nfsd4: permit read opens of executable-only files
commit a043226bc140a2c1dde162246d68a67e5043e6b2 upstream.
A client that wants to execute a file must be able to read it. Read
opens over nfs are therefore implicitly allowed for executable files
even when those files are not readable.
NFSv2/v3 get this right by using a passed-in NFSD_MAY_OWNER_OVERRIDE on
read requests, but NFSv4 has gotten this wrong ever since
dc730e173785e29b297aa605786c94adaffe2544 "nfsd4: fix owner-override on
open", when we realized that the file owner shouldn't override
permissions on non-reclaim NFSv4 opens.
So we can't use NFSD_MAY_OWNER_OVERRIDE to tell nfsd_permission to allow
reads of executable files.
So, do the same thing we do whenever we encounter another weird NFS
permission nit: define yet another NFSD_MAY_* flag.
The industry's future standardization on 128-bit processors will be
motivated primarily by the need for integers with enough bits for all
the NFSD_MAY_* flags.
Reported-by: Leonardo Borda <leonardoborda@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
diff --git a/fs/nfsd/vfs.c b/fs/nfsd/vfs.c
index fd0acca..acf88ae 100644
--- a/fs/nfsd/vfs.c
+++ b/fs/nfsd/vfs.c
@@ -2114,7 +2114,8 @@
/* Allow read access to binaries even when mode 111 */
if (err == -EACCES && S_ISREG(inode->i_mode) &&
- acc == (NFSD_MAY_READ | NFSD_MAY_OWNER_OVERRIDE))
+ (acc == (NFSD_MAY_READ | NFSD_MAY_OWNER_OVERRIDE) ||
+ acc == (NFSD_MAY_READ | NFSD_MAY_READ_IF_EXEC)))
err = inode_permission(inode, MAY_EXEC);
return err? nfserrno(err) : 0;