1e458f1127
Most of them were found and fixed using codespell. Signed-off-by: Stefan Weil <sw@weilnetz.de> Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@redhat.com> Message-Id: <20221030105944.311940-1-sw@weilnetz.de> Signed-off-by: Laurent Vivier <laurent@vivier.eu>
404 lines
13 KiB
ReStructuredText
404 lines
13 KiB
ReStructuredText
QEMU virtio-fs shared file system daemon
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========================================
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Synopsis
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--------
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**virtiofsd** [*OPTIONS*]
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Description
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-----------
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Share a host directory tree with a guest through a virtio-fs device. This
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program is a vhost-user backend that implements the virtio-fs device. Each
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virtio-fs device instance requires its own virtiofsd process.
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This program is designed to work with QEMU's ``--device vhost-user-fs-pci``
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but should work with any virtual machine monitor (VMM) that supports
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vhost-user. See the Examples section below.
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This program must be run as the root user. The program drops privileges where
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possible during startup although it must be able to create and access files
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with any uid/gid:
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* The ability to invoke syscalls is limited using seccomp(2).
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* Linux capabilities(7) are dropped.
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In "namespace" sandbox mode the program switches into a new file system
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namespace and invokes pivot_root(2) to make the shared directory tree its root.
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A new pid and net namespace is also created to isolate the process.
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In "chroot" sandbox mode the program invokes chroot(2) to make the shared
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directory tree its root. This mode is intended for container environments where
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the container runtime has already set up the namespaces and the program does
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not have permission to create namespaces itself.
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Both sandbox modes prevent "file system escapes" due to symlinks and other file
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system objects that might lead to files outside the shared directory.
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Options
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-------
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.. program:: virtiofsd
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.. option:: -h, --help
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Print help.
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.. option:: -V, --version
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Print version.
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.. option:: -d
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Enable debug output.
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.. option:: --syslog
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Print log messages to syslog instead of stderr.
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.. option:: -o OPTION
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* debug -
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Enable debug output.
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* flock|no_flock -
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Enable/disable flock. The default is ``no_flock``.
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* modcaps=CAPLIST
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Modify the list of capabilities allowed; CAPLIST is a colon separated
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list of capabilities, each preceded by either + or -, e.g.
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''+sys_admin:-chown''.
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* log_level=LEVEL -
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Print only log messages matching LEVEL or more severe. LEVEL is one of
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``err``, ``warn``, ``info``, or ``debug``. The default is ``info``.
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* posix_lock|no_posix_lock -
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Enable/disable remote POSIX locks. The default is ``no_posix_lock``.
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* readdirplus|no_readdirplus -
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Enable/disable readdirplus. The default is ``readdirplus``.
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* sandbox=namespace|chroot -
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Sandbox mode:
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- namespace: Create mount, pid, and net namespaces and pivot_root(2) into
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the shared directory.
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- chroot: chroot(2) into shared directory (use in containers).
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The default is "namespace".
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* source=PATH -
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Share host directory tree located at PATH. This option is required.
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* timeout=TIMEOUT -
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I/O timeout in seconds. The default depends on cache= option.
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* writeback|no_writeback -
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Enable/disable writeback cache. The cache allows the FUSE client to buffer
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and merge write requests. The default is ``no_writeback``.
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* xattr|no_xattr -
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Enable/disable extended attributes (xattr) on files and directories. The
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default is ``no_xattr``.
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* posix_acl|no_posix_acl -
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Enable/disable posix acl support. Posix ACLs are disabled by default.
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* security_label|no_security_label -
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Enable/disable security label support. Security labels are disabled by
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default. This will allow client to send a MAC label of file during
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file creation. Typically this is expected to be SELinux security
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label. Server will try to set that label on newly created file
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atomically wherever possible.
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* killpriv_v2|no_killpriv_v2 -
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Enable/disable ``FUSE_HANDLE_KILLPRIV_V2`` support. KILLPRIV_V2 is enabled
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by default as long as the client supports it. Enabling this option helps
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with performance in write path.
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.. option:: --socket-path=PATH
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Listen on vhost-user UNIX domain socket at PATH.
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.. option:: --socket-group=GROUP
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Set the vhost-user UNIX domain socket gid to GROUP.
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.. option:: --fd=FDNUM
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Accept connections from vhost-user UNIX domain socket file descriptor FDNUM.
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The file descriptor must already be listening for connections.
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.. option:: --thread-pool-size=NUM
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Restrict the number of worker threads per request queue to NUM. The default
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is 0.
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.. option:: --cache=none|auto|always
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Select the desired trade-off between coherency and performance. ``none``
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forbids the FUSE client from caching to achieve best coherency at the cost of
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performance. ``auto`` acts similar to NFS with a 1 second metadata cache
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timeout. ``always`` sets a long cache lifetime at the expense of coherency.
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The default is ``auto``.
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Extended attribute (xattr) mapping
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----------------------------------
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By default the name of xattr's used by the client are passed through to the server
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file system. This can be a problem where either those xattr names are used
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by something on the server (e.g. selinux client/server confusion) or if the
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``virtiofsd`` is running in a container with restricted privileges where it
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cannot access some attributes.
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Mapping syntax
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A mapping of xattr names can be made using -o xattrmap=mapping where the ``mapping``
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string consists of a series of rules.
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The first matching rule terminates the mapping.
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The set of rules must include a terminating rule to match any remaining attributes
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at the end.
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Each rule consists of a number of fields separated with a separator that is the
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first non-white space character in the rule. This separator must then be used
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for the whole rule.
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White space may be added before and after each rule.
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Using ':' as the separator a rule is of the form:
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``:type:scope:key:prepend:``
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**scope** is:
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- 'client' - match 'key' against a xattr name from the client for
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setxattr/getxattr/removexattr
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- 'server' - match 'prepend' against a xattr name from the server
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for listxattr
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- 'all' - can be used to make a single rule where both the server
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and client matches are triggered.
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**type** is one of:
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- 'prefix' - is designed to prepend and strip a prefix; the modified
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attributes then being passed on to the client/server.
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- 'ok' - Causes the rule set to be terminated when a match is found
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while allowing matching xattr's through unchanged.
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It is intended both as a way of explicitly terminating
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the list of rules, and to allow some xattr's to skip following rules.
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- 'bad' - If a client tries to use a name matching 'key' it's
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denied using EPERM; when the server passes an attribute
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name matching 'prepend' it's hidden. In many ways it's use is very like
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'ok' as either an explicit terminator or for special handling of certain
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patterns.
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- 'unsupported' - If a client tries to use a name matching 'key' it's
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denied using ENOTSUP; when the server passes an attribute
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name matching 'prepend' it's hidden. In many ways it's use is very like
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'ok' as either an explicit terminator or for special handling of certain
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patterns.
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**key** is a string tested as a prefix on an attribute name originating
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on the client. It maybe empty in which case a 'client' rule
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will always match on client names.
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**prepend** is a string tested as a prefix on an attribute name originating
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on the server, and used as a new prefix. It may be empty
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in which case a 'server' rule will always match on all names from
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the server.
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e.g.:
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``:prefix:client:trusted.:user.virtiofs.:``
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will match 'trusted.' attributes in client calls and prefix them before
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passing them to the server.
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``:prefix:server::user.virtiofs.:``
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will strip 'user.virtiofs.' from all server replies.
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``:prefix:all:trusted.:user.virtiofs.:``
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combines the previous two cases into a single rule.
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``:ok:client:user.::``
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will allow get/set xattr for 'user.' xattr's and ignore
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following rules.
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``:ok:server::security.:``
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will pass 'security.' xattr's in listxattr from the server
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and ignore following rules.
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``:ok:all:::``
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will terminate the rule search passing any remaining attributes
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in both directions.
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``:bad:server::security.:``
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would hide 'security.' xattr's in listxattr from the server.
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A simpler 'map' type provides a shorter syntax for the common case:
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``:map:key:prepend:``
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The 'map' type adds a number of separate rules to add **prepend** as a prefix
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to the matched **key** (or all attributes if **key** is empty).
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There may be at most one 'map' rule and it must be the last rule in the set.
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Note: When the 'security.capability' xattr is remapped, the daemon has to do
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extra work to remove it during many operations, which the host kernel normally
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does itself.
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Security considerations
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Operating systems typically partition the xattr namespace using
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well defined name prefixes. Each partition may have different
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access controls applied. For example, on Linux there are multiple
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partitions
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* ``system.*`` - access varies depending on attribute & filesystem
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* ``security.*`` - only processes with CAP_SYS_ADMIN
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* ``trusted.*`` - only processes with CAP_SYS_ADMIN
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* ``user.*`` - any process granted by file permissions / ownership
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While other OS such as FreeBSD have different name prefixes
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and access control rules.
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When remapping attributes on the host, it is important to
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ensure that the remapping does not allow a guest user to
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evade the guest access control rules.
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Consider if ``trusted.*`` from the guest was remapped to
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``user.virtiofs.trusted*`` in the host. An unprivileged
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user in a Linux guest has the ability to write to xattrs
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under ``user.*``. Thus the user can evade the access
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control restriction on ``trusted.*`` by instead writing
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to ``user.virtiofs.trusted.*``.
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As noted above, the partitions used and access controls
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applied, will vary across guest OS, so it is not wise to
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try to predict what the guest OS will use.
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The simplest way to avoid an insecure configuration is
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to remap all xattrs at once, to a given fixed prefix.
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This is shown in example (1) below.
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If selectively mapping only a subset of xattr prefixes,
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then rules must be added to explicitly block direct
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access to the target of the remapping. This is shown
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in example (2) below.
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Mapping examples
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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1) Prefix all attributes with 'user.virtiofs.'
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::
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-o xattrmap=":prefix:all::user.virtiofs.::bad:all:::"
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This uses two rules, using : as the field separator;
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the first rule prefixes and strips 'user.virtiofs.',
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the second rule hides any non-prefixed attributes that
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the host set.
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This is equivalent to the 'map' rule:
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::
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-o xattrmap=":map::user.virtiofs.:"
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2) Prefix 'trusted.' attributes, allow others through
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::
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"/prefix/all/trusted./user.virtiofs./
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/bad/server//trusted./
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/bad/client/user.virtiofs.//
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/ok/all///"
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Here there are four rules, using / as the field
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separator, and also demonstrating that new lines can
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be included between rules.
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The first rule is the prefixing of 'trusted.' and
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stripping of 'user.virtiofs.'.
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The second rule hides unprefixed 'trusted.' attributes
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on the host.
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The third rule stops a guest from explicitly setting
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the 'user.virtiofs.' path directly to prevent access
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control bypass on the target of the earlier prefix
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remapping.
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Finally, the fourth rule lets all remaining attributes
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through.
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This is equivalent to the 'map' rule:
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::
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-o xattrmap="/map/trusted./user.virtiofs./"
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3) Hide 'security.' attributes, and allow everything else
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::
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"/bad/all/security./security./
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/ok/all///'
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The first rule combines what could be separate client and server
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rules into a single 'all' rule, matching 'security.' in either
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client arguments or lists returned from the host. This stops
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the client seeing any 'security.' attributes on the server and
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stops it setting any.
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SELinux support
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---------------
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One can enable support for SELinux by running virtiofsd with option
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"-o security_label". But this will try to save guest's security context
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in xattr security.selinux on host and it might fail if host's SELinux
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policy does not permit virtiofsd to do this operation.
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Hence, it is preferred to remap guest's "security.selinux" xattr to say
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"trusted.virtiofs.security.selinux" on host.
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"-o xattrmap=:map:security.selinux:trusted.virtiofs.:"
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This will make sure that guest and host's SELinux xattrs on same file
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remain separate and not interfere with each other. And will allow both
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host and guest to implement their own separate SELinux policies.
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Setting trusted xattr on host requires CAP_SYS_ADMIN. So one will need
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add this capability to daemon.
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"-o modcaps=+sys_admin"
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Giving CAP_SYS_ADMIN increases the risk on system. Now virtiofsd is more
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powerful and if gets compromised, it can do lot of damage to host system.
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So keep this trade-off in my mind while making a decision.
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Examples
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--------
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Export ``/var/lib/fs/vm001/`` on vhost-user UNIX domain socket
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``/var/run/vm001-vhost-fs.sock``:
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.. parsed-literal::
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host# virtiofsd --socket-path=/var/run/vm001-vhost-fs.sock -o source=/var/lib/fs/vm001
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host# |qemu_system| \\
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-chardev socket,id=char0,path=/var/run/vm001-vhost-fs.sock \\
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-device vhost-user-fs-pci,chardev=char0,tag=myfs \\
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-object memory-backend-memfd,id=mem,size=4G,share=on \\
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-numa node,memdev=mem \\
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...
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guest# mount -t virtiofs myfs /mnt
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