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25 .\"
26 .\"
27 .TH USER_NAMESPACES 7 2014-09-21 "Linux" "Linux Programmer's Manual"
28 .SH NAME
29 user_namespaces \- overview of Linux user namespaces
30 .SH DESCRIPTION
31 For an overview of namespaces, see
32 .BR namespaces (7).
33
34 User namespaces isolate security-related identifiers and attributes,
35 in particular,
36 user IDs and group IDs (see
37 .BR credentials (7)),
38 the root directory,
39 keys (see
40 .BR keyctl (2)),
41 .\" FIXME: This page says very little about the interaction
42 .\" of user namespaces and keys. Add something on this topic.
43 and capabilities (see
44 .BR capabilities (7)).
45 A process's user and group IDs can be different
46 inside and outside a user namespace.
47 In particular,
48 a process can have a normal unprivileged user ID outside a user namespace
49 while at the same time having a user ID of 0 inside the namespace;
50 in other words,
51 the process has full privileges for operations inside the user namespace,
52 but is unprivileged for operations outside the namespace.
53 .\"
54 .\" ============================================================
55 .\"
56 .SS Nested namespaces, namespace membership
57 User namespaces can be nested;
58 that is, each user namespace\(emexcept the initial ("root")
59 namespace\(emhas a parent user namespace,
60 and can have zero or more child user namespaces.
61 The parent user namespace is the user namespace
62 of the process that creates the user namespace via a call to
63 .BR unshare (2)
64 or
65 .BR clone (2)
66 with the
67 .BR CLONE_NEWUSER
68 flag.
69
70 The kernel imposes (since version 3.11) a limit of 32 nested levels of
71 .\" commit 8742f229b635bf1c1c84a3dfe5e47c814c20b5c8
72 user namespaces.
73 .\" FIXME Explain the rationale for this limit. (What is the rationale?)
74 Calls to
75 .BR unshare (2)
76 or
77 .BR clone (2)
78 that would cause this limit to be exceeded fail with the error
79 .BR EUSERS .
80
81 Each process is a member of exactly one user namespace.
82 A process created via
83 .BR fork (2)
84 or
85 .BR clone (2)
86 without the
87 .BR CLONE_NEWUSER
88 flag is a member of the same user namespace as its parent.
89 A single-threaded process can join another user namespace with
90 .BR setns (2)
91 if it has the
92 .BR CAP_SYS_ADMIN
93 in that namespace;
94 upon doing so, it gains a full set of capabilities in that namespace.
95
96 A call to
97 .BR clone (2)
98 or
99 .BR unshare (2)
100 with the
101 .BR CLONE_NEWUSER
102 flag makes the new child process (for
103 .BR clone (2))
104 or the caller (for
105 .BR unshare (2))
106 a member of the new user namespace created by the call.
107 .\"
108 .\" ============================================================
109 .\"
110 .SS Capabilities
111 The child process created by
112 .BR clone (2)
113 with the
114 .BR CLONE_NEWUSER
115 flag starts out with a complete set
116 of capabilities in the new user namespace.
117 Likewise, a process that creates a new user namespace using
118 .BR unshare (2)
119 or joins an existing user namespace using
120 .BR setns (2)
121 gains a full set of capabilities in that namespace.
122 On the other hand,
123 that process has no capabilities in the parent (in the case of
124 .BR clone (2))
125 or previous (in the case of
126 .BR unshare (2)
127 and
128 .BR setns (2))
129 user namespace,
130 even if the new namespace is created or joined by the root user
131 (i.e., a process with user ID 0 in the root namespace).
132
133 Note that a call to
134 .BR execve (2)
135 will cause a process's capabilities to be recalculated in the usual way (see
136 .BR capabilities (7)),
137 so that usually,
138 unless it has a user ID of 0 within the namespace or the executable file
139 has a nonempty inheritable capabilities mask,
140 it will lose all capabilities.
141 See the discussion of user and group ID mappings, below.
142
143 A call to
144 .BR clone (2),
145 .BR unshare (2),
146 or
147 .BR setns (2)
148 using the
149 .BR CLONE_NEWUSER
150 flag sets the "securebits" flags
151 (see
152 .BR capabilities (7))
153 to their default values (all flags disabled) in the child (for
154 .BR clone (2))
155 or caller (for
156 .BR unshare (2),
157 or
158 .BR setns (2)).
159 Note that because the caller no longer has capabilities
160 in its original user namespace after a call to
161 .BR setns (2),
162 it is not possible for a process to reset its "securebits" flags while
163 retaining its user namespace membership by using a pair of
164 .BR setns (2)
165 calls to move to another user namespace and then return to
166 its original user namespace.
167
168 Having a capability inside a user namespace
169 permits a process to perform operations (that require privilege)
170 only on resources governed by that namespace.
171 The rules for determining whether or not a process has a capability
172 in a particular user namespace are as follows:
173 .IP 1. 3
174 A process has a capability inside a user namespace
175 if it is a member of that namespace and
176 it has the capability in its effective capability set.
177 A process can gain capabilities in its effective capability
178 set in various ways.
179 For example, it may execute a set-user-ID program or an
180 executable with associated file capabilities.
181 In addition,
182 a process may gain capabilities via the effect of
183 .BR clone (2),
184 .BR unshare (2),
185 or
186 .BR setns (2),
187 as already described.
188 .\" In the 3.8 sources, see security/commoncap.c::cap_capable():
189 .IP 2.
190 If a process has a capability in a user namespace,
191 then it has that capability in all child (and further removed descendant)
192 namespaces as well.
193 .IP 3.
194 .\" * The owner of the user namespace in the parent of the
195 .\" * user namespace has all caps.
196 When a user namespace is created, the kernel records the effective
197 user ID of the creating process as being the "owner" of the namespace.
198 .\" (and likewise associates the effective group ID of the creating process
199 .\" with the namespace).
200 A process that resides
201 in the parent of the user namespace
202 .\" See kernel commit 520d9eabce18edfef76a60b7b839d54facafe1f9 for a fix
203 .\" on this point
204 and whose effective user ID matches the owner of the namespace
205 has all capabilities in the namespace.
206 .\" This includes the case where the process executes a set-user-ID
207 .\" program that confers the effective UID of the creator of the namespace.
208 By virtue of the previous rule,
209 this means that the process has all capabilities in all
210 further removed descendant user namespaces as well.
211 .\"
212 .\" ============================================================
213 .\"
214 .SS Interaction of user namespaces and other types of namespaces
215 Starting in Linux 3.8, unprivileged processes can create user namespaces,
216 and mount, PID, IPC, network, and UTS namespaces can be created with just the
217 .B CAP_SYS_ADMIN
218 capability in the caller's user namespace.
219
220 When a non-user-namespace is created,
221 it is owned by the user namespace in which the creating process
222 was a member at the time of the creation of the namespace.
223 Actions on the non-user-namespace
224 require capabilities in the corresponding user namespace.
225
226 If
227 .BR CLONE_NEWUSER
228 is specified along with other
229 .B CLONE_NEW*
230 flags in a single
231 .BR clone (2)
232 or
233 .BR unshare (2)
234 call, the user namespace is guaranteed to be created first,
235 giving the child
236 .RB ( clone (2))
237 or caller
238 .RB ( unshare (2))
239 privileges over the remaining namespaces created by the call.
240 Thus, it is possible for an unprivileged caller to specify this combination
241 of flags.
242
243 When a new IPC, mount, network, PID, or UTS namespace is created via
244 .BR clone (2)
245 or
246 .BR unshare (2),
247 the kernel records the user namespace of the creating process against
248 the new namespace.
249 (This association can't be changed.)
250 When a process in the new namespace subsequently performs
251 privileged operations that operate on global
252 resources isolated by the namespace,
253 the permission checks are performed according to the process's capabilities
254 in the user namespace that the kernel associated with the new namespace.
255 .\"
256 .\" ============================================================
257 .\"
258 .SS Restrictions on mount namespaces
259
260 Note the following points with respect to mount namespaces:
261 .IP * 3
262 A mount namespace has an owner user namespace.
263 A mount namespace whose owner user namespace is different from
264 the owner user namespace of its parent mount namespace is
265 considered a less privileged mount namespace.
266 .IP *
267 When creating a less privileged mount namespace,
268 shared mounts are reduced to slave mounts.
269 This ensures that mappings performed in less
270 privileged mount namespaces will not propagate to more privileged
271 mount namespaces.
272 .IP *
273 .\" FIXME .
274 .\" What does "come as a single unit from more privileged mount" mean?
275 Mounts that come as a single unit from more privileged mount are
276 locked together and may not be separated in a less privileged mount
277 namespace.
278 (The
279 .BR unshare (2)
280 .B CLONE_NEWNS
281 operation brings across all of the mounts from the original
282 mount namespace as a single unit,
283 and recursive mounts that propagate between
284 mount namespaces propagate as a single unit.)
285 .IP *
286 The
287 .BR mount (2)
288 flags
289 .BR MS_RDONLY ,
290 .BR MS_NOSUID ,
291 .BR MS_NOEXEC ,
292 and the "atime" flags
293 .RB ( MS_NOATIME ,
294 .BR MS_NODIRATIME ,
295 .BR MS_RELATIME )
296 settings become locked
297 .\" commit 9566d6742852c527bf5af38af5cbb878dad75705
298 .\" Author: Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xmission.com>
299 .\" Date: Mon Jul 28 17:26:07 2014 -0700
300 .\"
301 .\" mnt: Correct permission checks in do_remount
302 .\"
303 when propagated from a more privileged to
304 a less privileged mount namespace,
305 and may not be changed in the less privileged mount namespace.
306 .IP *
307 .\" (As of 3.18-rc1 (in Al Viro's 2014-08-30 vfs.git#for-next tree))
308 A file or directory that is a mount point in one namespace that is not
309 a mount point in another namespace, may be renamed, unlinked, or removed
310 .RB ( rmdir (2))
311 in the mount namespace in which it is not a mount point
312 (subject to the usual permission checks).
313 .IP
314 Previously, attempting to unlink, rename, or remove a file or directory
315 that was a mount point in another mount namespace would result in the error
316 .BR EBUSY .
317 That behavior had technical problems of enforcement (e.g., for NFS)
318 and permitted denial-of-service attacks against more privileged users.
319 (i.e., preventing individual files from being updated
320 by bind mounting on top of them).
321 .\"
322 .\" ============================================================
323 .\"
324 .SS User and group ID mappings: uid_map and gid_map
325 When a user namespace is created,
326 it starts out without a mapping of user IDs (group IDs)
327 to the parent user namespace.
328 The
329 .IR /proc/[pid]/uid_map
330 and
331 .IR /proc/[pid]/gid_map
332 files (available since Linux 3.5)
333 .\" commit 22d917d80e842829d0ca0a561967d728eb1d6303
334 expose the mappings for user and group IDs
335 inside the user namespace for the process
336 .IR pid .
337 These files can be read to view the mappings in a user namespace and
338 written to (once) to define the mappings.
339
340 The description in the following paragraphs explains the details for
341 .IR uid_map ;
342 .IR gid_map
343 is exactly the same,
344 but each instance of "user ID" is replaced by "group ID".
345
346 The
347 .I uid_map
348 file exposes the mapping of user IDs from the user namespace
349 of the process
350 .IR pid
351 to the user namespace of the process that opened
352 .IR uid_map
353 (but see a qualification to this point below).
354 In other words, processes that are in different user namespaces
355 will potentially see different values when reading from a particular
356 .I uid_map
357 file, depending on the user ID mappings for the user namespaces
358 of the reading processes.
359
360 Each line in the
361 .I uid_map
362 file specifies a 1-to-1 mapping of a range of contiguous
363 user IDs between two user namespaces.
364 (When a user namespace is first created, this file is empty.)
365 The specification in each line takes the form of
366 three numbers delimited by white space.
367 The first two numbers specify the starting user ID in
368 each of the two user namespaces.
369 The third number specifies the length of the mapped range.
370 In detail, the fields are interpreted as follows:
371 .IP (1) 4
372 The start of the range of user IDs in
373 the user namespace of the process
374 .IR pid .
375 .IP (2)
376 The start of the range of user
377 IDs to which the user IDs specified by field one map.
378 How field two is interpreted depends on whether the process that opened
379 .I uid_map
380 and the process
381 .IR pid
382 are in the same user namespace, as follows:
383 .RS
384 .IP a) 3
385 If the two processes are in different user namespaces:
386 field two is the start of a range of
387 user IDs in the user namespace of the process that opened
388 .IR uid_map .
389 .IP b)
390 If the two processes are in the same user namespace:
391 field two is the start of the range of
392 user IDs in the parent user namespace of the process
393 .IR pid .
394 This case enables the opener of
395 .I uid_map
396 (the common case here is opening
397 .IR /proc/self/uid_map )
398 to see the mapping of user IDs into the user namespace of the process
399 that created this user namespace.
400 .RE
401 .IP (3)
402 The length of the range of user IDs that is mapped between the two
403 user namespaces.
404 .PP
405 System calls that return user IDs (group IDs)\(emfor example,
406 .BR getuid (2),
407 .BR getgid (2),
408 and the credential fields in the structure returned by
409 .BR stat (2)\(emreturn
410 the user ID (group ID) mapped into the caller's user namespace.
411
412 When a process accesses a file, its user and group IDs
413 are mapped into the initial user namespace for the purpose of permission
414 checking and assigning IDs when creating a file.
415 When a process retrieves file user and group IDs via
416 .BR stat (2),
417 the IDs are mapped in the opposite direction,
418 to produce values relative to the process user and group ID mappings.
419
420 The initial user namespace has no parent namespace,
421 but, for consistency, the kernel provides dummy user and group
422 ID mapping files for this namespace.
423 Looking at the
424 .I uid_map
425 file
426 .RI ( gid_map
427 is the same) from a shell in the initial namespace shows:
428
429 .in +4n
430 .nf
431 $ \fBcat /proc/$$/uid_map\fP
432 0 0 4294967295
433 .fi
434 .in
435
436 This mapping tells us
437 that the range starting at user ID 0 in this namespace
438 maps to a range starting at 0 in the (nonexistent) parent namespace,
439 and the length of the range is the largest 32-bit unsigned integer.
440 This leaves 4294967295 (the 32-bit signed \-1 value) unmapped.
441 This is deliberate:
442 .IR "(uid_t)\ \-1"
443 is used in several interfaces (e.g.,
444 .BR setreuid (2))
445 as a way to specify "no user ID".
446 Leaving
447 .IR "(uid_t)\ \-1"
448 unmapped and unusable guarantees that there will be no
449 confusion when using these interfaces.
450 .\"
451 .\" ============================================================
452 .\"
453 .SS Defining user and group ID mappings: writing to uid_map and gid_map
454 .PP
455 After the creation of a new user namespace, the
456 .I uid_map
457 file of
458 .I one
459 of the processes in the namespace may be written to
460 .I once
461 to define the mapping of user IDs in the new user namespace.
462 An attempt to write more than once to a
463 .I uid_map
464 file in a user namespace fails with the error
465 .BR EPERM .
466 Similar rules apply for
467 .I gid_map
468 files.
469
470 The lines written to
471 .IR uid_map
472 .RI ( gid_map )
473 must conform to the following rules:
474 .IP * 3
475 The three fields must be valid numbers,
476 and the last field must be greater than 0.
477 .IP *
478 Lines are terminated by newline characters.
479 .IP *
480 There is an (arbitrary) limit on the number of lines in the file.
481 As at Linux 3.18, the limit is five lines.
482 In addition, the number of bytes written to
483 the file must be less than the system page size,
484 .\" FIXME(Eric): the restriction "less than" rather than "less than or equal"
485 .\" seems strangely arbitrary. Furthermore, the comment does not agree
486 .\" with the code in kernel/user_namespace.c. Which is correct?
487 and the write must be performed at the start of the file (i.e.,
488 .BR lseek (2)
489 and
490 .BR pwrite (2)
491 can't be used to write to nonzero offsets in the file).
492 .IP *
493 The range of user IDs (group IDs)
494 specified in each line cannot overlap with the ranges
495 in any other lines.
496 In the initial implementation (Linux 3.8), this requirement was
497 satisfied by a simplistic implementation that imposed the further
498 requirement that
499 the values in both field 1 and field 2 of successive lines must be
500 in ascending numerical order,
501 which prevented some otherwise valid maps from being created.
502 Linux 3.9 and later
503 .\" commit 0bd14b4fd72afd5df41e9fd59f356740f22fceba
504 fix this limitation, allowing any valid set of nonoverlapping maps.
505 .IP *
506 At least one line must be written to the file.
507 .PP
508 Writes that violate the above rules fail with the error
509 .BR EINVAL .
510
511 In order for a process to write to the
512 .I /proc/[pid]/uid_map
513 .RI ( /proc/[pid]/gid_map )
514 file, all of the following requirements must be met:
515 .IP 1. 3
516 The writing process must have the
517 .BR CAP_SETUID
518 .RB ( CAP_SETGID )
519 capability in the user namespace of the process
520 .IR pid .
521 .IP 2.
522 The writing process must be in either the user namespace of the process
523 .I pid
524 or inside the parent user namespace of the process
525 .IR pid .
526 .IP 3.
527 The mapped user IDs (group IDs) must in turn have a mapping
528 in the parent user namespace.
529 .IP 4.
530 One of the following two cases applies:
531 .RS
532 .IP * 3
533 .IR Either
534 the writing process has the
535 .BR CAP_SETUID
536 .RB ( CAP_SETGID )
537 capability in the parent user namespace.
538 .RS
539 .IP + 3
540 No further restrictions apply:
541 a privileged process can make mappings to arbitrary user IDs (group IDs)
542 in the parent user namespace.
543 .RE
544 .IP * 3
545 .IR Or
546 otherwise all of the following restrictions apply:
547 .RS
548 .IP + 3
549 The data written to
550 .I uid_map
551 .RI ( gid_map )
552 consists of a single line that maps the writing process's effective user ID
553 (group ID) in the parent user namespace to a user ID (group ID)
554 in the user namespace.
555 .IP +
556 The writing process must have the same effective user ID as the process
557 that created the user namespace.
558 .IP +
559 In the case of
560 .IR gid_map ,
561 use of the
562 .BR setgroups (2)
563 system call must first be denied by writing
564 .RI \(dq deny \(dq
565 to the
566 .I /proc/[pid]/setgroups
567 file (see below) before writing to
568 .IR gid_map .
569 .RE
570 .RE
571 .PP
572 Writes that violate the above rules fail with the error
573 .BR EPERM .
574 .\"
575 .\" ============================================================
576 .\"
577 .SS Interaction with system calls that change process UIDs or GIDs
578 In a user namespace where the
579 .I uid_map
580 file has not been written, the system calls that change user IDs will fail.
581 Similarly, if the
582 .I gid_map
583 file has not been written, the system calls that change group IDs will fail.
584 After the
585 .I uid_map
586 and
587 .I gid_map
588 files have been written, only the mapped values may be used in
589 system calls that change user and group IDs.
590
591 For user IDs, the relevant system calls include
592 .BR setuid (2),
593 .BR setfsuid (2),
594 .BR setreuid (2),
595 and
596 .BR setresuid (2).
597 For group IDs, the relevant system calls include
598 .BR setgid (2),
599 .BR setfsgid (2),
600 .BR setregid (2),
601 .BR setresgid (2),
602 and
603 .BR setgroups (2).
604
605 Writing
606 .RI \(dq deny \(dq
607 to the
608 .I /proc/[pid]/setgroups
609 file before writing to
610 .I /proc/[pid]/gid_map
611 .\" Things changed in Linux 3.19
612 .\" commit 9cc46516ddf497ea16e8d7cb986ae03a0f6b92f8
613 .\" commit 66d2f338ee4c449396b6f99f5e75cd18eb6df272
614 .\" http://lwn.net/Articles/626665/
615 will permanently disable
616 .BR setgroups (2)
617 in a user namespace and allow writing to
618 .I /proc/[pid]/gid_map
619 without having the
620 .BR CAP_SETGID
621 capability in the parent user namespace.
622 .\"
623 .\" ============================================================
624 .\"
625 .SS The /proc/[pid]/setgroups file
626 .\"
627 .\" commit 9cc46516ddf497ea16e8d7cb986ae03a0f6b92f8
628 .\" commit 66d2f338ee4c449396b6f99f5e75cd18eb6df272
629 .\" http://lwn.net/Articles/626665/
630 .\" http://web.nvd.nist.gov/view/vuln/detail?vulnId=CVE-2014-8989
631 .\"
632 The
633 .I /proc/[pid]/setgroups
634 file displays the string
635 .RI \(dq allow \(dq
636 if processes in the user namespace that contains the process
637 .I pid
638 are permitted to employ the
639 .BR setgroups (2)
640 system call; it displays
641 .RI \(dq deny \(dq
642 if
643 .BR setgroups (2)
644 is not permitted in that user namespace.
645
646 A privileged process (one with the
647 .BR CAP_SYS_ADMIN
648 capability in the namespace) may write either of the strings
649 .RI \(dq allow \(dq
650 or
651 .RI \(dq deny \(dq
652 to this file
653 .I before
654 writing a group ID mapping
655 for this user namespace to the file
656 .IR /proc/[pid]/gid_map .
657 Writing the string
658 .RI \(dq deny \(dq
659 prevents any process in the user namespace from employing
660 .BR setgroups (2).
661 Note that regardless of the value in the
662 .I /proc/[pid]/setgroups
663 file, calls to
664 .BR setgroups (2)
665 are also not permitted if
666 .IR /proc/[pid]/gid_map
667 has not yet been set.
668
669 The essence of the restrictions described in the preceding
670 paragraph is that it is permitted to write to
671 .I /proc/[pid]/setgroups
672 only so long as calling
673 .BR setgroups (2)
674 is disallowed because
675 .I /proc/[pid]gid_map
676 has not been set.
677 This ensures that a process cannot transition from a state where
678 .BR setgroups (2)
679 is allowed to a state where
680 .BR setgroups (2)
681 is denied;
682 a process can only transition from
683 .BR setgroups (2)
684 being disallowed to
685 .BR setgroups (2)
686 being allowed.
687
688 The default value of this file in the initial user namespace is
689 .RI \(dq allow \(dq.
690
691 Once
692 .IR /proc/[pid]/gid_map
693 has been written to
694 (which has the effect of enabling
695 .BR setgroups (2)
696 in the user namespace),
697 it is no longer possible to deny
698 .BR setgroups (2)
699 by writing to
700 .IR /proc/[pid]/setgroups .
701
702 A child user namespace inherits the
703 .IR /proc/[pid]/gid_map
704 setting from its parent.
705
706 If the
707 .I setgroups
708 file has the value
709 .RI \(dq deny \(dq,
710 then the
711 .BR setgroups (2)
712 system call can't subsequently be reenabled (by writing
713 .RI \(dq allow \(dq
714 to the file) in this user namespace.
715 (Attempts to do so will fail with the error
716 .BR EPERM .)
717 This restriction also propagates down to all child user namespaces of
718 this user namespace.
719
720 The
721 .I /proc/[pid]/setgroups
722 file was added in Linux 3.19,
723 but was backported to many earlier stable kernel series,
724 because it addresses a security issue.
725 The issue concerned files with permissions such as "rwx\-\-\-rwx".
726 Such files give fewer permissions to "group" than they do to "other".
727 This means that dropping groups using
728 .BR setgroups (2)
729 might allow a process file access that it did not formerly have.
730 Before the existence of user namespaces this was not a concern,
731 since only a privileged process (one with the
732 .BR CAP_SETGID
733 capability) could call
734 .BR setgroups (2).
735 However, with the introduction of user namespaces,
736 it became possible for an unprivileged process to create
737 a new namespace in which the user had all privileges.
738 This then allowed formerly unprivileged
739 users to drop groups and thus gain file access
740 that they did not previously have.
741 The
742 .I /proc/[pid]/setgroups
743 file was added to address this security issue,
744 by denying any pathway for an unprivleged process to drop groups with
745 .BR setgroups (2).
746 .\"
747 .\" /proc/PID/setgroups
748 .\" [allow == setgroups() is allowed, "deny" == setgroups() is disallowed]
749 .\" * Can write if have CAP_SYS_ADMIN in NS
750 .\" * Must write BEFORE writing to /proc/PID/gid_map
751 .\"
752 .\" setgroups()
753 .\" * Must already have written to gid_maps
754 .\" * /proc/PID/setgroups must be "allow"
755 .\"
756 .\" /proc/PID/gid_map -- writing
757 .\" * Must already have written "deny" to /proc/PID/setgroups
758 .\"
759 .\" ============================================================
760 .\"
761 .SS Unmapped user and group IDs
762 .PP
763 There are various places where an unmapped user ID (group ID)
764 may be exposed to user space.
765 For example, the first process in a new user namespace may call
766 .BR getuid ()
767 before a user ID mapping has been defined for the namespace.
768 In most such cases, an unmapped user ID is converted
769 .\" from_kuid_munged(), from_kgid_munged()
770 to the overflow user ID (group ID);
771 the default value for the overflow user ID (group ID) is 65534.
772 See the descriptions of
773 .IR /proc/sys/kernel/overflowuid
774 and
775 .IR /proc/sys/kernel/overflowgid
776 in
777 .BR proc (5).
778
779 The cases where unmapped IDs are mapped in this fashion include
780 system calls that return user IDs
781 .RB ( getuid (2),
782 .BR getgid (2),
783 and similar),
784 credentials passed over a UNIX domain socket,
785 .\" also SO_PEERCRED
786 credentials returned by
787 .BR stat (2),
788 .BR waitid (2),
789 and the System V IPC "ctl"
790 .B IPC_STAT
791 operations,
792 credentials exposed by
793 .IR /proc/PID/status
794 and the files in
795 .IR /proc/sysvipc/* ,
796 credentials returned via the
797 .I si_uid
798 field in the
799 .I siginfo_t
800 received with a signal (see
801 .BR sigaction (2)),
802 credentials written to the process accounting file (see
803 .BR acct (5)),
804 and credentials returned with POSIX message queue notifications (see
805 .BR mq_notify (3)).
806
807 There is one notable case where unmapped user and group IDs are
808 .I not
809 .\" from_kuid(), from_kgid()
810 .\" Also F_GETOWNER_UIDS is an exception
811 converted to the corresponding overflow ID value.
812 When viewing a
813 .I uid_map
814 or
815 .I gid_map
816 file in which there is no mapping for the second field,
817 that field is displayed as 4294967295 (\-1 as an unsigned integer);
818 .\"
819 .\" ============================================================
820 .\"
821 .SS Set-user-ID and set-group-ID programs
822 .PP
823 When a process inside a user namespace executes
824 a set-user-ID (set-group-ID) program,
825 the process's effective user (group) ID inside the namespace is changed
826 to whatever value is mapped for the user (group) ID of the file.
827 However, if either the user
828 .I or
829 the group ID of the file has no mapping inside the namespace,
830 the set-user-ID (set-group-ID) bit is silently ignored:
831 the new program is executed,
832 but the process's effective user (group) ID is left unchanged.
833 (This mirrors the semantics of executing a set-user-ID or set-group-ID
834 program that resides on a filesystem that was mounted with the
835 .BR MS_NOSUID
836 flag, as described in
837 .BR mount (2).)
838 .\"
839 .\" ============================================================
840 .\"
841 .SS Miscellaneous
842 .PP
843 When a process's user and group IDs are passed over a UNIX domain socket
844 to a process in a different user namespace (see the description of
845 .B SCM_CREDENTIALS
846 in
847 .BR unix (7)),
848 they are translated into the corresponding values as per the
849 receiving process's user and group ID mappings.
850 .\"
851 .SH CONFORMING TO
852 Namespaces are a Linux-specific feature.
853 .\"
854 .SH NOTES
855 Over the years, there have been a lot of features that have been added
856 to the Linux kernel that have been made available only to privileged users
857 because of their potential to confuse set-user-ID-root applications.
858 In general, it becomes safe to allow the root user in a user namespace to
859 use those features because it is impossible, while in a user namespace,
860 to gain more privilege than the root user of a user namespace has.
861 .\"
862 .\" ============================================================
863 .\"
864 .SS Availability
865 Use of user namespaces requires a kernel that is configured with the
866 .B CONFIG_USER_NS
867 option.
868 User namespaces require support in a range of subsystems across
869 the kernel.
870 When an unsupported subsystem is configured into the kernel,
871 it is not possible to configure user namespaces support.
872
873 As at Linux 3.8, most relevant subsystems supported user namespaces,
874 but a number of filesystems did not have the infrastructure needed
875 to map user and group IDs between user namespaces.
876 Linux 3.9 added the required infrastructure support for many of
877 the remaining unsupported filesystems
878 (Plan 9 (9P), Andrew File System (AFS), Ceph, CIFS, CODA, NFS, and OCFS2).
879 Linux 3.11 added support the last of the unsupported major filesystems,
880 .\" commit d6970d4b726cea6d7a9bc4120814f95c09571fc3
881 XFS.
882 .\"
883 .SH EXAMPLE
884 The program below is designed to allow experimenting with
885 user namespaces, as well as other types of namespaces.
886 It creates namespaces as specified by command-line options and then executes
887 a command inside those namespaces.
888 The comments and
889 .I usage()
890 function inside the program provide a full explanation of the program.
891 The following shell session demonstrates its use.
892
893 First, we look at the run-time environment:
894
895 .in +4n
896 .nf
897 $ \fBuname -rs\fP # Need Linux 3.8 or later
898 Linux 3.8.0
899 $ \fBid -u\fP # Running as unprivileged user
900 1000
901 $ \fBid -g\fP
902 1000
903 .fi
904 .in
905
906 Now start a new shell in new user
907 .RI ( \-U ),
908 mount
909 .RI ( \-m ),
910 and PID
911 .RI ( \-p )
912 namespaces, with user ID
913 .RI ( \-M )
914 and group ID
915 .RI ( \-G )
916 1000 mapped to 0 inside the user namespace:
917
918 .in +4n
919 .nf
920 $ \fB./userns_child_exec -p -m -U -M '0 1000 1' -G '0 1000 1' bash\fP
921 .fi
922 .in
923
924 The shell has PID 1, because it is the first process in the new
925 PID namespace:
926
927 .in +4n
928 .nf
929 bash$ \fBecho $$\fP
930 1
931 .fi
932 .in
933
934 Inside the user namespace, the shell has user and group ID 0,
935 and a full set of permitted and effective capabilities:
936
937 .in +4n
938 .nf
939 bash$ \fBcat /proc/$$/status | egrep '^[UG]id'\fP
940 Uid: 0 0 0 0
941 Gid: 0 0 0 0
942 bash$ \fBcat /proc/$$/status | egrep '^Cap(Prm|Inh|Eff)'\fP
943 CapInh: 0000000000000000
944 CapPrm: 0000001fffffffff
945 CapEff: 0000001fffffffff
946 .fi
947 .in
948
949 Mounting a new
950 .I /proc
951 filesystem and listing all of the processes visible
952 in the new PID namespace shows that the shell can't see
953 any processes outside the PID namespace:
954
955 .in +4n
956 .nf
957 bash$ \fBmount -t proc proc /proc\fP
958 bash$ \fBps ax\fP
959 PID TTY STAT TIME COMMAND
960 1 pts/3 S 0:00 bash
961 22 pts/3 R+ 0:00 ps ax
962 .fi
963 .in
964 .SS Program source
965 \&
966 .nf
967 /* userns_child_exec.c
968
969 Licensed under GNU General Public License v2 or later
970
971 Create a child process that executes a shell command in new
972 namespace(s); allow UID and GID mappings to be specified when
973 creating a user namespace.
974 */
975 #define _GNU_SOURCE
976 #include <sched.h>
977 #include <unistd.h>
978 #include <stdlib.h>
979 #include <sys/wait.h>
980 #include <signal.h>
981 #include <fcntl.h>
982 #include <stdio.h>
983 #include <string.h>
984 #include <limits.h>
985 #include <errno.h>
986
987 /* A simple error\-handling function: print an error message based
988 on the value in \(aqerrno\(aq and terminate the calling process */
989
990 #define errExit(msg) do { perror(msg); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); \\
991 } while (0)
992
993 struct child_args {
994 char **argv; /* Command to be executed by child, with args */
995 int pipe_fd[2]; /* Pipe used to synchronize parent and child */
996 };
997
998 static int verbose;
999
1000 static void
1001 usage(char *pname)
1002 {
1003 fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s [options] cmd [arg...]\\n\\n", pname);
1004 fprintf(stderr, "Create a child process that executes a shell "
1005 "command in a new user namespace,\\n"
1006 "and possibly also other new namespace(s).\\n\\n");
1007 fprintf(stderr, "Options can be:\\n\\n");
1008 #define fpe(str) fprintf(stderr, " %s", str);
1009 fpe("\-i New IPC namespace\\n");
1010 fpe("\-m New mount namespace\\n");
1011 fpe("\-n New network namespace\\n");
1012 fpe("\-p New PID namespace\\n");
1013 fpe("\-u New UTS namespace\\n");
1014 fpe("\-U New user namespace\\n");
1015 fpe("\-M uid_map Specify UID map for user namespace\\n");
1016 fpe("\-G gid_map Specify GID map for user namespace\\n");
1017 fpe("\-z Map user\(aqs UID and GID to 0 in user namespace\\n");
1018 fpe(" (equivalent to: \-M \(aq0 <uid> 1\(aq \-G \(aq0 <gid> 1\(aq)\\n");
1019 fpe("\-v Display verbose messages\\n");
1020 fpe("\\n");
1021 fpe("If \-z, \-M, or \-G is specified, \-U is required.\\n");
1022 fpe("It is not permitted to specify both \-z and either \-M or \-G.\\n");
1023 fpe("\\n");
1024 fpe("Map strings for \-M and \-G consist of records of the form:\\n");
1025 fpe("\\n");
1026 fpe(" ID\-inside\-ns ID\-outside\-ns len\\n");
1027 fpe("\\n");
1028 fpe("A map string can contain multiple records, separated"
1029 " by commas;\\n");
1030 fpe("the commas are replaced by newlines before writing"
1031 " to map files.\\n");
1032
1033 exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
1034 }
1035
1036 /* Update the mapping file \(aqmap_file\(aq, with the value provided in
1037 \(aqmapping\(aq, a string that defines a UID or GID mapping. A UID or
1038 GID mapping consists of one or more newline\-delimited records
1039 of the form:
1040
1041 ID_inside\-ns ID\-outside\-ns length
1042
1043 Requiring the user to supply a string that contains newlines is
1044 of course inconvenient for command\-line use. Thus, we permit the
1045 use of commas to delimit records in this string, and replace them
1046 with newlines before writing the string to the file. */
1047
1048 static void
1049 update_map(char *mapping, char *map_file)
1050 {
1051 int fd, j;
1052 size_t map_len; /* Length of \(aqmapping\(aq */
1053
1054 /* Replace commas in mapping string with newlines */
1055
1056 map_len = strlen(mapping);
1057 for (j = 0; j < map_len; j++)
1058 if (mapping[j] == \(aq,\(aq)
1059 mapping[j] = \(aq\\n\(aq;
1060
1061 fd = open(map_file, O_RDWR);
1062 if (fd == \-1) {
1063 fprintf(stderr, "ERROR: open %s: %s\\n", map_file,
1064 strerror(errno));
1065 exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
1066 }
1067
1068 if (write(fd, mapping, map_len) != map_len) {
1069 fprintf(stderr, "ERROR: write %s: %s\\n", map_file,
1070 strerror(errno));
1071 exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
1072 }
1073
1074 close(fd);
1075 }
1076
1077 /* Linux 3.19 made a change in the handling of setgroups(2) and the
1078 \(aqgid_map\(aq file to address a security issue. The issue allowed
1079 *unprivileged* users to employ user namespaces in order to drop
1080 The upshot of the 3.19 changes is that in order to update the
1081 \(aqgid_maps\(aq file, use of the setgroups() system call in this
1082 user namespace must first be disabled by writing "deny" to one of
1083 the /proc/PID/setgroups files for this namespace. That is the
1084 purpose of the following function. */
1085
1086 static void
1087 proc_setgroups_write(pid_t child_pid, char *str)
1088 {
1089 char setgroups_path[PATH_MAX];
1090 int fd;
1091
1092 snprintf(setgroups_path, PATH_MAX, "/proc/%ld/setgroups",
1093 (long) child_pid);
1094
1095 fd = open(setgroups_path, O_RDWR);
1096 if (fd == \-1) {
1097
1098 /* We may be on a system that doesn\(aqt support
1099 /proc/PID/setgroups. In that case, the file won\(aqt exist,
1100 and the system won\(aqt impose the restrictions that Linux 3.19
1101 added. That\(aqs fine: we don\(aqt need to do anything in order
1102 to permit \(aqgid_map\(aq to be updated.
1103
1104 However, if the error from open() was something other than
1105 the ENOENT error that is expected for that case, let the
1106 user know. */
1107
1108 if (errno != ENOENT)
1109 fprintf(stderr, "ERROR: open %s: %s\\n", setgroups_path,
1110 strerror(errno));
1111 return;
1112 }
1113
1114 if (write(fd, str, strlen(str)) == \-1)
1115 fprintf(stderr, "ERROR: write %s: %s\\n", setgroups_path,
1116 strerror(errno));
1117
1118 close(fd);
1119 }
1120
1121 static int /* Start function for cloned child */
1122 childFunc(void *arg)
1123 {
1124 struct child_args *args = (struct child_args *) arg;
1125 char ch;
1126
1127 /* Wait until the parent has updated the UID and GID mappings.
1128 See the comment in main(). We wait for end of file on a
1129 pipe that will be closed by the parent process once it has
1130 updated the mappings. */
1131
1132 close(args\->pipe_fd[1]); /* Close our descriptor for the write
1133 end of the pipe so that we see EOF
1134 when parent closes its descriptor */
1135 if (read(args\->pipe_fd[0], &ch, 1) != 0) {
1136 fprintf(stderr,
1137 "Failure in child: read from pipe returned != 0\\n");
1138 exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
1139 }
1140
1141 /* Execute a shell command */
1142
1143 printf("About to exec %s\\n", args\->argv[0]);
1144 execvp(args\->argv[0], args\->argv);
1145 errExit("execvp");
1146 }
1147
1148 #define STACK_SIZE (1024 * 1024)
1149
1150 static char child_stack[STACK_SIZE]; /* Space for child\(aqs stack */
1151
1152 int
1153 main(int argc, char *argv[])
1154 {
1155 int flags, opt, map_zero;
1156 pid_t child_pid;
1157 struct child_args args;
1158 char *uid_map, *gid_map;
1159 const int MAP_BUF_SIZE = 100;
1160 char map_buf[MAP_BUF_SIZE];
1161 char map_path[PATH_MAX];
1162
1163 /* Parse command\-line options. The initial \(aq+\(aq character in
1164 the final getopt() argument prevents GNU\-style permutation
1165 of command\-line options. That\(aqs useful, since sometimes
1166 the \(aqcommand\(aq to be executed by this program itself
1167 has command\-line options. We don\(aqt want getopt() to treat
1168 those as options to this program. */
1169
1170 flags = 0;
1171 verbose = 0;
1172 gid_map = NULL;
1173 uid_map = NULL;
1174 map_zero = 0;
1175 while ((opt = getopt(argc, argv, "+imnpuUM:G:zv")) != \-1) {
1176 switch (opt) {
1177 case \(aqi\(aq: flags |= CLONE_NEWIPC; break;
1178 case \(aqm\(aq: flags |= CLONE_NEWNS; break;
1179 case \(aqn\(aq: flags |= CLONE_NEWNET; break;
1180 case \(aqp\(aq: flags |= CLONE_NEWPID; break;
1181 case \(aqu\(aq: flags |= CLONE_NEWUTS; break;
1182 case \(aqv\(aq: verbose = 1; break;
1183 case \(aqz\(aq: map_zero = 1; break;
1184 case \(aqM\(aq: uid_map = optarg; break;
1185 case \(aqG\(aq: gid_map = optarg; break;
1186 case \(aqU\(aq: flags |= CLONE_NEWUSER; break;
1187 default: usage(argv[0]);
1188 }
1189 }
1190
1191 /* \-M or \-G without \-U is nonsensical */
1192
1193 if (((uid_map != NULL || gid_map != NULL || map_zero) &&
1194 !(flags & CLONE_NEWUSER)) ||
1195 (map_zero && (uid_map != NULL || gid_map != NULL)))
1196 usage(argv[0]);
1197
1198 args.argv = &argv[optind];
1199
1200 /* We use a pipe to synchronize the parent and child, in order to
1201 ensure that the parent sets the UID and GID maps before the child
1202 calls execve(). This ensures that the child maintains its
1203 capabilities during the execve() in the common case where we
1204 want to map the child\(aqs effective user ID to 0 in the new user
1205 namespace. Without this synchronization, the child would lose
1206 its capabilities if it performed an execve() with nonzero
1207 user IDs (see the capabilities(7) man page for details of the
1208 transformation of a process\(aqs capabilities during execve()). */
1209
1210 if (pipe(args.pipe_fd) == \-1)
1211 errExit("pipe");
1212
1213 /* Create the child in new namespace(s) */
1214
1215 child_pid = clone(childFunc, child_stack + STACK_SIZE,
1216 flags | SIGCHLD, &args);
1217 if (child_pid == \-1)
1218 errExit("clone");
1219
1220 /* Parent falls through to here */
1221
1222 if (verbose)
1223 printf("%s: PID of child created by clone() is %ld\\n",
1224 argv[0], (long) child_pid);
1225
1226 /* Update the UID and GID maps in the child */
1227
1228 if (uid_map != NULL || map_zero) {
1229 snprintf(map_path, PATH_MAX, "/proc/%ld/uid_map",
1230 (long) child_pid);
1231 if (map_zero) {
1232 snprintf(map_buf, MAP_BUF_SIZE, "0 %ld 1", (long) getuid());
1233 uid_map = map_buf;
1234 }
1235 update_map(uid_map, map_path);
1236 }
1237
1238 if (gid_map != NULL || map_zero) {
1239 proc_setgroups_write(child_pid, "deny");
1240
1241 snprintf(map_path, PATH_MAX, "/proc/%ld/gid_map",
1242 (long) child_pid);
1243 if (map_zero) {
1244 snprintf(map_buf, MAP_BUF_SIZE, "0 %ld 1", (long) getgid());
1245 gid_map = map_buf;
1246 }
1247 update_map(gid_map, map_path);
1248 }
1249
1250 /* Close the write end of the pipe, to signal to the child that we
1251 have updated the UID and GID maps */
1252
1253 close(args.pipe_fd[1]);
1254
1255 if (waitpid(child_pid, NULL, 0) == \-1) /* Wait for child */
1256 errExit("waitpid");
1257
1258 if (verbose)
1259 printf("%s: terminating\\n", argv[0]);
1260
1261 exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
1262 }
1263 .fi
1264 .SH SEE ALSO
1265 .BR newgidmap (1), \" From the shadow package
1266 .BR newuidmap (1), \" From the shadow package
1267 .BR clone (2),
1268 .BR setns (2),
1269 .BR unshare (2),
1270 .BR proc (5),
1271 .BR subgid (5), \" From the shadow package
1272 .BR subuid (5), \" From the shadow package
1273 .BR credentials (7),
1274 .BR capabilities (7),
1275 .BR namespaces (7),
1276 .BR pid_namespaces (7)
1277 .sp
1278 The kernel source file
1279 .IR Documentation/namespaces/resource-control.txt .