Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Craig Small
8c81808de0 pgrep: Use only --signal option for signal
When pgrep was used to match on signal, it makes sense to use
the same signal parsing code as pkill. Unfortunately the
"find the signal" part is a little too enthusaistic about what a
signal is, meaning

pgrep -u -42

fails because the signal becomes "42" and then there is no UID.

This is a bit sad for pkill but has been that way for a long
time. For pgrep this is new so now only the long form
pgrep --signal <X>
will work.

In addition, when using --signal if pgrep/pkill couldn't work
out what the signal was it just silently ignored it. It now
complains and aborts.

References:
 https://bugs.debian.org/1031765
 commit 866abacf88
2023-03-01 17:35:14 +11:00
Craig Small
c1edb15259 misc: Update copyright of remaining man pages
Giving them all a standard format and using either the existing
header or the git logs to put the relevant authors in.
2023-02-08 18:28:55 +11:00
Craig Small
aa461df0a7 docs: Minor manpage fixes
References:
 procps-ng/procps#230
2023-01-16 18:29:50 +11:00
Chris Down
866abacf88 pgrep: Support matching on the presence of a userspace signal handler
In production we've had several incidents over the years where a process
has a signal handler registered for SIGHUP or one of the SIGUSR signals
which can be used to signal a request to reload configs, rotate log
files, and the like. While this may seem harmless enough, what we've
seen happen repeatedly is something like the following:

1. A process is using SIGHUP/SIGUSR[12] to request some
   application-handled state change -- reloading configs, rotating a log
   file, etc;
2. This kind of request is deprecated and removed, so the signal handler
   is removed. However, a site where the signal might be sent from is
   missed (often logrotate or a service manager);
3. Because the default disposition of these signals is terminal, sooner
   or later these applications are going to be sent SIGHUP or similar
   and end up unexpectedly killed.

I know for a fact that we're not the only organisation experiencing
this: in general, signal use is pretty tricky to reason about and safely
remove because of the fairly aggressive SIG_DFL behaviour for some
common signals, especially for SIGHUP which has a particularly ambiguous
meaning. Especially in a large, highly interconnected codebase,
reasoning about signal interactions between system configuration and
applications can be highly complex, and it's inevitable that on occasion
a callsite will be missed.

In some cases the right call to avoid this will be to migrate services
towards other forms of IPC for this purpose, but inevitably there will
be some services which must continue using signals, so we need a safe
way to support them.

This patch adds support for the -H/--require-handler flag, which matches
on processes with a userspace handler present for the signal being sent.

With this flag we can enforce that all SIGHUP reload cases and SIGUSR
equivalents use --require-handler. This effectively mitigates the case
we've seen time and time again where SIGHUP is used to rotate log files
or reload configs, but the sending site is mistakenly left present after
the removal of signal handler, resulting in unintended termination of
the process.

Signed-off-by: Chris Down <chris@chrisdown.name>
2023-01-15 04:05:40 +00:00
Craig Small
8eee6cc48c misc: Update NEWS/man date for pgrep -A
Added NEWS item
Update pgrep.1 date

References:
 commit 4b44ab98c1
2022-08-31 17:43:17 +10:00
Chris Down
4b44ab98c1 pgrep: Add support for ignoring ancestors with -A/--ignore-ancestors
pgrep and friends naturally filter their own processes from their
matches. The same issue can occur when elevating with tools like sudo or
doas, where the elevating shim layers linger as a parent and are
returned in the results. For example:

    % sudo pkill -9 -cf someelevatedcmdline
    1
    zsh: killed     sudo pkill -9 -cf someelevatedcmdline

This is a situation we've actually seen in production, where some poor
soul changes how permission management works (for example with Linux's
hidepid option), needs to elevate a pgrep or pkill call, and now ends up
with more than they bargained for. Even after the issue is noticed,
resolving it requires reinventing some of the pgrep logic, which is
unfortunate.

This commit adds the -A/--ignore-ancestors option which excludes pgrep's
ancestors from the results:

    % sudo ./pkill -9 -Acf someelevatedcmdline
    0

We looks at multiple layers of the process hierarchy because, while
things like sudo only have one layer of shimming, some mechanisms (like
those found in a typical container manager like those found in Docker or
Kubernetes) may have many more.

Signed-off-by: Chris Down <chris@chrisdown.name>
2022-08-31 07:37:10 +00:00
Craig Small
8e889ae682 build-sys: Rearrange the manual pages
All man pages are found in ./man
man-po -> po-man

References:
 https://www.freelists.org/post/procps/Next-for-newlib,3

Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@dropbear.xyz>
2022-08-29 18:07:43 +10:00