Re: [v8 4/5] ext4: adds FS_IOC_FSSETXATTR/FS_IOC_FSGETXATTR interface support

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On Tue, Jan 27, 2015 at 12:02 AM, Dave Chinner <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 23, 2015 at 03:59:04PM -0800, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
>> On Fri, Jan 23, 2015 at 3:30 PM, Dave Chinner <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> > On Fri, Jan 23, 2015 at 02:58:09PM +0300, Konstantin Khlebnikov wrote:
>> >> On 23.01.2015 04:53, Dave Chinner wrote:
>> >> >On Thu, Jan 22, 2015 at 06:28:51PM +0300, Konstantin Khlebnikov wrote:
>> >> >>>+  kprojid = make_kprojid(&init_user_ns, (projid_t)projid);
>> >> >>
>> >> >>Maybe current_user_ns()?
>> >> >>This code should be user-namespace aware from the beginning.
>> >> >
>> >> >No, the code is correct. Project quotas have nothing to do with
>> >> >UIDs and so should never have been included in the uid/gid
>> >> >namespace mapping infrastructure in the first place.
>> >>
>> >> Right, but user-namespace provides id mapping for project-id too.
>> >> This infrastructure adds support for nested project quotas with
>> >> virtualized ids in sub-containers. I couldn't say that this is
>> >> must have feature but implementation is trivial because whole
>> >> infrastructure is already here.
>> >
>> > This is an extremely common misunderstanding of project IDs. Project
>> > IDs are completely separate to the UID/GID namespace.  Project
>> > quotas were originally designed specifically for
>> > accounting/enforcing quotas in situations where uid/gid
>> > accounting/enforcing is not possible. This design intent goes back
>> > 25 years - it predates XFS...
>> >
>> > IOWs, mapping prids via user namespaces defeats the purpose
>> > for which prids were originally intended for.
>> >
>> >> >Point in case: directory subtree quotas can be used as a resource
>> >> >controller for limiting space usage within separate containers that
>> >> >share the same underlying (large) filesystem via mount namespaces.
>> >>
>> >> That's exactly my use-case: 'sub-volumes' for containers with
>> >> quota for space usage/inodes count.
>> >
>> > That doesn't require mapped project IDs. Hard container space limits
>> > can only be controlled by the init namespace, and because inodes can
>> > hold only one project ID the current ns cannot be allowed to change
>> > the project ID on the inode because that allows them to escape the
>> > resource limits set on the project ID associated with the sub-mount
>> > set up by the init namespace...
>> >
>> > i.e.
>> >
>> > /mnt                    prid = 0, default for entire fs.
>> > /mnt/container1/        prid = 1, inherit, 10GB space limit
>> > /mnt/container2/        prid = 2, inherit, 50GB space limit
>> > .....
>> > /mnt/containerN/        prid = N, inherit, 20GB space limit
>> >
>> > And you clone the mount namespace for each container so the root is
>> > at the appropriate /mnt/containerX/.  Now the containers have a
>> > fixed amount of space they can use in the parent filesystem they
>> > know nothing about, and it is enforced by directory subquotas
>> > controlled by the init namespace.  This "fixed amount of space" is
>> > reflected in the container namespace when "df" is run as it will
>> > report the project quota space limits. Adding or removing space to a
>> > container is as simple as changing the project quota limits from the
>> > init namespace. i.e. an admin operation controlled by the host, not
>> > the container....
>> >
>> > Allowing the container to modify the prid and/or the inherit bit of
>> > inodes in it's namespace then means the user can define their own
>> > space usage limits, even turn them off. It's not a resource
>> > container at that point because the user can define their own
>> > limits.  Hence, only if the current_ns cannot change project quotas
>> > will we have a hard fence on space usage that the container *cannot
>> > exceed*.
>>
>> I think I must be missing something simple here.  In a hypothetical
>> world where the code used nsown_capable, if an admin wants to stick a
>> container in /mnt/container1 with associated prid 1 and a userns,
>> shouldn't it just map only prid 1 into the user ns?  Then a user in
>> that userns can't try to change the prid of a file to 2 because the
>> number "2" is unmapped for that user and translation will fail.
>
> You've effectively said "yes, project quotas are enabled, but you
> only have a single ID, it's always turned on and you can't change it
> to anything else.

It's got to be a assigned somehow.  Inheritance from the parent
directory probably works too, though.

>
> So, why do they need to be mapped via user namespaces to enable
> this? Think about it a little harder:
>
>         - Project IDs are not user IDs.
>         - Project IDs are not a security/permission mechanism.
>         - Project quotas only provide a mechanism for
>           resource usage control.
>
> Think about that last one some more. Perhaps, as a hint, I should
> relate it to control groups? :) i.e:
>
>         - Project quotas can be used as an effective mount ns space
>           usage controller.
>
> But this can only be safely and reliably by keeping the project IDs
> inaccessible from the containers themselves. I don't see why a
> mechanism that controls the amount of filesystem space used by a
> container should be considered any differently to a memory control
> group that limits the amount of memory the container can use.
>

Cgroups are ephemeral, and I'd want my containers' quotas to survive
container restarts and even reboots.  I'm sure it *could* be done,
though.

> However, nobody on the container side of things would answer any of
> my questions about how project quotas were going to be used,
> limited, managed, etc back when we had to make a decision to enable
> XFS user ns support, I did what was needed to support the obvious
> container use case and close any possible loop hole that containers
> might be able to use to subvert that use case.
>
> If we want to do anything different, then there's a *lot* of
> userns aware regression tests needed to be written for xfstests....

Agreed.

--Andy
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-api" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html




[Index of Archives]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Yosemite News]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]

  Powered by Linux