Filesystem Permissions
Permissions Overview
As we've discussed, Slackware Linux is a multi-user operating system.
Because of this, its filesystems are mutli-user as well. This means
that every file or directory has a set of permissions that can grant or
deny privileges to different users. There are three basic permissions
and three sets of permissions for each file. Let's take a look at an
example file.
darkstar:~$ ls -l /bin/ls
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 81820 2007-06-08 21:12 /bin/ls
Recall from chapter 4 that ls -l
lists the permissions for a file or
directory along with the user and group that "own" the file. In this
case, the permissions are rwxr-xr-x, the user is root and the group is
also root. The permissions section, while grouped together, is really
three seperate pieces. The first set of three letters are the
permissions granted to the user that owns the file. The second set of
three are those granted to the group owner, and the final three are
permissions for everyone else.
Permissions of /bin/ls
Set
Listing
Meaning
Owner
rwx
The owner "root" may read, write, and execute
Group
r-x
The group "root" may read and execute
Others
r-x
Everyone else may read and execute
The permissions are pretty self explainatory of course, at least for
files. Read, write, and execute allow you to read a file, write to it,
or execute it. But what do these permissions mean for directories?
Simply put, the read permissions grants the ability to list the
directory's contents (say with ls). The write
permission grants the ability to create new files in the directory as
well as delete the entire directory, even if you otherwise wouldn't be
able to delete some of the other files inside it. The execute
permission grants the ability to actually enter the directory (with the
bash built-in command cd for example).
Let's look at the permissions on a directory now.
darkstar:~$ ls -ld /home/alan
drwxr-x--- 60 alan users 3040 2008-06-06 17:14 /home/alan/
Here we see the permissions on my home directory and its ownership. The
directory is owned by the user alan and the group users. The user is
granted all rights (rwx), the group is granted only read and execute
permissions (r-x), and everyone else is prohibited from doing anything.
chmod,
chown, and
chgrp
So now that we know what permissions are, how do we change them? And
for that matter, how do we assign user and group ownership? The answer
is right here in this section.
The first tool we'll discuss is the useful
chown
(1) command. Using chown, we can (you guessed
it), change the ownership of a file or
directory. chown is historically used only
to change the user ownership, but can change the group ownership as well.
darkstar:~# ls -l /tmp/foo
total 0
-rw-r--r-- 1 alan users 0 2008-06-06 22:29 a
-rw-r--r-- 1 alan users 0 2008-06-06 22:29 b
darkstar:~# chown root /tmp/foo/a
darkstar:~# ls -l /tmp/foo
total 0
-rw-r--r-- 1 root users 0 2008-06-06 22:29 a
-rw-r--r-- 1 alan users 0 2008-06-06 22:29 b
By using a colon after the user account, you may also specify a new
group account.
darkstar:~# chown root:root /tmp/foo/b
darkstar:~# ls -l /tmp/foo
total 0
-rw-r--r-- 1 root users 0 2008-06-06 22:29 a
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 2008-06-06 22:29 b
chown can also be used recursively to change
the ownership of all files and directories below a target directory.
The following command would change all the files under the directory
/tmp/foo to have their ownership set to root:root.
darkstar:~# chown -R root:root /tmp/foo/b
Specifying a colon and a group name without a user name will simply
change the group for a file and leave the user ownership intact.
darkstar:~# chown :wheel /tmp/foo/a
darkstar:~# ls -l /tmp/foo
ls -l /tmp/foo
total 0
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 0 2008-06-06 22:29 a
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 2008-06-06 22:29 b
The younger brother of chown is the
slightly less useful chgrp(1). This
command works just like chown, except
it can only change the group
ownership of a file. Since chown can
already do this, why bother with
chgrp? The answer is simple. Many other
operating systems use a
different version of chown that cannot
change the group ownership, so
if you ever come across one of those, now you know how.
There's a reason we discussed changing ownership before changing
permissions. The first is a much easier concept to grasp. The tool for
changing permissions on a file or directory is
chmod(1). The syntax for it
is nearly identical to that for chown, but
rather than
specify a user or group, the administrator must specify either a set of
octal permissions or a set of alphabetic permissions. Neither one is
especially easy to grasp the first time. We'll begin with the less
complicated octal permissions.
Octal permissions derive their name from being assigned by one of eight
digits, namely the numbers 0 through 7. Each permissions is assigned a
number that is a power of 2, and those numbers are added together to
get the final permissions for one of the permission sets. If this
sounds confusing, maybe this table will help.
Octal Permissions
Permission
Meaning
Read
4
Write
2
Execute
1
By adding these values together, we can reach any number between 0 and
7 and specify all possible permission combinations. For example, to
grant both read and write privilages while denying execute, we would
use the number 6. The number 3 would grant write and execute
permissions, but deny the ability to read the file. We must specify a
number for each of the three sets when using octal permissions. It's
not possible to specify only a set of user or group permissions this
way for example.
darkstar:~# ls -l /tmp/foo/a
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 2008-06-06 22:29 a
darkstar:~# chmod 750 /tmp/foo/a
darkstar:~# ls -l /tmp/foo/a
-rwxr-x--- 1 root root 0 2008-06-06 22:29 a
chmod can also use letter values along with
+ or - to grant or deny permissions.
While this may be easier to
remember, it's often easier to use the octal permissions.
Alphabetic Permissions
Permission
Letter Value
Read
r
Write
w
Execute
x
Alphabetic Users and Groups
Accounts Affected
Letter Value
User/Owner
u
Group
g
Others/World
o
To use the letter values with chmod, you
must specify which set to use them with, either "u" for user, "g" for
group, and "o" for all others. You must also specify whether you are
adding or removing permissions with the "+" and "-" signs. Multiple
sets can be changed at once by seperating each with a comma.
darkstar:/tmp/foo# ls -l
total 0
-rw-r--r-- 1 alan users 0 2008-06-06 23:37 a
-rw-r--r-- 1 alan users 0 2008-06-06 23:37 b
-rw-r--r-- 1 alan users 0 2008-06-06 23:37 c
-rw-r--r-- 1 alan users 0 2008-06-06 23:37 d
darkstar:/tmp/foo# chmod u+x a
darkstar:/tmp/foo# chmod g+w b
darkstar:/tmp/foo# chmod u+x,g+x,o-r c
darkstar:/tmp/foo# chmod u+rx-w,g+r,o-r d
darkstar:/tmp/foo# ls -l
-rwxr--r-- 1 alan users 0 2008-06-06 23:37 a*
-rw-rw-r-- 1 alan users 0 2008-06-06 23:37 b
-rwxr-x--- 1 alan users 0 2008-06-06 23:37 c*
-r-xr----- 1 alan users 0 2008-06-06 23:37 d*
Which you prefer to use is entirely up to you. There are places where
one is better than the other, so a real Slacker will know both inside
out.
SUID, SGID, and the "Sticky" Bit
We're not quite done with permissions just yet. There are three other
"special" permissions in addition to those mentioned above. They are
SUID, SGID, and the sticky bit. When a file has one or more of these
permissions set, it behaves in special ways. The SUID and SGID
permissions change the way an application is run, while the sticky bit
restricts deletion of files. These permissions are applied with
chmod
like read, write, and execute, but with a twist.
SUID and SGID stand for "Set User ID" and "Set Group ID" respectively.
When an application with one of these bits is set, the application runs
with the user or group ownership permissions of that application
regardless of what user actually
executed it. Let's take a look at a common SUID application, the humble
passwd and the files it modifies.
darkstar:~# ls -l /usr/bin/passwd \
/etc/passwd \
/etc/shadow
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1106 2008-06-03 22:23 /etc/passwd
-rw-r----- 1 root shadow 627 2008-06-03 22:22 /etc/shadow
-rws--x--x 1 root root 34844 2008-03-24 16:11 /usr/bin/passwd*
Notice the permissions on passwd. Instead of
an x in the user's execute slot, we have an
s. This tells us that
passwd is a SUID program, and when we run
it, the process will run as the user "root" rather than as the user
that actually executed it. The reason for this is readily apparent as
soon as you look at the two files it modifies. Neither
/etc/passwd nor /etc/shadow
are writeable by anyone other than root. Since users need to change
their personal information, passwd must be
run as root in order to modify those files.
So what about the sticky bit? The sticky bit restricts the ability to
move or delete files and is only ever set on directories. Non-root
users cannot move or delete any files under a directory with the sticky
bit set unless they are the owner of that file. Normally anyone with
write permission to the file can do this, but the sticky bit prevents
it for anyone but the owner (and of course, root). Let's take a look at
a common "sticky" directory.
darkstar:~# ls -ld /tmp
drwxrwxrwt 1 root root 34844 2008-03-24 16:11 /tmp
Naturally, being a directory for the storage of temporary files sytem
wide, /tmp needs to be readable, writeable, and
executable by anyone and everyone. Since any user is likely to have a
file or two stored here at any time, it only makes good sense to
prevent other users from deleting those files, so the sticky bit has
been set. You can see it by the presence of the t in
place of the x in the world permissions section.
SUID, SGID, and "Sticky" Permissions
Permission Type
Octal Value
Letter Value
SUID
4
s
SGID
2
s
Sticky
1
t
When using octal permissions, you must specify an additional leading
octal value. For example, to recreate the permission on
/tmp, we would use 1777. To recreate those
permissions on /usr/bin/passwd, we would use 4711.
Essentially, any time this leading fourth octet isn't specified,
chmod assumes its value to be 0.
darkstar:~# chmod 1777 /tmp
darkstar:~# chmod 4711 /usr/bin/passwd
Using the alphabetic permission values is slightly different. Assuming
the two files above have permissions of 0000 (no permissions at all),
here is how we would set them.
darkstar:~# chmod ug+rwx,o+rwt /tmp
darkstar:~# chmod u+rws,go+x /usr/bin/passwd