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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DERBY-5363?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13094781#comment-13094781
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Kathey Marsden commented on DERBY-5363:
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I personally don't think we have a security hole in Derby, but rather users
might have a security hole if they do not set their umask appropriately to
their situation. The proposed changes would help protect users from themselves
and that may be the right thing to do, especially for network server, but I
don't think it is a inherent hole in Derby.
> Tighten default permissions of DB files with >= JDK6
> ----------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: DERBY-5363
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DERBY-5363
> Project: Derby
> Issue Type: Improvement
> Reporter: Dag H. Wanvik
> Attachments: derby-5363-basic-1.diff, derby-5363-basic-1.stat,
> permission-5.diff, permission-5.stat, permission-6.diff, permission-6.stat,
> property-table.png, z.sql
>
>
> Before Java 6, files created by Derby would have the default
> permissions of the operating system context. Under Unix, this would
> depend on the effective umask of the process that started the Java VM.
> In Java 6 and 7, there are methods available that allows tightening up this
> (File.setReadable, setWritable), making it less likely that somebody
> would accidentally run Derby with a too lenient default.
> I suggest we take advantage of this, and let Derby by default (in Java
> 6 and higher) limit the visibility to the OS user that starts the VM,
> e.g. on Unix this would be equivalent to running with umask 0077. More
> secure by default is good, I think.
> We could have a flag, e.g. "derby.storage.useDefaultFilePermissions"
> that when set to true, would give the old behavior.
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