seccomp_attr_set, seccomp_attr_get - Manage the seccomp filter
attributes
#include <seccomp.h>
typedef void * scmp_filter_ctx;
enum scmp_filter_attr;
int seccomp_attr_set(scmp_filter_ctx ctx,
enum scmp_filter_attr attr, uint32_t value);
int seccomp_attr_get(scmp_filter_ctx ctx,
enum scmp_filter_attr attr, uint32_t *value);
Link with -lseccomp.
The seccomp_attr_set() function sets the different seccomp
filter attributes while the seccomp_attr_get() function fetches the
filter attributes. The seccomp filter attributes are tunable values that
affect how the library behaves when generating and loading the seccomp
filter into the kernel. The attributes are reset to their default values
whenever the filter is initialized or reset via seccomp_init(3) or
seccomp_reset(3).
The filter context ctx is the value returned by the call to
seccomp_init(3).
Valid attr values are as follows:
- SCMP_FLTATR_ACT_DEFAULT
- The default filter action as specified in the call to
seccomp_init(3) or seccomp_reset(3). This attribute is
read-only.
- SCMP_FLTATR_ACT_BADARCH
- The filter action taken when the loaded filter does not match the
architecture of the executing application. Defaults to the
SCMP_ACT_KILL action.
- SCMP_FLTATR_CTL_NNP
- A flag to specify if the NO_NEW_PRIVS functionality should be enabled
before loading the seccomp filter into the kernel. Setting this to off
(value == 0) results in no action, meaning that loading the seccomp
filter into the kernel will fail if CAP_SYS_ADMIN is missing and
NO_NEW_PRIVS has not been externally set. Defaults to on (value ==
1).
- SCMP_FLTATR_CTL_TSYNC
- A flag to specify if the kernel should attempt to synchronize the filters
across all threads on seccomp_load(3). If the kernel is unable to
synchronize all of the thread then the load operation will fail. This flag
is only available on Linux Kernel 3.17 or greater; attempting to enable
this flag on earlier kernels will result in an error being returned.
Defaults to off (value == 0).
- SCMP_FLTATR_API_TSKIP
- A flag to specify if libseccomp should allow filter rules to be created
for the -1 syscall. The -1 syscall value can be used by tracer programs to
skip specific syscall invocations, see seccomp(2) for more
information. Defaults to off (value == 0).
- SCMP_FLTATR_CTL_LOG
- A flag to specify if the kernel should log all filter actions taken except
for the SCMP_ACT_ALLOW action. Defaults to off (value ==
0).
- SCMP_FLTATR_CTL_SSB
- A flag to disable Speculative Store Bypass mitigations for this filter.
Defaults to off (value == 0).
- SCMP_FLTATR_CTL_OPTIMIZE
- A flag to specify the optimization level of the seccomp filter. By default
libseccomp generates a set of sequential ´if´ statements for
each rule in the filter. seccomp_syscall_priority(3) can be used to
prioritize the order for the default cause. The binary tree optimization
sorts by syscall numbers and generates consistent O(log n)
filter traversal for every rule in the filter. The binary tree may be
advantageous for large filters. Note that
seccomp_syscall_priority(3) is ignored when
SCMP_FLTATR_CTL_OPTIMIZE == 2.
The different optimization levels are described below:
- 0
- Reserved value, not currently used.
- 1
- Rules sorted by priority and complexity (DEFAULT).
- 2
- Binary tree sorted by syscall number.
- SCMP_FLTATR_API_SYSRAWRC
- A flag to specify if libseccomp should pass system error codes back to the
caller instead of the default -ECANCELED. Defaults to off (value ==
0).
Returns zero on success or one of the following error codes on
failure:
- -EACCES
- Setting the attribute with the given value is not allowed.
- -EEXIST
- The attribute does not exist.
- -EINVAL
- Invalid input, either the context or architecture token is invalid.
- -EOPNOTSUPP
- The library doesn't support the particular operation.
#include <seccomp.h>
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
int rc = -1;
scmp_filter_ctx ctx;
ctx = seccomp_init(SCMP_ACT_ALLOW);
if (ctx == NULL)
goto out;
/* ... */
rc = seccomp_attr_set(ctx, SCMP_FLTATR_ACT_BADARCH, SCMP_ACT_TRAP);
if (rc < 0)
goto out;
/* ... */
out:
seccomp_release(ctx);
return -rc;
}
While the seccomp filter can be generated independent of the
kernel, kernel support is required to load and enforce the seccomp filter
generated by libseccomp.
The libseccomp project site, with more information and the source
code repository, can be found at https://github.com/seccomp/libseccomp. This
tool, as well as the libseccomp library, is currently under development,
please report any bugs at the project site or directly to the author.
Paul Moore <paul@paul-moore.com>