linux-stable/include/linux/mnt_idmapping.h
Christian Brauner 209188ce75
fs: port higher-level mapping helpers
Enable the mapped_fs{g,u}id() helpers to support filesystems mounted
with an idmapping. Apart from core mapping helpers that use
mapped_fs{g,u}id() to initialize struct inode's i_{g,u}id fields xfs is
the only place that uses these low-level helpers directly.

The patch only extends the helpers to be able to take the filesystem
idmapping into account. Since we don't actually yet pass the
filesystem's idmapping in no functional changes happen. This will happen
in a final patch.

Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211123114227.3124056-9-brauner@kernel.org (v1)
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211130121032.3753852-9-brauner@kernel.org (v2)
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211203111707.3901969-9-brauner@kernel.org
Cc: Seth Forshee <sforshee@digitalocean.com>
Cc: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Cc: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
CC: linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org
Reviewed-by: Amir Goldstein <amir73il@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Seth Forshee <sforshee@digitalocean.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
2021-12-05 10:28:57 +01:00

234 lines
7.7 KiB
C

/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
#ifndef _LINUX_MNT_IDMAPPING_H
#define _LINUX_MNT_IDMAPPING_H
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/uidgid.h>
struct user_namespace;
/*
* Carries the initial idmapping of 0:0:4294967295 which is an identity
* mapping. This means that {g,u}id 0 is mapped to {g,u}id 0, {g,u}id 1 is
* mapped to {g,u}id 1, [...], {g,u}id 1000 to {g,u}id 1000, [...].
*/
extern struct user_namespace init_user_ns;
/**
* initial_idmapping - check whether this is the initial mapping
* @ns: idmapping to check
*
* Check whether this is the initial mapping, mapping 0 to 0, 1 to 1,
* [...], 1000 to 1000 [...].
*
* Return: true if this is the initial mapping, false if not.
*/
static inline bool initial_idmapping(const struct user_namespace *ns)
{
return ns == &init_user_ns;
}
/**
* no_idmapping - check whether we can skip remapping a kuid/gid
* @mnt_userns: the mount's idmapping
* @fs_userns: the filesystem's idmapping
*
* This function can be used to check whether a remapping between two
* idmappings is required.
* An idmapped mount is a mount that has an idmapping attached to it that
* is different from the filsystem's idmapping and the initial idmapping.
* If the initial mapping is used or the idmapping of the mount and the
* filesystem are identical no remapping is required.
*
* Return: true if remapping can be skipped, false if not.
*/
static inline bool no_idmapping(const struct user_namespace *mnt_userns,
const struct user_namespace *fs_userns)
{
return initial_idmapping(mnt_userns) || mnt_userns == fs_userns;
}
/**
* mapped_kuid_fs - map a filesystem kuid into a mnt_userns
* @mnt_userns: the mount's idmapping
* @fs_userns: the filesystem's idmapping
* @kuid : kuid to be mapped
*
* Take a @kuid and remap it from @fs_userns into @mnt_userns. Use this
* function when preparing a @kuid to be reported to userspace.
*
* If no_idmapping() determines that this is not an idmapped mount we can
* simply return @kuid unchanged.
* If initial_idmapping() tells us that the filesystem is not mounted with an
* idmapping we know the value of @kuid won't change when calling
* from_kuid() so we can simply retrieve the value via __kuid_val()
* directly.
*
* Return: @kuid mapped according to @mnt_userns.
* If @kuid has no mapping in either @mnt_userns or @fs_userns INVALID_UID is
* returned.
*/
static inline kuid_t mapped_kuid_fs(struct user_namespace *mnt_userns,
struct user_namespace *fs_userns,
kuid_t kuid)
{
uid_t uid;
if (no_idmapping(mnt_userns, fs_userns))
return kuid;
if (initial_idmapping(fs_userns))
uid = __kuid_val(kuid);
else
uid = from_kuid(fs_userns, kuid);
if (uid == (uid_t)-1)
return INVALID_UID;
return make_kuid(mnt_userns, uid);
}
/**
* mapped_kgid_fs - map a filesystem kgid into a mnt_userns
* @mnt_userns: the mount's idmapping
* @fs_userns: the filesystem's idmapping
* @kgid : kgid to be mapped
*
* Take a @kgid and remap it from @fs_userns into @mnt_userns. Use this
* function when preparing a @kgid to be reported to userspace.
*
* If no_idmapping() determines that this is not an idmapped mount we can
* simply return @kgid unchanged.
* If initial_idmapping() tells us that the filesystem is not mounted with an
* idmapping we know the value of @kgid won't change when calling
* from_kgid() so we can simply retrieve the value via __kgid_val()
* directly.
*
* Return: @kgid mapped according to @mnt_userns.
* If @kgid has no mapping in either @mnt_userns or @fs_userns INVALID_GID is
* returned.
*/
static inline kgid_t mapped_kgid_fs(struct user_namespace *mnt_userns,
struct user_namespace *fs_userns,
kgid_t kgid)
{
gid_t gid;
if (no_idmapping(mnt_userns, fs_userns))
return kgid;
if (initial_idmapping(fs_userns))
gid = __kgid_val(kgid);
else
gid = from_kgid(fs_userns, kgid);
if (gid == (gid_t)-1)
return INVALID_GID;
return make_kgid(mnt_userns, gid);
}
/**
* mapped_kuid_user - map a user kuid into a mnt_userns
* @mnt_userns: the mount's idmapping
* @fs_userns: the filesystem's idmapping
* @kuid : kuid to be mapped
*
* Use the idmapping of @mnt_userns to remap a @kuid into @fs_userns. Use this
* function when preparing a @kuid to be written to disk or inode.
*
* If no_idmapping() determines that this is not an idmapped mount we can
* simply return @kuid unchanged.
* If initial_idmapping() tells us that the filesystem is not mounted with an
* idmapping we know the value of @kuid won't change when calling
* make_kuid() so we can simply retrieve the value via KUIDT_INIT()
* directly.
*
* Return: @kuid mapped according to @mnt_userns.
* If @kuid has no mapping in either @mnt_userns or @fs_userns INVALID_UID is
* returned.
*/
static inline kuid_t mapped_kuid_user(struct user_namespace *mnt_userns,
struct user_namespace *fs_userns,
kuid_t kuid)
{
uid_t uid;
if (no_idmapping(mnt_userns, fs_userns))
return kuid;
uid = from_kuid(mnt_userns, kuid);
if (uid == (uid_t)-1)
return INVALID_UID;
if (initial_idmapping(fs_userns))
return KUIDT_INIT(uid);
return make_kuid(fs_userns, uid);
}
/**
* mapped_kgid_user - map a user kgid into a mnt_userns
* @mnt_userns: the mount's idmapping
* @fs_userns: the filesystem's idmapping
* @kgid : kgid to be mapped
*
* Use the idmapping of @mnt_userns to remap a @kgid into @fs_userns. Use this
* function when preparing a @kgid to be written to disk or inode.
*
* If no_idmapping() determines that this is not an idmapped mount we can
* simply return @kgid unchanged.
* If initial_idmapping() tells us that the filesystem is not mounted with an
* idmapping we know the value of @kgid won't change when calling
* make_kgid() so we can simply retrieve the value via KGIDT_INIT()
* directly.
*
* Return: @kgid mapped according to @mnt_userns.
* If @kgid has no mapping in either @mnt_userns or @fs_userns INVALID_GID is
* returned.
*/
static inline kgid_t mapped_kgid_user(struct user_namespace *mnt_userns,
struct user_namespace *fs_userns,
kgid_t kgid)
{
gid_t gid;
if (no_idmapping(mnt_userns, fs_userns))
return kgid;
gid = from_kgid(mnt_userns, kgid);
if (gid == (gid_t)-1)
return INVALID_GID;
if (initial_idmapping(fs_userns))
return KGIDT_INIT(gid);
return make_kgid(fs_userns, gid);
}
/**
* mapped_fsuid - return caller's fsuid mapped up into a mnt_userns
* @mnt_userns: the mount's idmapping
* @fs_userns: the filesystem's idmapping
*
* Use this helper to initialize a new vfs or filesystem object based on
* the caller's fsuid. A common example is initializing the i_uid field of
* a newly allocated inode triggered by a creation event such as mkdir or
* O_CREAT. Other examples include the allocation of quotas for a specific
* user.
*
* Return: the caller's current fsuid mapped up according to @mnt_userns.
*/
static inline kuid_t mapped_fsuid(struct user_namespace *mnt_userns,
struct user_namespace *fs_userns)
{
return mapped_kuid_user(mnt_userns, fs_userns, current_fsuid());
}
/**
* mapped_fsgid - return caller's fsgid mapped up into a mnt_userns
* @mnt_userns: the mount's idmapping
* @fs_userns: the filesystem's idmapping
*
* Use this helper to initialize a new vfs or filesystem object based on
* the caller's fsgid. A common example is initializing the i_gid field of
* a newly allocated inode triggered by a creation event such as mkdir or
* O_CREAT. Other examples include the allocation of quotas for a specific
* user.
*
* Return: the caller's current fsgid mapped up according to @mnt_userns.
*/
static inline kgid_t mapped_fsgid(struct user_namespace *mnt_userns,
struct user_namespace *fs_userns)
{
return mapped_kgid_user(mnt_userns, fs_userns, current_fsgid());
}
#endif /* _LINUX_MNT_IDMAPPING_H */