[ale] Write permission
DJ-Pfulio
DJPfulio at jdpfu.com
Mon May 16 17:02:20 EDT 2016
sudo isn't just to get access to the root account. It works great to
access other accounts, if configured for that.
I've done some fairly complex things with sudo to provide access to
other accounts (non-root) for thousands of end users who needed to run a
few different programs as different userids. We controlled which options
were allow too - sudo has config options for that as well. By far, this
would be the easiest answer.
On 05/16/16 16:43, DJ-Pfulio wrote:
> Force the processes to run under a different userid that is locked down.
> Users would use sudo to access that other account and launch the
> program(s) with approved options only. Nothing else. That user account
> could have access to create an LV for all temporary data, if you wanted
> to go crazy. Just don't let their normal userids have access to the
> temporary areas.
>
> Are the programs developed in-house? Hard to stop the devs from making
> debug stuff write wherever they want.
>
> On 05/16/16 10:48, Jim Kinney wrote:
>> I'm trying to envision a process that will have some funky permissions
>> in play and would appreciate ideas.
>>
>> Data is sensitive and stored in encrypted partition. Only users in the
>> approved group can read in that folder.
>>
>> They need to run that data through custom code that may do temporary
>> writes somewhere. That will need to be locked down and either encrypted
>> or overwritten after use (or both). This is the easy part.
>>
>> I need to prevent that data from being written/copied anywhere else even
>> if they have write permission (home dir).
>>
>> I run CentOS 7 systems so I have selinux. However, once this scales off
>> the individual research system to the cluster, I've disabled selinux on
>> the cluster for performance reasons. I can activate it if the encrypted
>> folders are mounted and limit runs to specific nodes if always running.
>>
>> So I'm seeing (sort of. Not fully thought out yet) a rule that allows
>> data read with binaries of a particular type that can only write to
>> particular folders. Note that the final output of the data run is not
>> sensitive but intermediate data may be. To run a process requires
>> writing binary to specific folder. That folder forces all contents to be
>> special type that is subject to selinux rule.
>>
>> Can't allow users to directly read the files in order to disallow 'cat
>> file > newfile' to disallowed folder.
>>
>> Data files are (currently) video and output is ascii text so it's
>> possible to check file types on output before allowed to copy to new folder.
>>
>> However, the input data files may be ascii for a different groups work.
>>
>>
>>
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>
>
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