Penguin

CAPGET

CAPGET


NAME

capget, capset - set/get process capabilities

SYNOPSIS

#undef _POSIX_SOURCE

  1. include <sys/capability.h>

int capget(cap_user_header_t header, cap_user_data_t data); int capset(cap_user_header_t header, const cap_user_data_t data);

DESCRIPTION

As of Linux 2.2, the power of the superuser (root) has been partitioned into a set of discrete capabilities. Every process has a set of effective capabilities identifying which capabilities (if any) it may currently exercise. Every process also has a set of inheritable capabilities that may be passed through an execve(2) and a set of permitted capabilites that it can make effective or inheritable.

These two functions are the raw kernel interface for getting and setting capabilities. Not only are these system calls specific to Linux, but the kernel API is likely to change and use of these functions (in particular the format of the cap_user_*_t types) is subject to change with each kernel revision.

The portable interfaces are cap_set_proc(3) and cap_get_proc(3); if possible you should use those interfaces in applications. If you wish to use the Linux extensions in applications, you should use the easier-to-use interfaces capsetp(3)? and capgetp(3)?.

RETURN VALUE

On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned, and errno is set appropriately.

ERRORS

EINVAL
One of the arguments was invalid.
EPERM
An attempt was made to add a capability to the Permitted set, or to set a capability in the Effective or Inheritable sets that is not in the Permitted set.

FURTHER INFORMATION

The portable interface to the capability querying and setting functions is provided by the libcap library and is available from here: ftp://linux.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/security/linux-privs


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