Searched hist:168396 (Results 1 - 4 of 4) sorted by relevance
/freebsd-11-stable/usr.sbin/jail/ | ||
H A D | jail.8 | diff 168396 Thu Apr 05 19:03:05 MDT 2007 pjd Add security.jail.mount_allowed sysctl, which allows to mount and unmount jail-friendly file systems from within a jail. Precisely it grants PRIV_VFS_MOUNT, PRIV_VFS_UNMOUNT and PRIV_VFS_MOUNT_NONUSER privileges for a jailed super-user. It is turned off by default. A jail-friendly file system is a file system which driver registers itself with VFCF_JAIL flag via VFS_SET(9) API. The lsvfs(1) command can be used to see which file systems are jail-friendly ones. There currently no jail-friendly file systems, ZFS will be the first one. In the future we may consider marking file systems like nullfs as jail-friendly. Reviewed by: rwatson |
/freebsd-11-stable/sys/kern/ | ||
H A D | kern_jail.c | diff 168396 Thu Apr 05 19:03:05 MDT 2007 pjd Add security.jail.mount_allowed sysctl, which allows to mount and unmount jail-friendly file systems from within a jail. Precisely it grants PRIV_VFS_MOUNT, PRIV_VFS_UNMOUNT and PRIV_VFS_MOUNT_NONUSER privileges for a jailed super-user. It is turned off by default. A jail-friendly file system is a file system which driver registers itself with VFCF_JAIL flag via VFS_SET(9) API. The lsvfs(1) command can be used to see which file systems are jail-friendly ones. There currently no jail-friendly file systems, ZFS will be the first one. In the future we may consider marking file systems like nullfs as jail-friendly. Reviewed by: rwatson |
H A D | vfs_mount.c | diff 168396 Thu Apr 05 19:03:05 MDT 2007 pjd Add security.jail.mount_allowed sysctl, which allows to mount and unmount jail-friendly file systems from within a jail. Precisely it grants PRIV_VFS_MOUNT, PRIV_VFS_UNMOUNT and PRIV_VFS_MOUNT_NONUSER privileges for a jailed super-user. It is turned off by default. A jail-friendly file system is a file system which driver registers itself with VFCF_JAIL flag via VFS_SET(9) API. The lsvfs(1) command can be used to see which file systems are jail-friendly ones. There currently no jail-friendly file systems, ZFS will be the first one. In the future we may consider marking file systems like nullfs as jail-friendly. Reviewed by: rwatson |
/freebsd-11-stable/sys/sys/ | ||
H A D | mount.h | diff 168396 Thu Apr 05 19:03:05 MDT 2007 pjd Add security.jail.mount_allowed sysctl, which allows to mount and unmount jail-friendly file systems from within a jail. Precisely it grants PRIV_VFS_MOUNT, PRIV_VFS_UNMOUNT and PRIV_VFS_MOUNT_NONUSER privileges for a jailed super-user. It is turned off by default. A jail-friendly file system is a file system which driver registers itself with VFCF_JAIL flag via VFS_SET(9) API. The lsvfs(1) command can be used to see which file systems are jail-friendly ones. There currently no jail-friendly file systems, ZFS will be the first one. In the future we may consider marking file systems like nullfs as jail-friendly. Reviewed by: rwatson |
Completed in 203 milliseconds