Re: Bypassing Directory Ownership Check in PostgreSQL 16.6 with Secure z/OS NFS (AT-TLS)
От | Tom Lane |
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Тема | Re: Bypassing Directory Ownership Check in PostgreSQL 16.6 with Secure z/OS NFS (AT-TLS) |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 708241.1752517845@sss.pgh.pa.us обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Bypassing Directory Ownership Check in PostgreSQL 16.6 with Secure z/OS NFS (AT-TLS) ("Peter J. Holzer" <hjp-pgsql@hjp.at>) |
Ответы |
Re: Bypassing Directory Ownership Check in PostgreSQL 16.6 with Secure z/OS NFS (AT-TLS)
Re: Bypassing Directory Ownership Check in PostgreSQL 16.6 with Secure z/OS NFS (AT-TLS) |
Список | pgsql-general |
"Peter J. Holzer" <hjp-pgsql@hjp.at> writes: > On 2025-07-14 10:07:20 -0400, Tom Lane wrote: >> That is primarily for safety reasons: if for some reason the >> filesystem gets dismounted, or hasn't come on-line yet during >> a reboot, you do not want Postgres to be able to write on the >> underlying mount-point directory. > Be careful: There are two different directorys involved in a mount > point. The one in the parent filesystem and the one in the mounted file > system. True, and the safety requirement really is only that the parent filesystem's mount-point directory not be writable by us. But normal practice is that both directories are root-owned, or at least owned by highly privileged users. (I have a vague idea that there are system-level security hazards, not specific to Postgres, if mount-point directories are publicly writable. Don't feel like researching that though.) regards, tom lane
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