CacheFiles: Fix the documentation to use the correct credential pointer names
Adjust the CacheFiles documentation to use the correct names of the credential pointers in task_struct. The documentation was using names from the old versions of the credentials patches. Signed-off-by: Marc Dionne <marc.c.dionne@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
This commit is contained in:
parent
e5b89542ea
commit
91ac033d83
|
@ -407,7 +407,7 @@ A NOTE ON SECURITY
|
|||
==================
|
||||
|
||||
CacheFiles makes use of the split security in the task_struct. It allocates
|
||||
its own task_security structure, and redirects current->act_as to point to it
|
||||
its own task_security structure, and redirects current->cred to point to it
|
||||
when it acts on behalf of another process, in that process's context.
|
||||
|
||||
The reason it does this is that it calls vfs_mkdir() and suchlike rather than
|
||||
|
@ -429,9 +429,9 @@ This means it may lose signals or ptrace events for example, and affects what
|
|||
the process looks like in /proc.
|
||||
|
||||
So CacheFiles makes use of a logical split in the security between the
|
||||
objective security (task->sec) and the subjective security (task->act_as). The
|
||||
objective security holds the intrinsic security properties of a process and is
|
||||
never overridden. This is what appears in /proc, and is what is used when a
|
||||
objective security (task->real_cred) and the subjective security (task->cred).
|
||||
The objective security holds the intrinsic security properties of a process and
|
||||
is never overridden. This is what appears in /proc, and is what is used when a
|
||||
process is the target of an operation by some other process (SIGKILL for
|
||||
example).
|
||||
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user