diff options
author | Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek <zbyszek@in.waw.pl> | 2016-10-20 23:41:21 -0400 |
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committer | Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek <zbyszek@in.waw.pl> | 2016-10-26 20:12:51 -0400 |
commit | 299a34c11a4241f8c5832ccd5a7bc13263f8488b (patch) | |
tree | f67f997d142debec99297a095f4687f65bf7c00e /src/basic/virt.c | |
parent | 24597ee0e626b61f134e09b4e871449ef86b1343 (diff) |
detect-virt: add --private-users switch to check if a userns is active
Various things don't work when we're running in a user namespace, but it's
pretty hard to reliably detect if that is true.
A function is added which looks at /proc/self/uid_map and returns false
if the default "0 0 UINT32_MAX" is found, and true if it finds anything else.
This misses the case where an 1:1 mapping with the full range was used, but
I don't know how to distinguish this case.
'systemd-detect-virt --private-users' is very similar to
'systemd-detect-virt --chroot', but we check for a user namespace instead.
Diffstat (limited to 'src/basic/virt.c')
-rw-r--r-- | src/basic/virt.c | 70 |
1 files changed, 70 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/basic/virt.c b/src/basic/virt.c index 41012d52a0..69b0f96183 100644 --- a/src/basic/virt.c +++ b/src/basic/virt.c @@ -485,6 +485,76 @@ int detect_virtualization(void) { return r; } +static int userns_has_mapping(const char *name) { + _cleanup_fclose_ FILE *f = NULL; + _cleanup_free_ char *buf = NULL; + size_t n_allocated = 0; + ssize_t n; + uint32_t a, b, c; + int r; + + f = fopen(name, "re"); + if (!f) { + log_debug_errno(errno, "Failed to open %s: %m", name); + return errno == -ENOENT ? false : -errno; + } + + n = getline(&buf, &n_allocated, f); + if (n < 0) { + if (feof(f)) { + log_debug("%s is empty, we're in an uninitialized user namespace", name); + return true; + } + + return log_debug_errno(errno, "Failed to read %s: %m", name); + } + + r = sscanf(buf, "%"PRIu32" %"PRIu32" %"PRIu32, &a, &b, &c); + if (r < 3) + return log_debug_errno(errno, "Failed to parse %s: %m", name); + + if (a == 0 && b == 0 && c == UINT32_MAX) { + /* The kernel calls mappings_overlap() and does not allow overlaps */ + log_debug("%s has a full 1:1 mapping", name); + return false; + } + + /* Anything else implies that we are in a user namespace */ + log_debug("Mapping found in %s, we're in a user namespace", name); + return true; +} + +int running_in_userns(void) { + _cleanup_free_ char *line = NULL; + int r; + + r = userns_has_mapping("/proc/self/uid_map"); + if (r != 0) + return r; + + r = userns_has_mapping("/proc/self/gid_map"); + if (r != 0) + return r; + + /* "setgroups" file was added in kernel v3.18-rc6-15-g9cc46516dd. It is also + * possible to compile a kernel without CONFIG_USER_NS, in which case "setgroups" + * also does not exist. We cannot distinguish those two cases, so assume that + * we're running on a stripped-down recent kernel, rather than on an old one, + * and if the file is not found, return false. + */ + r = read_one_line_file("/proc/self/setgroups", &line); + if (r < 0) { + log_debug_errno(r, "/proc/self/setgroups: %m"); + return r == -ENOENT ? false : r; + } + + truncate_nl(line); + r = streq(line, "deny"); + /* See user_namespaces(7) for a description of this "setgroups" contents. */ + log_debug("/proc/self/setgroups contains \"%s\", %s user namespace", line, r ? "in" : "not in"); + return r; +} + int running_in_chroot(void) { int ret; |