Return-Path: Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org via listexpand id S1754153AbaFCRja (ORCPT ); Tue, 3 Jun 2014 13:39:30 -0400 Received: from relay.parallels.com ([195.214.232.42]:59814 "EHLO relay.parallels.com" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S1753888AbaFCRj2 (ORCPT ); Tue, 3 Jun 2014 13:39:28 -0400 Message-ID: <538E0848.6060900@parallels.com> Date: Tue, 3 Jun 2014 21:39:20 +0400 From: Pavel Emelyanov User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:13.0) Gecko/20120605 Thunderbird/13.0 MIME-Version: 1.0 To: Serge Hallyn CC: Marian Marinov , Linux Containers , "Eric W. Biederman" , LXC development mailing-list , "linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org" Subject: Re: [RFC] Per-user namespace process accounting References: <5386D58D.2080809@1h.com> <87tx88nbko.fsf@x220.int.ebiederm.org> <53870EAA.4060101@1h.com> <20140529153232.GB9714@ubuntumail> <538DFF72.7000209@parallels.com> <20140603172631.GL9714@ubuntumail> In-Reply-To: <20140603172631.GL9714@ubuntumail> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="ISO-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Originating-IP: [89.169.95.100] Sender: linux-kernel-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: X-Mailing-List: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org On 06/03/2014 09:26 PM, Serge Hallyn wrote: > Quoting Pavel Emelyanov (xemul@parallels.com): >> On 05/29/2014 07:32 PM, Serge Hallyn wrote: >>> Quoting Marian Marinov (mm@1h.com): >>>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- >>>> Hash: SHA1 >>>> >>>> On 05/29/2014 01:06 PM, Eric W. Biederman wrote: >>>>> Marian Marinov writes: >>>>> >>>>>> Hello, >>>>>> >>>>>> I have the following proposition. >>>>>> >>>>>> Number of currently running processes is accounted at the root user namespace. The problem I'm facing is that >>>>>> multiple containers in different user namespaces share the process counters. >>>>> >>>>> That is deliberate. >>>> >>>> And I understand that very well ;) >>>> >>>>> >>>>>> So if containerX runs 100 with UID 99, containerY should have NPROC limit of above 100 in order to execute any >>>>>> processes with ist own UID 99. >>>>>> >>>>>> I know that some of you will tell me that I should not provision all of my containers with the same UID/GID maps, >>>>>> but this brings another problem. >>>>>> >>>>>> We are provisioning the containers from a template. The template has a lot of files 500k and more. And chowning >>>>>> these causes a lot of I/O and also slows down provisioning considerably. >>>>>> >>>>>> The other problem is that when we migrate one container from one host machine to another the IDs may be already >>>>>> in use on the new machine and we need to chown all the files again. >>>>> >>>>> You should have the same uid allocations for all machines in your fleet as much as possible. That has been true >>>>> ever since NFS was invented and is not new here. You can avoid the cost of chowning if you untar your files inside >>>>> of your user namespace. You can have different maps per machine if you are crazy enough to do that. You can even >>>>> have shared uids that you use to share files between containers as long as none of those files is setuid. And map >>>>> those shared files to some kind of nobody user in your user namespace. >>>> >>>> We are not using NFS. We are using a shared block storage that offers us snapshots. So provisioning new containers is >>>> extremely cheep and fast. Comparing that with untar is comparing a race car with Smart. Yes it can be done and no, I >>>> do not believe we should go backwards. >>>> >>>> We do not share filesystems between containers, we offer them block devices. >>> >>> Yes, this is a real nuisance for openstack style deployments. >>> >>> One nice solution to this imo would be a very thin stackable filesystem >>> which does uid shifting, or, better yet, a non-stackable way of shifting >>> uids at mount. >> >> I vote for non-stackable way too. Maybe on generic VFS level so that filesystems >> don't bother with it. From what I've seen, even simple stacking is quite a challenge. > > Do you have any ideas for how to go about it? It seems like we'd have > to have separate inodes per mapping for each file, which is why of > course stacking seems "natural" here. I was thinking about "lightweight mapping" which is simple shifting. Since we're trying to make this co-work with user-ns mappings, simple uid/gid shift should be enough. Please, correct me if I'm wrong. If I'm not, then it looks to be enough to have two per-sb or per-mnt values for uid and gid shift. Per-mnt for now looks more promising, since container's FS may be just a bind-mount from shared disk. > Trying to catch the uid/gid at every kernel-userspace crossing seems > like a design regression from the current userns approach. I suppose we > could continue in the kuid theme and introduce a iiud/igid for the > in-kernel inode uid/gid owners. Then allow a user privileged in some > ns to create a new mount associated with a different mapping for any > ids over which he is privileged. User-space crossing? From my point of view it would be enough if we just turn uid/gid read from disk (well, from whenever FS gets them) into uids, that would match the user-ns's ones, this sould cover the VFS layer and related syscalls only, which is, IIRC stat-s family and chown. Ouch, and the whole quota engine :\ Thanks, Pavel -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/