• Michael Kerrisk (man-pages)'s avatar
    nsfs: Add an ioctl() to return the namespace type · e5ff5ce6
    Michael Kerrisk (man-pages) authored
    Linux 4.9 added two ioctl() operations that can be used to discover:
    
    * the parental relationships for hierarchical namespaces (user and PID)
      [NS_GET_PARENT]
    * the user namespaces that owns a specified non-user-namespace
      [NS_GET_USERNS]
    
    For no good reason that I can glean, NS_GET_USERNS was made synonymous
    with NS_GET_PARENT for user namespaces. It might have been better if
    NS_GET_USERNS had returned an error if the supplied file descriptor
    referred to a user namespace, since it suggests that the caller may be
    confused. More particularly, if it had generated an error, then I wouldn't
    need the new ioctl() operation proposed here. (On the other hand, what
    I propose here may be more generally useful.)
    
    I would like to write code that discovers namespace relationships for
    the purpose of understanding the namespace setup on a running system.
    In particular, given a file descriptor (or pathname) for a namespace,
    N, I'd like to obtain the corresponding user namespace.  Namespace N
    might be a user namespace (in which case my code would just use N) or
    a non-user namespace (in which case my code will use NS_GET_USERNS to
    get the user namespace associated with N). The problem is that there
    is no way to tell the difference by looking at the file descriptor
    (and if I try to use NS_GET_USERNS on an N that is a user namespace, I
    get the parent user namespace of N, which is not what I want).
    
    This patch therefore adds a new ioctl(), NS_GET_NSTYPE, which, given
    a file descriptor that refers to a user namespace, returns the
    namespace type (one of the CLONE_NEW* constants).
    Signed-off-by: default avatarMichael Kerrisk <mtk-manpages@gmail.com>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarEric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xmission.com>
    e5ff5ce6
nsfs.c 5.19 KB