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We have an existing project using Eventlet module.

There is a server handling client request using green threads. All the requests are handled by a single user 'User A'

I now need to change this to do a setfsuid/setfsgid on the threads so that the underlying files are all created with the ownership of the requesting user only.

I understand that I need setid Linux capability to make the setfsid calls.

But will setfsid calls work with green threads like they do with the native threads ?

By reading through various texts over the net regarding 'green threads', I couldn't gather much :(

2 Answers 2

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All green threads are executed from one OS thread. To kernel it looks like your whole Python program only has one thread.

If you need separate filesystem ids for each request, start a separate OS thread, call setfsuid() in it and execute required filesystem calls in it.

threading = eventlet.patcher.original('threading')
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    Which also would mean only one user can be served at any given time.
    – BlackJack
    Jan 19, 2016 at 15:32
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    @mittal because you have only one OS thread but with several users at a time there are several green threads using the same UID set for that single OS thread.
    – BlackJack
    Jan 20, 2016 at 14:21
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    @mittal If you end up starting an OS thread for each green thread then green threads don't work for your purpose.
    – BlackJack
    Jan 20, 2016 at 14:26
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    @mittal the patcher.original() is used to reliably get original threading module even if you used eventlet monkey patching to replace standard library modules with greened versions. You can still handle network in green threads, but access filesystem from OS threads. Indeed this means that green threads don't work for your purpose.
    – temoto
    Jan 20, 2016 at 14:58
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    It's possible, but then you have OS threads as bottleneck, so the only reason to have green threads in first place is if you have other requests that don't require setfsuid. If all requests require setfsuid, then having green threads and OS threads only adds cognitive load at no profit.
    – temoto
    Jan 25, 2016 at 12:37
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The kernel is ignorant to green threads. If a process has a uid and gid, it is used by all green threads running as part of this process.

At a first glance, what you are seeking to do is equivalent to having a privileged process do a setuid prior to opening/creating a file, than doing a second setuid to open/create a second file etc. all to ensure that each file has the right ownership. I never tried such a scheme, but it sounds very very wrong. It is also extremely bad security wise. You are running at high privileges and may find yourself processing user X's data while having user Y's uid.

At a second glance, green threads are cooperative, meaning that under the hoods, some of the operations you do will yield. Following such yield, you may change to a different green thread that will change the uid again...

Bottom line, forget about changing the uid and gid of the green thread - there is no such thing. Create the file with whatever ID you have and chown to the right id after. Find a way to do that without running as root for security reasons.

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