64efd184ed
Previously we were setting GRKERNSEC_PROC_USER y, which was a little bit too strict. It doesn't allow a special group (e.g. the grsecurity group users) to access /proc information - this requires GRKERNSEC_PROC_USERGROUP y, and the two are mutually exclusive. This was also not in line with the default automatic grsecurity configuration - it actually defaults to USERGROUP (although it has a default GID of 1001 instead of ours), not USER. This introduces a new option restrictProcWithGroup - enabled by default - which turns on GRKERNSEC_PROC_USERGROUP instead. It also turns off restrictProc by default and makes sure both cannot be enabled. Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com> |
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config | ||
hardware | ||
installer | ||
misc | ||
profiles | ||
programs | ||
security | ||
services | ||
system | ||
tasks | ||
testing | ||
virtualisation | ||
module-list.nix | ||
rename.nix |