setuid - set user identity
Standard C library (libc
, -lc
)
#include <unistd.h>
int setuid(uid_t uid);
setuid() sets the effective user ID of the calling process. If the calling process is privileged (more precisely: if the process has the CAP_SETUID capability in its user namespace), the real UID and saved set-user-ID are also set.
Under Linux, setuid() is implemented like the POSIX version with the _POSIX_SAVED_IDS feature. This allows a set-user-ID (other than root) program to drop all of its user privileges, do some un-privileged work, and then reengage the original effective user ID in a secure manner.
If the user is root or the program is set-user-ID-root, special care
must be taken: setuid() checks the effective user ID of
the caller and if it is the superuser, all process-related user ID's are
set to uid
. After this has occurred, it is impossible for the
program to regain root privileges.
Thus, a set-user-ID-root program wishing to temporarily drop root privileges, assume the identity of an unprivileged user, and then regain root privileges afterward cannot use setuid(). You can accomplish this with seteuid(2).
The call would change the caller's real UID (i.e., uid
does
not match the caller's real UID), but there was a temporary failure
allocating the necessary kernel data structures.
uid
does not match the real user ID of the caller and this
call would bring the number of processes belonging to the real user ID
uid
over the caller's RLIMIT_NPROC resource
limit. Since Linux 3.1, this error case no longer occurs (but robust
applications should check for this error); see the description of
EAGAIN in execve(2).
The user ID specified in uid
is not valid in this user
namespace.
The user is not privileged (Linux: does not have the
CAP_SETUID capability in its user namespace) and
uid
does not match the real UID or saved set-user-ID of the
calling process.
At the kernel level, user IDs and group IDs are a per-thread attribute. However, POSIX requires that all threads in a process share the same credentials. The NPTL threading implementation handles the POSIX requirements by providing wrapper functions for the various system calls that change process UIDs and GIDs. These wrapper functions (including the one for setuid()) employ a signal-based technique to ensure that when one thread changes credentials, all of the other threads in the process also change their credentials. For details, see nptl(7).
POSIX.1-2008.
POSIX.1-2001, SVr4.
Not quite compatible with the 4.4BSD call, which sets all of the real, saved, and effective user IDs.
The original Linux setuid() system call supported only 16-bit user IDs. Subsequently, Linux 2.4 added setuid32() supporting 32-bit IDs. The glibc setuid() wrapper function transparently deals with the variation across kernel versions.
getuid(2), seteuid(2), setfsuid(2), setreuid(2), capabilities(7), credentials(7), user_namespaces(7)