On Do, 29.10.20 10:47, Eric W. Biederman (ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx) wrote: > Is that the use case you are looking at removing the need for > systemd-homed to avoid chowning after lugging encrypted home directories > from one system to another? Why would it be desirable to avoid the > chown? Yes, I am very interested in seeing Christian's work succeed, for the usecase in systemd-homed. In systemd-homed each user gets their own private file system, and these fs shall be owned by the user's local UID, regardless in which system it is used. The UID should be an artifact of the local, individual system in this model, and thus the UID on of the same user/home on system A might be picked as 1010 and on another as 1543, and on a third as 1323, and it shouldn't matter. This way, home directories become migratable without having to universially sync UID assignments: it doesn't matter anymore what the local UID is. Right now we do a recursive chown() at login time to ensure the home dir is properly owned. This has two disadvantages: 1. It's slow. In particular on large home dirs, it takes a while to go through the whole user's homedir tree and chown/adjust ACLs for everything. 2. Because it is so slow we take a shortcut right now: if the top-level home dir inode itself is owned by the correct user, we skip the recursive chowning. This means in the typical case where a user uses the same system most of the time, and thus the UID is stable we can avoid the slowness. But this comes at a drawback: if the user for some reason ends up with files in their homedir owned by an unrelated user, then we'll never notice or readjust. > If the goal is to solve fragmented administration of uid assignment I > suggest that it might be better to solve the administration problem so > that all of the uids of interest get assigned the same way on all of the > systems of interest. Well, the goal is to make things simple and be able to use the home dir everywhere without any prior preparation, without central UID assignment authority. The goal is to have a scheme that requires no administration, by making the UID management problem go away. Hence, if you suggest solving this by having a central administrative authority: this is exactly what the model wants to get away from. Or to say this differently: just because I personally use three different computers, I certainly don't want to set up LDAP or sync UIDs manually. Lennart -- Lennart Poettering, Berlin