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.\" SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
.\" Copyright (c) 2020-2022 Red Hat GmbH
.\" Author: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com>
.TH passt 1
.SH NAME
.B passt
\- Unprivileged user-mode network connectivity for virtual machines
.br
.B pasta
\- Unprivileged user-mode network connectivity for network namespaces
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B passt
[\fIOPTION\fR]...
.br
.B pasta
[\fIOPTION\fR]... [\fICOMMAND\fR [\fIARG\fR]...]
.br
.B pasta
[\fIOPTION\fR]... \fIPID\fR
.br
.B pasta
[\fIOPTION\fR]... \fB--netns\fR [\fIPATH\fR|\fINAME\fR]
.SH DESCRIPTION
.SS passt
.B passt
(\fIP\fRlug \fIA\fR \fIS\fRimple \fIS\fRocket \fIT\fRransport) provides full,
quasi-native network connectivity to virtual machines in user-mode without
requiring any capabilities or privileges.
The data plane implements a translation layer between a Layer-2 virtual network
interface and native Layer-4 (TCP, UDP, ping) sockets on the host, giving the
illusion that application processes residing on the guest are running on the
local host, from a networking perspective.
Built-in ARP, DHCP, NDP, and DHCPv6 implementations are designed to provide the
guest with a network configuration that tightly resembles the host native
configuration. With the default options, guest and host share IP addresses,
routes, and port bindings.
Port forwarding and translation allow networking services running in the guest
to be reachable from both local and remote hosts.
Unlike \fBslirp4netns\fR(1), \fBpasst\fR doesn't implement a full TCP stack: the
TCP translation layer has no stateful data buffering and operates by reflecting
one peer's observed parameters (congestion window size, acknowledged data, etc.)
to the corresponding peer.
Currently, the only supported hypervisor is \fBqemu\fR(1), connecting to
\fBpasst\fR by means of a UNIX domain socket. This is supported starting from
qemu 7.2. For older qemu versions, see the \fBqrap\fR(1) wrapper.
.SS pasta
.B pasta
(\fIP\fRack \fIA\fR \fIS\fRubtle \fIT\fRap \fIA\fRbstraction) provides
equivalent functionality to network namespaces, as the one offered by
\fBpasst\fR for virtual machines.
If PID or --netns are given, \fBpasta\fR associates to an existing
user and network namespace. Otherwise, \fBpasta\fR creates a new user
and network namespace, and spawns the given command or a default shell
within this context. A \fItap\fR device within the network namespace
is created to provide network connectivity.
For local TCP and UDP traffic only, \fBpasta\fR also implements a bypass path
directly mapping Layer-4 sockets between \fIinit\fR and target namespaces,
for performance reasons.
.SH OPTIONS
conf: Accept duplicate and conflicting options, the last one wins In multiple occasions, especially when passt(1) and pasta(1) are used in integrations such as the one with Podman, the ability to override earlier options on the command line with later one would have been convenient. Recently, to debug a number of issues happening with Podman, I would have liked to ask users to share a debug log by passing --debug as additional option, but pasta refuses --quiet (always passed by Podman) and --debug at the same time. On top of this, Podman lets users specify other pasta options in its containers.conf(5) file, as well as on the command line. The options from the configuration files are appended together with the ones from the command line, which makes it impossible for users to override options from the configuration file, if duplicated options are refused, unless Podman takes care of sorting them, which is clearly not sustainable. For --debug and --trace, somebody took care of this on Podman side at: https://github.com/containers/common/pull/2052 but this doesn't fix the issue with other options, and we'll have anyway older versions of Podman around, too. I think there's some value in telling users about duplicated or conflicting options, because that might reveal issues in integrations or accidental misconfigurations, but by now I'm fairly convinced that the downsides outweigh this. Drop checks about duplicate options and mutually exclusive ones. In some cases, we need to also undo a couple of initialisations caused by earlier options, but this looks like a simplification, overall. Notable exception: --stderr still conflicts with --log-file, because users might have the expectation that they don't actually conflict. But they do conflict in the existing implementation, so it's safer to make sure that the users notice that. Suggested-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com> Suggested-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au> Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au> Tested-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com>
2024-06-18 16:04:49 +00:00
Unless otherwise noted below, \fBif conflicting or multiple options are given,
the last one takes effect.\fR
.TP
.BR \-d ", " \-\-debug
Be verbose, don't log to the system logger.
.TP
.BR \-\-trace
Be extra verbose, show single packets. Implies \fB--debug\fR.
.TP
.BR \-q ", " \-\-quiet
Don't print informational messages.
.TP
.BR \-f ", " \-\-foreground
passt, pasta: Namespace-based sandboxing, defer seccomp policy application To reach (at least) a conceptually equivalent security level as implemented by --enable-sandbox in slirp4netns, we need to create a new mount namespace and pivot_root() into a new (empty) mountpoint, so that passt and pasta can't access any filesystem resource after initialisation. While at it, also detach IPC, PID (only for passt, to prevent vulnerabilities based on the knowledge of a target PID), and UTS namespaces. With this approach, if we apply the seccomp filters right after the configuration step, the number of allowed syscalls grows further. To prevent this, defer the application of seccomp policies after the initialisation phase, before the main loop, that's where we expect bad things to happen, potentially. This way, we get back to 22 allowed syscalls for passt and 34 for pasta, on x86_64. While at it, move #syscalls notes to specific code paths wherever it conceptually makes sense. We have to open all the file handles we'll ever need before sandboxing: - the packet capture file can only be opened once, drop instance numbers from the default path and use the (pre-sandbox) PID instead - /proc/net/tcp{,v6} and /proc/net/udp{,v6}, for automatic detection of bound ports in pasta mode, are now opened only once, before sandboxing, and their handles are stored in the execution context - the UNIX domain socket for passt is also bound only once, before sandboxing: to reject clients after the first one, instead of closing the listening socket, keep it open, accept and immediately discard new connection if we already have a valid one Clarify the (unchanged) behaviour for --netns-only in the man page. To actually make passt and pasta processes run in a separate PID namespace, we need to unshare(CLONE_NEWPID) before forking to background (if configured to do so). Introduce a small daemon() implementation, __daemon(), that additionally saves the PID file before forking. While running in foreground, the process itself can't move to a new PID namespace (a process can't change the notion of its own PID): mention that in the man page. For some reason, fork() in a detached PID namespace causes SIGTERM and SIGQUIT to be ignored, even if the handler is still reported as SIG_DFL: add a signal handler that just exits. We can now drop most of the pasta_child_handler() implementation, that took care of terminating all processes running in the same namespace, if pasta started a shell: the shell itself is now the init process in that namespace, and all children will terminate once the init process exits. Issuing 'echo $$' in a detached PID namespace won't return the actual namespace PID as seen from the init namespace: adapt demo and test setup scripts to reflect that. Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com>
2022-02-07 20:11:37 +00:00
Don't run in background. This implies that the process is not moved to a
detached PID namespace after starting, because the PID itself cannot change.
Default is to fork into background.
.TP
.BR \-e ", " \-\-stderr " " (DEPRECATED)
conf, passt: Make --stderr do nothing, and deprecate it The original behaviour of printing messages to standard error by default when running from a non-interactive terminal was introduced because the first KubeVirt integration draft used to start passt in foreground and get messages via standard error. For development purposes, the system logger was more convenient at that point, and passt was running from interactive terminals only if not started by the KubeVirt integration. This behaviour was introduced by 84a62b79a2bc ("passt: Also log to stderr, don't fork to background if not interactive"). Later, I added command-line options in 1e49d194d017 ("passt, pasta: Introduce command-line options and port re-mapping") and accidentally reversed this condition, which wasn't a problem as --stderr could force printing to standard error anyway (and it was used by KubeVirt). Nowadays, the KubeVirt integration uses a log file (requested via libvirt configuration), and the same applies for Podman if one actually needs to look at runtime logs. There are no use cases left, as far as I know, where passt runs in foreground in non-interactive terminals. Seize the chance to reintroduce some sanity here. If we fork to background, standard error is closed, so --stderr is useless in that case. If we run in foreground, there's no harm in printing messages to standard error, and that accidentally became the default behaviour anyway, so --stderr is not needed in that case. It would be needed for non-interactive terminals, but there are no use cases, and if there were, let's log to standard error anyway: the user can always redirect standard error to /dev/null if needed. Before we're up and running, we need to print to standard error anyway if something happens, otherwise we can't report failure to start in any kind of usage, stand-alone or in integrations. So, make --stderr do nothing, and deprecate it. While at it, drop a left-over comment about --foreground being the default only for interactive terminals, because it's not the case anymore. Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
2024-06-19 18:10:10 +00:00
This option has no effect, and is maintained for compatibility purposes only.
conf, passt: Make --stderr do nothing, and deprecate it The original behaviour of printing messages to standard error by default when running from a non-interactive terminal was introduced because the first KubeVirt integration draft used to start passt in foreground and get messages via standard error. For development purposes, the system logger was more convenient at that point, and passt was running from interactive terminals only if not started by the KubeVirt integration. This behaviour was introduced by 84a62b79a2bc ("passt: Also log to stderr, don't fork to background if not interactive"). Later, I added command-line options in 1e49d194d017 ("passt, pasta: Introduce command-line options and port re-mapping") and accidentally reversed this condition, which wasn't a problem as --stderr could force printing to standard error anyway (and it was used by KubeVirt). Nowadays, the KubeVirt integration uses a log file (requested via libvirt configuration), and the same applies for Podman if one actually needs to look at runtime logs. There are no use cases left, as far as I know, where passt runs in foreground in non-interactive terminals. Seize the chance to reintroduce some sanity here. If we fork to background, standard error is closed, so --stderr is useless in that case. If we run in foreground, there's no harm in printing messages to standard error, and that accidentally became the default behaviour anyway, so --stderr is not needed in that case. It would be needed for non-interactive terminals, but there are no use cases, and if there were, let's log to standard error anyway: the user can always redirect standard error to /dev/null if needed. Before we're up and running, we need to print to standard error anyway if something happens, otherwise we can't report failure to start in any kind of usage, stand-alone or in integrations. So, make --stderr do nothing, and deprecate it. While at it, drop a left-over comment about --foreground being the default only for interactive terminals, because it's not the case anymore. Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
2024-06-19 18:10:10 +00:00
Note that this configuration option is \fBdeprecated\fR and will be removed in a
future version.
conf: Accept duplicate and conflicting options, the last one wins In multiple occasions, especially when passt(1) and pasta(1) are used in integrations such as the one with Podman, the ability to override earlier options on the command line with later one would have been convenient. Recently, to debug a number of issues happening with Podman, I would have liked to ask users to share a debug log by passing --debug as additional option, but pasta refuses --quiet (always passed by Podman) and --debug at the same time. On top of this, Podman lets users specify other pasta options in its containers.conf(5) file, as well as on the command line. The options from the configuration files are appended together with the ones from the command line, which makes it impossible for users to override options from the configuration file, if duplicated options are refused, unless Podman takes care of sorting them, which is clearly not sustainable. For --debug and --trace, somebody took care of this on Podman side at: https://github.com/containers/common/pull/2052 but this doesn't fix the issue with other options, and we'll have anyway older versions of Podman around, too. I think there's some value in telling users about duplicated or conflicting options, because that might reveal issues in integrations or accidental misconfigurations, but by now I'm fairly convinced that the downsides outweigh this. Drop checks about duplicate options and mutually exclusive ones. In some cases, we need to also undo a couple of initialisations caused by earlier options, but this looks like a simplification, overall. Notable exception: --stderr still conflicts with --log-file, because users might have the expectation that they don't actually conflict. But they do conflict in the existing implementation, so it's safer to make sure that the users notice that. Suggested-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com> Suggested-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au> Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au> Tested-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com>
2024-06-18 16:04:49 +00:00
.TP
.BR \-l ", " \-\-log-file " " \fIPATH\fR
conf, passt: Make --stderr do nothing, and deprecate it The original behaviour of printing messages to standard error by default when running from a non-interactive terminal was introduced because the first KubeVirt integration draft used to start passt in foreground and get messages via standard error. For development purposes, the system logger was more convenient at that point, and passt was running from interactive terminals only if not started by the KubeVirt integration. This behaviour was introduced by 84a62b79a2bc ("passt: Also log to stderr, don't fork to background if not interactive"). Later, I added command-line options in 1e49d194d017 ("passt, pasta: Introduce command-line options and port re-mapping") and accidentally reversed this condition, which wasn't a problem as --stderr could force printing to standard error anyway (and it was used by KubeVirt). Nowadays, the KubeVirt integration uses a log file (requested via libvirt configuration), and the same applies for Podman if one actually needs to look at runtime logs. There are no use cases left, as far as I know, where passt runs in foreground in non-interactive terminals. Seize the chance to reintroduce some sanity here. If we fork to background, standard error is closed, so --stderr is useless in that case. If we run in foreground, there's no harm in printing messages to standard error, and that accidentally became the default behaviour anyway, so --stderr is not needed in that case. It would be needed for non-interactive terminals, but there are no use cases, and if there were, let's log to standard error anyway: the user can always redirect standard error to /dev/null if needed. Before we're up and running, we need to print to standard error anyway if something happens, otherwise we can't report failure to start in any kind of usage, stand-alone or in integrations. So, make --stderr do nothing, and deprecate it. While at it, drop a left-over comment about --foreground being the default only for interactive terminals, because it's not the case anymore. Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
2024-06-19 18:10:10 +00:00
Log to file \fIPATH\fR, and not to the system logger.
conf: Accept duplicate and conflicting options, the last one wins In multiple occasions, especially when passt(1) and pasta(1) are used in integrations such as the one with Podman, the ability to override earlier options on the command line with later one would have been convenient. Recently, to debug a number of issues happening with Podman, I would have liked to ask users to share a debug log by passing --debug as additional option, but pasta refuses --quiet (always passed by Podman) and --debug at the same time. On top of this, Podman lets users specify other pasta options in its containers.conf(5) file, as well as on the command line. The options from the configuration files are appended together with the ones from the command line, which makes it impossible for users to override options from the configuration file, if duplicated options are refused, unless Podman takes care of sorting them, which is clearly not sustainable. For --debug and --trace, somebody took care of this on Podman side at: https://github.com/containers/common/pull/2052 but this doesn't fix the issue with other options, and we'll have anyway older versions of Podman around, too. I think there's some value in telling users about duplicated or conflicting options, because that might reveal issues in integrations or accidental misconfigurations, but by now I'm fairly convinced that the downsides outweigh this. Drop checks about duplicate options and mutually exclusive ones. In some cases, we need to also undo a couple of initialisations caused by earlier options, but this looks like a simplification, overall. Notable exception: --stderr still conflicts with --log-file, because users might have the expectation that they don't actually conflict. But they do conflict in the existing implementation, so it's safer to make sure that the users notice that. Suggested-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com> Suggested-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au> Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au> Tested-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com>
2024-06-18 16:04:49 +00:00
Specifying this option multiple times does \fInot\fR lead to multiple log files:
the last given option takes effect.
.TP
.BR \-\-log-size " " \fISIZE\fR
Limit log file size to \fISIZE\fR bytes. When the log file is full, make room
for new entries by removing old ones at the beginning. This limit is mandatory.
Default is 1048576 (1 MiB).
.TP
.BR \-\-runas " " \fIUID\fR|\fIUID:GID\fR|\fILOGIN\fR|\fILOGIN:GROUP\fR
Attempt to change to given UID and corresponding group if UID is given,
or to given UID and given GID if both are given. Alternatively, login name, or
login name and group name can be passed. This requires privileges (either
initial effective UID 0 or CAP_SETUID capability) to work.
Default is to change to user \fInobody\fR if started as root.
.TP
.BR \-h ", " \-\-help
Display a help message and exit.
.TP
.BR \-\-version
Show version and exit.
.TP
.BR \-p ", " \-\-pcap " " \fIfile
Capture tap-facing (that is, guest-side or namespace-side) network packets to
\fIfile\fR in \fBpcap\fR format.
conf: Accept duplicate and conflicting options, the last one wins In multiple occasions, especially when passt(1) and pasta(1) are used in integrations such as the one with Podman, the ability to override earlier options on the command line with later one would have been convenient. Recently, to debug a number of issues happening with Podman, I would have liked to ask users to share a debug log by passing --debug as additional option, but pasta refuses --quiet (always passed by Podman) and --debug at the same time. On top of this, Podman lets users specify other pasta options in its containers.conf(5) file, as well as on the command line. The options from the configuration files are appended together with the ones from the command line, which makes it impossible for users to override options from the configuration file, if duplicated options are refused, unless Podman takes care of sorting them, which is clearly not sustainable. For --debug and --trace, somebody took care of this on Podman side at: https://github.com/containers/common/pull/2052 but this doesn't fix the issue with other options, and we'll have anyway older versions of Podman around, too. I think there's some value in telling users about duplicated or conflicting options, because that might reveal issues in integrations or accidental misconfigurations, but by now I'm fairly convinced that the downsides outweigh this. Drop checks about duplicate options and mutually exclusive ones. In some cases, we need to also undo a couple of initialisations caused by earlier options, but this looks like a simplification, overall. Notable exception: --stderr still conflicts with --log-file, because users might have the expectation that they don't actually conflict. But they do conflict in the existing implementation, so it's safer to make sure that the users notice that. Suggested-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com> Suggested-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au> Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au> Tested-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com>
2024-06-18 16:04:49 +00:00
Specifying this option multiple times does \fInot\fR lead to multiple capture
files: the last given option takes effect.
.TP
.BR \-P ", " \-\-pid " " \fIfile
Write own PID to \fIfile\fR once initialisation is done, before forking to
background (if configured to do so).
.TP
.BR \-m ", " \-\-mtu " " \fImtu
Assign \fImtu\fR via DHCP (option 26) and NDP (option type 5). A zero value
disables assignment.
By default, the advertised MTU is 65520 bytes, that is, the maximum 802.3 MTU
minus the length of a 802.3 header, rounded to 32 bits (IPv4 words).
.TP
.BR \-a ", " \-\-address " " \fIaddr
Assign IPv4 \fIaddr\fR via DHCP (\fByiaddr\fR), or \fIaddr\fR via DHCPv6 (option
5) and an \fIaddr\fR-based prefix via NDP Router Advertisement (option type 3)
for an IPv6 \fIaddr\fR.
This option can be specified zero (for defaults) to two times (once for IPv4,
once for IPv6).
By default, assigned IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are taken from the host interfaces
with the first default route, if any, for the corresponding IP version. If no
default routes are available and there is any interface with any route for a
given IP version, the first of these interfaces will be chosen instead. If no
such interface exists, the link-local address 169.254.2.1 is assigned for IPv4,
and no additional address will be assigned for IPv6.
.TP
.BR \-n ", " \-\-netmask " " \fImask
Assign IPv4 netmask \fImask\fR, expressed as dot-decimal or number of bits, via
DHCP (option 1).
By default, the netmask associated to the host address matching the assigned one
is used. If there's no matching address on the host, the netmask is determined
according to the CIDR block of the assigned address (RFC 4632).
.TP
.BR \-M ", " \-\-mac-addr " " \fIaddr
Use source MAC address \fIaddr\fR when communicating to the guest or to the
target namespace.
Default is the locally administered MAC addresses 9a:55:9a:55:9a:55.
.TP
.BR \-g ", " \-\-gateway " " \fIaddr
Assign IPv4 \fIaddr\fR as default gateway via DHCP (option 3), or IPv6
\fIaddr\fR as source for NDP Router Advertisement and DHCPv6 messages.
This option can be specified zero (for defaults) to two times (once for IPv4,
once for IPv6).
By default, IPv4 and IPv6 gateways are taken from the host interface with the
first default route, if any, for the corresponding IP version. If the default
route is a multipath one, the gateway is the first nexthop router returned by
the kernel which has the highest weight in the set of paths. If no default
routes are available and there is just one interface with any route, that
interface will be chosen instead. If no such interface exists, the link-local
address 169.254.2.2 is used for IPv4, and the link-local address fe80::1 is used
for IPv6.
Note: these addresses are also used as source address for packets directed to
the guest or to the target namespace having a loopback or local source address,
to allow mapping of local traffic to guest and target namespace. See the
\fBNOTES\fR below for more details about this mechanism.
.TP
.BR \-i ", " \-\-interface " " \fIname
Use host interface \fIname\fR to derive addresses and routes.
conf, icmp, tcp, udp: Add options to bind to outbound address and interface I didn't notice earlier: libslirp (and slirp4netns) supports binding outbound sockets to specific IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, to force the source addresse selection. If we want to claim feature parity, we should implement that as well. Further, Podman supports specifying outbound interfaces as well, but this is simply done by resolving the primary address for an interface when the network back-end is started. However, since kernel version 5.7, commit c427bfec18f2 ("net: core: enable SO_BINDTODEVICE for non-root users"), we can actually bind to a specific interface name, which doesn't need to be validated in advance. Implement -o / --outbound ADDR to bind to IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, and --outbound-if4 and --outbound-if6 to bind IPv4 and IPv6 sockets to given interfaces. Given that it probably makes little sense to select addresses and routes from interfaces different than the ones given for outbound sockets, also assign those as "template" interfaces, by default, unless explicitly overridden by '-i'. For ICMP and UDP, we call sock_l4() to open outbound sockets, as we already needed to bind to given ports or echo identifiers, and we can bind() a socket only once: there, pass address (if any) and interface (if any) for the existing bind() and setsockopt() calls. For TCP, in general, we wouldn't otherwise bind sockets. Add a specific helper to do that. For UDP outbound sockets, we need to know if the final destination of the socket is a loopback address, before we decide whether it makes sense to bind the socket at all: move the block mangling the address destination before the creation of the socket in the IPv4 path. This was already the case for the IPv6 path. Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
2023-03-08 02:29:51 +00:00
Default is to use the interfaces specified by \fB--outbound-if4\fR and
\fB--outbound-if6\fR, for IPv4 and IPv6 addresses and routes, respectively.
If no interfaces are given, the interface with the first default routes for each
IP version is selected. If no default routes are available and there is just one
interface with any route, that interface will be chosen instead. If no such
interface exists, host interfaces will be ignored for the purposes of assigning
addresses and routes, and link-local addresses will be used instead.
conf, icmp, tcp, udp: Add options to bind to outbound address and interface I didn't notice earlier: libslirp (and slirp4netns) supports binding outbound sockets to specific IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, to force the source addresse selection. If we want to claim feature parity, we should implement that as well. Further, Podman supports specifying outbound interfaces as well, but this is simply done by resolving the primary address for an interface when the network back-end is started. However, since kernel version 5.7, commit c427bfec18f2 ("net: core: enable SO_BINDTODEVICE for non-root users"), we can actually bind to a specific interface name, which doesn't need to be validated in advance. Implement -o / --outbound ADDR to bind to IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, and --outbound-if4 and --outbound-if6 to bind IPv4 and IPv6 sockets to given interfaces. Given that it probably makes little sense to select addresses and routes from interfaces different than the ones given for outbound sockets, also assign those as "template" interfaces, by default, unless explicitly overridden by '-i'. For ICMP and UDP, we call sock_l4() to open outbound sockets, as we already needed to bind to given ports or echo identifiers, and we can bind() a socket only once: there, pass address (if any) and interface (if any) for the existing bind() and setsockopt() calls. For TCP, in general, we wouldn't otherwise bind sockets. Add a specific helper to do that. For UDP outbound sockets, we need to know if the final destination of the socket is a loopback address, before we decide whether it makes sense to bind the socket at all: move the block mangling the address destination before the creation of the socket in the IPv4 path. This was already the case for the IPv6 path. Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
2023-03-08 02:29:51 +00:00
.TP
.BR \-o ", " \-\-outbound " " \fIaddr
Use an IPv4 \fIaddr\fR as source address for IPv4 outbound TCP connections, UDP
flows, ICMP requests, or an IPv6 \fIaddr\fR for IPv6 ones, by binding outbound
sockets to it.
This option can be specified zero (for defaults) to two times (once for IPv4,
once for IPv6).
By default, the source address is selected by the routing tables.
.TP
.BR \-\-outbound-if4 " " \fIname
Bind IPv4 outbound sockets to host interface \fIname\fR, and, unless another
interface is specified via \fB-i\fR, \fB--interface\fR, use this interface to
derive IPv4 addresses and routes.
By default, the interface given by the default route is selected. If no default
routes are available and there is just one interface with any route, that
interface will be chosen instead. If no such interface exists, outbound sockets
will not be bound to any specific interface.
conf, icmp, tcp, udp: Add options to bind to outbound address and interface I didn't notice earlier: libslirp (and slirp4netns) supports binding outbound sockets to specific IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, to force the source addresse selection. If we want to claim feature parity, we should implement that as well. Further, Podman supports specifying outbound interfaces as well, but this is simply done by resolving the primary address for an interface when the network back-end is started. However, since kernel version 5.7, commit c427bfec18f2 ("net: core: enable SO_BINDTODEVICE for non-root users"), we can actually bind to a specific interface name, which doesn't need to be validated in advance. Implement -o / --outbound ADDR to bind to IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, and --outbound-if4 and --outbound-if6 to bind IPv4 and IPv6 sockets to given interfaces. Given that it probably makes little sense to select addresses and routes from interfaces different than the ones given for outbound sockets, also assign those as "template" interfaces, by default, unless explicitly overridden by '-i'. For ICMP and UDP, we call sock_l4() to open outbound sockets, as we already needed to bind to given ports or echo identifiers, and we can bind() a socket only once: there, pass address (if any) and interface (if any) for the existing bind() and setsockopt() calls. For TCP, in general, we wouldn't otherwise bind sockets. Add a specific helper to do that. For UDP outbound sockets, we need to know if the final destination of the socket is a loopback address, before we decide whether it makes sense to bind the socket at all: move the block mangling the address destination before the creation of the socket in the IPv4 path. This was already the case for the IPv6 path. Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
2023-03-08 02:29:51 +00:00
.TP
.BR \-\-outbound-if6 " " \fIname
Bind IPv6 outbound sockets to host interface \fIname\fR, and, unless another
interface is specified via \fB-i\fR, \fB--interface\fR, use this interface to
derive IPv6 addresses and routes.
By default, the interface given by the default route is selected. If no default
routes are available and there is just one interface with any route, that
interface will be chosen instead. If no such interface exists, outbound sockets
will not be bound to any specific interface.
.TP
.BR \-D ", " \-\-dns " " \fIaddr
Instruct the guest (via DHCP, DHVPv6 or NDP) to use \fIaddr\fR (IPv4
or IPv6) as a nameserver, as configured (see options
\fB--no-dhcp-dns\fR, \fB--dhcp-dns\fR) instead of reading addresses
from \fI/etc/resolv.conf\fR. This option can be specified multiple
times. Specifying \fB-D none\fR disables usage of DNS addresses
altogether. Unlike addresses from \fI/etc/resolv.conf\fR, \fIaddr\fR
is given to the guest without remapping. For example \fB--dns
127.0.0.1\fR will instruct the guest to use itself as nameserver, not
the host.
.TP
.BR \-\-dns-forward " " \fIaddr
Map \fIaddr\fR (IPv4 or IPv6) as seen from guest or namespace to the
nameserver (with corresponding IP version) specified by the
\fB\-\-dns-host\fR option. Maps only UDP and TCP traffic to port 53 or
port 853. Replies are translated back with a reverse mapping. This
option can be specified zero to two times (once for IPv4, once for
IPv6).
.TP
.BR \-\-dns-host " " \fIaddr
Configure the host nameserver which guest or namespace queries to the
\fB\-\-dns-forward\fR address will be redirected to. This option can
be specified zero to two times (once for IPv4, once for IPv6).
By default, the first nameserver from the host's
\fI/etc/resolv.conf\fR.
.TP
.BR \-S ", " \-\-search " " \fIlist
Use space-separated \fIlist\fR for DHCP, DHCPv6, and NDP purposes, instead of
reading entries from \fI/etc/resolv.conf\fR. See options \fB--no-dhcp-search\fR
and \fB--dhcp-search\fR. \fB--search none\fR disables the DNS domain search
list altogether (if you need to search a domain called "none" you can use
\fB--search none.\fR).
.TP
.BR \-\-no-dhcp-dns
In \fIpasst\fR mode, do not assign IPv4 addresses via DHCP (option 23) or IPv6
addresses via NDP Router Advertisement (option type 25) and DHCPv6 (option 23)
as DNS resolvers.
By default, all the configured addresses are passed.
.TP
.BR \-\-dhcp-dns
In \fIpasta\fR mode, assign IPv4 addresses via DHCP (option 23) or IPv6
addresses via NDP Router Advertisement (option type 25) and DHCPv6 (option 23)
as DNS resolvers.
By default, configured addresses, if any, are not passed.
.TP
.BR \-\-no-dhcp-search
In \fIpasst\fR mode, do not send the DNS domain search list addresses via DHCP
(option 119), via NDP Router Advertisement (option type 31) and DHCPv6 (option
24).
By default, the DNS domain search list resulting from configuration is passed.
.TP
.BR \-\-dhcp-search
In \fIpasta\fR mode, send the DNS domain search list addresses via DHCP (option
119), via NDP Router Advertisement (option type 31) and DHCPv6 (option 24).
By default, the DNS domain search list resulting from configuration is not
passed.
.TP
.BR \-\-no-tcp
Disable the TCP protocol handler. No TCP connections will be accepted host-side,
and TCP packets coming from guest or target namespace will be silently dropped.
.TP
.BR \-\-no-udp
Disable the UDP protocol handler. No UDP traffic coming from the host side will
be forwarded, and UDP packets coming from guest or target namespace will be
silently dropped.
.TP
.BR \-\-no-icmp
Disable the ICMP/ICMPv6 echo handler. ICMP and ICMPv6 echo requests coming from
guest or target namespace will be silently dropped.
.TP
.BR \-\-no-dhcp
Disable the DHCP server. DHCP client requests coming from guest or target
namespace will be silently dropped. Implied if there is no gateway on the
selected IPv4 default route.
.TP
.BR \-\-no-ndp
Disable NDP responses. NDP messages coming from guest or target namespace will
be ignored.
.TP
.BR \-\-no-dhcpv6
Disable the DHCPv6 server. DHCPv6 client requests coming from guest or target
namespace will be silently dropped.
.TP
.BR \-\-no-ra
Disable Router Advertisements. Router Solicitations coming from guest or target
namespace will be ignored.
.TP
.BR \-\-freebind
Allow any binding address to be specified for \fB-t\fR and \fB-u\fR
options. Usually binding addresses must be addresses currently
configured on the host. With \fB\-\-freebind\fR, the
\fBIP_FREEBIND\fR or \fBIPV6_FREEBIND\fR socket option is enabled
allowing any address to be used. This is typically used to bind
addresses which might be configured on the host in future, at which
point the forwarding will immediately start operating.
.TP
.BR \-\-map-host-loopback " " \fIaddr
Translate \fIaddr\fR to refer to the host. Packets from the guest to
\fIaddr\fR will be redirected to the host. On the host such packets
will appear to have both source and destination of 127.0.0.1 or ::1.
If \fIaddr\fR is 'none', no address is mapped (this implies
\fB--no-map-gw\fR). Only one IPv4 and one IPv6 address can be
translated, if the option is specified multiple times, the last one
takes effect.
Default is to translate the guest's default gateway address, unless
\fB--no-map-gw\fR is given, in which case no address is mapped.
.TP
.BR \-\-no-map-gw
Don't remap TCP connections and untracked UDP traffic, with the gateway address
as destination, to the host. Implied if there is no gateway on the selected
default route, or if there is no default route, for any of the enabled address
families.
.TP
.BR \-\-map-guest-addr " " \fIaddr
Translate \fIaddr\fR in the guest to be equal to the guest's assigned
address on the host. That is, packets from the guest to \fIaddr\fR
will be redirected to the address assigned to the guest with \fB-a\fR,
or by default the host's global address. This allows the guest to
access services available on the host's global address, even though its
own address shadows that of the host.
If \fIaddr\fR is 'none', no address is mapped. Only one IPv4 and one
IPv6 address can be translated, and if the option is specified
multiple times, the last one for each address type takes effect.
By default, mapping happens as described for the \-\-map-host-loopback option.
.TP
.BR \-4 ", " \-\-ipv4-only
Enable IPv4-only operation. IPv6 traffic will be ignored.
By default, IPv6 operation is enabled as long as at least an IPv6 route and an
interface address are configured on a given host interface.
.TP
.BR \-6 ", " \-\-ipv6-only
Enable IPv6-only operation. IPv4 traffic will be ignored.
By default, IPv4 operation is enabled as long as at least an IPv4 route and an
interface address are configured on a given host interface.
.SS \fBpasst\fR-only options
.TP
.BR \-s ", " \-\-socket-path ", " \-\-socket " " \fIpath
Path for UNIX domain socket used by \fBqemu\fR(1) or \fBqrap\fR(1) to connect to
\fBpasst\fR.
Default is to probe a free socket, not accepting connections, starting from
\fI/tmp/passt_1.socket\fR to \fI/tmp/passt_64.socket\fR.
.TP
.BR \-\-vhost-user
Enable vhost-user. The vhost-user command socket is provided by \fB--socket\fR.
.TP
.BR \-\-print-capabilities
Print back-end capabilities in JSON format, only meaningful for vhost-user mode.
.TP
.BR \-F ", " \-\-fd " " \fIFD
Pass a pre-opened, connected socket to \fBpasst\fR. Usually the socket is opened
in the parent process and \fBpasst\fR inherits it when run as a child. This
allows the parent process to open sockets using another address family or
requiring special privileges.
This option implies the behaviour described for \-\-one-off, once this socket
is closed.
.TP
.BR \-1 ", " \-\-one-off
Quit after handling a single client connection, that is, once the client closes
the socket, or once we get a socket error.
.TP
.BR \-t ", " \-\-tcp-ports " " \fIspec
Configure TCP port forwarding to guest. \fIspec\fR can be one of:
.RS
.TP
.BR none
Don't forward any ports
.TP
.BR all
Forward all unbound, non-ephemeral ports, as permitted by current capabilities.
conf, passt.1: Exit if we can't bind a forwarded port, except for -[tu] all ...or similar, that is, if only excluded ranges are given (implying we'll forward any other available port). In that case, we'll usually forward large sets of ports, and it might be inconvenient for the user to skip excluding single ports that are already taken. The existing behaviour, that is, exiting only if we fail to bind all the ports for one given forwarding option, turns out to be problematic for several aspects raised by Paul: - Podman merges ranges anyway, so we might fail to bind all the ports from a specific range given by the user, but we'll not fail anyway because Podman merges it with another one where we succeed to bind at least one port. At the same time, there should be no semantic difference between multiple ranges given by a single option and multiple ranges given as multiple options: it's unexpected and not documented - the user might actually rely on a given port to be forwarded to a given container or a virtual machine, and if connections are forwarded to an unrelated process, this might raise security concerns - given that we can try and fail to bind multiple ports before exiting (in case we can't bind any), we don't have a specific error code we can return to the user, so we don't give the user helpful indication as to why we couldn't bind ports. Exit as soon as we fail to create or bind a socket for a given forwarded port, and report the actual error. Keep the current behaviour, however, in case the user wants to forward all the (available) ports for a given protocol, or all the ports with excluded ranges only. There, it's more reasonable that the user is expecting partial failures, and it's probably convenient that we continue with the ports we could forward. Update the manual page to reflect the new behaviour, and the old behaviour too in the cases where we keep it. Suggested-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com> Link: https://github.com/containers/podman/pull/21563#issuecomment-1937024642 Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com> Tested-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
2024-02-14 01:26:24 +00:00
For low (< 1024) ports, see \fBNOTES\fR. No failures are reported for
unavailable ports, unless no ports could be forwarded at all.
.TP
.BR ports
A comma-separated list of ports, optionally ranged with \fI-\fR, and,
optionally, with target ports after \fI:\fR, if they differ. Specific addresses
can be bound as well, separated by \fI/\fR, and also, since Linux 5.7, limited
to specific interfaces, prefixed by \fI%\fR. Within given ranges, selected ports
and ranges can be excluded by an additional specification prefixed by \fI~\fR.
conf, passt.1: Exit if we can't bind a forwarded port, except for -[tu] all ...or similar, that is, if only excluded ranges are given (implying we'll forward any other available port). In that case, we'll usually forward large sets of ports, and it might be inconvenient for the user to skip excluding single ports that are already taken. The existing behaviour, that is, exiting only if we fail to bind all the ports for one given forwarding option, turns out to be problematic for several aspects raised by Paul: - Podman merges ranges anyway, so we might fail to bind all the ports from a specific range given by the user, but we'll not fail anyway because Podman merges it with another one where we succeed to bind at least one port. At the same time, there should be no semantic difference between multiple ranges given by a single option and multiple ranges given as multiple options: it's unexpected and not documented - the user might actually rely on a given port to be forwarded to a given container or a virtual machine, and if connections are forwarded to an unrelated process, this might raise security concerns - given that we can try and fail to bind multiple ports before exiting (in case we can't bind any), we don't have a specific error code we can return to the user, so we don't give the user helpful indication as to why we couldn't bind ports. Exit as soon as we fail to create or bind a socket for a given forwarded port, and report the actual error. Keep the current behaviour, however, in case the user wants to forward all the (available) ports for a given protocol, or all the ports with excluded ranges only. There, it's more reasonable that the user is expecting partial failures, and it's probably convenient that we continue with the ports we could forward. Update the manual page to reflect the new behaviour, and the old behaviour too in the cases where we keep it. Suggested-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com> Link: https://github.com/containers/podman/pull/21563#issuecomment-1937024642 Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com> Tested-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
2024-02-14 01:26:24 +00:00
Specifying excluded ranges only implies that all other ports are forwarded. In
this case, no failures are reported for unavailable ports, unless no ports could
be forwarded at all.
Examples:
.RS
.TP
-t 22
Forward local port 22 to port 22 on the guest
.TP
-t 22:23
Forward local port 22 to port 23 on the guest
.TP
-t 22,25
Forward local ports 22 and 25 to ports 22 and 25 on the guest
.TP
-t 22-80
Forward local ports between 22 and 80 to corresponding ports on the guest
.TP
-t 22-80:32-90
Forward local ports between 22 and 80 to ports between 32 and 90 on the guest
.TP
-t 192.0.2.1/22
Forward local port 22, bound to 192.0.2.1, to port 22 on the guest
.TP
-t 192.0.2.1%eth0/22
Forward local port 22, bound to 192.0.2.1 and interface eth0, to port 22
.TP
-t %eth0/22
Forward local port 22, bound to any address on interface eth0, to port 22
.TP
-t 2000-5000,~3000-3010
Forward local ports between 2000 and 5000, except for those between 3000 and
3010
.TP
-t 192.0.2.1/20-30,~25
For the local address 192.0.2.1, forward ports between 20 and 24 and between 26
and 30
.TP
-t ~20000-20010
Forward all ports to the guest, except for the range from 20000 to 20010
.RE
Default is \fBnone\fR.
.RE
.TP
.BR \-u ", " \-\-udp-ports " " \fIspec
Configure UDP port forwarding to guest. \fIspec\fR is as described for TCP
above.
Note: unless overridden, UDP ports with numbers corresponding to forwarded TCP
port numbers are forwarded too, without, however, any port translation. IPv6
bound ports are also forwarded for IPv4.
Default is \fBnone\fR.
.SS \fBpasta\fR-only options
.TP
.BR \-I ", " \-\-ns-ifname " " \fIname
Name of tap interface to be created in target namespace.
By default, the same interface name as the external, routable interface is used.
If no such interface exists, the name \fItap0\fR will be used instead.
.TP
.BR \-t ", " \-\-tcp-ports " " \fIspec
Configure TCP port forwarding to namespace. \fIspec\fR can be one of:
.RS
.TP
.BR none
Don't forward any ports
.TP
.BR auto
Dynamically forward ports bound in the namespace. The list of ports is
periodically derived (every second) from listening sockets reported by
\fI/proc/net/tcp\fR and \fI/proc/net/tcp6\fR, see \fBproc\fR(5).
.TP
.BR ports
A comma-separated list of ports, optionally ranged with \fI-\fR, and,
optionally, with target ports after \fI:\fR, if they differ. Specific addresses
can be bound as well, separated by \fI/\fR, and also, since Linux 5.7, limited
to specific interfaces, prefixed by \fI%\fR. Within given ranges, selected ports
and ranges can be excluded by an additional specification prefixed by \fI~\fR.
conf, passt.1: Exit if we can't bind a forwarded port, except for -[tu] all ...or similar, that is, if only excluded ranges are given (implying we'll forward any other available port). In that case, we'll usually forward large sets of ports, and it might be inconvenient for the user to skip excluding single ports that are already taken. The existing behaviour, that is, exiting only if we fail to bind all the ports for one given forwarding option, turns out to be problematic for several aspects raised by Paul: - Podman merges ranges anyway, so we might fail to bind all the ports from a specific range given by the user, but we'll not fail anyway because Podman merges it with another one where we succeed to bind at least one port. At the same time, there should be no semantic difference between multiple ranges given by a single option and multiple ranges given as multiple options: it's unexpected and not documented - the user might actually rely on a given port to be forwarded to a given container or a virtual machine, and if connections are forwarded to an unrelated process, this might raise security concerns - given that we can try and fail to bind multiple ports before exiting (in case we can't bind any), we don't have a specific error code we can return to the user, so we don't give the user helpful indication as to why we couldn't bind ports. Exit as soon as we fail to create or bind a socket for a given forwarded port, and report the actual error. Keep the current behaviour, however, in case the user wants to forward all the (available) ports for a given protocol, or all the ports with excluded ranges only. There, it's more reasonable that the user is expecting partial failures, and it's probably convenient that we continue with the ports we could forward. Update the manual page to reflect the new behaviour, and the old behaviour too in the cases where we keep it. Suggested-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com> Link: https://github.com/containers/podman/pull/21563#issuecomment-1937024642 Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com> Tested-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
2024-02-14 01:26:24 +00:00
Specifying excluded ranges only implies that all other ports are forwarded. In
this case, no failures are reported for unavailable ports, unless no ports could
be forwarded at all.
Examples:
.RS
.TP
-t 22
Forward local port 22 to 22 in the target namespace
.TP
-t 22:23
Forward local port 22 to port 23 in the target namespace
.TP
-t 22,25
Forward local ports 22 and 25 to ports 22 and 25 in the target namespace
.TP
-t 22-80
Forward local ports between 22 and 80 to corresponding ports in the target
namespace
.TP
-t 22-80:32-90
Forward local ports between 22 and 80 to ports between 32 and 90 in the target
namespace
.TP
-t 192.0.2.1/22
Forward local port 22, bound to 192.0.2.1, to port 22 in the target namespace
.TP
-t 192.0.2.1%eth0/22
Forward local port 22, bound to 192.0.2.1 and interface eth0, to port 22
.TP
-t %eth0/22
Forward local port 22, bound to any address on interface eth0, to port 22
.TP
-t 2000-5000,~3000-3010
Forward local ports between 2000 and 5000, except for those between 3000 and
3010
.TP
-t 192.0.2.1/20-30,~25
For the local address 192.0.2.1, forward ports between 20 and 24 and between 26
and 30
.TP
-t ~20000-20010
Forward all ports to the namespace, except for those between 20000 and 20010
.RE
IPv6 bound ports are also forwarded for IPv4.
Default is \fBauto\fR.
.RE
.TP
.BR \-u ", " \-\-udp-ports " " \fIspec
Configure UDP port forwarding to namespace. \fIspec\fR is as described for TCP
above, and the list of ports is derived from listening sockets reported by
\fI/proc/net/udp\fR and \fI/proc/net/udp6\fR, see \fBproc\fR(5).
Note: unless overridden, UDP ports with numbers corresponding to forwarded TCP
port numbers are forwarded too, without, however, any port translation.
IPv6 bound ports are also forwarded for IPv4.
Default is \fBauto\fR.
.TP
.BR \-T ", " \-\-tcp-ns " " \fIspec
Configure TCP port forwarding from target namespace to init namespace.
\fIspec\fR is as described above for TCP.
Default is \fBauto\fR.
.TP
.BR \-U ", " \-\-udp-ns " " \fIspec
Configure UDP port forwarding from target namespace to init namespace.
\fIspec\fR is as described above for UDP.
Default is \fBauto\fR.
.TP
.BR \-\-host-lo-to-ns-lo " " (DEPRECATED)
If specified, connections forwarded with \fB\-t\fR and \fB\-u\fR from
the host's loopback address will appear on the loopback address in the
guest as well. Without this option such forwarded packets will appear
to come from the guest's public address.
.TP
.BR \-\-userns " " \fIspec
Target user namespace to join, as a path. If PID is given, without this option,
the user namespace will be the one of the corresponding process.
.TP
.BR \-\-netns " " \fIspec
Target network namespace to join, as a path or a name. A name is treated as
with \fBip-netns(8)\fR as equivalent to a path in \fI/run/netns\fR.
This option can't be specified with a PID.
.TP
.BR \-\-netns-only
passt, pasta: Namespace-based sandboxing, defer seccomp policy application To reach (at least) a conceptually equivalent security level as implemented by --enable-sandbox in slirp4netns, we need to create a new mount namespace and pivot_root() into a new (empty) mountpoint, so that passt and pasta can't access any filesystem resource after initialisation. While at it, also detach IPC, PID (only for passt, to prevent vulnerabilities based on the knowledge of a target PID), and UTS namespaces. With this approach, if we apply the seccomp filters right after the configuration step, the number of allowed syscalls grows further. To prevent this, defer the application of seccomp policies after the initialisation phase, before the main loop, that's where we expect bad things to happen, potentially. This way, we get back to 22 allowed syscalls for passt and 34 for pasta, on x86_64. While at it, move #syscalls notes to specific code paths wherever it conceptually makes sense. We have to open all the file handles we'll ever need before sandboxing: - the packet capture file can only be opened once, drop instance numbers from the default path and use the (pre-sandbox) PID instead - /proc/net/tcp{,v6} and /proc/net/udp{,v6}, for automatic detection of bound ports in pasta mode, are now opened only once, before sandboxing, and their handles are stored in the execution context - the UNIX domain socket for passt is also bound only once, before sandboxing: to reject clients after the first one, instead of closing the listening socket, keep it open, accept and immediately discard new connection if we already have a valid one Clarify the (unchanged) behaviour for --netns-only in the man page. To actually make passt and pasta processes run in a separate PID namespace, we need to unshare(CLONE_NEWPID) before forking to background (if configured to do so). Introduce a small daemon() implementation, __daemon(), that additionally saves the PID file before forking. While running in foreground, the process itself can't move to a new PID namespace (a process can't change the notion of its own PID): mention that in the man page. For some reason, fork() in a detached PID namespace causes SIGTERM and SIGQUIT to be ignored, even if the handler is still reported as SIG_DFL: add a signal handler that just exits. We can now drop most of the pasta_child_handler() implementation, that took care of terminating all processes running in the same namespace, if pasta started a shell: the shell itself is now the init process in that namespace, and all children will terminate once the init process exits. Issuing 'echo $$' in a detached PID namespace won't return the actual namespace PID as seen from the init namespace: adapt demo and test setup scripts to reflect that. Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com>
2022-02-07 20:11:37 +00:00
Join only a target network namespace, not a user namespace, and don't create one
for sandboxing purposes either. This is implied if PATH or NAME are given
without \-\-userns.
.TP
.BR \-\-no-netns-quit
pasta: Don't try to watch namespaces in procfs with inotify, use timer instead We watch network namespace entries to detect when we should quit (unless --no-netns-quit is passed), and these might stored in a tmpfs typically mounted at /run/user/UID or /var/run/user/UID, or found in procfs at /proc/PID/ns/. Currently, we try to use inotify for any possible location of those entries, but inotify, of course, doesn't work on pseudo-filesystems (see inotify(7)). The man page reflects this: the description of --no-netns-quit implies that we won't quit anyway if the namespace is not "bound to the filesystem". Well, we won't quit, but, since commit 9e0dbc894813 ("More deterministic detection of whether argument is a PID, PATH or NAME"), we try. And, indeed, this is harmless, as the caveat from that commit message states. Now, it turns out that Buildah, a tool to create container images, sharing its codebase with Podman, passes a procfs entry to pasta, and expects pasta to exit once the network namespace is not needed anymore, that is, once the original container process, also spawned by Buildah, terminates. Get this to work by using the timer fallback mechanism if the namespace name is passed as a path belonging to a pseudo-filesystem. This is expected to be procfs, but I covered sysfs and devpts pseudo-filesystems as well, because nothing actually prevents creating this kind of directory structure and links there. Note that fstatfs(), according to some versions of man pages, was apparently "deprecated" by the LSB. My reasoning for using it is essentially this: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-man/f54kudgblgk643u32tb6at4cd3kkzha6hslahv24szs4raroaz@ogivjbfdaqtb/t/#u ...that is, there was no such thing as an LSB deprecation, and anyway there's no other way to get the filesystem type. Also note that, while it might sound more obvious to detect the filesystem type using fstatfs() on the file descriptor itself (c->pasta_netns_fd), the reported filesystem type for it is nsfs, no matter what path was given to pasta. If we use the parent directory, we'll typically have either tmpfs or procfs reported. If the target namespace is given as a PID, or as a PID-based procfs entry, we don't risk races if this PID is recycled: our handle on /proc/PID/ns will always refer to the original namespace associated with that PID, and we don't re-open this entry from procfs to check it. There's, however, a remaining race possibility if the parent process is not the one associated to the network namespace we operate on: in that case, the parent might pass a procfs entry associated to a PID that was recycled by the time we parse it. This can't happen if the namespace PID matches the one of the parent, because we detach from the controlling terminal after parsing the namespace reference. To avoid this type of race, if desired, we could add the option for the parent to pass a PID file descriptor, that the parent obtained via pidfd_open(). This is beyond the scope of this change. Update the man page to reflect that, even if the target network namespace is passed as a procfs path or a PID, we'll now quit when the procfs entry is gone. Reported-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com> Link: https://github.com/containers/podman/pull/21563#issuecomment-1948200214 Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com>
2024-02-17 12:41:39 +00:00
Do not exit once the target namespace reference is removed.
Without this option, \fBpasta\fR will terminate if the target network namespace
is bound to the filesystem, and the given path is deleted, or if the target
network namespace is represented by a procfs entry, and that entry is deleted,
representing the fact that a process with the given PID terminated.
.TP
.BR \-\-config-net
Configure networking in the namespace: set up addresses and routes as configured
or sourced from the host, and bring up the tap interface.
.TP
.BR \-\-no-copy-routes " " (DEPRECATED)
With \-\-config-net, do not copy all the routes associated to the interface we
derive addresses and routes from: set up only the default gateway. Implied by
-g, \-\-gateway, for the corresponding IP version only.
Default is to copy all the routing entries from the interface in the outer
namespace to the target namespace, translating the output interface attribute to
the outbound interface in the namespace.
Note that this configuration option is \fBdeprecated\fR and will be removed in a
future version. It is not expected to be of any use, and it simply reflects a
legacy behaviour. If you have any use for this, refer to \fBREPORTING BUGS\fR
below.
.TP
.BR \-\-no-copy-addrs " " (DEPRECATED)
With \-\-config-net, do not copy all the addresses associated to the interface
we derive addresses and routes from: set up a single one. Implied by \-a,
\-\-address, for the corresponding IP version only.
Default is to copy all the addresses, except for link-local ones, from the
interface from the outer namespace to the target namespace.
Note that this configuration option is \fBdeprecated\fR and will be removed in a
future version. It is not expected to be of any use, and it simply reflects a
legacy behaviour. If you have any use for this, refer to \fBREPORTING BUGS\fR
below.
.TP
.BR \-\-ns-mac-addr " " \fIaddr
Configure MAC address \fIaddr\fR on the tap interface in the namespace.
Default is to let the tap driver build a pseudorandom hardware address.
.SH EXAMPLES
.SS \fBpasta
.BR "Create and use a new, connected, user and network namespace"
.RS
.nf
$ iperf3 -s -D
$ ./pasta
Outbound interface: eth0, namespace interface: eth0
ARP:
address: 28:16:ad:39:a9:ea
DHCP:
assign: 192.168.1.118
mask: 255.255.255.0
router: 192.168.1.1
NDP/DHCPv6:
assign: 2a02:6d40:3ca5:2001:b81d:fa4a:8cdd:cf17
router: fe80::62e3:27ff:fe33:2b01
#
# dhclient -4 --no-pid
# dhclient -6 --no-pid
# ip address show
1: lo: <LOOPBACK,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 65536 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN group default qlen 1000
link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00
inet 127.0.0.1/8 scope host lo
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 ::1/128 scope host
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
2: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 65520 qdisc pfifo_fast state UNKNOWN group default qlen 1000
link/ether 5e:90:02:eb:b0:2a brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
inet 192.168.1.118/24 brd 192.168.1.255 scope global eth0
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 2a02:6d40:3ca5:2001:b81d:fa4a:8cdd:cf17/128 scope global
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 2a02:6d40:3ca5:2001:5c90:2ff:feeb:b02a/64 scope global dynamic mngtmpaddr
valid_lft 3591sec preferred_lft 3591sec
inet6 fe80::5c90:2ff:feeb:b02a/64 scope link
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
# ip route show
default via 192.168.1.1 dev eth0
192.168.1.0/24 dev eth0 proto kernel scope link src 192.168.1.118
# ip -6 route show
2a02:6d40:3ca5:2001:b81d:fa4a:8cdd:cf17 dev eth0 proto kernel metric 256 pref medium
2a02:6d40:3ca5:2001::/64 dev eth0 proto kernel metric 256 expires 3584sec pref medium
fe80::/64 dev eth0 proto kernel metric 256 pref medium
default via fe80::62e3:27ff:fe33:2b01 dev eth0 proto ra metric 1024 expires 3584sec pref medium
# iperf3 -c 127.0.0.1 -t1
Connecting to host 127.0.0.1, port 5201
[ 5] local 127.0.0.1 port 51938 connected to 127.0.0.1 port 5201
[ ID] Interval Transfer Bitrate Retr Cwnd
[ 5] 0.00-1.00 sec 4.46 GBytes 38.3 Gbits/sec 0 3.93 MBytes
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[ ID] Interval Transfer Bitrate Retr
[ 5] 0.00-1.00 sec 4.46 GBytes 38.3 Gbits/sec 0 sender
[ 5] 0.00-1.41 sec 4.45 GBytes 27.1 Gbits/sec receiver
iperf Done.
# iperf3 -c ::1 -t1
Connecting to host ::1, port 5201
[ 5] local ::1 port 50108 connected to ::1 port 5201
[ ID] Interval Transfer Bitrate Retr Cwnd
[ 5] 0.00-1.00 sec 4.35 GBytes 37.4 Gbits/sec 0 4.99 MBytes
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[ ID] Interval Transfer Bitrate Retr
[ 5] 0.00-1.00 sec 4.35 GBytes 37.4 Gbits/sec 0 sender
[ 5] 0.00-1.41 sec 4.35 GBytes 26.4 Gbits/sec receiver
iperf Done.
# ping -c1 -4 spaghetti.pizza
PING spaghetti.pizza (172.67.192.217) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from 172.67.192.217: icmp_seq=1 ttl=255 time=37.3 ms
--- spaghetti.pizza ping statistics ---
1 packets transmitted, 1 received, 0% packet loss, time 0ms
# ping -c1 -6 spaghetti.pizza
PING spaghetti.pizza(2606:4700:3034::6815:147a (2606:4700:3034::6815:147a)) 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 2606:4700:3034::6815:147a: icmp_seq=1 ttl=255 time=35.6 ms
--- spaghetti.pizza ping statistics ---
1 packets transmitted, 1 received, 0% packet loss, time 0ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 35.605/35.605/35.605/0.000 ms
# logout
$
.RE
.fi
.BR "Connect an existing user and network namespace"
.RS
.nf
$ unshare -rUn
# echo $$
2446678
.fi
.BR " [From another terminal]"
.nf
$ ./pasta 2446678
Outbound interface: eth0, namespace interface: eth0
ARP:
address: 28:16:ad:39:a9:ea
DHCP:
assign: 192.168.1.118
mask: 255.255.255.0
router: 192.168.1.1
NDP/DHCPv6:
assign: 2a02:6d40:3ca5:2001:b81d:fa4a:8cdd:cf17
router: fe80::62e3:27ff:fe33:2b01
.fi
.BR " [Back to the original terminal]"
.nf
# dhclient -4 --no-pid
# dhclient -6 --no-pid
# ip address show
1: lo: <LOOPBACK,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 65536 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN group default qlen 1000
link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00
inet 127.0.0.1/8 scope host lo
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 ::1/128 scope host
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
2: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 65520 qdisc pfifo_fast state UNKNOWN group default qlen 1000
link/ether fa:c1:2a:27:92:a9 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
inet 192.168.1.118/24 brd 192.168.1.255 scope global eth0
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 2a02:6d40:3ca5:2001:b81d:fa4a:8cdd:cf17/128 scope global
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 2a02:6d40:3ca5:2001:f8c1:2aff:fe27:92a9/64 scope global dynamic mngtmpaddr
valid_lft 3594sec preferred_lft 3594sec
inet6 fe80::f8c1:2aff:fe27:92a9/64 scope link
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
.fi
.RE
.SS \fBpasst
.BR "Start and connect a guest with basic port forwarding"
.RS
.nf
$ ./passt -f -t 2222:22
Outbound interface: eth0
ARP:
address: 28:16:ad:39:a9:ea
DHCP:
assign: 192.168.1.118
mask: 255.255.255.0
router: 192.168.1.1
search:
redhat.com
NDP/DHCPv6:
assign: 2a02:6d40:3ca5:2001:b81d:fa4a:8cdd:cf17
router: fe80::62e3:27ff:fe33:2b01
search:
redhat.com
UNIX domain socket bound at /tmp/passt_1.socket
You can now start qrap:
./qrap 5 qemu-system-x86_64 ... -net socket,fd=5 -net nic,model=virtio
or directly qemu, patched with:
qemu/0001-net-Allow-also-UNIX-domain-sockets-to-be-used-as-net.patch
as follows:
qemu-system-x86_64 ... -net socket,connect=/tmp/passt_1.socket -net nic,model=virtio
.fi
.BR " [From another terminal]"
.nf
$ ./qrap 5 qemu-system-x86_64 test.qcow2 -m 1024 -display none -nodefaults -nographic -net socket,fd=5 -net nic,model=virtio
Connected to /tmp/passt_1.socket
.fi
.BR " [Back to the original terminal]"
.nf
passt: DHCP: ack to request
passt: from 52:54:00:12:34:56
passt: NDP: received NS, sending NA
passt: NDP: received RS, sending RA
passt: DHCPv6: received SOLICIT, sending ADVERTISE
passt: NDP: received NS, sending NA
passt: DHCPv6: received REQUEST/RENEW/CONFIRM, sending REPLY
passt: NDP: received NS, sending NA
.fi
.BR " [From yet another terminal]"
.nf
$ ssh -p 2222 root@localhost
root@localhost's password:
.fi
.BR " [...]"
.nf
# ip address show
1: lo: <LOOPBACK,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 65536 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN group default qlen 1000
link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00
inet 127.0.0.1/8 scope host lo
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 ::1/128 scope host
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
2: ens2: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 65520 qdisc pfifo_fast state UP group default qlen 1000
link/ether 52:54:00:12:34:56 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
inet 192.168.1.118/24 brd 192.168.1.255 scope global noprefixroute ens2
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 2a02:6d40:3ca5:2001:b81d:fa4a:8cdd:cf17/128 scope global noprefixroute
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 2a02:6d40:3ca5:2001:b019:9ae2:a2fe:e6b4/64 scope global dynamic noprefixroute
valid_lft 3588sec preferred_lft 3588sec
inet6 fe80::1f98:d09f:9309:9e77/64 scope link noprefixroute
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
.fi
.RE
.SH NOTES
.SS Handling of traffic with loopback destination and source addresses
Both \fBpasst\fR and \fBpasta\fR can bind on ports with a loopback
address (127.0.0.0/8 or ::1), depending on the configuration. Loopback
destination or source addresses need to be changed before packets are
delivered to the guest or target namespace: most operating systems
would drop packets received with loopback addresses on non-loopback
interfaces, and it would also be impossible for guest or target
namespace to route answers back.
For convenience, the source address on these packets is translated to
the address specified by the \fB\-\-map-host-loopback\fR option (with
some exceptions in pasta mode, see next section below). If not
specified this defaults, somewhat arbitrarily, to the address of
default IPv4 or IPv6 gateway (if any) -- this is known to be an
existing, valid address on the same subnet. If \fB\-\-no-map-gw\fR or
\fB\-\-map-host-loopback none\fR are specified this translation is
disabled and packets with loopback addresses are simply dropped.
Loopback destination addresses are translated to the observed external
address of the guest or target namespace. For IPv6, the observed
link-local address is used if the translated source address is
link-local, otherwise the observed global address is used. For both
IPv4 and IPv6, if no addresses have been seen yet, the configured
addresses will be used instead.
For example, if \fBpasst\fR or \fBpasta\fR receive a connection from 127.0.0.1,
with destination 127.0.0.10, and the default IPv4 gateway is 192.0.2.1, while
the last observed source address from guest or namespace is 192.0.2.2, this will
be translated to a connection from 192.0.2.1 to 192.0.2.2.
Similarly, for traffic coming from guest or namespace, packets with
destination address corresponding to the \fB\-\-map-host-loopback\fR
address will have their destination address translated to a loopback
address.
.SS Handling of local traffic in pasta
Depending on the configuration, \fBpasta\fR can bind to local ports in the init
namespace, in the target namespace, or both, and forward connections and packets
to corresponding ports in the other namespace.
To avoid unnecessary overhead, these connections and packets are not forwarded
through the tap device connecting the namespaces: \fBpasta\fR creates a socket
in the destination namespace, with matching Layer-4 protocol, and uses it to
forward local data. For TCP, data is forwarded between the originating socket
and the new socket using the \fBsplice\fR(2) system call, and for UDP, a pair
of \fBrecvmmsg\fR(2) and \fBsendmmsg\fR(2) system calls deals with packet
transfers.
Because it's not possible to bind sockets to foreign addresses, this
bypass only applies to local connections and traffic. It also means
that the address translation differs slightly from passt mode.
Connections from loopback to loopback on the host will appear to come
from the target namespace's public address within the guest, unless
\fB\-\-host-lo-to-ns-lo\fR is specified, in which case they will
appear to come from loopback in the namespace as well. The latter
behaviour used to be the default, but is usually undesirable, since it
can unintentionally expose namespace local services to the host.
.SS Binding to low numbered ports (well-known or system ports, up to 1023)
If the port forwarding configuration requires binding to ports with numbers
lower than 1024, \fBpasst\fR and \fBpasta\fR will try to bind to them, but will
fail, unless, either:
.IP \(bu 2
the \fIsys.net.ipv4.ip_unprivileged_port_start\fR sysctl is set to the number
of the lowest port \fBpasst\fR and \fBpasta\fR need. For example, as root:
.nf
sysctl -w net.ipv4.ip_unprivileged_port_start=443
.fi
\fBNote\fR: this is the recommended way of enabling \fBpasst\fR and \fBpasta\fR
to bind to ports with numbers below 1024.
.IP \(bu
or the \fICAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE\fR Linux capability is granted, see
\fBservices\fR(5) and \fBcapabilities\fR(7).
This is, in general, \fBnot the recommended way\fR, because \fBpasst\fR and
\fBpasta\fR might be used as vector to effectively use this capability from
another process.
However, if your environment is sufficiently controlled by an LSM (Linux
Security Module) such as \fIAppArmor\fR, \fISELinux\fR, \fISmack\fR or
\fITOMOYO\fR, and no other processes can interact in such a way in virtue of
this, granting this capability to \fBpasst\fR and \fBpasta\fR only can
effectively prevent other processes from utilising it.
Note that this will not work for automatic detection and forwarding of ports
with \fBpasta\fR, because \fBpasta\fR will relinquish this capability at
runtime.
To grant this capability, you can issue, as root:
.nf
for p in $(which passt passt.avx2); do
setcap 'cap_net_bind_service=+ep' "${p}"
done
.fi
.RE
.SS ICMP/ICMPv6 Echo sockets
ICMP and ICMPv6 Echo requests coming from guest or target namespace are handled
using so-called "ping" sockets, introduced in Linux 2.6.30. To preserve the
original identifier (see RFC 792, page 14, for ICMP, and RFC 4443, section 4.1,
for ICMPv6), \fBpasst\fR and \fBpasta\fR try to bind these sockets using the
observed source identifier as "port" -- that corresponds to Echo identifiers
for "ping" sockets.
As \fBbind\fR(2) failures were seen with particularly restrictive SELinux
policies, a fall-back mechanism maps different identifiers to different sockets,
and identifiers in replies will be mapped back to the original identifier of the
request. However, if \fBbind\fR(2) fails and the fall-back mechanism is used,
echo requests will be forwarded with different, albeit unique, identifiers.
For ICMP and ICMPv6 Echo requests to work, the \fIping_group_range\fR parameter
needs to include the PID of \fBpasst\fR or \fBpasta\fR, see \fBicmp\fR(7).
.SS pasta and loopback interface
As \fBpasta\fR connects to an existing namespace, or once it creates a new
namespace, it will also ensure that the loopback interface, \fIlo\fR, is brought
up. This is needed to bind ports using the loopback address in the namespace.
.SS TCP sending window and \fITCP_INFO\fB before Linux 5.3
To synchronise the TCP sending window from host Layer-4 sockets to the TCP
parameters announced in TCP segments sent over the Layer-2 interface,
\fBpasst\fR and \fBpasta\fR routinely query the size of the sending window seen
by the kernel on the corresponding socket using the \fITCP_INFO\fR socket
option, see \fBtcp\fR(7). Before Linux 5.3, i.e. before Linux kernel commit
8f7baad7f035 ("tcp: Add snd_wnd to TCP_INFO"), the sending window
(\fIsnd_wnd\fR field) is not available.
If the sending window cannot be queried, it will always be announced as the
current sending buffer size to guest or target namespace. This might affect
throughput of TCP connections.
.SS Local mode for disconnected setups
If \fBpasst\fR and \fBpasta\fR fail to find a host interface with a configured
address, other than loopback addresses, they will, obviously, not attempt to
source addresses or routes from the host.
In this case, unless configured otherwise, they will assign the IPv4 link-local
address 169.254.2.1 to the guest or target namespace, and no IPv6 address. The
notion of the guest or target namespace IPv6 address is derived from the first
link-local address observed.
Default gateways will be assigned as the link-local address 169.254.2.2 for
IPv4, and as the link-local address fe80::1 for IPv6.
.SH LIMITATIONS
Currently, IGMP/MLD proxying (RFC 4605) and support for SCTP (RFC 4960) are not
implemented.
TCP Selective Acknowledgment (RFC 2018), as well as Protection Against Wrapped
Sequences (PAWS) and Round-Trip Time Measurement (RTTM), both described by RFC
7232, are currently not implemented.
.SH AUTHORS
Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com>, David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>.
.SH REPORTING BUGS
Please report issues on the bug tracker at https://passt.top/passt/bugs, or
send a message to the passt-user@passt.top mailing list, see
https://passt.top/passt/lists.
.SH COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2020-2022 Red Hat GmbH.
\fBpasst\fR and \fBpasta\fR are free software: you can redistribute them and/or
modify them under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
.SH SEE ALSO
\fBnamespaces\fR(7), \fBqemu\fR(1), \fBqrap\fR(1), \fBslirp4netns\fR(1).
High-level documentation is available at https://passt.top/passt/about/.