ppriv(1) User Commands ppriv(1)NAMEppriv - inspect or modify process privilege sets and attributes
SYNOPSIS
/usr/bin/ppriv -e [-D | -N] [-M] [-s spec] command [arg]...
/usr/bin/ppriv [-v] [-S] [-D | -N] [-s spec]
[pid | core]...
/usr/bin/ppriv -l [-v] [privilege-specification]...
DESCRIPTION
The first invocation of the ppriv command runs the command specified
with the privilege sets and flags modified according to the arguments
on the command line.
The second invocation examines or changes the privilege state of run‐
ning process and core files.
The third invocation lists the privileges defined and information about
specified privileges or privileges set specifications.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-D Turns on privilege debugging for the processes or command
supplied.
-e Interprets the remainder of the arguments as a command line
and runs the command line with specified privilege
attributes and sets.
-l Lists all currently defined privileges on stdout.
-M When a system is configured with Trusted Extensions, this
option turns on the NET_MAC_AWARE and NET_MAC_AWARE_INHERIT
process attributes.
A process with these attributes and the net_mac_aware privi‐
lege can communicate with lower-level remote peers.
-N Turns off privilege debugging for the processes or command
supplied.
-s spec Modifies a process's privilege sets according to spec, a
specification with the format [AEILP][+-=]privsetspec, con‐
taining no spaces, where:
AEILP Indicates one or more letters indicating
which privilege sets to change. These are
case insensitive, for example, either a or A
indicates all privilege sets.
For definitions of the single letter abbrevi‐
ations for privilege sets, see privileges(5).
+-= Indicates a modifier to respectively add (+),
remove (-), or assign (=) the listed privi‐
leges to the specified set(s) in privsetspec.
privsetspec Indicates a comma-separated privilege set
specification (priv1,priv2, and so on), as
described in priv_str_to_set(3C).
Modifying the same set with multiple -s options is possible
as long as there is either precisely one assignment to an
individual set or any number of additions and removals. That
is, assignment and addition or removal for one set are mutu‐
ally exclusive.
-S Short. Reports the shortest possible output strings for
sets. The default is portable output. See
priv_str_to_set(3C).
-v Verbose. Reports privilege sets using privilege names.
USAGE
The ppriv utility examines processes and core files and prints or
changes their privilege sets.
ppriv can run commands with privilege debugging on or off or with fewer
privileges than the invoking process.
When executing a sub process, the only sets that can be modified are L
and I. Privileges can only be removed from L and I as ppriv starts with
P=E=I.
ppriv can also be used to remove privileges from processes or to convey
privileges to other processes. In order to control a process, the
effective set of the ppriv utility must be a super set of the con‐
trolled process's E, I, and P. The utility's limit set must be a super
set of the target's limit set. If the target's process uids do not
match, the {PRIV_PROC_OWNER} privilege must be asserted in the util‐
ity's effective set. If the controlled processes have any uid with the
value 0, more restrictions may exist. See privileges(5).
EXAMPLES
Example 1 Obtaining the Process Privileges of the Current Shell
example$ ppriv $$
387: -sh
flags = <none>
E: basic
I: basic
P: basic
L: all
Example 2 Removing a Privilege From Your Shell's Inheritable and Effec‐
tive set
example$ ppriv-s EI-proc_session $$
The subprocess can still inspect the parent shell but it can no longer
influence the parent because the parent has more privileges in its Per‐
mitted set than the ppriv child process:
example$ truss -p $$
truss: permission denied: 387
example$ ppriv $$
387: -sh
flags = <none>
E: basic,!proc_session
I: basic,!proc_session
P: basic
L: all
Example 3 Running a Process with Privilege Debugging
example$ ppriv-e -D cat /etc/shadow
cat[418]: missing privilege "file_dac_read" (euid = 21782),
needed at ufs_access+0x3c
cat: cannot open /etc/shadow
The privilege debugging error messages are sent to the controlling ter‐
minal of the current process. The "needed at" address specification is
an artifact of the kernel implementation and it can be changed at any
time after a software update.
The system call number can be mapped to a system call using
/etc/name_to_sysnum.
Example 4 Listing the Privileges Available in the Current Zone
This example lists the privileges available in the current zone (see
zones(5)). When run in the global zone, all defined privileges are
listed.
example$ ppriv-l zone
... listing of all privileges elided ...
Example 5 Examining a Privilege Aware Process
The following example examines a privilege aware process:
example$ ppriv-S `pgrep rpcbind`
928: /usr/sbin/rpcbind
flags = PRIV_AWARE
E: net_privaddr,proc_fork,sys_nfs
I: none
P: net_privaddr,proc_fork,sys_nfs
L: none
See setpflags(2) for explanations of the flags.
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0 Successful operation.
non-zero An error has occurred.
FILES
/proc/* Process files
/etc/name_to_sysnum system call name to number mapping
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Availability │SUNWesu │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Interface Stability │See below. │
└─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
The invocation is Evolving. The output is Unstable.
SEE ALSOgcore(1), truss(1), setpflags(2), priv_str_to_set(3C), proc(4),
attributes(5), privileges(5), zones(5)SunOS 5.10 25 Mar 2011 ppriv(1)