The function GetClosestMountpointAncestor is not very efficient,
does not really belong to cgroup package, and is only used once
(from fs/cpuset.go).
Remove it, replacing with the implementation based on moby/sys/mountinfo
parser.
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
This function is not very efficient, does not really belong to cgroup
package, and is only used once (from fs/cpuset.go).
Prepare to remove it by replacing with the implementation based on
the parser from github.com/moby/sys/mountinfo parser.
This commit is here to make sure the proposed replacement passes the
unit test.
Funny, but the unit test need to be slightly modified since it
supplies the wrong mountinfo (space as the first character, empty line
at the end).
Validated by
$ go test -v -run Ance
=== RUN TestGetClosestMountpointAncestor
--- PASS: TestGetClosestMountpointAncestor (0.00s)
PASS
ok github.com/opencontainers/runc/libcontainer/cgroups 0.002s
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
Such containers should remain paused after the update. This has
historically been true, but this helps ensure that the systemd cgroup
changes (freezing the container during SetUnitProperties) don't break
this behaviour.
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <asarai@suse.de>
Unfortunately, runc update doesn't support setting devices rules
directly so we have to trigger it by modifying a different rule (which
happens to trigger a devices update).
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <asarai@suse.de>
It seems we missed that systemd added support for the devices cgroup, as
a result systemd would actually *write an allow-all rule each time you
did 'runc update'* if you used the systemd cgroup driver. This is
obviously ... bad and was a clear security bug. Luckily the commits which
introduced this were never in an actual runc release.
So we simply generate the cgroupv1-style rules (which is what systemd's
DeviceAllow wants) and default to a deny-all ruleset. Unfortunately it
turns out that systemd is susceptible to the same spurrious error
failure that we were, so that problem is out of our hands for systemd
cgroup users.
However, systemd has a similar bug to the one fixed in [1]. It will
happily write a disruptive deny-all rule when it is not necessary.
Unfortunately, we cannot even use devices.Emulator to generate a minimal
set of transition rules because the DBus API is limited (you can only
clear or append to the DeviceAllow= list -- so we are forced to always
clear it). To work around this, we simply freeze the container during
SetUnitProperties.
[1]: afe83489d4 ("cgroupv1: devices: use minimal transition rules with devices.Emulator")
Fixes: 1d4ccc8e0c ("fix data inconsistent when runc update in systemd driven cgroup v1")
Fixes: 7682a2b2a5 ("fix data inconsistent when runc update in systemd driven cgroup v2")
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <asarai@suse.de>
Now that all of the infrastructure for devices.Emulator is in place, we
can finally implement minimal transition rules for devices cgroups. This
allows for minimal disruption to running containers if a rule update is
requested. Only in very rare circumstances (black-list cgroups and mode
switching) will a clear-all rule be written. As a result, containers
should no longer see spurious errors.
A similar issue affects the cgroupv2 devices setup, but that is a topic
for another time (as the solution is drastically different).
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <asarai@suse.de>
Okay, this requires a bit of explanation.
The reason for this emulation is to allow us to have seamless updates of
the devices cgroup for running containers. This was triggered by several
users having issues where our initial writing of a deny-all rule (in all
cases) results in spurrious errors.
The obvious solution would be to just remove the deny-all rule, right?
Well, it turns out that runc doesn't actually control the deny-all rule
because all users of runc have explicitly specified their own deny-all
rule for many years. This appears to have been done to work around a bug
in runc (which this series has fixed in [1]) where we would actually act
as a black-list despite this being a violation of the OCI spec.
This means that not adding our own deny-all rule in the case of updates
won't solve the issue. However, it will also not solve the issue in
several other cases (the most notable being where a container is being
switched between default-permission modes).
So in order to handle all of these cases, a way of tracking the relevant
internal cgroup state (given a certain state of "cgroups.list" and a set
of rules to apply) is necessary. That is the purpose of DevicesEmulator.
Reading "devices.list" is quite important because that's the only way we
can tell if it's safe to skip the troublesome deny-all rules without
making potentially-dangerous assumptions about the container.
We also are currently bug-compatible with the devices cgroup (namely,
removing rules that don't exist or having superfluous rules all works as
with the in-kernel implementation). The only exception to this is that
we give an error if a user requests to revoke part of a wildcard
exception, because allowing such configurations could result in security
holes (cgroupv1 silently ignores such rules, meaning in white-list mode
that the access is still permitted).
[1]: b2bec9806f ("cgroup: devices: eradicate the Allow/Deny lists")
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <asarai@suse.de>
Making them the same type is simply confusing, but also means that you
could accidentally use one in the wrong context. This eliminates that
problem. This also includes a whole bunch of cleanups for the types
within DeviceRule, so that they can be used more ergonomically.
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <asarai@suse.de>
/dev/console is a host resouce which gives a bunch of permissions that
we really shouldn't be giving to containers, not to mention that
/dev/console in containers is actually /dev/pts/$n. Drop this since
arguably this is a fairly scary thing to allow...
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <asarai@suse.de>
These lists have been in the codebase for a very long time, and have
been unused for a large portion of that time -- specconv doesn't
generate them and the only user of these flags has been tests (which
doesn't inspire much confidence).
In addition, we had an incorrect implementation of a white-list policy.
This wasn't exploitable because all of our users explicitly specify
"deny all" as the first rule, but it was a pretty glaring issue that
came from the "feature" that users can select whether they prefer a
white- or black- list. Fix this by always writing a deny-all rule (which
is what our users were doing anyway, to work around this bug).
This is one of many changes needed to clean up the devices cgroup code.
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <asarai@suse.de>
This is effectively a nicer implementation of the container.isPaused()
helper, but to be used within the cgroup code for handling some fun
issues we have to fix with the systemd cgroup driver.
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <asarai@suse.de>
This is mostly just useful for testing with the "single" mode, since it
allows you to run recvtty in the background without the console being
closed.
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <asarai@suse.de>
1. The command `runc checkpoint --lazy-server --status-fd $FD` actually
accepts a file name as an $FD. Make it accept a file descriptor,
like its name implies and the documentation states.
In addition, since runc itself does not use the result of CRIU status
fd, remove the code which relays it, and pass the FD directly to CRIU.
Note 1: runc should close this file descriptor itself after passing it
to criu, otherwise whoever waits on it might wait forever.
Note 2: due to the way criu swrk consumes the fd (it reopens
/proc/$SENDER_PID/fd/$FD), runc can't close it as soon as criu swrk has
started. There is no good way to know when criu swrk has reopened the
fd, so we assume that as soon as we have received something back, the
fd is already reopened.
2. Since the meaning of --status-fd has changed, the test case using
it needs to be fixed as well.
Modify the lazy migration test to remove "sleep 2", actually waiting
for the the lazy page server to be ready.
While at it,
- remove the double fork (using shell's background process is
sufficient here);
- check the exit code for "runc checkpoint" and "criu lazy-pages";
- remove the check for no errors in dump.log after restore, as we
are already checking its exit code.
[v2: properly close status fd after spawning criu]
[v3: move close status fd to after the first read]
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
The change ensures that the passed in value of NoNewPrivileges under spec.Process
is reflected in the container config generated by specconv.CreateLibcontainerConfig
Closes#2397
Signed-off-by: Pradyumna Agrawal <pradyumnaa@vmware.com>
This unties the Gordian Knot of using GetPaths in cgroupv2 code.
The problem is, the current code uses GetPaths for three kinds of things:
1. Get all the paths to cgroup v1 controllers to save its state (see
(*linuxContainer).currentState(), (*LinuxFactory).loadState()
methods).
2. Get all the paths to cgroup v1 controllers to have the setns process
enter the proper cgroups in `(*setnsProcess).start()`.
3. Get the path to a specific controller (for example,
`m.GetPaths()["devices"]`).
Now, for cgroup v2 instead of a set of per-controller paths, we have only
one single unified path, and a dedicated function `GetUnifiedPath()` to get it.
This discrepancy between v1 and v2 cgroupManager API leads to the
following problems with the code:
- multiple if/else code blocks that have to treat v1 and v2 separately;
- backward-compatible GetPaths() methods in v2 controllers;
- - repeated writing of the PID into the same cgroup for v2;
Overall, it's hard to write the right code with all this, and the code
that is written is kinda hard to follow.
The solution is to slightly change the API to do the 3 things outlined
above in the same manner for v1 and v2:
1. Use `GetPaths()` for state saving and setns process cgroups entering.
2. Introduce and use Path(subsys string) to obtain a path to a
subsystem. For v2, the argument is ignored and the unified path is
returned.
This commit converts all the controllers to the new API, and modifies
all the users to use it.
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
1. Prevent theoretical "concurrent map access" error to m.paths.
2. There is no need to call m.Paths -- we can access m.paths directly.
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
c.cgroupManager.GetPaths() are called twice here: once in currentState()
and then in newSetnsProcess(). Reuse the result of the first call, which
is stored into state.CgroupPaths.
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
Instead of passing the whole map of paths, pass the path to the memory
controller which these functions actually require.
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
The test cases need to take into account the assembly modifications.
The instruction:
LdXMemH dst: r2 src: r1 off: 0 imm: 0
has been replaced with:
LdXMemW dst: r2 src: r1 off: 0 imm: 0
And32Imm dst: r2 imm: 65535
Signed-off-by: Alice Frosi <afrosi@de.ibm.com>
Load the full 32 bits word and take the lower 16 bits, instead of
reading just 16 bits.
Same fix as 07bae05e61
Signed-off-by: Alice Frosi <afrosi@de.ibm.com>