table of contents
PROCCTL(2) | System Calls Manual | PROCCTL(2) |
NAME¶
procctl
— control
processes
LIBRARY¶
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
<sys/procctl.h>
int
procctl
(idtype_t
idtype, id_t id,
int cmd,
void *data);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
procctl
()
system call provides for control over processes. The
idtype and id arguments specify
the set of processes to control. If multiple processes match the identifier,
procctl
will make a “best effort” to
control as many of the selected processes as possible. An error is only
returned if no selected processes successfully complete the request. The
following identifier types are supported:
P_PID
- Control the process with the process ID id.
P_PGID
- Control processes belonging to the process group with the ID id.
The control request to perform is specified by the cmd argument. The following commands are supported:
PROC_ASLR_CTL
- Controls the Address Space Layout Randomization (ASLR) in the program
images created by execve(2) in the specified process or
its descendants that did not changed the control nor modified it by other
means. The data parameter must point to the integer
variable holding one of the following values:
PROC_ASLR_FORCE_ENABLE
- Request that ASLR is enabled after execution, even if it is disabled system-wide. The image flag and set-uid might prevent ASLR enablement still.
PROC_ASLR_FORCE_DISABLE
- Request that ASLR is disabled after execution. Same notes as for
PROC_ASLR_FORCE_ENABLE
apply. PROC_ASLR_NOFORCE
- Use system-wide configured policy for ASLR.
PROC_ASLR_STATUS
- Returns the current status of ASLR enablement for the target process. The
data parameter must point to the integer variable,
where one of the following values is written:
If the currently executed image in the process itself has ASLR enabled, the
PROC_ASLR_ACTIVE
flag is or-ed with the value listed above. PROC_SPROTECT
- Set process protection state. This is used to mark a process as protected
from being killed if the system exhausts the available memory and swap.
The data parameter must point to an integer
containing an operation and zero or more optional flags. The following
operations are supported:
PPROT_SET
- Mark the selected processes as protected.
PPROT_CLEAR
- Clear the protected state of selected processes.
The following optional flags are supported:
PPROT_DESCEND
- Apply the requested operation to all child processes of each selected process in addition to each selected process.
PPROT_INHERIT
- When used with
PPROT_SET
, mark all future child processes of each selected process as protected. Future child processes will also mark all of their future child processes.
PROC_REAP_ACQUIRE
- Acquires the reaper status for the current process. Reaper status means that children orphaned by the reaper's descendants that were forked after the acquisition of reaper status are reparented to the reaper process. After system initialization, init(8) is the default reaper.
PROC_REAP_RELEASE
- Release the reaper state for the current process. The reaper of the current process becomes the new reaper of the current process's descendants.
PROC_REAP_STATUS
- Provides information about the reaper of the specified process, or the
process itself when it is a reaper. The data
argument must point to a procctl_reaper_status
structure which is filled in by the syscall on successful return.
struct procctl_reaper_status { u_int rs_flags; u_int rs_children; u_int rs_descendants; pid_t rs_reaper; pid_t rs_pid; };
REAPER_STATUS_OWNED
- The specified process has acquired reaper status and has not released it. When the flag is returned, the specified process id, pid, identifies the reaper, otherwise the rs_reaper field of the structure is set to the pid of the reaper for the specified process id.
REAPER_STATUS_REALINIT
- The specified process is the root of the reaper tree, i.e., init(8).
The rs_children field returns the number of children of the reaper among the descendants. It is possible to have a child whose reaper is not the specified process, since the reaper for any existing children is not reset on the
PROC_REAP_ACQUIRE
operation. The rs_descendants field returns the total number of descendants of the reaper(s), not counting descendants of the reaper in the subtree. The rs_reaper field returns the reaper pid. The rs_pid returns the pid of one reaper child if there are any descendants. PROC_REAP_GETPIDS
- Queries the list of descendants of the reaper of the specified process.
The request takes a pointer to a procctl_reaper_pids
structure in the data parameter.
struct procctl_reaper_pids { u_int rp_count; struct procctl_reaper_pidinfo *rp_pids; };
The struct procctl_reaper_pidinfo structure provides some information about one of the reaper's descendants. Note that for a descendant that is not a child, it may be incorrectly identified because of a race in which the original child process exited and the exited process's pid was reused for an unrelated process.
struct procctl_reaper_pidinfo { pid_t pi_pid; pid_t pi_subtree; u_int pi_flags; };
REAPER_PIDINFO_VALID
- Set to indicate that the procctl_reaper_pidinfo
structure was filled in by the kernel. Zero-filling the
rp_pids array and testing the
REAPER_PIDINFO_VALID
flag allows the caller to detect the end of the returned array. REAPER_PIDINFO_CHILD
- The pi_pid field identifies the direct child of the reaper.
REAPER_PIDINFO_REAPER
- The reported process is itself a reaper. The descendants of the subordinate reaper are not reported.
PROC_REAP_KILL
- Request to deliver a signal to some subset of the descendants of the
reaper. The data parameter must point to a
procctl_reaper_kill structure, which is used both
for parameters and status return.
struct procctl_reaper_kill { int rk_sig; u_int rk_flags; pid_t rk_subtree; u_int rk_killed; pid_t rk_fpid; };
REAPER_KILL_CHILDREN
- Deliver the specified signal only to direct children of the reaper.
REAPER_KILL_SUBTREE
- Deliver the specified signal only to descendants that were forked by the direct child with pid specified in the rk_subtree field.
REAPER_KILL_CHILDREN
nor theREAPER_KILL_SUBTREE
flags are specified, all current descendants of the reaper are signalled.If a signal was delivered to any process, the return value from the request is zero. In this case, the rk_killed field identifies the number of processes signalled. The rk_fpid field is set to the pid of the first process for which signal delivery failed, e.g., due to permission problems. If no such process exists, the rk_fpid field is set to -1.
PROC_TRACE_CTL
- Enable or disable tracing of the specified process(es), according to the
value of the integer argument. Tracing includes attachment to the process
using the ptrace(2) and ktrace(2),
debugging sysctls, hwpmc(4),
dtrace(1), and core dumping. Possible values for the
data argument are:
PROC_TRACE_CTL_ENABLE
- Enable tracing, after it was disabled by
PROC_TRACE_CTL_DISABLE
. Only allowed for self. PROC_TRACE_CTL_DISABLE
- Disable tracing for the specified process. Tracing is re-enabled when the process changes the executing program with the execve(2) syscall. A child inherits the trace settings from the parent on fork(2).
PROC_TRACE_CTL_DISABLE_EXEC
- Same as
PROC_TRACE_CTL_DISABLE
, but the setting persists for the process even after execve(2).
PROC_TRACE_STATUS
- Returns the current tracing status for the specified process in the integer variable pointed to by data. If tracing is disabled, data is set to -1. If tracing is enabled, but no debugger is attached by the ptrace(2) syscall, data is set to 0. If a debugger is attached, data is set to the pid of the debugger process.
PROC_TRAPCAP_CTL
- Controls the capability mode sandbox actions for the specified sandboxed
processes, on a return from any syscall which gives either a
ENOTCAPABLE
orECAPMODE
error. If the control is enabled, such errors from the syscalls cause delivery of the synchronousSIGTRAP
signal to the thread immediately before returning from the syscalls.Possible values for the data argument are:
PROC_TRAPCAP_CTL_ENABLE
- Enable the
SIGTRAP
signal delivery on capability mode access violations. The enabled mode is inherited by the children of the process, and is kept after fexecve(2) calls. PROC_TRAPCAP_CTL_DISABLE
- Disable the signal delivery on capability mode access violations. Note
that the global sysctl
kern.trap_enotcap
might still cause the signal to be delivered. See capsicum(4).
On signal delivery, the si_errno member of the siginfo signal handler parameter is set to the syscall error value, and the si_code member is set to
TRAP_CAP
.See capsicum(4) for more information about the capability mode.
PROC_TRAPCAP_STATUS
- Return the current status of signalling capability mode access violations
for the specified process. The integer value pointed to by the
data argument is set to the
PROC_TRAPCAP_CTL_ENABLE
value if the process control enables signal delivery, and toPROC_TRAPCAP_CTL_DISABLE
otherwise.See the note about sysctl
kern.trap_enotcap
above, which gives independent global control of signal delivery. PROC_PDEATHSIG_CTL
- Request the delivery of a signal when the parent of the calling process
exits. idtype must be
P_PID
and id must be the either caller's pid or zero, with no difference in effect. The value is cleared for child processes and when executing set-user-ID or set-group-ID binaries. arg must point to a value of type int indicating the signal that should be delivered to the caller. Use zero to cancel a previously requested signal delivery. PROC_PDEATHSIG_STATUS
- Query the current signal number that will be delivered when the parent of
the calling process exits. idtype must be
P_PID
and id must be the either caller's pid or zero, with no difference in effect. arg must point to a memory location that can hold a value of type int. If signal delivery has not been requested, it will contain zero on return. PROC_STACKGAP_CTL
- Controls the stack gaps in the specified process. A stack gap is the part
of the growth area for a
MAP_STACK
mapped region that is reserved and never filled by memory. Instead, the process is guaranteed to receive aSIGSEGV
signal on accessing pages in the gap. Gaps protect against stack overflow corrupting memory adjacent to the stack.The data argument must point to an integer variable containing flags. The following flags are allowed:
PROC_STACKGAP_ENABLE
- This flag is only accepted for consistency with
PROC_STACKGAP_STATUS
. If stack gaps are enabled, the flag is ignored. If disabled, the flag causes anEINVAL
error to be returned. After gaps are disabled in a process, they can only be re-enabled when an execve(2) is performed. PROC_STACKGAP_DISABLE
- Disable stack gaps for the process. For existing stacks, the gap is no longer a reserved part of the growth area and can be filled by memory on access.
PROC_STACKGAP_ENABLE_EXEC
- Enable stack gaps for programs started after an execve(2) by the specified process.
PROC_STACKGAP_DISABLE_EXEC
- Inherit disabled stack gaps state after execve(2). In other words, if the currently executing program has stack gaps disabled, they are kept disabled on exec. If gaps were enabled, they are kept enabled after exec.
The stack gap state is inherited from the parent on fork(2).
PROC_STACKGAP_STATUS
- Returns the current stack gap state for the specified process.
data must point to an integer variable, which is
used to return a bitmask consisting of the following flags:
PROC_STACKGAP_ENABLE
- Stack gaps are enabled.
PROC_STACKGAP_DISABLE
- Stack gaps are disabled.
PROC_STACKGAP_ENABLE_EXEC
- Stack gaps are enabled in the process after execve(2).
PROC_STACKGAP_DISABLE_EXEC
- Stack gaps are disabled in the process after execve(2).
x86 MACHINE-SPECIFIC REQUESTS¶
PROC_KPTI_CTL
- AMD64 only. Controls the Kernel Page Table Isolation (KPTI) option for the
children of the specified process. For the command to work, the
vm.pmap.kpti tunable must be enabled on boot. It is
not possible to change the KPTI setting for a running process, except at
the execve(2), where the address space is reinitialized.
The data parameter must point to an integer variable containing one of the following commands:
PROC_KPTI_CTL_ENABLE_ON_EXEC
- Enable KPTI after execve(2).
PROC_KPTI_CTL_DISABLE_ON_EXEC
- Disable KPTI after execve(2). Only root or a process having the PRIV_IO privilege might use this option.
PROC_KPTI_STATUS
- Returns the current KPTI status for the specified process.
data must point to the integer variable, which returns
the following statuses:
The status is or-ed with the PROC_KPTI_STATUS_ACTIVE in case KPTI is active for the current address space of the process.
NOTES¶
Disabling tracing on a process should not be considered a security feature, as it is bypassable both by the kernel and privileged processes, and via other system mechanisms. As such, it should not be utilized to reliably protect cryptographic keying material or other confidential data.
RETURN VALUES¶
If an error occurs, a value of -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.
ERRORS¶
The procctl
() system call will fail
if:
- [
EFAULT
] - The arg parameter points outside the process's allocated address space.
- [
EINVAL
] - The cmd argument specifies an unsupported command.
The idtype argument specifies an unsupported identifier type.
- [
EPERM
] - The calling process does not have permission to perform the requested operation on any of the selected processes.
- [
ESRCH
] - No processes matched the requested idtype and id.
- [
EINVAL
] - An invalid operation or flag was passed in arg for a
PROC_SPROTECT
command. - [
EPERM
] - The idtype argument is not equal to
P_PID
, or id is not equal to the pid of the calling process, forPROC_REAP_ACQUIRE
orPROC_REAP_RELEASE
requests. - [
EINVAL
] - Invalid or undefined flags were passed to a
PROC_REAP_KILL
request. - [
EINVAL
] - An invalid or zero signal number was requested for a
PROC_REAP_KILL
request. - [
EINVAL
] - The
PROC_REAP_RELEASE
request was issued by the init(8) process. - [
EBUSY
] - The
PROC_REAP_ACQUIRE
request was issued by a process that had already acquired reaper status and has not yet released it. - [
EBUSY
] - The
PROC_TRACE_CTL
request was issued for a process already being traced. - [
EPERM
] - The
PROC_TRACE_CTL
request to re-enable tracing of the process (PROC_TRACE_CTL_ENABLE
), or to disable persistence ofPROC_TRACE_CTL_DISABLE
on execve(2) was issued for a non-current process. - [
EINVAL
] - The value of the integer data parameter for the
PROC_TRACE_CTL
orPROC_TRAPCAP_CTL
request is invalid. - [
EINVAL
] - The
PROC_PDEATHSIG_CTL
orPROC_PDEATHSIG_STATUS
request referenced an unsupported id, idtype or invalid signal number.
SEE ALSO¶
dtrace(1), cap_enter(2), kill(2), ktrace(2), ptrace(2), wait(2), capsicum(4), hwpmc(4), init(8)
HISTORY¶
The procctl
() function appeared in
FreeBSD 10.0.
The reaper facility is based on a similar feature of Linux and DragonflyBSD, and first appeared in FreeBSD 10.2.
The PROC_PDEATHSIG_CTL
facility is based
on the prctl(PR_SET_PDEATHSIG, ...) feature of Linux, and first appeared in
FreeBSD 11.2.
The ASLR support was added to system for the checklists compliance in FreeBSD 13.0.
June 13, 2020 | Debian |