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JAIL(2) BSD System Calls Manual JAIL(2) NAME jail -- imprison current process and future decendants LIBRARY Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/jail.h> int jail(struct jail *jail); DESCRIPTION The jail system call sets up a jail and locks the current process in it. The argument is a pointer to a structure describing the prison: struct jail { u_int32_t version; char *path; char *hostname; u_int32_t ip_number; }; "version" defines the version of the API in use. It should be set to zero at this time. The "path" pointer should be set to the directory which is to be the root of the prison. The "hostname" pointer can be set to the hostname of the prison. This can be changed from the inside of the prison. The "ip_number" can be set to the IP number assigned to the prison. PRISON? Once a process has been put in a prison, it and its decendants cannot es- cape the prison. It is not possible to add a process to a preexisting prison. Inside the prison, the concept of "superuser" is very diluted. In gen- eral, it can be assumed that nothing can be mangled from inside a prison which does not exist entirely inside that prison. For instance the di- rectory tree below "path" can be manipulated all the ways a root can nor- mally do it, including "rm -rf /*" but new device special nodes cannot be created because they reference shared resources (the device drivers in the kernel). All IP activity will be forced to happen to/from the IP number specified, which should be an alias on one of the network interfaces. It is possible to identify a process as jailed by examining "/proc/<pid>/status": it will show a field near the end of the line, ei- ther as a single hyphen for a process at large, or the hostname currently set for the prison for jailed processes. ERRORS jail() will fail if: [EINVAL] The version number of the argument is not correct. Further jail() calls chroot(2) internally, so it can fail for all the same reasons. Please consult the chroot(2) manual page for details. SEE ALSO chdir(2), chroot(2) HISTORY The jail() function call appeared in FreeBSD 4.0. AUTHORS The jail feature was written by Poul-Henning Kamp for R&D Associates "http://www.rndassociates.com/" who contributed it to FreeBSD. BSD April 28, 1999 BSD
NAME | LIBRARY | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | PRISON? | ERRORS | SEE ALSO | HISTORY | AUTHORS
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