Explanation for newbies: setuid is a special permission bit that makes an executable run with the permissions of its owner rather than the user executing it. This is often used to let a user run a specific program as root without having sudo access.

If this sounds like a security nightmare, that’s because it is.

In linux, setuid is slowly being phased out by Capabilities. An example of this is the ping command which used to need setuid in order to create raw sockets, but now just needs the cap_net_raw capability. More info: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/382771/why-does-ping-need-setuid-permission. Nevertheless, many linux distros still ship with setuid executables, for example passwd from the shadow-utils package.

  • @unhrpetby@sh.itjust.works
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    8 hours ago

    The nosuid mount option disables this behavior per mount. Just be sure you don’t use suid binaries.

    Example: sudo or doas. I replaced those with switching to a tty with an already open root account on startup. Generally faster and (for me) more secure (you need physical access to get to the tty).

      • @unhrpetby@sh.itjust.works
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        4 minutes ago

        All I do is have agetty --autologin root tty2 linux run as a service. It launches on startup, and I just hit CTRL + ALT + F2 if I ever need a root shell.

        All its doing is just auto logging-in as root on TTY2.

      • @unhrpetby@sh.itjust.works
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        31 day ago

        From what I’ve read, no. Though it doesn’t solve the fundamental problem of a root process handling untrusted input from a regular user.

        The TTY method is IMO better as it ties privileges to a piece of physical hardware, bypassing the complexities of userspace elevation of privileges.