Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sergio Costas
5afdbc669d wayland/client: Free GSubprocessLauncher after spawning
A Meta.WaylandClient() object has a GSubprocessLauncher object
passed externally. Currently this object is kept while the
WaylandClient object exists, but is is only needed until the call
to spawn is made.

This patch frees that GSubprocessLauncher just after that call,
thus freeing those resources.

Fix https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1462
2020-10-02 15:37:52 +00:00
Sergio Costas
533882ab77 wayland: Fix refcount error
The Meta.WaylandClient constructor receives a GSubprocessLauncher
as a parameter, and stores it internally. Unfortunately, its
refcount value isn't increased, which results in the object being
released twice.

This patch fixes this bug.

Fix https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1454
2020-09-29 20:44:25 +00:00
Sergio Costas
f894f5cc13 wayland: Add API to launch trusted clients
Allowing code from inside mutter to create a child process and
delegate on it some of its tasks is something very useful. This can
be done easily with the g_subprocess and g_subprocess_launcher classes
already available in GLib and GObject.

Unfortunately, although the child process can be a graphical program,
currently it is not possible for the inner code to identify the
windows created by the child in a secure manner (this is: being able
to ensure that a malicious program won't be able to trick the inner
code into thinking it is a child process launched by it).

Under X11 this is not a problem because any program has full control
over their windows, but under Wayland it is a different story: a
program can't neither force their window to be kept at the top (like a
docker program does) or at the bottom (like a program for desktop icons
does), nor hide it from the list of windows. This means that it is not
possible for a "classic", non-priviledged program, to fulfill these
tasks, and it can be done only from code inside mutter (like a
gnome-shell extension).

This is a non desirable situation, because an extension runs in the
same main loop than the whole desktop itself, which means that a
complex extension can need to do too much work inside the main loop,
and freeze the whole desktop for too much time. Also, it is important
to note that javascript doesn't have access to fork(), or threads,
which means that, at most, all the parallel computing that can do is
those available in the _async calls in GLib/GObject.

Also, having to create an extension for any priviledged graphical
element is an stopper for a lot of programmers who already know
GTK+ but doesn't know Clutter.

This patch wants to offer a solution to this problem, by offering a
new class that allows to launch a trusted child process from inside
mutter, and make it to use an specific UNIX socket to communicate
with the compositor. It also allows to check whether an specific
MetaWindow was created by one of this trusted child processes or not.

This allows to create extensions that launch a child process, and
when that process creates a window, the extension can confirm in a
secure way that the window really belongs to that process
launched by it, so it can give to that window "superpowers" like
being kept at the bottom of the desktop, not being listed in the
list of windows or shown in the Activities panel... Also, in future
versions, it could easily implement protocol extensions that only
could be used by these trusted child processes.

Several examples of the usefulness of this are that, with it, it
is possible to write programs that implements:

- desktop icons
- a dock
- a top or bottom bar
...

all in a secure manner, avoiding insecure programs to do the same.
In fact, even if the same code is launched manually, it won't have
those privileges, only the specific process launched from inside
mutter.

Since this is only needed under Wayland, it won't work under X11.

Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/741
2020-08-04 08:42:29 +00:00