On Fri, Jun 23, 2017 at 03:17:23PM -0500, Serge E. Hallyn wrote: > Quoting Vivek Goyal (vgoyal@xxxxxxxxxx): > > On Thu, Jun 22, 2017 at 02:59:46PM -0400, Stefan Berger wrote: > > > This series of patches primary goal is to enable file capabilities > > > in user namespaces without affecting the file capabilities that are > > > effective on the host. This is to prevent that any unprivileged user > > > on the host maps his own uid to root in a private namespace, writes > > > the xattr, and executes the file with privilege on the host. > > > > > > We achieve this goal by writing extended attributes with a different > > > name when a user namespace is used. If for example the root user > > > in a user namespace writes the security.capability xattr, the name > > > of the xattr that is actually written is encoded as > > > security.capability@uid=1000 for root mapped to uid 1000 on the host. > > > When listing the xattrs on the host, the existing security.capability > > > as well as the security.capability@uid=1000 will be shown. Inside the > > > namespace only 'security.capability', with the value of > > > security.capability@uid=1000, is visible. > > > > Hi Stefan, > > > > Got a question. If child usernamespace sets a > > security.capability@uid=1000, can any of the parent namespace remove it? > > > > IOW, I set capability from usernamespace and tried to remove it from > > host and that failed. Is that expected. > > > > # Inside usernamespce > > $setcap cat_net_raw+ep foo.txt > > > > # outside user namespace > > $listxattr foo.txt > > xattr: security.capability@uid=1000 > > xattr: security.selinux > > > > # outside user namespace > > setfattr -x security.capability@uid foo.txt > > setfattr: foo.txt: Invalid argument > > > > Doing a strace shows removexattr() failed. May this will need fixing? > > > > removexattr("testfile.txt", "security.capability@uid") = -1 EINVAL > > (Invalid argument) > > That's not the right xattr, though, does > > setfattr -x security.capability@uid=1000 foo.txt > > work? Yep, that works (as root on host). My bad. > > If you are in fact uid=1000 then that should work. Tried setfattr -x as uid 1000 in init_user_ns and that seems to have issues. $ ll testfile.txt -rw-r--r--. 1 vivek vivek 0 Jun 23 15:44 testfile.txt $listxattr testfile.txt xattr: security.capability@uid=1000 xattr: security.selinux $id uid=1000(vivek) gid=1000(vivek) groups=1000(vivek) context=unconfined_u:unconfined_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023 $setfattr -x security.capability@uid=1000 testfile.txt setfattr: testfile.txt: Operation not permitted I had to launch a user namespace with 1000 mapped to 0 inside user namespace and then "setfattr -x security.capability testfile.txt" worked. > If you are uid 1001, > and 1000 was delegated to you, then you'll need to create a transient > userns with uid 1000 mapped into it in order to delete it (so that you > have privilege over the uid). Will give this a try. Vivek > > If that doesn't work, then it's a bug. > > -serge _______________________________________________ Containers mailing list Containers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/containers