"Serge E. Hallyn" <[email protected]> writes:
> Quoting Eric W. Biederman ([email protected]):
>> "Serge E. Hallyn" <[email protected]> writes:
>> >> No. The uids in a filesystem are interpreted in some user namespace
>> >> context. We can discover that context at the first mount of the
>> >> filesystem. Assuming the uids on a filesystem are the same set
>> >> of uids your process is using is just wrong.
>> >
>> > But, when I insert a usb keychain disk into my laptop, that fs assumes
>> > the uids on it's fs are the same as uids on my laptop...
>>
>> I agree that setting the fs_user_namespace at mount time is fine.
>> However when we use a mount that a process in another user namespace
>> we need to not assume the uids are the same.
>>
>> Do you see the difference?
>
> Aaah - so you don't want to store this on the fs. So this is actually
> like what I had mentioned many many emails ago?
Quite possibly. I'm not certain where you go the idea I was thinking
of storing this on the fs. I think you must have been thinking of
the Linux-Vserver implementation.
>> Actually I was thinking something as mundane as a mapping table. This
>> uid in this namespace equals that uid in that other namespace.
>
> I see.
>
> That's also what I was imagining earlier, but it seems crass somehow.
> I'd almost prefer to just tag a mount with a user namespace implicitly,
> and only allow the mounter to say 'do' or 'don't' allow this to be read
> by users in another namespace. Then in the 'don't' case, user joe
> [1000] can't read files belonging to user jack [1000] in another
> namespace. It's stricter, but clean.
>
> But whether we do mapping tables or simple isolation, I do still like
> the idea of pursuing the use of the keystore for global uids.
Yes. I guess my thinking is that the mapping effort and keys are an
enhancement after we get the basic user namespace working, to overcome
the limitations.
Eric
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