OSS in jail
James Gritton
jamie at gritton.org
Sun Dec 13 15:24:00 UTC 2015
On 2015-12-12 15:44, Luís Fernando Schultz Xavier da Silveira wrote:
>
> I would like one of my jails to have the ability to play back sound,
> but not to record it. As I understand, sound is played back by writing
> to /dev/dsp and recorded by reading from it. Hence, placing the
> /dev/dsp
> device (and /dev/dsp[0-9]* devices) in the jail via devfs.rules is not
> a solution since the jail superuser can override permissions on these
> devices and even read from them when they lack read permission.
>
> Is there a way to give a device to a jail in write-only mode?
> If not, is it possible to create a virtual OSS stack and give that to
> the jail?
> How would you solve this problem?
>
> Also, is it possible to give the jail a mixer device that can only read
> mixer settings but not alter them?
There is no mechanism for adding a device to a jail with partial
permissions. Generally, it wouldn't just be reading and writing, but a
per-device decision on different ioctl calls. This would require an
entire jail device framework that doesn't exist.
I suppose it's possible to create a virtual OSS stack - sounds like a
pretty big project though. If I had this job to do, that's likely the
direction I'd go, though instead of a virtual OSS driver, I'd consider
something on the user level, with a listening UNIX socket inside the
jail. I doubt this would work seamlessly without recompiling software
though (again, the ioctl question).
- Jamie
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