Quoting Miklos Szeredi ([email protected]):
> > I'm a bit lost about what is currently done and who advocates for what.
> >
> > It seems to me the MNT_ALLOWUSERMNT (or whatever :) flag should be
> > propagated. In the /share rbind+chroot example, I assume the admin
> > would start by doing
> >
> > mount --bind /share /share
> > mount --make-slave /share
> > mount --bind -o allow_user_mounts /share (or whatever)
> > mount --make-shared /share
> >
> > then on login, pam does
> >
> > chroot /share/$USER
> >
> > or some sort of
> >
> > mount --bind /share /home/$USER/root
> > chroot /home/$USER/root
> >
> > or whatever. In any case, the user cannot make user mounts except under
> > /share, and any cloned namespaces will still allow user mounts.
>
> I don't quite understand your method. This is how I think of it:
>
> mount --make-rshared /
> mkdir -p /mnt/ns/$USER
> mount --rbind / /mnt/ns/$USER
> mount --make-rslave /mnt/ns/$USER
This was my main point - that the tree in which users can mount will be
a slave of /, so that propagating the "are user mounts allowed" flag
among peers is safe and intuitive.
> mount --set-flags --recursive -oallowusermnt /mnt/ns/$USER
> chroot /mnt/ns/$USER
> su - $USER
>
> I did actually try something equivalent (without the fancy mount
> commands though), and it worked fine. The only "problem" is the
> proliferation of mounts in /proc/mounts. There was a recently posted
> patch in AppArmor, that at least hides unreachable mounts from
> /proc/mounts, so the user wouldn't see all those. But it could still
> be pretty confusing to the sysadmin.
>
> So in that sense doing it the complicated way, by first cloning the
> namespace, and then copying and sharing mounts individually which need
> to be shared could relieve this somewhat.
True. But the kernel functionality you provide enables both ways so no
problem in either case :)
> Another point: user mounts under /proc and /sys shouldn't be allowed.
> There are files there (at least in /proc) that are seemingly writable
> by the user, but they are still not writable in the sense, that
> "normal" files are.
Good point.
> Anyway, there are lots of userspace policy issues, but those don't
> impact the kernel part.
Though it might make sense to enforce /proc and /sys not allowing user
mounts under them in the kernel.
> As for the original question of propagating the "allowusermnt" flag, I
> think it doesn't matter, as long as it's consistent and documented.
>
> Propagating some mount flags and not propagating others is
> inconsistent and confusing, so I wouldn't want that. Currently
> remount doesn't propagate mount flags, that may be a bug, dunno.
Dave, any thoughts on safety of propagating the vfsmount read-only
flags?
-serge
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