For review (v2): user_namespaces(7) man page

Michael Kerrisk (man-pages) mtk.manpages at gmail.com
Wed Mar 27 21:26:07 UTC 2013


Hi Eric et al.,

All: The attached page aims to provide a fairly complete overview of
user namespaces. I'm looking for review comments (corrections,
improvements, additions, etc.) on this man page. I've provided it in
two forms inline below, and reviewers can comment on whichever form
they are most comfortable with:

1) The rendered page as plain text
2) The *roff source (also attached); rendering that source will enable
readers to see proper formatting for the page.

Note that the namespaces(7) page referred to in this page is not yet
finished; I'll send it out for review at a future time.

Main change since v1 is to address Serge's comments here:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.man/3745/focus=1457720

Cheers,

Michael

=====

USER_NAMESPACES(7)     Linux Programmer's Manual    USER_NAMESPACES(7)



NAME
       user_namespaces - overview of Linux user_namespaces

DESCRIPTION
       For an overview of namespaces, see namespaces(7).

       User  namespaces  isolate security-related identifiers, in par‐
       ticular, user IDs and group IDs (see credentials(7), keys  (see
       keyctl(2)),   and   capabilities   (see   capabilities(7)).   A
       process's user and group IDs can be different inside  and  out‐
       side  a  user  namespace.   In particular, a process can have a
       normal unprivileged user ID outside a user namespace  while  at
       the  same  time  having a user ID of 0 inside the namespace; in
       other words, the process has  full  privileges  for  operations
       inside  the  user namespace, but is unprivileged for operations
       outside the namespace.

   Nested namespaces, namespace membership
       User namespaces can be nested; that is,  each  user  namespace—
       except  the initial ("root") namespace—has a parent user names‐
       pace, and can have zero or more  child  user  namespaces.   The
       parent user namespace is the user namespace of the process that
       creates the user namespace via a call to unshare(2) or clone(2)
       with the CLONE_NEWUSER flag.

       Each  process  is  a  member  of exactly one user namespace.  A
       process  created  via   fork(2)   or   clone(2)   without   the
       CLONE_NEWUSER  flag  is  a member of the same user namespace as
       its parent.  A process can join  another  user  namespace  with
       setns(2)  if  it  has the CAP_SYS_ADMIN in that namespace; upon
       doing so, it gains a full set of capabilities  in  that  names‐
       pace.

       A  call  to  clone(2) or unshare(2) with the CLONE_NEWUSER flag
       makes the new child process (for clone(2)) or the  caller  (for
       unshare(2))  a  member of the new user namespace created by the
       call.

   Capabilities
       The child process created by clone(2)  with  the  CLONE_NEWUSER
       flag  starts out with a complete set of capabilities in the new
       user namespace.  Likewise, a process that creates  a  new  user
       namespace  using unshare(2) or joins an existing user namespace
       using setns(2) gains a full set of capabilities in that  names‐
       pace.   On  the other hand, that process has no capabilities in
       the parent (in the case of clone(2)) or previous (in  the  case
       of  unshare(2)  and  setns(2))  user namespace, even if the new
       namespace is created or  joined  by  the  root  user  (i.e.,  a
       process with user ID 0 in the root namespace).  Nevertheless, a
       process owned by the root user will be able to access resources
       such  as files that are owned by user ID 0, and will be able to
       do things such as sending signals  to  processes  belonging  to
       user ID 0.

       Note  that a call to execve(2) will cause a process to lose any
       capabilities that it has, unless it has a user ID of  0  within
       the  namespace.  Thus, before calling execve(2), a user ID map‐
       ping for ID 0 must be defined, and the caller may also need  to
       use setuid(2) or similar to set its user ID to 0.

       A   call   to  clone(2),  unshare(2),  or  setns(2)  using  the
       CLONE_NEWUSER flag sets the "securebits" flags  (see  capabili‐
       ties(7))  to  their  default values (all flags disabled) in the
       child (for clone(2)) or caller (for unshare(2),  or  setns(2)).
       Note  that because the caller no longer has capabilities in its
       original user namespace after a call to  setns(2),  it  is  not
       possible  for  a  process to reset its "securebits" flags while
       retaining its user namespace membership  by  using  a  pair  of
       setns(2)  calls  to  move  to  another  user namespace and then
       return to its original user namespace.

       Having a capability inside a user namespace permits  a  process
       to   perform   operations  (that  require  privilege)  only  on
       resources governed by that namespace.  The rules for  determin‐
       ing  whether  or not a process has a capability in a particular
       user namespace are as follows:

       1. A process has a capability inside a user namespace if it  is
          a  member of that namespace and it has the capability in its
          effective capability set.  A process can  gain  capabilities
          in  its effective capability set in various ways.  For exam‐
          ple, it may execute a set-user-ID program or  an  executable
          with  associated  file capabilities.  In addition, a process
          may  gain  capabilities  via   the   effect   of   clone(2),
          unshare(2), or setns(2), as already described.

       2. If  a  process has a capability in a user namespace, then it
          has that  capability  in  all  child  (and  further  removed
          descendant) namespaces as well.

       3. When  a  user  namespace  is created, the kernel records the
          effective user ID of  the  creating  process  as  being  the
          "owner"  of  the  namespace.   A process that resides in the
          parent of the user namespace and  whose  effective  user  ID
          matches  the  owner of the namespace has all capabilities in
          the namespace.  By virtue of the previous rule,  this  means
          that the process has all capabilities in all further removed
          descendant user namespaces as well.

   Interaction of user namespaces and other types of namespaces
       Starting in Linux 3.8, unprivileged processes can  create  user
       namespaces,  and  mount,  PID, IPC, network, and UTS namespaces
       can be created with just the CAP_SYS_ADMIN  capability  in  the
       caller's user namespace.

       If CLONE_NEWUSER is specified along with other CLONE_NEW* flags
       in a single clone(2) or unshare(2) call, the user namespace  is
       guaranteed  to be created first, giving the child (clone(2)) or
       caller (unshare(2)) privileges over  the  remaining  namespaces
       created  by the call.  Thus, it is possible for an unprivileged
       caller to specify this combination of flags.

       When a new IPC, mount, network, PID, or UTS namespace  is  cre‐
       ated  via  clone(2)  or unshare(2), the kernel records the user
       namespace of the creating process against  the  new  namespace.
       (This association can't be changed.)  When a process in the new
       namespace  subsequently  performs  privileged  operations  that
       operate on global resources isolated by the namespace, the per‐
       mission checks are performed according to the  process's  capa‐
       bilities  in the user namespace that the kernel associated with
       the new namespace.

   User and group ID mappings: uid_map and gid_map
       When a user namespace is created, it starts out without a  map‐
       ping of user IDs (group IDs) to the parent user namespace.  The
       /proc/[pid]/uid_map and  /proc/[pid]/gid_map  files  (available
       since  Linux  3.5)  expose  the mappings for user and group IDs
       inside the user namespace for the process pid.  These files can
       be read to view the mappings in a user namespace and written to
       (once) to define the mappings.

       The  description  in  the  following  paragraphs  explains  the
       details  for  uid_map;  gid_map  is  exactly the same, but each
       instance of "user ID" is replaced by "group ID".

       The uid_map file exposes the mapping of user IDs from the  user
       namespace  of  the  process  pid  to  the user namespace of the
       process that opened uid_map (but see a  qualification  to  this
       point  below).  In other words, processes that are in different
       user namespaces will  potentially  see  different  values  when
       reading  from  a particular uid_map file, depending on the user
       ID mappings for the user namespaces of the reading processes.

       Each line in the uid_map file specifies a 1-to-1 mapping  of  a
       range  of  contiguous  user  IDs  between  two user namespaces.
       (When a user namespace is first created, this file  is  empty.)
       The  specification in each line takes the form of three numbers
       delimited by white space.  The first two  numbers  specify  the
       starting user ID in each of the two user namespaces.  The third
       number specifies the length of the mapped  range.   In  detail,
       the fields are interpreted as follows:

       (1) The start of the range of user IDs in the user namespace of
           the process pid.

       (2) The start of the range of user IDs to which  the  user  IDs
           specified  by  field one map.  How field two is interpreted
           depends on whether the process that opened uid_map and  the
           process pid are in the same user namespace, as follows:

           a) If  the  two processes are in different user namespaces:
              field two is the start of a range of  user  IDs  in  the
              user namespace of the process that opened uid_map.

           b) If  the  two  processes  are in the same user namespace:
              field two is the start of the range of user IDs  in  the
              parent  user  namespace  of  the process pid.  This case
              enables the opener of uid_map (the common case  here  is
              opening  /proc/self/uid_map)  to see the mapping of user
              IDs into the user namespace of the process that  created
              this user namespace.

       (3) The  length of the range of user IDs that is mapped between
           the two user namespaces.

       System calls that return  user  IDs  (group  IDs)—for  example,
       getuid(2),  getgid(2),  and the credential fields in the struc‐
       ture returned by stat(2)—return the user ID (group  ID)  mapped
       into the caller's user namespace.

       When  a  process  accesses  a  file, its user and group IDs are
       mapped into the initial user namespace for the purpose of  per‐
       mission  checking and assigning IDs when creating a file.  When
       a process retrieves file user and group IDs  via  stat(2),  the
       IDs  are  mapped  in  the opposite direction, to produce values
       relative to the process user and group ID mappings.

       The initial user namespace has no parent  namespace,  but,  for
       consistency,  the  kernel provides dummy user and group ID map‐
       ping files for this namespace.  Looking  at  the  uid_map  file
       (gid_map  is  the  same)  from a shell in the initial namespace
       shows:

           $ cat /proc/$$/uid_map
                    0          0 4294967295

       This mapping tells us that the range starting at user ID  0  in
       this  namespace  maps to a range starting at 0 in the (nonexis‐
       tent) parent namespace, and the length  of  the  range  is  the
       largest 32-bit unsigned integer.

   Defining user and group ID mappings: writing to uid_map and gid_map
       After the creation of a new user namespace, the uid_map file of
       one of the processes in the namespace may be written to once to
       define  the  mapping of user IDs in the new user namespace.  An
       attempt to write more than once to a uid_map  file  in  a  user
       namespace  fails with the error EPERM.  Similar rules apply for
       gid_map files.

       The lines written to uid_map (gid_map) must conform to the fol‐
       lowing rules:

       *  The  three  fields must be valid numbers, and the last field
          must be greater than 0.

       *  Lines are terminated by newline characters.

       *  There is an (arbitrary) limit on the number of lines in  the
          file.   As  at Linux 3.8, the limit is five lines.  In addi‐
          tion, the number of bytes written to the file must  be  less
          than  the  system page size, and the write must be performed
          at the start of the file (i.e., lseek(2) and pwrite(2) can't
          be used to write to nonzero offsets in the file).

       *  The  range  of  user  IDs (group IDs) specified in each line
          cannot overlap with the ranges in any other lines.   In  the
          initial  implementation  (Linux  3.8),  this requirement was
          satisfied by a simplistic implementation  that  imposed  the
          further  requirement  that  the  values  in both field 1 and
          field 2 of successive lines must be in  ascending  numerical
          order,  which prevented some otherwise valid maps from being
          created.  Linux 3.9 and later fix this limitation,  allowing
          any valid set of nonoverlapping maps.

       *  At least one line must be written to the file.

       Writes that violate the above rules fail with the error EINVAL.

       In  order  for  a  process  to write to the /proc/[pid]/uid_map
       (/proc/[pid]/gid_map) file, all of the  following  requirements
       must be met:

       1. The  writing  process  must have the CAP_SETUID (CAP_SETGID)
          capability in the user namespace of the process pid.

       2. The writing process must be in either the user namespace  of
          the  process  pid or inside the parent user namespace of the
          process pid.

       3. The mapped user IDs (group IDs) must in turn have a  mapping
          in the parent user namespace.

       4. One of the following is true:

          *  The  data written to uid_map (gid_map) consists of a sin‐
             gle line that maps the writing process's file system user
             ID  (group  ID) in the parent user namespace to a user ID
             (group ID) in the user namespace.  The usual case here is
             that  this  single line provides a mapping for user ID of
             the process that created the namespace.

          *  The process has the CAP_SETUID (CAP_SETGID) capability in
             the  parent  user  namespace.  Thus, a privileged process
             can make mappings to arbitrary user IDs  (group  IDs)  in
             the parent user namespace.

       Writes that violate the above rules fail with the error EPERM.

   Unmapped user and group IDs
       There  are  various places where an unmapped user ID (group ID)
       may be exposed to user space.  For example, the  first  process
       in a new user namespace may call getuid() before a user ID map‐
       ping has been defined for the namespace.  In most  such  cases,
       an unmapped user ID is converted to the overflow user ID (group
       ID); the default value for the overflow user ID (group  ID)  is
       65534.   See  the  descriptions of /proc/sys/kernel/overflowuid
       and /proc/sys/kernel/overflowgid in proc(5).

       The cases where unmapped IDs are mapped in this fashion include
       system  calls  that  return  user IDs (getuid(2) getgid(2), and
       similar), credentials passed over a UNIX domain socket, creden‐
       tials  returned  by  stat(2),  waitid(2),  and the System V IPC
       "ctl"   IPC_STAT    operations,    credentials    exposed    by
       /proc/PID/status  and the files in /proc/sysvipc/*, credentials
       returned via the si_uid field in the siginfo_t received with  a
       signal  (see  sigaction(2)), credentials written to the process
       accounting file (see acct(5)), and  credentials  returned  with
       POSIX message queue notifications (see mq_notify(3)).

       There is one notable case where unmapped user and group IDs are
       not converted to the corresponding  overflow  ID  value.   When
       viewing  a uid_map or gid_map file in which there is no mapping
       for the second field, that field is displayed as 4294967295 (-1
       as an unsigned integer);

   Set-user-ID and set-group-ID programs
       When  a  process inside a user namespace executes a set-user-ID
       (set-group-ID) program, the process's effective user (group) ID
       inside the namespace is changed to whatever value is mapped for
       the user (group) ID of the file.  However, if either  the  user
       or  the  group  ID of the file has no mapping inside the names‐
       pace, the set-user-ID (set-group-ID) bit is  silently  ignored:
       the  new  program is executed, but the process's effective user
       (group) ID is left unchanged.  (This mirrors the  semantics  of
       executing a set-user-ID or set-group-ID program that resides on
       a file system that was mounted  with  the  MS_NOSUID  flag,  as
       described in mount(2).)

   Miscellaneous
       When  a  process's  user  and  group IDs are passed over a UNIX
       domain socket to a process in a different user  namespace  (see
       the description of SCM_CREDENTIALS in unix(7)), they are trans‐
       lated into  the  corresponding  values  as  per  the  receiving
       process's user and group ID mappings.

CONFORMING TO
       Namespaces are a Linux-specific feature.

NOTES
       Over  the  years,  there  have been a lot of features that have
       been added to the Linux kernel that have  been  made  available
       only  to privileged users because of their potential to confuse
       set-user-ID-root applications.  In general, it becomes safe  to
       allow  the  root user in a user namespace to use those features
       because it is impossible, while in a user  namespace,  to  gain
       more privilege than the root user of a user namespace has.

   Availability
       Use  of  user  namespaces  requires a kernel that is configured
       with the CONFIG_USER_NS option.  User namespaces  require  sup‐
       port  in  a  range  of  subsystems  across the kernel.  When an
       unsupported subsystem is configured into the kernel, it is  not
       possible  to  configure  user  namespaces support.  As at Linux
       3.8, most relevant  subsystems  support  user  namespaces,  but
       there  are  a  number  of  file systems that do not.  Linux 3.9
       added user namespaces support for many of the remaining  unsup‐
       ported  file  systems:  Plan  9 (9P), Andrew File System (AFS),
       Ceph, CIFS, CODA, NFS, and OCFS2.  XFS support for user  names‐
       paces is not yet available.

EXAMPLE
       The  program below is designed to allow experimenting with user
       namespaces, as well as other types of namespaces.   It  creates
       namespaces  as  specified by command-line options and then exe‐
       cutes a command inside  those  namespaces.   The  comments  and
       usage()  function inside the program provide a full explanation
       of the program.  The following shell session  demonstrates  its
       use.

       First, we look at the run-time environment:

           $ uname -rs     # Need Linux 3.8 or later
           Linux 3.8.0
           $ id -u         # Running as unprivileged user
           1000
           $ id -g
           1000

       Now  start  a  new  shell in new user (-U), mount (-m), and PID
       (-p) namespaces, with user ID  (-M)  and  group  ID  (-G)  1000
       mapped to 0 inside the user namespace:

           $ ./userns_child_exec -p -m -U -M '0 1000 1' -G '0 1000 1' bash

       The shell has PID 1, because it is the first process in the new
       PID namespace:

           bash$ echo $$
           1

       Inside the user namespace, the shell has user and group  ID  0,
       and a full set of permitted and effective capabilities:

           bash$ cat /proc/$$/status | egrep '^[UG]id'
           Uid: 0    0    0    0
           Gid: 0    0    0    0
           bash$ cat /proc/$$/status | egrep '^Cap(Prm|Inh|Eff)'
           CapInh:   0000000000000000
           CapPrm:   0000001fffffffff
           CapEff:   0000001fffffffff

       Mounting  a  new  /proc file system and listing all of the pro‐
       cesses visible in the new PID namespace shows  that  the  shell
       can't see any processes outside the PID namespace:

           bash$ mount -t proc proc /proc
           bash$ ps ax
             PID TTY      STAT   TIME COMMAND
               1 pts/3    S      0:00 bash
              22 pts/3    R+     0:00 ps ax

   Program source

       /* userns_child_exec.c

          Licensed under GNU General Public License v2 or later

          Create a child process that executes a shell command in new
          namespace(s); allow UID and GID mappings to be specified when
          creating a user namespace.
       */
       #define _GNU_SOURCE
       #include <sched.h>
       #include <unistd.h>
       #include <stdlib.h>
       #include <sys/wait.h>
       #include <signal.h>
       #include <fcntl.h>
       #include <stdio.h>
       #include <string.h>
       #include <limits.h>
       #include <errno.h>

       /* A simple error-handling function: print an error message based
          on the value in 'errno' and terminate the calling process */

       #define errExit(msg)    do { perror(msg); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); \
                               } while (0)

       struct child_args {
           char **argv;        /* Command to be executed by child, with args */
           int    pipe_fd[2];  /* Pipe used to synchronize parent and child */
       };

       static int verbose;

       static void
       usage(char *pname)
       {
           fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s [options] cmd [arg...]\n\n", pname);
           fprintf(stderr, "Create a child process that executes a shell "
                   "command in a new user namespace,\n"
                   "and possibly also other new namespace(s).\n\n");
           fprintf(stderr, "Options can be:\n\n");
       #define fpe(str) fprintf(stderr, "    %s", str);
           fpe("-i          New IPC namespace\n");
           fpe("-m          New mount namespace\n");
           fpe("-n          New network namespace\n");
           fpe("-p          New PID namespace\n");
           fpe("-u          New UTS namespace\n");
           fpe("-U          New user namespace\n");
           fpe("-M uid_map  Specify UID map for user namespace\n");
           fpe("-G gid_map  Specify GID map for user namespace\n");
           fpe("-z          Map user's UID and GID to 0 in user namespace\n");
           fpe("            (equivalent to: -M '0 <uid> 1' -G '0 <gid> 1')\n");
           fpe("-v          Display verbose messages\n");
           fpe("\n");
           fpe("If -z, -M, or -G is specified, -U is required.\n");
           fpe("It is not permitted to specify both -z and either -M or -G.\n");
           fpe("\n");
           fpe("Map strings for -M and -G consist of records of the form:\n");
           fpe("\n");
           fpe("    ID-inside-ns   ID-outside-ns   len\n");
           fpe("\n");
           fpe("A map string can contain multiple records, separated"
               " by commas;\n");
           fpe("the commas are replaced by newlines before writing"
               " to map files.\n");

           exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
       }

       /* Update the mapping file 'map_file', with the value provided in
          'mapping', a string that defines a UID or GID mapping. A UID or
          GID mapping consists of one or more newline-delimited records
          of the form:

              ID_inside-ns    ID-outside-ns   length

          Requiring the user to supply a string that contains newlines is
          of course inconvenient for command-line use. Thus, we permit the
          use of commas to delimit records in this string, and replace them
          with newlines before writing the string to the file. */

       static void
       update_map(char *mapping, char *map_file)
       {
           int fd, j;
           size_t map_len;     /* Length of 'mapping' */

           /* Replace commas in mapping string with newlines */

           map_len = strlen(mapping);
           for (j = 0; j < map_len; j++)
               if (mapping[j] == ',')
                   mapping[j] = '\n';

           fd = open(map_file, O_RDWR);
           if (fd == -1) {
               fprintf(stderr, "ERROR: open %s: %s\n", map_file,
strerror(errno));
               return;
               //exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           if (write(fd, mapping, map_len) != map_len) {
               fprintf(stderr, "ERROR: write %s: %s\n", map_file,
strerror(errno));
               //exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           close(fd);
       }

       static int              /* Start function for cloned child */
       childFunc(void *arg)
       {
           struct child_args *args = (struct child_args *) arg;
           char ch;

           /* Wait until the parent has updated the UID and GID mappings.
              See the comment in main(). We wait for end of file on a
              pipe that will be closed by the parent process once it has
              updated the mappings. */

           close(args->pipe_fd[1]);    /* Close our descriptor for the write
                                          end of the pipe so that we see EOF
                                          when parent closes its descriptor */
           if (read(args->pipe_fd[0], &ch, 1) != 0) {
               fprintf(stderr,
                       "Failure in child: read from pipe returned != 0\n");
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           /* Execute a shell command */

           printf("About to exec %s\n", args->argv[0]);
           execvp(args->argv[0], args->argv);
           errExit("execvp");
       }

       #define STACK_SIZE (1024 * 1024)

       static char child_stack[STACK_SIZE];    /* Space for child's stack */

       int
       main(int argc, char *argv[])
       {
           int flags, opt, map_zero;
           pid_t child_pid;
           struct child_args args;
           char *uid_map, *gid_map;
           const int MAP_BUF_SIZE = 100;
           char map_buf[MAP_BUF_SIZE];
           char map_path[PATH_MAX];

           /* Parse command-line options. The initial '+' character in
              the final getopt() argument prevents GNU-style permutation
              of command-line options. That's useful, since sometimes
              the 'command' to be executed by this program itself
              has command-line options. We don't want getopt() to treat
              those as options to this program. */

           flags = 0;
           verbose = 0;
           gid_map = NULL;
           uid_map = NULL;
           map_zero = 0;
           while ((opt = getopt(argc, argv, "+imnpuUM:G:zv")) != -1) {
               switch (opt) {
               case 'i': flags |= CLONE_NEWIPC;        break;
               case 'm': flags |= CLONE_NEWNS;         break;
               case 'n': flags |= CLONE_NEWNET;        break;
               case 'p': flags |= CLONE_NEWPID;        break;
               case 'u': flags |= CLONE_NEWUTS;        break;
               case 'v': verbose = 1;                  break;
               case 'z': map_zero = 1;                 break;
               case 'M': uid_map = optarg;             break;
               case 'G': gid_map = optarg;             break;
               case 'U': flags |= CLONE_NEWUSER;       break;
               default:  usage(argv[0]);
               }
           }

           /* -M or -G without -U is nonsensical */

           if (((uid_map != NULL || gid_map != NULL || map_zero) &&
                       !(flags & CLONE_NEWUSER)) ||
                   (map_zero && (uid_map != NULL || gid_map != NULL)))
               usage(argv[0]);

           args.argv = &argv[optind];

           /* We use a pipe to synchronize the parent and child, in order to
              ensure that the parent sets the UID and GID maps before the child
              calls execve(). This ensures that the child maintains its
              capabilities during the execve() in the common case where we
              want to map the child's effective user ID to 0 in the new user
              namespace. Without this synchronization, the child would lose
              its capabilities if it performed an execve() with nonzero
              user IDs (see the capabilities(7) man page for details of the
              transformation of a process's capabilities during execve()). */

           if (pipe(args.pipe_fd) == -1)
               errExit("pipe");

           /* Create the child in new namespace(s) */

           child_pid = clone(childFunc, child_stack + STACK_SIZE,
                             flags | SIGCHLD, &args);
           if (child_pid == -1)
               errExit("clone");

           /* Parent falls through to here */

           if (verbose)
               printf("%s: PID of child created by clone() is %ld\n",
                       argv[0], (long) child_pid);

           /* Update the UID and GID maps in the child */

           if (uid_map != NULL || map_zero) {
               snprintf(map_path, PATH_MAX, "/proc/%ld/uid_map",
                       (long) child_pid);
               if (map_zero) {
                   snprintf(map_buf, MAP_BUF_SIZE, "0 %ld 1", (long) getuid());
                   uid_map = map_buf;
               }
               update_map(uid_map, map_path);
           }
           if (gid_map != NULL || map_zero) {
               snprintf(map_path, PATH_MAX, "/proc/%ld/gid_map",
                       (long) child_pid);
               if (map_zero) {
                   snprintf(map_buf, MAP_BUF_SIZE, "0 %ld 1", (long) getgid());
                   gid_map = map_buf;
               }
               update_map(gid_map, map_path);
           }

           /* Close the write end of the pipe, to signal to the child that we
              have updated the UID and GID maps */

           close(args.pipe_fd[1]);

           if (waitpid(child_pid, NULL, 0) == -1)      /* Wait for child */
               errExit("waitpid");

           if (verbose)
               printf("%s: terminating\n", argv[0]);

           exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
       }

SEE ALSO
       newgidmap(1),  newuidmap(1),  clone(2),  setns(2),  unshare(2),
       proc(5), subgid(5), subuid(5), credentials(7), capabilities(7),
       namespaces(7), pid_namespaces(7)

       The  kernel  source file Documentation/namespaces/resource-con‐
       trol.txt.



Linux                         2013-01-14            USER_NAMESPACES(7)



========== *roff source ==========

.\" Copyright (c) 2013 by Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpages at gmail.com>
.\" and Copyright (c) 2012 by Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm at xmission.com>
.\"
.\" Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
.\" manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are
.\" preserved on all copies.
.\"
.\" Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
.\" manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the
.\" entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
.\" permission notice identical to this one.
.\"
.\" Since the Linux kernel and libraries are constantly changing, this
.\" manual page may be incorrect or out-of-date.  The author(s) assume no
.\" responsibility for errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from
.\" the use of the information contained herein.  The author(s) may not
.\" have taken the same level of care in the production of this manual,
.\" which is licensed free of charge, as they might when working
.\" professionally.
.\"
.\" Formatted or processed versions of this manual, if unaccompanied by
.\" the source, must acknowledge the copyright and authors of this work.
.\"
.\"
.TH USER_NAMESPACES 7 2013-01-14 "Linux" "Linux Programmer's Manual"
.SH NAME
user_namespaces \- overview of Linux user_namespaces
.SH DESCRIPTION
For an overview of namespaces, see
.BR namespaces (7).

User namespaces isolate security-related identifiers, in particular,
user IDs and group IDs (see
.BR credentials (7),
keys (see
.BR keyctl (2)),
.\" FIXME: This page says very little about the interaction
.\" of user namespaces and keys. Add something on this topic.
and capabilities (see
.BR capabilities (7)).
A process's user and group IDs can be different
inside and outside a user namespace.
In particular,
a process can have a normal unprivileged user ID outside a user namespace
while at the same time having a user ID of 0 inside the namespace;
in other words,
the process has full privileges for operations inside the user namespace,
but is unprivileged for operations outside the namespace.
.\"
.\" ============================================================
.\"
.SS Nested namespaces, namespace membership
User namespaces can be nested;
that is, each user namespace\(emexcept the initial ("root")
namespace\(emhas a parent user namespace,
and can have zero or more child user namespaces.
The parent user namespace is the user namespace
of the process that creates the user namespace via a call to
.BR unshare (2)
or
.BR clone (2)
with the
.BR CLONE_NEWUSER
flag.

Each process is a member of exactly one user namespace.
A process created via
.BR fork (2)
or
.BR clone (2)
without the
.BR CLONE_NEWUSER
flag is a member of the same user namespace as its parent.
A process can join another user namespace with
.BR setns (2)
if it has the
.BR CAP_SYS_ADMIN
in that namespace;
upon doing so, it gains a full set of capabilities in that namespace.

A call to
.BR clone (2)
or
.BR unshare (2)
with the
.BR CLONE_NEWUSER
flag makes the new child process (for
.BR clone (2))
or the caller (for
.BR unshare (2))
a member of the new user namespace created by the call.
.\"
.\" ============================================================
.\"
.SS Capabilities
The child process created by
.BR clone (2)
with the
.BR CLONE_NEWUSER
flag starts out with a complete set
of capabilities in the new user namespace.
Likewise, a process that creates a new user namespace using
.BR unshare (2)
or joins an existing user namespace using
.BR setns (2)
gains a full set of capabilities in that namespace.
On the other hand,
that process has no capabilities in the parent (in the case of
.BR clone (2))
or previous (in the case of
.BR unshare (2)
and
.BR setns (2))
user namespace,
even if the new namespace is created or joined by the root user
(i.e., a process with user ID 0 in the root namespace).
Nevertheless, a process owned by the root user
will be able to access resources such as
files that are owned by user ID 0,
and will be able to do things such as sending signals
to processes belonging to user ID 0.

Note that a call to
.BR execve (2)
will cause a process to lose any capabilities that it has,
unless it has a user ID of 0 within the namespace.
Thus, before calling
.BR execve (2),
a user ID mapping for ID 0 must be defined,
and the caller may also need to use
.BR setuid (2)
or similar to set its user ID to 0.

A call to
.BR clone (2),
.BR unshare (2),
or
.BR setns (2)
using the
.BR CLONE_NEWUSER
flag sets the "securebits" flags
(see
.BR capabilities (7))
to their default values (all flags disabled) in the child (for
.BR clone (2))
or caller (for
.BR unshare (2),
or
.BR setns (2)).
Note that because the caller no longer has capabilities
in its original user namespace after a call to
.BR setns (2),
it is not possible for a process to reset its "securebits" flags while
retaining its user namespace membership by using a pair of
.BR setns (2)
calls to move to another user namespace and then return to
its original user namespace.

Having a capability inside a user namespace
permits a process to perform operations (that require privilege)
only on resources governed by that namespace.
The rules for determining whether or not a process has a capability
in a particular user namespace are as follows:
.IP 1. 3
A process has a capability inside a user namespace
if it is a member of that namespace and
it has the capability in its effective capability set.
A process can gain capabilities in its effective capability
set in various ways.
For example, it may execute a set-user-ID program or an
executable with associated file capabilities.
In addition,
a process may gain capabilities via the effect of
.BR clone (2),
.BR unshare (2),
or
.BR setns (2),
as already described.
.\" In the 3.8 sources, see security/commoncap.c::cap_capable():
.IP 2.
If a process has a capability in a user namespace,
then it has that capability in all child (and further removed descendant)
namespaces as well.
.IP 3.
.\" * The owner of the user namespace in the parent of the
.\" * user namespace has all caps.
When a user namespace is created, the kernel records the effective
user ID of the creating process as being the "owner" of the namespace.
.\" (and likewise associates the effective group ID of the creating process
.\" with the namespace).
A process that resides
in the parent of the user namespace
.\" See kernel commit 520d9eabce18edfef76a60b7b839d54facafe1f9 for a fix
.\" on this point
and whose effective user ID matches the owner of the namespace
has all capabilities in the namespace.
.\"     This includes the case where the process executes a set-user-ID
.\"     program that confers the effective UID of the creator of the namespace.
By virtue of the previous rule,
this means that the process has all capabilities in all
further removed descendant user namespaces as well.
.\"
.\" ============================================================
.\"
.SS Interaction of user namespaces and other types of namespaces
Starting in Linux 3.8, unprivileged processes can create user namespaces,
and mount, PID, IPC, network, and UTS namespaces can be created with just the
.B CAP_SYS_ADMIN
capability in the caller's user namespace.

If
.BR CLONE_NEWUSER
is specified along with other
.B CLONE_NEW*
flags in a single
.BR clone (2)
or
.BR unshare (2)
call, the user namespace is guaranteed to be created first,
giving the child
.RB ( clone (2))
or caller
.RB ( unshare (2))
privileges over the remaining namespaces created by the call.
Thus, it is possible for an unprivileged caller to specify this combination
of flags.

When a new IPC, mount, network, PID, or UTS namespace is created via
.BR clone (2)
or
.BR unshare (2),
the kernel records the user namespace of the creating process against
the new namespace.
(This association can't be changed.)
When a process in the new namespace subsequently performs
privileged operations that operate on global
resources isolated by the namespace,
the permission checks are performed according to the process's capabilities
in the user namespace that the kernel associated with the new namespace.
.\"
.\" ============================================================
.\"
.SS User and group ID mappings: uid_map and gid_map
When a user namespace is created,
it starts out without a mapping of user IDs (group IDs)
to the parent user namespace.
The
.IR /proc/[pid]/uid_map
and
.IR /proc/[pid]/gid_map
files (available since Linux 3.5)
.\" commit 22d917d80e842829d0ca0a561967d728eb1d6303
expose the mappings for user and group IDs
inside the user namespace for the process
.IR pid .
These files can be read to view the mappings in a user namespace and
written to (once) to define the mappings.

The description in the following paragraphs explains the details for
.IR uid_map ;
.IR gid_map
is exactly the same,
but each instance of "user ID" is replaced by "group ID".

The
.I uid_map
file exposes the mapping of user IDs from the user namespace
of the process
.IR pid
to the user namespace of the process that opened
.IR uid_map
(but see a qualification to this point below).
In other words, processes that are in different user namespaces
will potentially see different values when reading from a particular
.I uid_map
file, depending on the user ID mappings for the user namespaces
of the reading processes.

Each line in the
.I uid_map
file specifies a 1-to-1 mapping of a range of contiguous
user IDs between two user namespaces.
(When a user namespace is first created, this file is empty.)
The specification in each line takes the form of
three numbers delimited by white space.
The first two numbers specify the starting user ID in
each of the two user namespaces.
The third number specifies the length of the mapped range.
In detail, the fields are interpreted as follows:
.IP (1) 4
The start of the range of user IDs in
the user namespace of the process
.IR pid .
.IP (2)
The start of the range of user
IDs to which the user IDs specified by field one map.
How field two is interpreted depends on whether the process that opened
.I uid_map
and the process
.IR pid
are in the same user namespace, as follows:
.RS
.IP a) 3
If the two processes are in different user namespaces:
field two is the start of a range of
user IDs in the user namespace of the process that opened
.IR uid_map .
.IP b)
If the two processes are in the same user namespace:
field two is the start of the range of
user IDs in the parent user namespace of the process
.IR pid .
This case enables the opener of
.I uid_map
(the common case here is opening
.IR /proc/self/uid_map )
to see the mapping of user IDs into the user namespace of the process
that created this user namespace.
.RE
.IP (3)
The length of the range of user IDs that is mapped between the two
user namespaces.
.PP
System calls that return user IDs (group IDs)\(emfor example,
.BR getuid (2),
.BR getgid (2),
and the credential fields in the structure returned by
.BR stat (2)\(emreturn
the user ID (group ID) mapped into the caller's user namespace.

When a process accesses a file, its user and group IDs
are mapped into the initial user namespace for the purpose of permission
checking and assigning IDs when creating a file.
When a process retrieves file user and group IDs via
.BR stat (2),
the IDs are mapped in the opposite direction,
to produce values relative to the process user and group ID mappings.

The initial user namespace has no parent namespace,
but, for consistency, the kernel provides dummy user and group
ID mapping files for this namespace.
Looking at the
.I uid_map
file
.RI ( gid_map
is the same) from a shell in the initial namespace shows:

.in +4n
.nf
$ \fBcat /proc/$$/uid_map\fP
         0          0 4294967295
.fi
.in

This mapping tells us
that the range starting at user ID 0 in this namespace
maps to a range starting at 0 in the (nonexistent) parent namespace,
and the length of the range is the largest 32-bit unsigned integer.
.\"
.\" ============================================================
.\"
.SS Defining user and group ID mappings: writing to uid_map and gid_map
.PP
After the creation of a new user namespace, the
.I uid_map
file of
.I one
of the processes in the namespace may be written to
.I once
to define the mapping of user IDs in the new user namespace.
An attempt to write more than once to a
.I uid_map
file in a user namespace fails with the error
.BR EPERM .
Similar rules apply for
.I gid_map
files.

The lines written to
.IR uid_map
.RI ( gid_map )
must conform to the following rules:
.IP * 3
The three fields must be valid numbers,
and the last field must be greater than 0.
.IP *
Lines are terminated by newline characters.
.IP *
There is an (arbitrary) limit on the number of lines in the file.
As at Linux 3.8, the limit is five lines.
In addition, the number of bytes written to
the file must be less than the system page size,
.\" FIXME(Eric): the restriction "less than" rather than "less than or equal"
.\" seems strangely arbitrary. Furthermore, the comment does not agree
.\" with the code in kernel/user_namespace.c. Which is correct.
and the write must be performed at the start of the file (i.e.,
.BR lseek (2)
and
.BR pwrite (2)
can't be used to write to nonzero offsets in the file).
.IP *
The range of user IDs (group IDs)
specified in each line cannot overlap with the ranges
in any other lines.
In the initial implementation (Linux 3.8), this requirement was
satisfied by a simplistic implementation that imposed the further
requirement that
the values in both field 1 and field 2 of successive lines must be
in ascending numerical order,
which prevented some otherwise valid maps from being created.
Linux 3.9 and later
.\" commit 0bd14b4fd72afd5df41e9fd59f356740f22fceba
fix this limitation, allowing any valid set of nonoverlapping maps.
.IP *
At least one line must be written to the file.
.PP
Writes that violate the above rules fail with the error
.BR EINVAL .

In order for a process to write to the
.I /proc/[pid]/uid_map
.RI ( /proc/[pid]/gid_map )
file, all of the following requirements must be met:
.IP 1. 3
The writing process must have the
.BR CAP_SETUID
.RB ( CAP_SETGID )
capability in the user namespace of the process
.IR pid .
.IP 2.
The writing process must be in either the user namespace of the process
.I pid
or inside the parent user namespace of the process
.IR pid .
.IP 3.
The mapped user IDs (group IDs) must in turn have a mapping
in the parent user namespace.
.IP 4.
One of the following is true:
.RS
.IP * 3
The data written to
.I uid_map
.RI ( gid_map )
consists of a single line that maps the writing process's file system user ID
(group ID) in the parent user namespace to a user ID (group ID)
in the user namespace.
The usual case here is that this single line provides a mapping for user ID
of the process that created the namespace.
.IP * 3
The process has the
.BR CAP_SETUID
.RB ( CAP_SETGID )
capability in the parent user namespace.
Thus, a privileged process can make mappings to arbitrary user IDs (group IDs)
in the parent user namespace.
.RE
.PP
Writes that violate the above rules fail with the error
.BR EPERM .
.\"
.\" ============================================================
.\"
.SS Unmapped user and group IDs
.PP
There are various places where an unmapped user ID (group ID)
may be exposed to user space.
For example, the first process in a new user namespace may call
.BR getuid ()
before a user ID mapping has been defined for the namespace.
In most such cases, an unmapped user ID is converted
.\" from_kuid_munged(), from_kgid_munged()
to the overflow user ID (group ID);
the default value for the overflow user ID (group ID) is 65534.
See the descriptions of
.IR /proc/sys/kernel/overflowuid
and
.IR /proc/sys/kernel/overflowgid
in
.BR proc (5).

The cases where unmapped IDs are mapped in this fashion include
system calls that return user IDs
.RB ( getuid (2)
.BR getgid (2),
and similar),
credentials passed over a UNIX domain socket,
.\" also SO_PEERCRED
credentials returned by
.BR stat (2),
.BR waitid (2),
and the System V IPC "ctl"
.B IPC_STAT
operations,
credentials exposed by
.IR /proc/PID/status
and the files in
.IR /proc/sysvipc/* ,
credentials returned via the
.I si_uid
field in the
.I siginfo_t
received with a signal (see
.BR sigaction (2)),
credentials written to the process accounting file (see
.BR acct (5)),
and credentials returned with POSIX message queue notifications (see
.BR mq_notify (3)).

There is one notable case where unmapped user and group IDs are
.I not
.\" from_kuid(), from_kgid()
.\" Also F_GETOWNER_UIDS is an exception
converted to the corresponding overflow ID value.
When viewing a
.I uid_map
or
.I gid_map
file in which there is no mapping for the second field,
that field is displayed as 4294967295 (\-1 as an unsigned integer);
.\"
.\" ============================================================
.\"
.SS Set-user-ID and set-group-ID programs
.PP
When a process inside a user namespace executes
a set-user-ID (set-group-ID) program,
the process's effective user (group) ID inside the namespace is changed
to whatever value is mapped for the user (group) ID of the file.
However, if either the user
.I or
the group ID of the file has no mapping inside the namespace,
the set-user-ID (set-group-ID) bit is silently ignored:
the new program is executed,
but the process's effective user (group) ID is left unchanged.
(This mirrors the semantics of executing a set-user-ID or set-group-ID
program that resides on a file system that was mounted with the
.BR MS_NOSUID
flag, as described in
.BR mount (2).)
.\"
.\" ============================================================
.\"
.SS Miscellaneous
.PP
When a process's user and group IDs are passed over a UNIX domain socket
to a process in a different user namespace (see the description of
.B SCM_CREDENTIALS
in
.BR unix (7)),
they are translated into the corresponding values as per the
receiving process's user and group ID mappings.
.\"
.SH CONFORMING TO
Namespaces are a Linux-specific feature.
.\"
.SH NOTES
Over the years, there have been a lot of features that have been added
to the Linux kernel that have been made available only to privileged users
because of their potential to confuse set-user-ID-root applications.
In general, it becomes safe to allow the root user in a user namespace to
use those features because it is impossible, while in a user namespace,
to gain more privilege than the root user of a user namespace has.
.SS Availability
Use of user namespaces requires a kernel that is configured with the
.B CONFIG_USER_NS
option.
User namespaces require support in a range of subsystems across
the kernel.
When an unsupported subsystem is configured into the kernel,
it is not possible to configure user namespaces support.
As at Linux 3.8, most relevant subsystems support user namespaces,
but there are a number of file systems that do not.
Linux 3.9 added user namespaces support for many of the remaining
unsupported file systems:
Plan 9 (9P), Andrew File System (AFS), Ceph, CIFS, CODA, NFS, and OCFS2.
XFS support for user namespaces is not yet available.
.\"
.SH EXAMPLE
The program below is designed to allow experimenting with
user namespaces, as well as other types of namespaces.
It creates namespaces as specified by command-line options and then executes
a command inside those namespaces.
The comments and
.I usage()
function inside the program provide a full explanation of the program.
The following shell session demonstrates its use.

First, we look at the run-time environment:

.in +4n
.nf
$ \fBuname -rs\fP     # Need Linux 3.8 or later
Linux 3.8.0
$ \fBid -u\fP         # Running as unprivileged user
1000
$ \fBid -g\fP
1000
.fi
.in

Now start a new shell in new user
.RI ( \-U ),
mount
.RI ( \-m ),
and PID
.RI ( \-p )
namespaces, with user ID
.RI ( \-M )
and group ID
.RI ( \-G )
1000 mapped to 0 inside the user namespace:

.in +4n
.nf
$ \fB./userns_child_exec -p -m -U -M '0 1000 1' -G '0 1000 1' bash\fP
.fi
.in

The shell has PID 1, because it is the first process in the new
PID namespace:

.in +4n
.nf
bash$ \fBecho $$\fP
1
.fi
.in

Inside the user namespace, the shell has user and group ID 0,
and a full set of permitted and effective capabilities:

.in +4n
.nf
bash$ \fBcat /proc/$$/status | egrep '^[UG]id'\fP
Uid:	0	0	0	0
Gid:	0	0	0	0
bash$ \fBcat /proc/$$/status | egrep '^Cap(Prm|Inh|Eff)'\fP
CapInh:	0000000000000000
CapPrm:	0000001fffffffff
CapEff:	0000001fffffffff
.fi
.in

Mounting a new
.I /proc
file system and listing all of the processes visible
in the new PID namespace shows that the shell can't see
any processes outside the PID namespace:

.in +4n
.nf
bash$ \fBmount -t proc proc /proc\fP
bash$ \fBps ax\fP
  PID TTY      STAT   TIME COMMAND
    1 pts/3    S      0:00 bash
   22 pts/3    R+     0:00 ps ax
.fi
.in
.SS Program source
\&
.nf
/* userns_child_exec.c

   Licensed under GNU General Public License v2 or later

   Create a child process that executes a shell command in new
   namespace(s); allow UID and GID mappings to be specified when
   creating a user namespace.
*/
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <sched.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <signal.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <errno.h>

/* A simple error\-handling function: print an error message based
   on the value in \(aqerrno\(aq and terminate the calling process */

#define errExit(msg)    do { perror(msg); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); \\
                        } while (0)

struct child_args {
    char **argv;        /* Command to be executed by child, with args */
    int    pipe_fd[2];  /* Pipe used to synchronize parent and child */
};

static int verbose;

static void
usage(char *pname)
{
    fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s [options] cmd [arg...]\\n\\n", pname);
    fprintf(stderr, "Create a child process that executes a shell "
            "command in a new user namespace,\\n"
            "and possibly also other new namespace(s).\\n\\n");
    fprintf(stderr, "Options can be:\\n\\n");
#define fpe(str) fprintf(stderr, "    %s", str);
    fpe("\-i          New IPC namespace\\n");
    fpe("\-m          New mount namespace\\n");
    fpe("\-n          New network namespace\\n");
    fpe("\-p          New PID namespace\\n");
    fpe("\-u          New UTS namespace\\n");
    fpe("\-U          New user namespace\\n");
    fpe("\-M uid_map  Specify UID map for user namespace\\n");
    fpe("\-G gid_map  Specify GID map for user namespace\\n");
    fpe("\-z          Map user\(aqs UID and GID to 0 in user namespace\\n");
    fpe("            (equivalent to: \-M \(aq0 <uid> 1\(aq \-G \(aq0
<gid> 1\(aq)\\n");
    fpe("\-v          Display verbose messages\\n");
    fpe("\\n");
    fpe("If \-z, \-M, or \-G is specified, \-U is required.\\n");
    fpe("It is not permitted to specify both \-z and either \-M or \-G.\\n");
    fpe("\\n");
    fpe("Map strings for \-M and \-G consist of records of the form:\\n");
    fpe("\\n");
    fpe("    ID\-inside\-ns   ID\-outside\-ns   len\\n");
    fpe("\\n");
    fpe("A map string can contain multiple records, separated"
        " by commas;\\n");
    fpe("the commas are replaced by newlines before writing"
        " to map files.\\n");

    exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}

/* Update the mapping file \(aqmap_file\(aq, with the value provided in
   \(aqmapping\(aq, a string that defines a UID or GID mapping. A UID or
   GID mapping consists of one or more newline\-delimited records
   of the form:

       ID_inside\-ns    ID\-outside\-ns   length

   Requiring the user to supply a string that contains newlines is
   of course inconvenient for command\-line use. Thus, we permit the
   use of commas to delimit records in this string, and replace them
   with newlines before writing the string to the file. */

static void
update_map(char *mapping, char *map_file)
{
    int fd, j;
    size_t map_len;     /* Length of \(aqmapping\(aq */

    /* Replace commas in mapping string with newlines */

    map_len = strlen(mapping);
    for (j = 0; j < map_len; j++)
        if (mapping[j] == \(aq,\(aq)
            mapping[j] = \(aq\\n\(aq;

    fd = open(map_file, O_RDWR);
    if (fd == \-1) {
        fprintf(stderr, "ERROR: open %s: %s\\n", map_file, strerror(errno));
        return;
        //exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
    }

    if (write(fd, mapping, map_len) != map_len) {
        fprintf(stderr, "ERROR: write %s: %s\\n", map_file, strerror(errno));
        //exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
    }

    close(fd);
}

static int              /* Start function for cloned child */
childFunc(void *arg)
{
    struct child_args *args = (struct child_args *) arg;
    char ch;

    /* Wait until the parent has updated the UID and GID mappings.
       See the comment in main(). We wait for end of file on a
       pipe that will be closed by the parent process once it has
       updated the mappings. */

    close(args\->pipe_fd[1]);    /* Close our descriptor for the write
                                   end of the pipe so that we see EOF
                                   when parent closes its descriptor */
    if (read(args\->pipe_fd[0], &ch, 1) != 0) {
        fprintf(stderr,
                "Failure in child: read from pipe returned != 0\\n");
        exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
    }

    /* Execute a shell command */

    printf("About to exec %s\\n", args\->argv[0]);
    execvp(args\->argv[0], args\->argv);
    errExit("execvp");
}

#define STACK_SIZE (1024 * 1024)

static char child_stack[STACK_SIZE];    /* Space for child\(aqs stack */

int
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    int flags, opt, map_zero;
    pid_t child_pid;
    struct child_args args;
    char *uid_map, *gid_map;
    const int MAP_BUF_SIZE = 100;
    char map_buf[MAP_BUF_SIZE];
    char map_path[PATH_MAX];

    /* Parse command\-line options. The initial \(aq+\(aq character in
       the final getopt() argument prevents GNU\-style permutation
       of command\-line options. That\(aqs useful, since sometimes
       the \(aqcommand\(aq to be executed by this program itself
       has command\-line options. We don\(aqt want getopt() to treat
       those as options to this program. */

    flags = 0;
    verbose = 0;
    gid_map = NULL;
    uid_map = NULL;
    map_zero = 0;
    while ((opt = getopt(argc, argv, "+imnpuUM:G:zv")) != \-1) {
        switch (opt) {
        case \(aqi\(aq: flags |= CLONE_NEWIPC;        break;
        case \(aqm\(aq: flags |= CLONE_NEWNS;         break;
        case \(aqn\(aq: flags |= CLONE_NEWNET;        break;
        case \(aqp\(aq: flags |= CLONE_NEWPID;        break;
        case \(aqu\(aq: flags |= CLONE_NEWUTS;        break;
        case \(aqv\(aq: verbose = 1;                  break;
        case \(aqz\(aq: map_zero = 1;                 break;
        case \(aqM\(aq: uid_map = optarg;             break;
        case \(aqG\(aq: gid_map = optarg;             break;
        case \(aqU\(aq: flags |= CLONE_NEWUSER;       break;
        default:  usage(argv[0]);
        }
    }

    /* \-M or \-G without \-U is nonsensical */

    if (((uid_map != NULL || gid_map != NULL || map_zero) &&
                !(flags & CLONE_NEWUSER)) ||
            (map_zero && (uid_map != NULL || gid_map != NULL)))
        usage(argv[0]);

    args.argv = &argv[optind];

    /* We use a pipe to synchronize the parent and child, in order to
       ensure that the parent sets the UID and GID maps before the child
       calls execve(). This ensures that the child maintains its
       capabilities during the execve() in the common case where we
       want to map the child\(aqs effective user ID to 0 in the new user
       namespace. Without this synchronization, the child would lose
       its capabilities if it performed an execve() with nonzero
       user IDs (see the capabilities(7) man page for details of the
       transformation of a process\(aqs capabilities during execve()). */

    if (pipe(args.pipe_fd) == \-1)
        errExit("pipe");

    /* Create the child in new namespace(s) */

    child_pid = clone(childFunc, child_stack + STACK_SIZE,
                      flags | SIGCHLD, &args);
    if (child_pid == \-1)
        errExit("clone");

    /* Parent falls through to here */

    if (verbose)
        printf("%s: PID of child created by clone() is %ld\\n",
                argv[0], (long) child_pid);

    /* Update the UID and GID maps in the child */

    if (uid_map != NULL || map_zero) {
        snprintf(map_path, PATH_MAX, "/proc/%ld/uid_map",
                (long) child_pid);
        if (map_zero) {
            snprintf(map_buf, MAP_BUF_SIZE, "0 %ld 1", (long) getuid());
            uid_map = map_buf;
        }
        update_map(uid_map, map_path);
    }
    if (gid_map != NULL || map_zero) {
        snprintf(map_path, PATH_MAX, "/proc/%ld/gid_map",
                (long) child_pid);
        if (map_zero) {
            snprintf(map_buf, MAP_BUF_SIZE, "0 %ld 1", (long) getgid());
            gid_map = map_buf;
        }
        update_map(gid_map, map_path);
    }

    /* Close the write end of the pipe, to signal to the child that we
       have updated the UID and GID maps */

    close(args.pipe_fd[1]);

    if (waitpid(child_pid, NULL, 0) == \-1)      /* Wait for child */
        errExit("waitpid");

    if (verbose)
        printf("%s: terminating\\n", argv[0]);

    exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
.fi
.SH SEE ALSO
.BR newgidmap (1),      \" From the shadow package
.BR newuidmap (1),      \" From the shadow package
.BR clone (2),
.BR setns (2),
.BR unshare (2),
.BR proc (5),
.BR subgid (5),         \" From the shadow package
.BR subuid (5),         \" From the shadow package
.BR credentials (7),
.BR capabilities (7),
.BR namespaces (7),
.BR pid_namespaces (7)
.sp
The kernel source file
.IR Documentation/namespaces/resource-control.txt .
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