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Message #57798
[Bug 1611171] Re: re-runs self via sudo
** Also affects: nova/newton
Importance: Undecided
Status: New
** Changed in: nova/newton
Importance: Undecided => Medium
** Changed in: nova/newton
Status: New => In Progress
** Changed in: nova/newton
Assignee: (unassigned) => Lee Yarwood (lyarwood)
** Changed in: nova
Importance: Undecided => Medium
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1611171
Title:
re-runs self via sudo
Status in Cinder:
Fix Released
Status in Designate:
In Progress
Status in ec2-api:
In Progress
Status in gce-api:
In Progress
Status in Manila:
In Progress
Status in masakari:
Fix Released
Status in OpenStack Compute (nova):
Fix Released
Status in OpenStack Compute (nova) newton series:
In Progress
Status in OpenStack Security Advisory:
Won't Fix
Status in Rally:
In Progress
Bug description:
Hello, I'm looking through Designate source code to determine if is
appropriate to include in Ubuntu Main. This isn't a full security
audit.
This looks like trouble:
./designate/cmd/manage.py
def main():
CONF.register_cli_opt(category_opt)
try:
utils.read_config('designate', sys.argv)
logging.setup(CONF, 'designate')
except cfg.ConfigFilesNotFoundError:
cfgfile = CONF.config_file[-1] if CONF.config_file else None
if cfgfile and not os.access(cfgfile, os.R_OK):
st = os.stat(cfgfile)
print(_("Could not read %s. Re-running with sudo") % cfgfile)
try:
os.execvp('sudo', ['sudo', '-u', '#%s' % st.st_uid] + sys.argv)
except Exception:
print(_('sudo failed, continuing as if nothing happened'))
print(_('Please re-run designate-manage as root.'))
sys.exit(2)
This is an interesting decision -- if the configuration file is _not_ readable by the user in question, give the executing user complete privileges of the user that owns the unreadable file.
I'm not a fan of hiding privilege escalation / modifications in
programs -- if a user had recently used sudo and thus had the
authentication token already stored for their terminal, this 'hidden'
use of sudo may be unexpected and unwelcome, especially since it
appears that argv from the first call leaks through to the sudo call.
Is this intentional OpenStack style? Or unexpected for you guys too?
(Feel free to make this public at your convenience.)
Thanks
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