13.6 Security Guards
(security-guard? v) → boolean? |
v : any/c |
A security guard provides a set of access-checking procedures to be called when a thread initiates access of a file, directory, or network connection through a primitive procedure. For example, when a thread calls open-input-file, the thread’s current security guard is consulted to check whether the thread is allowed read access to the file. If access is granted, the thread receives a port that it may use indefinitely, regardless of changes to the security guard (although the port’s custodian could shut down the port; see Custodians).
A thread’s current security guard is determined by the current-security-guard parameter. Every security guard has a parent, and a parent’s access procedures are called whenever a child’s access procedures are called. Thus, a thread cannot increase its own access arbitrarily by installing a new guard. The initial security guard enforces no access restrictions other than those enforced by the host platform.
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parent : security-guard? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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link-guard : (or/c (symbol? path? path? . -> . any) #f) = #f |
The file-guard procedure must accept three arguments:
a symbol for the primitive procedure that triggered the access check, which is useful for raising an exception to deny access.
a path (see Paths) or #f for pathless queries, such as (current-directory), (filesystem-root-list), and (find-system-path symbol). A path provided to file-guard is not expanded or otherwise normalized before checking access; it may be a relative path, for example.
a list containing one or more of the following symbols:
The 'exists symbol is never combined with other symbols in the last argument to file-guard, but any other combination is possible. When the second argument to file-guard is #f, the last argument always contains only 'exists.
The network-guard procedure must accept four arguments:
a symbol for the primitive operation that triggered the access check, which is useful for raising an exception to deny access.
an immutable string representing the target hostname for a client connection or the accepting hostname for a listening server; #f for a listening server or UDP socket that accepts connections at all of the host’s address; or #f an unbound UDP socket.
an exact integer between 1 and 65535 (inclusive) representing the port number, or #f for an unbound UDP socket. In the case of a client connection, the port number is the target port on the server. For a listening server, the port number is the local port number.
a symbol, either 'client or 'server, indicating whether the check is for the creation of a client connection or a listening server. The opening of an unbound UDP socket is identified as a 'client connection; explicitly binding the socket is identified as a 'server action.
The link-guard argument can be #f or a procedure of three arguments:
a symbol for the primitive procedure that triggered the access check, which is useful for raising an exception to deny access.
a complete path (see Paths) representing the file to create as link.
a path representing the content of the link, which may be relative the second-argument path; this path is not expanded or otherwise normalized before checking access.
If link-guard is #f, then a default procedure is used that always raises exn:fail.
The return value of file-guard, network-guard, or link-guard is ignored. To deny access, the procedure must raise an exception or otherwise escape from the context of the primitive call. If the procedure returns, the parent’s corresponding procedure is called on the same inputs, and so on up the chain of security guards.
The file-guard, network-guard, and link-guard procedures are invoked in the thread that called the access-checked primitive. Breaks may or may not be enabled (see Breaks). Full continuation jumps are blocked going into or out of the file-guard or network-guard call (see Prompts, Delimited Continuations, and Barriers).
(current-security-guard) → security-guard? |
(current-security-guard guard) → void? |
guard : security-guard? |