On Mon, Nov 2, 2020 at 5:52 PM Alexey Gladkov <gladkov.alexey@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Add a new prctl to change the user namespace in which the process > counter is located. A pointer to the user namespace is in cred struct > to be inherited by all child processes. [...] > + case PR_SET_RLIMIT_USER_NAMESPACE: > + if (!capable(CAP_SYS_RESOURCE)) > + return -EPERM; > + > + switch (arg2) { > + case PR_RLIMIT_BIND_GLOBAL_USERNS: > + error = set_rlimit_ns(&init_user_ns); > + break; > + case PR_RLIMIT_BIND_CURRENT_USERNS: > + error = set_rlimit_ns(current_user_ns()); > + break; > + default: > + error = -EINVAL; > + } > + break; I don't see how this can work. capable() requires that current_user_ns()==&init_user_ns, so you can't use this API to bind rlimits to any other user namespace. Fundamentally, if it requires CAP_SYS_RESOURCE, this probably can't be done as an API that a process uses to change its own rlimit scope. In that case I would implement this as part of clone3() instead of prctl(). (Then init_user_ns can set it if the caller has CAP_SYS_RESOURCE. If you want to have support for doing the same thing with nested namespaces, you'd also need a flag that the first-level clone3() can set on the namespace to say "further rlimit splitting should be allowed".) Or alternatively, we could say that CAP_SYS_RESOURCE doesn't matter, and instead you're allowed to move the rlimit scope if your current hard rlimit is INFINITY. That might make more sense? Maybe?