Commit graph

2 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Liav A
633006926f Kernel: Make the Jails' internal design a lot more sane
This is done with 2 major steps:
1. Remove JailManagement singleton and use a structure that resembles
    what we have with the Process object. This is required later for the
    second step in this commit, but on its own, is a major change that
    removes this clunky singleton that had no real usage by itself.
2. Use IntrusiveLists to keep references to Process objects in the same
    Jail so it will be much more straightforward to iterate on this kind
    of objects when needed. Previously we locked the entire Process list
    and we did a simple pointer comparison to check if the checked
    Process we iterate on is in the same Jail or not, which required
    taking multiple Spinlocks in a very clumsy and heavyweight way.
2023-03-12 10:21:59 -06:00
Liav A
5e062414c1 Kernel: Add support for jails
Our implementation for Jails resembles much of how FreeBSD jails are
working - it's essentially only a matter of using a RefPtr in the
Process class to a Jail object. Then, when we iterate over all processes
in various cases, we could ensure if either the current process is in
jail and therefore should be restricted what is visible in terms of
PID isolation, and also to be able to expose metadata about Jails in
/sys/kernel/jails node (which does not reveal anything to a process
which is in jail).

A lifetime model for the Jail object is currently plain simple - there's
simpy no way to manually delete a Jail object once it was created. Such
feature should be carefully designed to allow safe destruction of a Jail
without the possibility of releasing a process which is in Jail from the
actual jail. Each process which is attached into a Jail cannot leave it
until the end of a Process (i.e. when finalizing a Process). All jails
are kept being referenced in the JailManagement. When a last attached
process is finalized, the Jail is automatically destroyed.
2022-11-05 18:00:58 -06:00