FreeBSD manual
download PDF document: cap_unwrap.3.pdf
LIBCASPER(3) FreeBSD Library Functions Manual LIBCASPER(3)
NAME
cap_init, cap_wrap, cap_unwrap, cap_sock, cap_clone, cap_close,
cap_limit_get, cap_limit_set, cap_send_nvlist, cap_recv_nvlist,
cap_xfer_nvlist, cap_service_open - library for handling application
capabilities
LIBRARY
Casper Library (libcasper, -lcasper)
SYNOPSIS
#define WITH_CASPER
#include <sys/nv.h>
#include <libcasper.h>
cap_channel_t *
cap_init(void);
cap_channel_t *
cap_wrap(int sock, int flags);
int
cap_unwrap(cap_channel_t *chan, int *flags);
int
cap_sock(const cap_channel_t *chan);
cap_channel_t *
cap_clone(const cap_channel_t *chan);
void
cap_close(cap_channel_t *chan);
int
cap_limit_get(const cap_channel_t *chan, nvlist_t **limitsp);
int
cap_limit_set(const cap_channel_t *chan, nvlist_t *limits);
int
cap_send_nvlist(const cap_channel_t *chan, const nvlist_t *nvl);
nvlist_t *
cap_recv_nvlist(const cap_channel_t *chan);
nvlist_t *
cap_xfer_nvlist(const cap_channel_t *chan, nvlist_t *nvl);
cap_channel_t *
cap_service_open(const cap_channel_t *chan, const char *name);
DESCRIPTION
The libcasper library provides for the control of application
capabilities through the casper process.
An application capability, represented by the cap_channel_t type, is a
communication channel between the caller and the casper daemon or an
context.
The cap_wrap() function creates a cap_channel_t based on the socket
supplied in the call. The function is used when a capability is
inherited through the execve(2) system call, or sent over a unix(4)
domain socket as a file descriptor, and has to be converted into a
cap_channel_t. The flags argument defines the channel behavior. The
supported flags are:
CASPER_NO_UNIQ
The communication between the process and the casper daemon uses no
unique version of nvlist.
The cap_unwrap() function returns the unix(4) domain socket used by the
daemon service, and frees the cap_channel_t structure.
The cap_clone() function returns a clone of the capability passed as its
only argument.
The cap_close() function closes, and frees, the given capability.
The cap_sock() function returns the unix(4) domain socket descriptor
associated with the given capability for use with system calls such as:
kevent(2), poll(2), and select(2).
The cap_limit_get() function stores the current limits of the given
capability in the limitsp argument. If the function returns 0 and NULL
is stored in the limitsp argument, there are no limits set.
The cap_limit_set() function sets limits for the given capability. The
limits are provided as an nvlist(9). The exact format of the limits
depends on the service that the capability represents. cap_limit_set()
frees the limits passed to the call, whether or not the operation
succeeds or fails.
The cap_send_nvlist() function sends the given nvlist(9) over the given
capability. This is a low level interface to communicate with casper
services. It is expected that most services will provide a higher level
API.
The cap_recv_nvlist() function receives the given nvlist(9) over the
given capability.
The cap_xfer_nvlist() function sends the given nvlist(9), destroys it,
and receives a new nvlist(9) in response over the given capability. It
does not matter if the function succeeds or fails, the nvlist(9) given
for sending will always be destroyed before the function returns.
The cap_service_open() function opens the casper service named in the
call using the casper capability obtained via the cap_init() function.
The cap_service_open() function returns a capability that provides access
to the opened service. Casper supports the following services in the
base system:
system.dns provides libc compatible DNS API
system.fileargs
provides an API for opening files specified on a
command line
system.grp provides a getgrent(3) compatible API
The cap_clone(), cap_init(), cap_recv_nvlist(), cap_service_open(),
cap_wrap() and cap_xfer_nvlist() functions return NULL and set the errno
variable on failure.
The cap_limit_get(), cap_limit_set() and cap_send_nvlist() functions
return -1 and set the errno variable on failure.
The cap_close(), cap_sock() and cap_unwrap() functions always succeed.
SEE ALSO
errno(2), execve(2), kevent(2), poll(2), select(2), cap_dns(3),
cap_fileargs(3), cap_grp(3), cap_net(3), cap_netdb(3), cap_pwd(3),
cap_sysctl(3), cap_syslog(3), libcasper_service(3), capsicum(4), unix(4),
nv(9)
HISTORY
The libcasper library first appeared in FreeBSD 10.3.
AUTHORS
The libcasper library was implemented by Pawel Jakub Dawidek
<pawel@dawidek.net> under sponsorship from the FreeBSD Foundation. The
libcasper new architecture was implemented by
Mariusz Zaborski <oshogbo@FreeBSD.org>
FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11 September 6, 2023 FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11