Close the selabel handle to update the file_context. This means that the
file_context will be remmaped and used by selabel_lookup() to return
the appropriate context to label the home folder.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1993081
Signed-off-by: Iker Pedrosa <ipedrosa@redhat.com>
Create the home and mail folders after the SELinux user has been set for
the added user. This will allow the folders to be created with the
SELinux user label.
Signed-off-by: Iker Pedrosa <ipedrosa@redhat.com>
The buggy code was introduced nearly 5 years ago at the
commit 08fd4b69e8. The
desired behavior is that SIGKILL will be sent to the
child if it does not exit within 2 seconds after it
receives SIGTERM. However, SIGALRM is masked while
waiting for the child so it cannot wake the program
up after 2 seconds to send SIGKILL.
An example shows the buggy behavior, which exists in
Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (with login 1:4.5-1ubuntu2).
```bash
user1@localhost:~$ su user2 -c '
_term() {
echo SIGTERM received
}
trap _term TERM
while true; do
sleep 1
echo still alive
done'
Password:
still alive
Session terminated, terminating shell...Terminated
SIGTERM received
still alive
still alive
still alive
still alive
```
(SIGTERM is sent in another user1's terminal by
executing `killall su`.)
Here is the desired behavior, which shows what the
commit fixes.
```bash
user1@localhost:~$ su user2 -c '
_term() {
echo SIGTERM received
}
trap _term TERM
while true; do
sleep 1
echo still alive
done'
Password:
still alive
Session terminated, terminating shell...Terminated
SIGTERM received
still alive
still alive
...killed.
user1@localhost:~$ echo $?
255
```
In some circumstances I want the default behaviour of useradd to
not add user entries to the lastlog and faillog databases. Allowing
this options behaviour to be controlled by the config file
/etc/default/useradd.
`sgent` is only initialized in `get_group()` if `is_shadowgrp` is true.
So we should also only attempt to free it if this is actually the case.
Can otherwise lead to:
```
free() double free detected in tcache 2 (gpasswd)
```
The GitHub and Debian permanently moved to HTTPS URLs and redirect
there. The Gentoo URL does not redirect to HTTPS, but still use it to
address certain kinds of attacks. Lastly, the NetBSD URL is only
available using HTTP.
subuid_count won't get used by usr_update(), but since we're passing it
as an argument we have to make sure it's always defined. So just define
it as pre-set to 0.
Closes#402
Signed-off-by: Serge Hallyn <serge@hallyn.com>
xml2po is deprecated. We've previously replaced xml2po with
itstool in man/generate_translations.mak, but there was still
an instance of it that only is exercised for 'make dist'.
Update that one. Now 'make dist' succeeds on a ubuntu focal
or newer host where xml2po is not available.
Signed-off-by: Serge Hallyn <serge@hallyn.com>
If SHA_CRYPT_MIN_ROUNDS and SHA_CRYPT_MAX_ROUNDS are both unspecified,
use SHA_ROUNDS_DEFAULT.
Previously, the code fell through, calling shadow_random(-1, -1). This
ultimately set rounds = (unsigned long) -1, which ends up being a very
large number! This then got capped to SHA_ROUNDS_MAX later in the
function.
The new behavior matches BCRYPT_get_salt_rounds().
Bug: https://bugs.gentoo.org/808195
Fixes: https://github.com/shadow-maint/shadow/issues/393
useradd generates an empty subid range when adding a new user. This is
caused because there are two variables, one local and the other one
global, that have a very similar name and they are used indistinctly in
the code. The local variable loads the SUB_*ID_COUNT configuration from
the login.defs file, while the global variable, which holds a value of
0, is used to generate the subid range. Causing the empty subid range
problem.
I've merged the two variables in the local one and removed the global
variable. I prefer to do it this way to reduce the scope of it but I'm
open to doing it the other way round.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1990653
Signed-off-by: Iker Pedrosa <ipedrosa@redhat.com>
When the -S and -a options are used for passwd to list the status
of all passwords, there is a chance the pw_passwd field of struct
passwd will be NULL. This can be due to 'files compat' being set
for passwd in /etc/nsswitch.conf and the usage of some features
not available in the 'files' mode (e.g. a plus sign at the start
of a line).
Example:
germ161:~ # grep passwd /etc/nsswitch.conf
passwd: files compat
germ161:~ # rpm -qa shadow
shadow-4.2.1-34.20.x86_64
germ161:~ # grep passwd /etc/nsswitch.conf
passwd: files compat
germ161:~ # grep + /etc/passwd
+@nisgroup
germ161:~ # passwd -S -a > /dev/null
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
With this commit:
germ161:~ # passwd -S -a > /dev/null
passwd: malformed password data obtained for user +@nisgroup
The only way of removing a group from the supplementary list is to use
-G option, and list all groups that the user is a member of except for
the one that wants to be removed. The problem lies when there's a user
that contains both local and remote groups, and the group to be removed
is a local one. As we need to include the remote group with -G option
the command will fail.
This reverts commit 140510de9d. This way,
it would be possible to remove the remote groups from the supplementary
list.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1967641
Resolves: https://github.com/shadow-maint/shadow/issues/338
Signed-off-by: Iker Pedrosa <ipedrosa@redhat.com>
Fixes a link failure:
../libsubid/.libs/libsubid.so: undefined reference to `FascistCheck'
Bug: https://bugs.gentoo.org/806124
Signed-off-by: Mike Gilbert <floppym@gentoo.org>
new*idmap has a dependency with libeconf since commit
c464ec5570. I'm just adding it to the
Makefile to be able to compile in distributions that include libeconf.
Signed-off-by: Iker Pedrosa <ipedrosa@redhat.com>
Since bbf4b79, we stopped shipping /etc/default/useradd, and therefore
install of shadow does not auto-create /etc/default. So when useradd
tries to save a new default, it needs to create the directory.
Closes#390.
Signed-off-by: Serge Hallyn <serge@hallyn.com>
libsubid's Makefile.am was always setting enable-shared in its LDFLAGS.
Do that only if not building static.
Closes#387
Signed-off-by: Serge Hallyn <shallyn@cisco.com>
There's a better way to do this, and I hope to clean that up,
but this fixes out of tree builds for me right now.
Closes#386
Signed-off-by: Serge Hallyn <serge@hallyn.com>