> On Wed, 2007-04-11 at 12:44 +0200, Miklos Szeredi wrote:
> > > 1. clone the master namespace.
> > >
> > > 2. in the new namespace
> > >
> > > move the tree under /share/$me to /
> > > for each ($user, $what, $how) {
> > > move /share/$user/$what to /$what
> > > if ($how == slave) {
> > > make the mount tree under /$what as slave
> > > }
> > > }
> > >
> > > 3. in the new namespace make the tree under
> > > /share as private and unmount /share
> >
> > Thanks. I get the basic idea now: the namespace itself need not be
> > shared between the sessions, it is enough if "share" propagation is
> > set up between the different namespaces of a user.
> >
> > I don't yet see either in your or Viro's description how the trees
> > under /share/$USER are initialized. I guess they are recursively
> > bound from /, and are made slaves.
>
> yes. I suppose, when a userid is created one of the steps would be
>
> mount --rbind / /share/$USER
> mount --make-rslave /share/$USER
> mount --make-rshared /share/$USER
Thinking a bit more about this, I'm quite sure most users wouldn't
even want private namespaces. It would be enough to
chroot /share/$USER
and be done with it.
Private namespaces are only good for keeping a bunch of mounts
referenced by a group of processes. But my guess is, that the natural
behavior for users is to see a persistent set of mounts.
If for example they mount something on a remote machine, then log out
from the ssh session and later log back in, they would want to see
their previous mount still there.
Miklos
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