xpr without privileges - significado y definición. Qué es xpr without privileges
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Qué (quién) es xpr without privileges - definición

Drop privileges; Dropping privileges; Privileges drop; Dropping root; Privileges-drop; Unprivileged processes

Commons Select Committee of Privileges         
UK HOUSE OF COMMONS PARLIAMENTARY SELECT COMMITTEE
Committee of Privileges; House of Commons Privileges Select Committee; The Commons Privileges Committee
The Commons Select Committee of Privileges is appointed by the House of Commons to consider specific matters relating to privileges referred to it by the House.
Admitting privileges         
PRIVILEGE OF A DOCTOR TO ADMIT PATIENTS TO A MEDICAL CENTER
Admitting privilege; Admittance privileges; Admission privileges; Admitting-privileges; Admitting-privilege
An admitting privilege is the right of a doctor to admit patients to a hospital for medical treatment without first having to go through an emergency department. This is generally restricted to doctors on the hospital staff, although in some countries such as Canada and the United States, both general practitioners and specialists can have admitting privileges.
Committee for Privileges and Conduct         
FORMER SELECT COMMITTEE OF THE UK HOUSE OF LORDS
House of Lords Committee on Privileges; Committee for privileges; Committee for Privileges; Privileges and Conduct Committee; Select Committee for Privileges
The Committee for Privileges and Conduct was a select committee of the House of Lords in the Parliament of the United Kingdom which considered issues relating to the privileges of the House of Lords and its members, as well as having oversight for its members' conduct.

Wikipedia

Privilege separation

In computer programming and computer security, privilege separation is one software-based technique for implementing the principle of least privilege. With privilege separation, a program is divided into parts which are limited to the specific privileges they require in order to perform a specific task. This is used to mitigate the potential damage of a computer security vulnerability.

A common method to implement privilege separation is to have a computer program fork into two processes. The main program drops privileges, and the smaller program keeps privileges in order to perform a certain task. The two halves then communicate via a socket pair. Thus, any successful attack against the larger program will gain minimal access, even though the pair of programs will be capable of performing privileged operations.

Privilege separation is traditionally accomplished by distinguishing a real user ID/group ID from the effective user ID/group ID, using the setuid(2)/setgid(2) and related system calls, which were specified by POSIX. If these are incorrectly positioned, gaps can allow widespread network penetration.

Many network service daemons have to do a specific privileged operation such as open a raw socket or an Internet socket in the well known ports range. Administrative utilities can require particular privileges at run-time as well. Such software tends to separate privileges by revoking them completely after the critical section is done, and change the user it runs under to some unprivileged account after so doing. This action is known as dropping root under Unix-like operating systems. The unprivileged part is usually run under the "nobody" user or an equivalent separate user account.

Privilege separation can also be done by splitting functionality of a single program into multiple smaller programs, and then assigning the extended privileges to particular parts using file system permissions. That way the different programs have to communicate with each other through the operating system, so the scope of the potential vulnerabilities is limited (since a crash in the less privileged part cannot be exploited to gain privileges, merely to cause a denial-of-service attack).

Separation of privileges is one of the major OpenBSD security features. The implementation of Postfix was focused on implementing comprehensive privilege separation. Another email server software designed with privilege separation and security in mind is Dovecot. Solaris implements a separate set of functions for privilege bracketing.