World: r3wp
[!REBOL3]
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BrianH 10-Apr-2011 [7865] | Technically, the #[map! []] syntax is not a constructor itself, it merely calls a constructor :) |
Andreas 10-Apr-2011 [7866] | The security issue is to not have a file that is done automatically be writeable using the same permissions that the scripts are run under. sorry, i don't get that. could you try reformulate the problem? |
Ladislav 10-Apr-2011 [7867x2] | REBOL programmers can't define constructors, but they are still constructors - technically not, since they are not definable |
The definability is a property that is used to explain what a constructor is. | |
BrianH 10-Apr-2011 [7869] | Being defineable doesn't make it a constructor. Constructing something does. |
Ladislav 10-Apr-2011 [7870x2] | OK, my opinion: The user does neither "see" nor is able to define any constructors. What you are referring to are some syntactic constructs, that are not constructors at all. |
The difference between #[map! [...]] and a constructor is roughly the same as the difference between a constructor, and a list of arguments given to the constructor, when a constructor is called - it is a totally different thing. | |
BrianH 10-Apr-2011 [7872] | I am talking about the code that is called when those syntactic constructs are loaded, which is type-specific and constructs a value of that type. REBOL types have 3 builtin constructors (#[type ...], MAKE and TO). The user can't create new constructors because the user can't create new types. |
Ladislav 10-Apr-2011 [7873] | For me, it is just a mess, the "serialized constructors" don't exist at all. |
BrianH 10-Apr-2011 [7874] | And #1857 indicates that the #[type ...] constructors are seperate code from TRANSCODE, and called by it. |
Ladislav 10-Apr-2011 [7875] | ...and it surely does not make sense to call #[map! [...]] a "serialized constructor" - it is just a syntactic "construct" used as data by something. |
BrianH 10-Apr-2011 [7876] | Quoting myself from above: "Technically, the #[map! []] syntax is not a constructor itself, it merely calls a constructor :)" |
Ladislav 10-Apr-2011 [7877x2] | It clearly does not correspond to the definition of the "constructor" |
That is why I am not a fan of using such a terminological mess | |
BrianH 10-Apr-2011 [7879x2] | But using them counts (indirectly) as using constructors. |
I agree that it is a terminological mess, which is why I was careful with my phrasing. | |
Ladislav 10-Apr-2011 [7881] | I do not know whether I should repeat my opinion or not, but, here goes: #[map! [...]] and similar syntaxes are not "constructors" in the standard sense of the word. That is why I do not like seeing such phrases in documentation or elsewhere. |
BrianH 10-Apr-2011 [7882x2] | I agree that it is a terminological mess |
Andreas, in the OSes with which I am familiar, you can't set a file to read-only and then count on that file staying read-only unless the user is asked for permission to change that setting. In REBOL you can. The security of a DOable %user.r depends on it not being writeable between when REBOL shuts down and when it starts up again. So that means using OS permissions to guard it, and those are based on user capabilities, not enough protection. The situation is different with %rebol.r since we only load it from the same location as the R3 executable, and that location can be protected with user permissions; this is why we can still DO %rebol.r in R3. | |
Andreas 10-Apr-2011 [7884] | The security of a DOable %user.r depends on it not being writeable between when REBOL shuts down and when it starts up again. Why? |
Ladislav 10-Apr-2011 [7885] | I do not agree with "The security of a DOable %user.r depends on it not being writeable between when REBOL shuts down and when it starts up again." |
BrianH 10-Apr-2011 [7886] | Because you can have a worm spread using a combination of REBOL and code that is not written in REBOL but writes %user.r to do its propagation. |
Ladislav 10-Apr-2011 [7887] | you can have a worm spread using a combination of REBOL and code that is not written in REBOL but writes %user.r to do its propagation - yes, you can, but when you run a worm like that, then you are insecure anyway, since the worm could overwrite even your rebol.exe file. |
Andreas 10-Apr-2011 [7888] | Sure, and such a worm could spread much more easily by writing my .bashrc to do the propagation. |
BrianH 10-Apr-2011 [7889x2] | And I don't really trust .bashrc for that reason, though there might be some OS protection for that file of which I'm not aware. |
Ladislav, you can put the rebol.exe file in a place that only admins can write to; %rebol.r too. You can't do the same with %user.r. | |
Andreas 10-Apr-2011 [7891] | Depends on where you put %user.r and your OS capabilities, I guess. |
BrianH 10-Apr-2011 [7892] | Until %user.r is validated, you can't trust it. We can compare against checksums for other scripts, but there's no safe place to store a checksum for %user.r where it can be updated by the user script, because we don't have a "trusted code" concept in R3. |
Andreas 10-Apr-2011 [7893x3] | Just store %user.r read-only and owned by an admin group and be done with it. |
(And still assuming you have eliminated all other similar security leaks from your regular OS usage.) | |
But thanks for the reformulated explanation. I now understand your concerns. | |
BrianH 10-Apr-2011 [7896x2] | Andreas, by %user.r, I mean a file that would be loaded from the user's home directory or some subdirectory of it (.rebol, %appdata%\REBOL, whatever), and which could be manually writeable by the user when REBOL isn't running (or else its syntax wouldn't need to be human-readable and writeable). If you decide to skip any of those constraints, you can secure it despite the limited security models of most the OSes we support. |
Those are the standard constraints of a preferences file, but there are some programs that make exceptions. | |
Andreas 10-Apr-2011 [7898] | Agreed on all points. But if you don't make the file writable without having to elevate your permissions first, does that not solve your immediate security concern? |
BrianH 10-Apr-2011 [7899x2] | Not all platforms supported by R3 have permissions elevation. We support Windows all the way back to 2000, and permissions elevation wasn't introduced until Vista. Plus, that wouldn't work for multiuser systems where the user doesn't have the admin password (possible because they're the target market of these restrictions). |
Must run now, I'm late already :( | |
Andreas 10-Apr-2011 [7901x3] | So that's a "yes, that would solve the security issue", I gather. |
With a "but (some) OSes can't do this" constraint. | |
See you later. | |
BrianH 10-Apr-2011 [7904] | With a "some OSes won't allow users to edit or save their own preferences, so preferences are half broken on those OSes" constraint, that would solve the issue. |
Ladislav 10-Apr-2011 [7905x2] | I am still having issues with what is considered "secure" here. As far as REBOL goes, for me, it is not unsecure, if it relies on the user environment being secure. (How can any program be secure, if it runs in an insecure environment?) Thus, the only concern I do have as far as REBOL goes is my wish for the REBOL interpreter to not overwrite the %user.r file unless specifically allowed to do that. |
Any additional security is just an illusion for me. | |
Gregg 10-Apr-2011 [7907] | I agree. |
Nicolas 10-Apr-2011 [7908] | It seems that rebol3 is having some real problems. What's this I hear about Carl getting a job? |
Kaj 10-Apr-2011 [7909] | He did |
Nicolas 10-Apr-2011 [7910] | Is he still the benevolent overlord of r3? |
Kaj 10-Apr-2011 [7911] | He's the absent overlord |
Nicolas 10-Apr-2011 [7912] | What's happened to development? |
Kaj 10-Apr-2011 [7913] | Well, he can only spend his time once |
Nicolas 10-Apr-2011 [7914] | Has it stopped? |
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