OpenVZ Forum


Home » Mailing lists » Devel » [RFC] [PATCH 0/4] uid_ns: introduction
Re: [RFC] [PATCH 0/4] uid_ns: introduction [message #16739 is a reply to message #16737] Wed, 08 November 2006 21:27 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Herbert Poetzl is currently offline  Herbert Poetzl
Messages: 239
Registered: February 2006
Senior Member
On Wed, Nov 08, 2006 at 01:34:09PM -0700, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
> Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@fys.uio.no> writes:
> 
> > On Wed, 2006-11-08 at 01:52 +0100, Herbert Poetzl wrote:
> >> On Mon, Nov 06, 2006 at 10:18:14PM -0600, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
> >> > Cedric has previously sent out a patchset
> >> > (http://lists.osdl.org/pipermail/containers/2006-August/000078.html)
> >> > impplementing the very basics of a user namespace. It ignores
> >> > filesystem access checks, so that uid 502 in one namespace could
> >> > access files belonging to uid 502 in another namespace, if the
> >> > containers were so set up.
> >> >
> >> > This isn't necessarily bad, since proper container setup should
> >> > prevent problems. However there has been concern, so here is a
> >> > patchset which takes one course in addressing the concern.
> >> >
> >> > It adds a user namespace pointer to every superblock, and to
> >> > enhances fsuid equivalence checks with a (inode->i_sb->s_uid_ns ==
> >> > current->nsproxy->uid_ns) comparison.
> >> 
> >> I don't consider that a good idea as it means that a filesystem
> >> (or to be precise, a superblock) can only belong to one specific
> >> namespace, which is not very useful for shared setups
> >> 
> >> Linux-VServer provides a mechanism to do per inode (and per
> >> nfs mount) tagging for similar 'security' and more important
> >> for disk space accounting and limiting, which permits to have
> >> different disk limits, quota and access on a shared partition
> >> 
> >> i.e. I do not like it
> >
> > Indeed. I discussed this with Eric at the kernel summit this summer and
> > explained my reservations. As far as I'm concerned, tagging superblocks
> > with a container label is an unacceptable hack since it completely
> > breaks NFS caching semantics.
> 
> As I recall there are two basic issues.
> 
> Putting the default on the mount structure instead of the superblock
> for filesystems that are not uid namespaces aware sounded reasonable,
> and allowed certain classes of sharing between namespaces where they
> agreed on a subset of the uids (especially for read-only data).

yes, that is especially interesting for --bind mounts
when you 'know' that you will dedicate a certain 
sub-tree to one context/guest

> The other was to have a mechanism that allows a uid namespace aware
> filesystem (like some of the distributed filesystems can be) to perform
> the mapping on their own.

Linux-VServer currently provides different 'tagging'
methods to make filesystems context aware, some of
them are based on reusing some (upper 8/16) bits of
uid and gid, others store the context id inside 
(currently) unused places in the on disk inodes

those are currently working for ext2/3, jfs, xfs,
reiser and ocfs2 as well as nfs

HTH,
Herbert

> Some mostly this is a case of simply not going far enough in the uid
> namespace direction.
> 
> Eric
_______________________________________________
Containers mailing list
Containers@lists.osdl.org
https://lists.osdl.org/mailman/listinfo/containers
 
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Previous Topic: Re: [v4l-dvb-maintainer] Re: Re: [PATCH/RFC] kthread API conversion for dvb_frontend and av7110
Next Topic: Re: Re: [RFC] [PATCH 0/4] uid_ns: introduction
Goto Forum:
  


Current Time: Sat Jul 26 08:16:19 GMT 2025

Total time taken to generate the page: 0.46234 seconds