Hi Serge, On 6 July 2016 at 16:13, Serge E. Hallyn <serge@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, Jul 06, 2016 at 10:41:48AM +0200, Michael Kerrisk (man-pages) wrote: >> [Rats! Doing now what I should have down to start with. Looping some >> lists and CRIU and other possibly relevant people into this >> conversation] >> >> Hi Eric, >> >> On 5 July 2016 at 23:47, Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> > "Michael Kerrisk (man-pages)" <mtk.manpages@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >> > >> >> Hi Eric, >> >> >> >> I have a question. Is there any way currently to discover which >> >> user namespace a particular nonuser namespace is governed by? >> >> Maybe I am missing something, but there does not seem to be a >> >> way to do this. Also, can one discover which userns is the >> >> parent of a given userns? Again, I can't see a way to do this. >> >> >> >> The point here is introspecting so that a process might determine >> >> what its capabilities are when operating on some resource governed >> >> by a (nonuser) namespace. >> > >> > To the best of my knowledge that there is not an interface to get that >> > information. It would be good to have such an interface for no other >> > reason than the CRIU folks are going to need it at some point. I am a >> > bit surprised they have not complained yet. > > I don't think they need it. They do in fact have what they need. Assume > you have tasks T1, T2, T1_1 and T2_1; T1 and T2 are in init_user_ns; T1 > spawned T1_1 in a new userns; T2 spawned T2_1 which setns()d to T1_1's ns. > There's some {handwave} uid mapping, does not matter. > > At restart, it doesn't matter which task originally created the new userns. > criu knows T1_1 and T2_1 are in the same userns; it creates the userns, sets > up the mapping, and T1_1 and T2_1 setns() to it. I'm missing something here. How does the parental relationships between the user namespaces get reconstructed? Those relationships will govern what capabilities a process will have in various user namespaces. Cheers, Michael -- Michael Kerrisk Linux man-pages maintainer; http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/ Linux/UNIX System Programming Training: http://man7.org/training/ _______________________________________________ Containers mailing list Containers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/containers