NAME
schroot - securely enter a chroot environment
SYNOPSIS
schroot [-h|--help | -V|--version | -l|--list | -i|--info | --config | --location | --automatic-session | -b|--begin-session | --recover-session | -r|--run-session | -e|--end-session] [-f|--force] [-n session-name|--session-name=session-name] [-d directory|--directory=directory] [-u user|--user=user] [-p|--preserve-environment] [-s shell|--shell=shell] [-q|--quiet | -v|--verbose] [-c chroot|--chroot=chroot | [--all | --all-chroots | --all-source-chroots | --all-sessions] [--exclude-aliases]] [-o|--option=key=value] [--] [COMMAND [ ARG1 [ ARG2 [ ARGn]]]]
DESCRIPTION
schroot allows the user to run a command or a login shell in a chroot environment. If no command is specified, a login shell will be started in the user’s current working directory inside the chroot.
The command is a program, plus as many optional arguments as required. Each argument may be separately quoted.
The directory the command or login shell is run in depends upon the context. See --directory option below for a complete description.
All chroot usage will be logged in the system logs. Under some circumstances, the user may be required to authenticate themselves; see the section “Authentication”, below.
If no chroot is specified, the chroot name or alias ’default’ will be used as a fallback. This is equivalent to “--chroot=default”.
OVERVIEW
There is often a need to run programs in a virtualised environment rather than on the host system directly. Unlike other virtualisation systems such as kvm or Xen, schroot does not virtualise the entire system; it only virtualises the filesystem, and some parts of the filesystem may still be shared with the host. It is therefore fast, lightweight and flexible. However, it does not virtualise other aspects of the system, such as shared memory, networking, devices etc., and so may be less secure than other systems, depending upon its intended use. Some examples of existing uses for schroot include:
• |
Running an untrusted program in a sandbox, so that it can’t interfere with files on the host system; this may also be used to limit the damage a compromised service can inflict upon the host | ||
• |
Using a defined or clean environment, to guarantee the reproducibility and integrity of a given task | ||
• |
Using different versions of an operating system, or even different operating systems altogether, e.g. different GNU/Linux distributions | ||
• |
Running 32-bit programs using a 32-bit chroot on a 64-bit host system | ||
• |
Automatic building of Debian packages using sbuild(1), which builds each package in a pristine chroot snapshot when using LVM snapshots or unions | ||
• |
Supporting multiple system images in a cluster setup, where modifying the base image is time-consuming and/or supporting all the required configurations needed by users is difficult: different chroots can support all the different configurations required, and cluster users may be given access to the chroots they need (which can include root access for trusted users to maintain their own images) |
A chroot may be used directly as root by running chroot(8), but normal users are not able to use this command. schroot allows access to chroots for normal users using the same mechanism, but with several additional features. While schroot uses a directory as a chroot just like chroot(8), it does not require this to be a regular directory in the filesystem. While this is the default, the chroot can also be created from a file, a filesystem, including LVM and Btrfs snapshots and loopback mounts, or composed of a unionfs overlay. Being user-extensible, the scope for creating chroots from different sources is limited only by your imagination. schroot performs permissions checking and allows additional automated setup of the chroot environment, such as mounting additional filesystems and other configuration tasks. This automated setup is done through the action of setup scripts which may be customised and extended to perform any actions required. Typical actions include mounting the user’s home directory, setting up networking and system databases, and even starting up services. These are again entirely customisable by the admin. The setup scripts are run for all types of chroot, with the exception of the ’plain’ type, the simplest chroot type, offering no automated setup features at all. The configuration of schroot is covered in more detail in schroot.conf(5).
OPTIONS
schroot accepts the following options:
Actions
-h, --help
Show help summary.
-V, --version
Print version information.
-l, --list
List all available chroots.
-i, --info
Print detailed information about the specified chroots.
--config
Print configuration of the specified chroots. This is useful for testing that the configuration in use is the same as the configuration file. Any comments in the original file will be missing.
--location
Print location (path) of the specified chroots. Note that chroot types which can only be used within a session will not have a location until they are active.
General
options
-q, --quiet
Print only essential messages.
-v, --verbose
Print all messages.
Chroot
selection
-c, --chroot=chroot
Specify a chroot or active session to use. This option may be used multiple times to specify more than one chroot, in which case its effect is similar to --all. The chroot name may be prefixed with a namespace; see the section “Chroot Namespaces”, below.
-a, --all
Select all chroots, source chroots and active sessions. When a command has been specified, the command will be run in all chroots, source chroots and active sessions. If --info has been used, display information about all chroots. This option does not make sense to use with a login shell (run when no command has been specified). This option is equivalent to “--all-chroots --all-source-chroots --all-sessions”.
--all-chroots
Select all chroots. Identical to --all, except that source chroots and active sessions are not considered.
--all-sessions
Select all active sessions. Identical to --all, except that chroots and source chroots are not considered.
--all-source-chroots
Select all source chroots. Identical to --all, except that chroots and sessions are not considered.
--exclude-aliases
Do not select aliases in addition to chroots. This ensures that only real chroots are selected, and are only listed once.
Chroot
environment
-d, --directory=directory
Change to directory inside the chroot before running the command or login shell. If directory is not available, schroot will exit with an error status.
The default behaviour is as follows (all directory paths are inside the chroot). A login shell is run in the current working directory. If this is not available, it will try $HOME (when --preserve-environment is used), then the user’s home directory, and / inside the chroot in turn. A command is always run in the current working directory inside the chroot. If none of the directories are available, schroot will exit with an error status.
-u, --user=user
Run as a different user. The default is to run as the current user. If required, the user may be required to authenticate themselves with a password. For further information, see the section “Authentication”, below.
-p, --preserve-environment
Preserve the user’s environment inside the chroot environment. The default is to use a clean environment; this option copies the entire user environment and sets it in the session. The environment variables allowed are subject to certain restrictions; see the section “Environment”, below.
-s, --shell=shell
Use shell as the login shell. When running a login shell a number of potential shells will be considered, in this order: the command in the SHELL environment variable (if --preserve-environment is used, or preserve-environment is enabled), the user’s shell in the ’passwd’ database, /bin/bash and finally /bin/sh. This option overrides this list, and will use the shell specified. This option also overrides the shell configuration key, if set.
-o, --option=key=value
Set an option. The value of selected configuration keys in schroot.conf may be modified using this option. The key must be present in the user-modifiable-keys configuration key in schroot.conf, or additionally the user-modifiable-keys key if running as (or switching to) the root user. The key and value set here will be set in the environment of the setup scripts, and may hence be used to customise the chroot on a per-session basis.
Session
actions
--automatic-session
Begin, run and end a session automatically. This is the default action, so does not require specifying in normal operation.
-b, --begin-session
Begin a session. A unique session identifier (session ID) is returned on standard output. The session ID is required to use the other session options. Note that the session identifier may be specified with the --session-name option.
--recover-session
Recover an existing session. If an existing session has become unavailable, for example becoming unmounted due to a reboot, this option will make the session available for use again, for example by remounting it. The session ID is specified with the --chroot option.
-r, --run-session
Run an existing session. The session ID is specified with the --chroot option.
-e, --end-session
End an existing session. The session ID is specified with the --chroot option.
Session
options
-n, --session-name=session-name
Name a session. The specified session-name replaces the default session name containing an automatically-generated session ID. The session name must not contain a namespace qualifier, since sessions are always created within the ’session:’ namespace. The session name is also subject to the chroot naming restrictions documented in schroot.conf(5).
-f, --force
Force a session operation, even if it would otherwise fail. This may be used to forcibly end a session, even if it has active users. This does not guarantee that the session will be ended cleanly; filesystems may not be unmounted, for example.
Separator
-- |
End of options. Used to indicate the end of the schroot options; any following options will be passed to the command being run, rather than to schroot. |
AUTHENTICATION
If the user is not an allowed user, or a member of the allowed groups (or if changing to root, the allowed root users or allowed root groups) for the specified chroot(s), permission will be immediately denied. If switching users, and the user running the command has access, the user will be required to authenticate themselves using the credentials of the user being switched to.
On systems supporting Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM), schroot will use PAM for authentication and authorisation of users. If and when required, schroot will prompt for a password. If PAM is not available, all authentication will automatically fail (user switching is not supported without PAM).
Note that when PAM is in use, the root user is not granted any special privileges by default in the program. However, the default PAM configuration permits root to log in without a password (pam_rootok.so), but this may be disabled to prevent root from accessing any chroots except if specifically permitted. In such a situation, root must be added to the allowed users or groups as for any other user or group. If PAM is not available, the root user will be permitted to access all chroots, even when not explicitly granted access.
CHROOT NAMESPACES
Namespace
basics
There are three different types of chroot: regular chroots,
source chroots and session chroots. These different types of
chroot are separated into different namespaces. A
namespace is a prefix to a chroot name. Currently there are
three namespaces: ’chroot:’,
’source:’ and ’session:’. Use
--list --all to list all available chroots in all
namespaces. Because ’:’ is used as the separator
between namespace and chroot names, it is not permitted to
use this character in chroot names.
Depending upon the action you request schroot to take, it may look for the chroot in one of the three namespaces, or a particular namespace may be specified. For example, a chroot named “sid” is actually named “chroot:sid” if the namespace is included, but the namespace may be omitted for most actions.
Source
chroots
Some chroot types, for example LVM snapshots and Btrfs
snapshots, provide session-managed copy-on-write snapshots
of the chroot. These also provide a source chroot to
allow easy access to the filesystem used as a source for
snapshotting. These are regular chroots as well, just with
the snapshotting disabled. For a chroot named
“sid-snapshot” (i.e. with a fully qualified name
of “chroot:sid-snapshot”), there will also be a
corresponding source chroot named
“source:sid-snapshot”. Earlier versions of
schroot provided source chroots with a ’-source’
suffix. These are also provided for compatibility. In this
example, this would be called
“chroot:sid-snapshot-source”. These
compatibility names will be dropped in a future version, so
programs and scripts should switch to using the
namespace-qualified names rather than the old suffix.
Session
chroots
All sessions created with --begin-session are placed
within the ’session:’ namespace. A session named
with --session-name may have any name, even the same
name as the chroot it was created from, providing that it is
unique within this namespace. This was not permitted in
previous versions of schroot which did not have
namespaces.
Actions and
default namespaces
All actions use ’chroot:’ as the default
namespace, with some session actions being the exception.
--run-session, --recover-session and
--end-session use ’session:’ as the
default namespace instead, since these actions work on
session chroots. The upshot is that the namespace is usually
never required except when you need to work with a chroot in
a namespace other than the default, such as when using a
source chroot. To make chroot selection unambiguous, it is
always possible to use the full name including the
namespace, even when not strictly required.
PERFORMANCE
Performance on some filesystems, for example Btrfs, is bad when running dpkg due to the amount of fsync operations performed. This may be mitigated by installing the eatmydata package and then adding eatmydata to the command-prefix configuration key, which disables all fsync operations. Note that this should only be done in snapshot chroots where data loss is not an issue. This is useful when using a chroot for package building, for example.
DIRECTORY FALLBACKS
schroot will select an appropriate directory to use within the chroot based upon whether an interactive login shell will be used, or a command invoked, and additionally if the --directory option is used. In the case of running commands directly, or explicitly specifying a directory, only one directory will be used for safety and consistency, while for a login shell several possibilities may be tried. The following subsections list the fallback sequence for each case. CWD is the current working directory, DIR is the directory specified with --directory.
Login shell
Command
No fallbacks should exist under any circumstances.
--directory used
No fallbacks should exist under any circumstances.
Debugging
Note that --debug=notice will show the internal
fallback list computed for the session.
EXAMPLES
List
available chroots
% schroot -l↵
chroot:default
chroot:etch
chroot:sid
chroot:testing
chroot:unstable
Get
information about a chroot
% schroot -i -c sid↵
——— Chroot ———
Name sid
Description Debian sid (unstable)
Type plain
Priority 3
Users rleigh
Groups sbuild
Root Users
Root Groups sbuild
Aliases unstable unstable-sbuild unstable-p
owerpc-sbuild
Environment Filter ^(BASH_ENV|CDPATH|ENV|HOSTALIASES|I\
FS|KRB5_CONFIG|KRBCONFDIR|KRBTKFILE|KRB_CONF|LD_.*|LOCALDOMA\
IN|NLSPATH|PATH_LOCALE|RES_OPTIONS|TERMINFO|TERMINFO_DIRS|TE\
RMPATH)$
Run Setup Scripts true
Script Configuration script-defaults
Session Managed true
Personality linux32
Location /srv/chroot/sid
Use --all or -c multiple times to use all or multiple chroots, respectively.
Running
commands in a chroot
% schroot -c sid /bin/ls↵
[sid chroot] Running command: “/bin/ls”
CVS sbuild-chroot.c sbuild-session.h schroot.conf.5
Makefile sbuild-chroot.h schroot.1 schroot.conf.5.in
Makefile.am sbuild-config.c schroot.1.in
Makefile.in sbuild-config.h schroot.c
pam sbuild-session.c schroot.conf
% schroot -c sid -- ls -1 | head -n 5↵
[sid chroot] Running command: “ls -1”
ABOUT-NLS
AUTHORS
COPYING
ChangeLog
INSTALL
Use -- to allow options beginning with ’-’ or ’--’ in the command to run in the chroot. This prevents them being interpreted as options for schroot itself. Note that the top line was echoed to standard error, and the remaining lines to standard output. This is intentional, so that program output from commands run in the chroot may be piped and redirected as required; the data will be the same as if the command was run directly on the host system.
Switching
users
% schroot -c sid -u root↵
Password:
[sid chroot] (rleigh→root) Running login shell:
“/bin/bash”
#
If the user ’rleigh’ was in root-users in /etc/schroot/schroot.conf, or one of the groups he belonged to was in root-groups, they would be granted root access without authentication, but the PAM authorisation step is still applied.
Sessions
A chroot may be needed to run more than one command. In
particular, where the chroot is created on the fly from an
LVM LV or a file on disc, there is a need to make the chroot
persistent while a given task (or set of tasks) is
performed. Sessions exist for this purpose. For simple
chroot types such as ’plain’ and
’directory’, sessions may be created but are not
strictly necessary.
Let’s start by looking at a session-capable chroot:
% schroot -i
-c sid-snap↵
——— Chroot ———
Name sid-snap
Description Debian sid snapshot
Type lvm-snapshot
Priority 3
Users maks rleigh
Groups sbuild
Root Users
Root Groups root sbuild
Aliases
Environment Filter ^(BASH_ENV|CDPATH|ENV|HOSTALIASES|I\
FS|KRB5_CONFIG|KRBCONFDIR|KRBTKFILE|KRB_CONF|LD_.*|LOCALDOMA\
IN|NLSPATH|PATH_LOCALE|RES_OPTIONS|TERMINFO|TERMINFO_DIRS|TE\
RMPATH)$
Run Setup Scripts true
Script Configuration script-defaults
Session Managed true
Personality linux
Device /dev/hda_vg/sid_chroot
Mount Options -o atime,async,user_xattr
Source Users
Source Groups root rleigh
Source Root Users
Source Root Groups root rleigh
LVM Snapshot Options --size 2G -c 128
Note that the Session Managed option is set to ’true’. This is a requirement in order to use session management, and is supported by most chroot types. Next, we will create a new session:
% schroot -b
-c sid-snap↵
sid-snap-46195b04-0893-49bf-beb8-0d4ccc899f0f
The session ID of the newly-created session is returned on standard output. It is common to store it like this:
%
SESSION=$(schroot -b -c sid-snap)↵
% echo $SESSION↵
sid-snap-46195b04-0893-49bf-beb8-0d4ccc899f0f
The session may be used just like any normal chroot. This is what the session looks like:
% schroot -i
-c sid-snap-46195b04-0893-49bf-beb8-0d4ccc899f0f↵
——— Session ———
Name sid-snap-46195b04-0893-49bf-beb8-0d\
4ccc899f0f
Description Debian sid snapshot
Type lvm-snapshot
Priority 3
Users maks rleigh
Groups sbuild
Root Users
Root Groups root sbuild
Aliases
Environment Filter ^(BASH_ENV|CDPATH|ENV|HOSTALIASES|I\
FS|KRB5_CONFIG|KRBCONFDIR|KRBTKFILE|KRB_CONF|LD_.*|LOCALDOMA\
IN|NLSPATH|PATH_LOCALE|RES_OPTIONS|TERMINFO|TERMINFO_DIRS|TE\
RMPATH)$
Run Setup Scripts true
Script Configuration script-defaults
Session Managed true
Personality linux
Mount Location /var/lib/schroot/mount/sid-snap-461\
95b04-0893-49bf-beb8-0d4ccc899f0f
Path /var/lib/schroot/mount/sid-snap-461\
95b04-0893-49bf-beb8-0d4ccc899f0f
Mount Device /dev/hda_vg/sid-snap-46195b04-0893-\
49bf-beb8-0d4ccc899f0f
Device /dev/hda_vg/sid_chroot
Mount Options -o atime,async,user_xattr
Source Users
Source Groups root rleigh
Source Root Users
Source Root Groups root rleigh
LVM Snapshot Device /dev/hda_vg/sid-snap-46195b04-0893-\
49bf-beb8-0d4ccc899f0f
LVM Snapshot Options --size 2G -c 128
Now the session has been created, commands may be run in it:
% schroot -r
-c sid-snap-46195b04-0893-49bf-beb8-0d4ccc899f0f -- \
uname -sr↵
I: [sid-snap-46195b04-0893-49bf-beb8-0d4ccc899f0f chroot]
Running \
command: “uname -sr”
Linux 2.6.18-3-powerpc
% schroot -r -c $SESSION -- uname -sr↵
I: [sid-snap-fe170af9-d9be-4800-b1bd-de275858b938 chroot]
Running \
command: “uname -sr”
Linux 2.6.18-3-powerpc
When all the commands to run in the session have been performed, the session may be ended:
% schroot -e
-c sid-snap-46195b04-0893-49bf-beb8-0d4ccc899f0f↵
% schroot -e -c $SESSION↵
Finally, the session names can be long and unwieldy. A name may be specified instead of using the automatically generated session ID:
% schroot -b
-c sid-snap -n my-session-name↵
my-session-name
TROUBLESHOOTING
If something is not working, and it’s not clear from the error messages what is wrong, try using the --debug=level option to turn on debugging messages. This gives a great deal more information. Valid debug levels are ’none’, and ’notice’, ’info’, ’warning’ and ’critical’ in order of increasing severity. The lower the severity level, the more output.
If you are
still having trouble, the developers may be contacted on the
mailing list:
Debian buildd-tools Developers
<buildd-tools-devel [AT] lists.org>
BUGS
On the mips and mipsel architectures, Linux kernels up to and including at least version 2.6.17 have broken personality(2) support, which results in a failure to set the personality. This will be seen as an “Operation not permitted” (EPERM) error. To work around this problem, set personality to ’undefined’, or upgrade to a more recent kernel.
ENVIRONMENT
By default, the environment is not preserved, and the following environment variables are defined: HOME, LOGNAME, PATH, SHELL, TERM (preserved if already defined), and USER. The environment variables SCHROOT_COMMAND, SCHROOT_USER, SCHROOT_GROUP, SCHROOT_UID and SCHROOT_GID are set inside the chroot specifying the command being run, the user name, group name, user ID and group ID, respectively. Additionally, the environment variables SCHROOT_SESSION_ID, SCHROOT_CHROOT_NAME and SCHROOT_ALIAS_NAME specify the session ID, the original chroot name prior to session creation, and the alias used to originally identify the selected chroot, respectively.
The following, potentially dangerous, environment variables are removed for safety by default: BASH_ENV, CDPATH, ENV, HOSTALIASES, IFS, KRB5_CONFIG, KRBCONFDIR, KRBTKFILE, KRB_CONF, LD_.*, LOCALDOMAIN, NLSPATH, PATH_LOCALE, RES_OPTIONS, TERMINFO, TERMINFO_DIRS, and TERMPATH. If desired, the environment-filter configuration key will allow the exclusion list to the modified; see schroot.conf(5) for further details.
FILES
Configuration
files
/etc/schroot/schroot.conf
The system-wide chroot definition file. This file must be owned by the root user, and not be writable by other.
/etc/schroot/chroot.d
Additional chroot definitions may be placed in files under this directory. They are treated in exactly that same manner as /etc/schroot/schroot.conf. Each file may contain one or more chroot definitions. Note that the files in this directory follow the same naming rules as run-parts(8) when run with the --lsbsysinit option.
/etc/schroot/setup.d
The system-wide chroot setup script directories. See schroot-setup(5).
/etc/pam.d/schroot
PAM configuration.
System
directories
/usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/schroot
Directory containing helper programs used by setup scripts.
Session
directories
Each directory contains a directory or file with the name of
each session. Not all chroot types make use of all the
following directories.
/var/lib/schroot/session
Directory containing the session configuration for each active session.
/var/run/schroot/mount
Directory used to mount the filesystems used by each active session.
/var/lib/schroot/union/underlay
Directory used for filesystem union source (underlay).
/var/lib/schroot/union/overlay
Directory used for filesystem union writeable overlay.
/var/lib/schroot/unpack
Directory used for unpacking file chroots.
AUTHORS
Roger Leigh.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright © 2005-2012 Roger Leigh <rleigh [AT] codelibre.net>
schroot is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
SEE ALSO
dchroot(1), sbuild(1), chroot(2), schroot.conf(5). schroot-setup(5), schroot-faq(7), run-parts(8),