Server IP : 149.255.58.128 / Your IP : 216.73.216.59
System : Linux cloud516.thundercloud.uk 5.14.0-427.26.1.el9_4.x86_64 #1 SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Wed Jul 17 15:51:13 EDT 2024 x86_64
PHP Version : 8.2.28
Disable Function : allow_url_include, apache_child_terminate, apache_setenv, exec, passthru, pcntl_exec, posix_kill, posix_mkfifo, posix_getpwuid, posix_setpgid, posix_setsid, posix_setuid, posix_setgid, posix_seteuid, posix_setegid, posix_uname, proc_close, proc_get_status, proc_open, proc_terminate, shell_exec, show_source, system
cURL : ON | WGET : ON | Sudo : OFF | Pkexec : OFF
Upload Files :
Command :
Current File : /lib/sysctl.d//10-default-yama-scope.conf
# When yama is enabled in the kernel it might be used to filter any user
# space access which requires PTRACE_MODE_ATTACH like ptrace attach, access
# to /proc/PID/{mem,personality,stack,syscall}, and the syscalls
# process_vm_readv and process_vm_writev which are used for interprocess
# services, communication and introspection (like synchronisation, signaling,
# debugging, tracing and profiling) of processes.
#
# Usage of ptrace attach is restricted by normal user permissions. Normal
# unprivileged processes cannot interact through ptrace with processes
# that they cannot send signals to or processes that are running set-uid
# or set-gid.
#
# yama ptrace scope can be used to reduce these permissions even more.
# This should normally not be done because it will break various programs
# relying on the default ptrace security restrictions. But can be used
# if you don't have any other way to separate processes in their own
# domains. A different way to restrict ptrace is to set the selinux
# deny_ptrace boolean. Both mechanisms will break some programs relying
# on the ptrace system call and might force users to elevate their
# privileges to root to do their work.
#
# For more information see Documentation/security/Yama.txt in the kernel
# sources. Which also describes the defaults when CONFIG_SECURITY_YAMA
# is enabled in a kernel build (currently 1 for ptrace_scope).
#
# This runtime kernel parameter can be set to the following options:
# (Note that setting this to anything except zero will break programs!)
#
# 0 - Default attach security permissions.
# 1 - Restricted attach. Only child processes plus normal permissions.
# 2 - Admin-only attach. Only executables with CAP_SYS_PTRACE.
# 3 - No attach. No process may call ptrace at all. Irrevocable.
#
kernel.yama.ptrace_scope = 0