/dev/pts/0 in a jail shows no one is observing from outer prison.
Julian H. Stacey
jhs at berklix.com
Fri Jul 19 22:39:38 UTC 2013
Hi, Reference:
> From: =?utf-8?Q?Dag-Erling_Sm=C3=B8rgrav?= <des at des.no>
> Date: Fri, 19 Jul 2013 08:34:45 +0200
=?utf-8?Q?Dag-Erling_Sm=C3=B8rgrav?= wrote:
> "Julian H. Stacey" <jhs at berklix.com> writes:
> > A ssh to a jail followed by Who, if it shows just pts/0, shows
> > no one else is logged in { within jail And Also Outer Prison
> > [And presumably also other parallel jails] }.
>
> Not really, it just shows that pts/0 was available. Like file
> descriptors, pseudo-ttys are allocated on a first-unused basis. There
> could be twenty people logged in; if the first logs out, the
> twenty-first gets pts/0.
Thanks DES,
Yes, I suppose so, on busy hardware. It was more obvious what was
going on with my prison & jail as that was lightly logged in.
If FreeBSD wanted to obscure the information, I suppose one could
do a kernel tweak to do pty allocation from a cyclic buffer, (like
PID IDs) rather than searching sequentially from 0 each time, but
I guess there's more interesting things to do than that.
> Also, please read the warning at the start of the jail chapter in the
> FreeBSD handbook.
Wow ! Light dawns brightly !
> I should probably update it to note that there are
> many ways in which information can leak between jails and the host.
If so do, maybe add
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-jail
next to
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
If you think appropriate.
Thanks.
Cheers,
Julian
--
Julian Stacey, BSD Unix Linux C Sys Eng Consultant, Munich http://berklix.com
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