Restricted shell (original) (raw)

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The restricted shell is a Unix shell that restricts some of the capabilities available to an interactive user session, or to a shell script, running within it. It is intended to provide an additional layer of security, but is insufficient to allow execution of entirely untrusted software. A restricted mode operation is found in the original Bourne shell[1] and its later counterpart Bash,[2] and in the KornShell.[3] In some cases a restricted shell is used in conjunction with a chroot jail, in a further attempt to limit access to the system as a whole.

The restricted mode of the Bourne shell sh, and its POSIX workalikes, is used when the interpreter is invoked in one of the following ways:

The restricted mode of Bash is used when Bash is invoked in one of the following ways:

Similarly KornShell's restricted mode is produced by invoking it thus:

For some systems (e.g., CentOS), the invocation through rbash is not enabled by default, and the user obtains a command not found error if invoked directly, or a login failure if the /etc/passwd file indicates /bin/rbash as the user's shell.

It suffices to create a link named rbash pointing directly to bash. Though this invokes Bash directly, without the -r or --restricted options, Bash does recognize that it was invoked through rbash and it does come up as a restricted shell.

This can be accomplished with the following simple commands (executed as root, either logged in as user root, or using sudo):

root@host:~# cd /bin root@host:/bin# ln bash rbash

The following operations are not permitted in a restricted shell:

Bash adds further restrictions, including:[2]

Restrictions in the restricted KornShell are much the same as those in the restricted Bourne shell.[4]

Weaknesses of a restricted shell

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The restricted shell is not secure. A user can break out of the restricted environment by running a program that features a shell function. The following is an example of the shell function in vi being used to escape from the restricted shell:

:set shell=/bin/sh :shell

Or by simply starting a new unrestricted shell, if it is in the PATH, as demonstrated here:

user@host:$ rbash user@host:$ cd / rbash: cd: restricted user@host:$ bash user@host:$ cd / user@host:/$

Beyond the restricted modes of usual shells, specialized restricted shell programs include:

  1. ^ "POSIX sh specification". Archived from the original on 2014-12-21. Retrieved 2010-10-04.
  2. ^ a b GNU Bash manual
  3. ^ ksh manual, Solaris (SunOS 5.10) manual page, Oracle Inc.
  4. ^ ksh(1) manual page, IBM AIX documentation set
  5. ^ Costales, Bryan; Assmann, Claus; Jansen, George; Shapiro, Gregory Neil (2007). Sendmail. Oreilly Series (4 ed.). O'Reilly Media, Inc. p. 379. ISBN 9780596510299. Retrieved 2012-08-02. As an aid in preventing [...] attacks, V8.1 sendmail first offered the smrsh (sendmail restricted shell) program.