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authorErik Sjölund <erik.sjolund@gmail.com>2021-04-20 20:28:11 +0200
committerErik Sjölund <erik.sjolund@gmail.com>2021-04-20 20:28:11 +0200
commit6e5bb9d1d3411953a6a4e507d854a5773e6f7dbc (patch)
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parentcf2c3a1f13710014892804aacf855cd6b001a5ea (diff)
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[CI:DOCS] Rewrite --uidmap doc in podman-create.1.md and podman-run.1.md
Introduce the concept of "intermediate UID" to explain how --uidmap works when running rootless. Add Markdown tables to show examples of how UIDs are mapped. Co-authored-by: Tom Sweeney <tsweeney@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Erik Sjölund <erik.sjolund@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r--docs/source/markdown/podman-create.1.md66
-rw-r--r--docs/source/markdown/podman-run.1.md74
2 files changed, 124 insertions, 16 deletions
diff --git a/docs/source/markdown/podman-create.1.md b/docs/source/markdown/podman-create.1.md
index db9ff937b..11a2410a8 100644
--- a/docs/source/markdown/podman-create.1.md
+++ b/docs/source/markdown/podman-create.1.md
@@ -975,11 +975,71 @@ Remote connections use local containers.conf for defaults
Set the umask inside the container. Defaults to `0022`.
Remote connections use local containers.conf for defaults
-#### **\-\-uidmap**=*container_uid:host_uid:amount*
+#### **\-\-uidmap**=*container_uid*:*from_uid*:*amount*
-UID map for the user namespace. Using this flag will run the container with user namespace enabled. It conflicts with the `--userns` and `--subuidname` flags.
+Run the container in a new user namespace using the supplied mapping. This
+option conflicts with the **\-\-userns** and **\-\-subuidname** options. This
+option provides a way to map host UIDs to container UIDs. It can be passed
+several times to map different ranges.
-The following example maps uids 0-2000 in the container to the uids 30000-31999 on the host and gids 0-2000 in the container to the gids 30000-31999 on the host. `--uidmap=0:30000:2000`
+The _from_uid_ value is based upon the user running the command, either rootful or rootless users.
+* rootful user: *container_uid*:*host_uid*:*amount*
+* rootless user: *container_uid*:*intermediate_uid*:*amount*
+
+When **podman create** is called by a privileged user, the option **\-\-uidmap**
+works as a direct mapping between host UIDs and container UIDs.
+
+host UID -> container UID
+
+The _amount_ specifies the number of consecutive UIDs that will be mapped.
+If for example _amount_ is **4** the mapping would look like:
+
+| host UID | container UID |
+| - | - |
+| _from_uid_ | _container_uid_ |
+| _from_uid_ + 1 | _container_uid_ + 1 |
+| _from_uid_ + 2 | _container_uid_ + 2 |
+| _from_uid_ + 3 | _container_uid_ + 3 |
+
+When **podman create** is called by an unprivileged user (i.e. running rootless),
+the value _from_uid_ is interpreted as an "intermediate UID". In the rootless
+case, host UIDs are not mapped directly to container UIDs. Instead the mapping
+happens over two mapping steps:
+
+host UID -> intermediate UID -> container UID
+
+The **\-\-uidmap** option only influences the second mapping step.
+
+The first mapping step is derived by Podman from the contents of the file
+_/etc/subuid_ and the UID of the user calling Podman.
+
+First mapping step:
+| host UID | intermediate UID |
+| - | - |
+| UID for the user starting Podman | 0 |
+| 1st subordinate UID for the user starting Podman | 1 |
+| 2nd subordinate UID for the user starting Podman | 2 |
+| 3rd subordinate UID for the user starting Podman | 3 |
+| nth subordinate UID for the user starting Podman | n |
+
+To be able to use intermediate UIDs greater than zero, the user needs to have
+subordinate UIDs configured in _/etc/subuid_. See **subuid**(5).
+
+The second mapping step is configured with **\-\-uidmap**.
+
+If for example _amount_ is **5** the second mapping step would look like:
+
+| intermediate UID | container UID |
+| - | - |
+| _from_uid_ | _container_uid_ |
+| _from_uid_ + 1 | _container_uid_ + 1 |
+| _from_uid_ + 2 | _container_uid_ + 2 |
+| _from_uid_ + 3 | _container_uid_ + 3 |
+| _from_uid_ + 4 | _container_uid_ + 4 |
+
+Even if a user does not have any subordinate UIDs in _/etc/subuid_,
+**\-\-uidmap** could still be used to map the normal UID of the user to a
+container UID by running `podman create --uidmap $container_uid:0:1 --user $container_uid ...`.
#### **\-\-ulimit**=*option*
diff --git a/docs/source/markdown/podman-run.1.md b/docs/source/markdown/podman-run.1.md
index f84a5913c..e149c8531 100644
--- a/docs/source/markdown/podman-run.1.md
+++ b/docs/source/markdown/podman-run.1.md
@@ -1047,23 +1047,71 @@ Remote connections use local containers.conf for defaults
Set the umask inside the container. Defaults to `0022`.
Remote connections use local containers.conf for defaults
-#### **\-\-uidmap**=*container_uid*:*host_uid*:*amount*
+#### **\-\-uidmap**=*container_uid*:*from_uid*:*amount*
-Run the container in a new user namespace using the supplied mapping. This option conflicts
-with the **\-\-userns** and **\-\-subuidname** flags.
-This option can be passed several times to map different ranges. If calling **podman run**
-as an unprivileged user, the user needs to have the right to use the mapping. See **subuid**(5).
+Run the container in a new user namespace using the supplied mapping. This
+option conflicts with the **\-\-userns** and **\-\-subuidname** options. This
+option provides a way to map host UIDs to container UIDs. It can be passed
+several times to map different ranges.
-The following example maps uids 0-1999 in the container to the uids 30000-31999 on the host: **\-\-uidmap=0:30000:2000**.
+The _from_uid_ value is based upon the user running the command, either rootful or rootless users.
+* rootful user: *container_uid*:*host_uid*:*amount*
+* rootless user: *container_uid*:*intermediate_uid*:*amount*
-**Important note:** The new user namespace mapping based on **\-\-uidmap** is based on the initial mapping made in the _/etc/subuid_ file.
-Assuming there is a _/etc/subuid_ mapping **username:100000:65536**, then **username** is initially mapped to a namespace starting with
-uid **100000** for **65536** ids. From here the **\-\-uidmap** mapping to the new namespace starts from **0** again, but is based on the initial mapping.
-Meaning **username** is initially mapped to uid **100000** which is referenced as **0** in the following **\-\-uidmap** mapping. In terms of the example
-above: The user **username** is mapped to user **100000** of the initial namespace then the
-**30000**st id of this namespace (which is uid 130000 in this namespace) is mapped to container namespace user id **0**. (username -> 100000 / 30000 -> 0)
+When **podman run** is called by a privileged user, the option **\-\-uidmap**
+works as a direct mapping between host UIDs and container UIDs.
-_Note_: A minimal mapping has to have at least container uid **0** mapped to the parent user namespace.
+host UID -> container UID
+
+The _amount_ specifies the number of consecutive UIDs that will be mapped.
+If for example _amount_ is **4** the mapping would look like:
+
+| host UID | container UID |
+| - | - |
+| _from_uid_ | _container_uid_ |
+| _from_uid_ + 1 | _container_uid_ + 1 |
+| _from_uid_ + 2 | _container_uid_ + 2 |
+| _from_uid_ + 3 | _container_uid_ + 3 |
+
+When **podman run** is called by an unprivileged user (i.e. running rootless),
+the value _from_uid_ is interpreted as an "intermediate UID". In the rootless
+case, host UIDs are not mapped directly to container UIDs. Instead the mapping
+happens over two mapping steps:
+
+host UID -> intermediate UID -> container UID
+
+The **\-\-uidmap** option only influences the second mapping step.
+
+The first mapping step is derived by Podman from the contents of the file
+_/etc/subuid_ and the UID of the user calling Podman.
+
+First mapping step:
+| host UID | intermediate UID |
+| - | - |
+| UID for the user starting Podman | 0 |
+| 1st subordinate UID for the user starting Podman | 1 |
+| 2nd subordinate UID for the user starting Podman | 2 |
+| 3rd subordinate UID for the user starting Podman | 3 |
+| nth subordinate UID for the user starting Podman | n |
+
+To be able to use intermediate UIDs greater than zero, the user needs to have
+subordinate UIDs configured in _/etc/subuid_. See **subuid**(5).
+
+The second mapping step is configured with **\-\-uidmap**.
+
+If for example _amount_ is **5** the second mapping step would look like:
+
+| intermediate UID | container UID |
+| - | - |
+| _from_uid_ | _container_uid_ |
+| _from_uid_ + 1 | _container_uid_ + 1 |
+| _from_uid_ + 2 | _container_uid_ + 2 |
+| _from_uid_ + 3 | _container_uid_ + 3 |
+| _from_uid_ + 4 | _container_uid_ + 4 |
+
+Even if a user does not have any subordinate UIDs in _/etc/subuid_,
+**\-\-uidmap** could still be used to map the normal UID of the user to a
+container UID by running `podman run --uidmap $container_uid:0:1 --user $container_uid ...`.
#### **\-\-ulimit**=*option*