Child processes on Fuchsia are only capable of accessing the resources provided to them -- this is an essential idea encompassing “capability-based” systems. If a handle is provided to a service, access to that handle implies the client can use it.
Intuitively, this concept can be applied to filesystems: If a handle is provided to a directory, it should imply access to resources within that directory (and additionally, their subdirectories). Unfortunately, however, a holdout from POSIX prevents directory handles from cleanly integrating with these concepts in a capability system: “..”. If a handle is provided to a directory, the client can simply request “..”, and the handle will be “upgraded” to access the parent directory, with broader scope. As a consequence, this implies that a handle to a directory can be upgraded arbitrarily to access the entire filesystem.
Traditionally, filesystems have tried to combat this using “chroot”, which changes the notion of a filesystem root, preventing access beyond “..” in trivial cases of path traversal. However, this approach has some problems:
To overcome these deficiencies, Fuchsia does not implement traditional dot dot semantics on filesystem servers, which would allow open directories to traverse upward. More specifically, it disallows access to “..”, preventing clients from trivially accessing parent directories. This provides some strong properties for process creation: If an application manager only wants to give a process access to “/data/my_private_data”, then it can simply provide a handle to that open directory to the child process, and it will “automatically” be sandboxed.
Certain paths, such as “foo/../bar”, which can be transformed to “bar”, can be determined without accessing a filesystem server in the absence of symbolic links (and at the time of writing, symbolic links do not exist on Fuchsia). These paths may be canonicalized, or cleaned, on the client-side, prior to sending path-based requests to filesystem servers: the libfdio library already does this for any fdio operations that are eventually transmitted to filesystem servers in a function called __fdio_cleanpath
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I.e, if someone “cd”s into a directory, how can they leave? Internally, the notion of “CWD” isn’t merely a file descriptor to an open directory; rather, it’s a combination of “file descriptor” and “absolute path interpreted to mean CWD”. If all operations to cd act on this absolute path, then “..” can always be resolved locally on a client, rather than being transmitted to a filesystem server. For example, if the CWD is “/foo/bar”, and a user calls “cd ..”, then the underlying call may be transformed into “chdir /foo/bar/..”, which can be canonicalized to “/foo”.
Once these hurdles have been overcome, the benefits of removing “..” are enormous: access to filesystem resources fits naturally within the capability system, sandboxing new processes becomes massively easier, and resource access can more naturally be composed through filesystem namespaces.