Current File : //check_permissions.py |
"""Verifies certbot-auto cannot be modified by unprivileged users.
This script takes the path to certbot-auto as its only command line
argument. It then checks that the file can only be modified by uid/gid
< 1000 and if other users can modify the file, it prints a warning with
a suggestion on how to solve the problem.
Permissions on symlinks in the absolute path of certbot-auto are ignored
and only the canonical path to certbot-auto is checked. There could be
permissions problems due to the symlinks that are unreported by this
script, however, issues like this were not caused by our documentation
and are ignored for the sake of simplicity.
All warnings are printed to stdout rather than stderr so all stderr
output from this script can be suppressed to avoid printing messages if
this script fails for some reason.
"""
from __future__ import print_function
import os
import stat
import sys
FORUM_POST_URL = 'https://community.letsencrypt.org/t/certbot-auto-deployment-best-practices/91979/'
def has_safe_permissions(path):
"""Returns True if the given path has secure permissions.
The permissions are considered safe if the file is only writable by
uid/gid < 1000.
The reason we allow more IDs than 0 is because on some systems such
as Debian, system users/groups other than uid/gid 0 are used for the
path we recommend in our instructions which is /usr/local/bin. 1000
was chosen because on Debian 0-999 is reserved for system IDs[1] and
on RHEL either 0-499 or 0-999 is reserved depending on the
version[2][3]. Due to these differences across different OSes, this
detection isn't perfect so we only determine permissions are
insecure when we can be reasonably confident there is a problem
regardless of the underlying OS.
[1] https://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy/ch-opersys.html#uid-and-gid-classes
[2] https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/6/html/deployment_guide/ch-managing_users_and_groups
[3] https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/7/html/system_administrators_guide/ch-managing_users_and_groups
:param str path: filesystem path to check
:returns: True if the path has secure permissions, otherwise, False
:rtype: bool
"""
# os.stat follows symlinks before obtaining information about a file.
stat_result = os.stat(path)
if stat_result.st_mode & stat.S_IWOTH:
return False
if stat_result.st_mode & stat.S_IWGRP and stat_result.st_gid >= 1000:
return False
if stat_result.st_mode & stat.S_IWUSR and stat_result.st_uid >= 1000:
return False
return True
def main(certbot_auto_path):
current_path = os.path.realpath(certbot_auto_path)
last_path = None
permissions_ok = True
# This loop makes use of the fact that os.path.dirname('/') == '/'.
while current_path != last_path and permissions_ok:
permissions_ok = has_safe_permissions(current_path)
last_path = current_path
current_path = os.path.dirname(current_path)
if not permissions_ok:
print('{0} has insecure permissions!'.format(certbot_auto_path))
print('To learn how to fix them, visit {0}'.format(FORUM_POST_URL))
if __name__ == '__main__':
main(sys.argv[1])