Bubblewrap/例
目次
dhcpcd
Create a simple dhcpcd sandbox:
- Determine available kernel namespaces
$ ls /proc/self/ns cgroup ipc mnt net pid uts
- Bind as read-write the entire host
/
directory to/
in the sandbox - Mount a new devtmpfs filesystem to
/dev
in the sandbox - Create new IPC and control group namespaces
- Create a new UTS namespace and set
dhcpcd
as the hostname
# /usr/bin/bwrap --bind / / --dev /dev --unshare-ipc --unshare-cgroup --unshare-uts --hostname dhcpcd /usr/bin/dhcpcd -q -b
Unbound
Create a more granular and complex Unbound sandbox:
- Bind as read-only the system
/usr
directory to/usr
in the sandbox - Create a symbolic link from the system
/usr/lib
directory to/lib64
in the sandbox - Bind as read-only the system
/etc
directory to/etc
in the sandbox - Create empty
/var
and/run
directories within the sandbox - Mount a new devtmpfs filesystem to
/dev
in the sandbox - Create new IPC and PID and control group namespaces
- Create a new UTS namespace and set
unbound
as the hostname
# /usr/bin/bwrap --ro-bind /usr /usr --symlink usr/lib /lib64 --ro-bind /etc /etc --dir /var --dir /run --dev /dev --unshare-ipc --unshare-pid --unshare-cgroup --unshare-uts --hostname unbound /usr/bin/unbound -d
Desktop
Leverage Bubblewrap within desktop entries:
- Bind as read-write the entire host
/
directory to/
in the sandbox - Re-bind as read-only the
/var
and/etc
directories in the sandbox - Mount a new devtmpfs filesystem to
/dev
in the sandbox - Create a tmpfs filesystem over the sandboxed
/run
directory - Disable network access by creating new network namespace
[Desktop Entry] Name=nano Editor Exec=bwrap --bind / / --dev /dev --tmpfs /run --unshare-net st -e nano -o . %f Type=Application MimeType=text/plain;
- Example MuPDF desktop entry incorporating a
mupdf.sh
shell wrapper:
[Desktop Entry] Name=MuPDF Exec=mupdf.sh %f Icon=application-pdf.svg Type=Application MimeType=application/pdf;application/x-pdf;
MuPDF
The power and flexibility of bwrap is best revealed when used to create an environment within a shell wrapper:
- Bind as read-only the host
/usr/bin
directory to/usr/bin
in the sandbox - Bind as read-only the host
/usr/lib
directory to/usr/lib
in the sandbox - Create a symbolic link from the system
/usr/lib
directory to/lib64
in the sandbox - Create a tmpfs filesystem overlaying
/usr/lib/gcc
in the sandbox- This effectively blacklists the contents of
/usr/lib/gcc
from appearing in the sandbox
- This effectively blacklists the contents of
- Create a new tmpfs filesystem as the
$HOME
directory in the sandbox - Bind as read-only an
.Xauthority
file and Documents directory into the sandbox- This effectively whitelists the
.Xauthority
file and Documents directory with recursion
- This effectively whitelists the
- Create a new tmpfs filesystem as the
/tmp
directory in the sandbox - Whitelist the X11 socket by binding it into the sandbox as read-only
- Clone and create private containers for all namespaces supported by the running kernel
- If the kernel does not support non-privileged user namespaces, skip its creation and continue
- Do not place network components into a private namespace
- This allows for network access to follow URI hyperlinks
#!/bin/sh #~/bwrap/mupdf.sh (exec bwrap \ --ro-bind /usr/bin /usr/bin \ --ro-bind /usr/lib /usr/lib \ --symlink usr/lib /lib64 \ --tmpfs /usr/lib/gcc \ --tmpfs $HOME \ --ro-bind $HOME/.Xauthority $HOME/.Xauthority \ --ro-bind $HOME/Documents $HOME/Documents \ --tmpfs /tmp \ --ro-bind /tmp/.X11-unix/X0 /tmp/.X11-unix/X0 \ --unshare-all \ --share-net \ /usr/bin/mupdf "$@")
$ bwrap \ --ro-bind /usr/bin /usr/bin \ --ro-bind /usr/lib /usr/lib \ --symlink usr/lib /lib64 \ --tmpfs /usr/lib/gcc \ --tmpfs $HOME \ --ro-bind $HOME/.Xauthority $HOME/.Xauthority \ --ro-bind $HOME/Desktop $HOME/Desktop \ --tmpfs /tmp \ --ro-bind /tmp/.X11-unix/X0 /tmp/.X11-unix/X0 \ --unshare-all \ --share-net \ /usr/bin/sh bash-4.4$ ls -AF .Xauthority Documents/
Perhaps the most important rule to consider when building a bubblewrapped filesystem is that commands are executed in the order they appear. From the MuPDF example above:
- A tmpfs system is created followed by the bind mounting of an
.Xauthority
file and a Documents directory:
--tmpfs $HOME \ --ro-bind $HOME/.Xauthority $HOME/.Xauthority \ --ro-bind $HOME/Documents $HOME/Documents \
bash-4.4$ ls -a . .. .Xauthority Desktop
- A tmpfs filesystem is created after the bind mounting of
.Xauthority
and overlays it so that only the Documents directory is visible within the sandbox:
--ro-bind $HOME/.Xauthority $HOME/.Xauthority \ --tmpfs $HOME \ --ro-bind $HOME/Desktop $HOME/Desktop \
bash-4.4$ ls -a . .. Desktop
p7zip
Applications which have not yet been patched against known vulnerabilities constitute prime candidates for bubblewrapping:
- Bind as read-only the host
/usr/bin/7za
executable path to the sandbox - Create a symbolic link from the system
/usr/lib
directory to/lib64
in the sandbox - Blacklist the sandboxed contents of
/usr/lib/modules
and/usr/lib/systemd
with tmpfs overlays - Mount a new devtmpfs filesystem to
/dev
in the sandbox - Bind as read-write the host
/sandbox
directory to the/sandbox
directory in the sandbox- 7za will only run in the host
/sandbox
directory and/or its subdirectories when called from the shell wrapper
- 7za will only run in the host
- Create new cgroup/IPC/network/PID/UTS namespaces for the application and its processes
- If the kernel does not support non-privileged user namespaces, skip its creation and continue
- Creation of a new network namespace prevents the sandbox from obtaining network access
- Add a custom or an arbitrary hostname to the sandbox such as
p7zip
- Unset the
XAUTHORITY
environment variable to hide the location of the X11 connection cookie- 7za does not need to connect to an X11 display server to function properly
- Start a new terminal session to prevent keyboard input from escaping the sandbox
#!/bin/sh #~/bwrap/pz7ip.sh (exec bwrap \ --ro-bind /usr/bin/7za /usr/bin/7za \ --symlink usr/lib /lib64 \ --tmpfs /usr/lib/modules \ --tmpfs /usr/lib/systemd \ --dev /dev \ --bind /sandbox /sandbox \ --unshare-all \ --hostname p7zip \ --unsetenv XAUTHORITY \ --new-session \ /usr/bin/7za "$@")
bwrap \ --ro-bind /usr/bin/7za /usr/bin/7za \ --ro-bind /usr/bin/ls /usr/bin/ls \ --ro-bind /usr/bin/sh /usr/bin/sh \ --symlink usr/lib /lib64 \ --tmpfs /usr/lib/modules \ --tmpfs /usr/lib/systemd \ --dev /dev \ --bind /sandbox /sandbox \ --unshare-all \ --hostname p7zip \ --unsetenv XAUTHORITY \ --new-session \ /usr/bin/sh bash: no job control in this shell bash-4.4$ ls -AF dev/ lib64@ usr/ bash-4.4$ ls -l /usr/lib/modules total 0 bash-4.4$ ls -l /usr/lib/systemd total 0 bash-4.4$ ls -AF /dev console full null ptmx@ pts/ random shm/ stderr@ stdin@ stdout@ tty urandom zero bash-4.4$ ls -A /usr/bin 7za ls sh
Firefox
Network facing applications with large surface attack areas are also ideal candidates to be bubblewrapped:
- Transmission included in the sandbox to launch with magnet and torrent links
- Example wrap supports audio (PulseAudio) and printing (CUPS/Avahi) under GNOME (Wayland)
- Paths in
~/.config/transmission/settings.json
should reflect the--setenv HOME
variable
- Paths in
- Full paths are used to allow for keyboard bindings in environments which do not support variable expansion.
- WebRenderer and hardware (accelerated) compositing support included
bwrap \ --symlink usr/lib /lib \ --symlink usr/lib64 /lib64 \ --symlink usr/bin /bin \ --symlink usr/bin /sbin \ --ro-bind /usr/lib /usr/lib \ --ro-bind /usr/lib64 /usr/lib64 \ --ro-bind /usr/bin /usr/bin \ --ro-bind /usr/lib/firefox /usr/lib/firefox \ --ro-bind /usr/share/applications /usr/share/applications \ --ro-bind /usr/share/gtk-3.0 /usr/share/gtk-3.0 \ --ro-bind /usr/share/fontconfig /usr/share/fontconfig \ --ro-bind /usr/share/icu /usr/share/icu \ --ro-bind /usr/share/drirc.d /usr/share/drirc.d \ --ro-bind /usr/share/fonts /usr/share/fonts \ --ro-bind /usr/share/glib-2.0 /usr/share/glib-2.0 \ --ro-bind /usr/share/glvnd /usr/share/glvnd \ --ro-bind /usr/share/icons /usr/share/icons \ --ro-bind /usr/share/libdrm /usr/share/libdrm \ --ro-bind /usr/share/mime /usr/share/mime \ --ro-bind /usr/share/X11/xkb /usr/share/X11/xkb \ --ro-bind /usr/share/icons /usr/share/icons \ --ro-bind /usr/share/mime /usr/share/mime \ --ro-bind /etc/fonts /etc/fonts \ --ro-bind /etc/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf \ --ro-bind /usr/share/ca-certificates /usr/share/ca-certificates \ --ro-bind /etc/ssl /etc/ssl \ --ro-bind /etc/ca-certificates /etc/ca-certificates \ --dir /run/user/"$(id -u)" \ --ro-bind /run/user/"$(id -u)"/pulse /run/user/"$(id -u)"/pulse \ --ro-bind /run/user/"$(id -u)"/wayland-1 /run/user/"$(id -u)"/wayland-1 \ --dev /dev \ --dev-bind /dev/dri /dev/dri \ --ro-bind /sys/dev/char /sys/dev/char \ --ro-bind /sys/devices/pci0000:00 /sys/devices/pci0000:00 \ --proc /proc \ --tmpfs /tmp \ --bind /home/example/.mozilla /home/example/.mozilla \ --bind /home/example/.config/transmission /home/example/.config/transmission \ --bind /home/example/Downloads /home/example/Downloads \ --setenv HOME /home/example \ --setenv GTK_THEME Adwaita:dark \ --setenv MOZ_ENABLE_WAYLAND 1 \ --setenv PATH /usr/bin \ --hostname RESTRICTED \ --unshare-all \ --share-net \ --die-with-parent \ --new-session \ /usr/bin/firefox
Enhancing privacy
- Further restrictions can be made by removing specific entries
- Remove the following entry to remove audio support:
--ro-bind /run/user/"$(id -u)"/pulse /run/user/"$(id -u)"/pulse \
/sandbox
represents an arbitrary location defined by the user to hold desired profile information- This allows for the use of a sanitized profile copied into
/sandbox
via a script/cron job or manually e.g.
- This allows for the use of a sanitized profile copied into
$ cp -pR ~/.mozilla /sandbox/
The location can be a network share, a USB mount, or a local filesystem or ramfs/tmpfs location
- Set
/home/r
to obscure the actual/home/example
- Set new user ID and group ID values
bwrap \ .... --bind /sandbox/.mozilla /home/r/.mozilla \ --bind /sandbox/Downloads /home/r/Downloads \ ... --setenv HOME /home/r \ ... --uid 200 --gid 400 \ ... /usr/bin/firefox --no-remote --private-window
Chromium
A simple chromium sandbox on wayland and with pipewire:
bwrap \ --symlink usr/lib /lib \ --symlink usr/lib64 /lib64 \ --symlink usr/bin /bin \ --symlink usr/bin /sbin \ --ro-bind /usr/lib /usr/lib \ --ro-bind /usr/lib64 /usr/lib64 \ --ro-bind /usr/bin /usr/bin \ --ro-bind /etc /etc \ --ro-bind /usr/lib/chromium /usr/lib/chromium \ --ro-bind /usr/share /usr/share \ --dev /dev \ --dev-bind /dev/dri /dev/dri \ --proc /proc \ --ro-bind /sys/dev/char /sys/dev/char \ --ro-bind /sys/devices /sys/devices \ --ro-bind /run/dbus /run/dbus \ --dir "$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR" \ --ro-bind "$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/wayland-1" "$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/wayland-1" \ --ro-bind "$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/pipewire-0" "$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/pipewire-0" \ --ro-bind "$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/pulse" "$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/pulse" \ --tmpfs /tmp \ --dir $HOME/.cache \ --bind $HOME/.config/chromium $HOME/.config/chromium \ --bind $HOME/Downloads $HOME/Downloads \ /usr/bin/chromium --enable-features=UseOzonePlatform --ozone-platform=wayland
- PipeWire:
--ro-bind "/run/user/$(id -u)/pipewire-0" "/run/user/$(id -u)/pipewire-0" \
- If you are not using pipewire, feel free to remove this line
--bind $HOME/.config/chromium $HOME/.config/chromium \
mounts your chromium configuration directory in the sandbox as readable and writable--bind $HOME/Downloads $HOME/Downloads \
mounts your ~/Downloads directory in the sandbox as readable and writable- This example can be further improved for more isolation.
Skype for Linux
skypeforlinux-stable-binAUR should be started with /usr/share/skypeforlinux/skypeforlinux
instead of /usr/bin/skypeforlinux
, because the latter is just a wrapper script which forks the main process in the background and terminates, which conflicts with the --die-with-parent
bwrap option.
The following example provides these features:
env -i
ensures that all environment variables are unset.- Network is shared with the host (
--share-net
),/etc/resolv.conf
is bind-mounted. - Xorg access: bind the
/tmp/.X11-unix/X0
socket, set$DISPLAY
. - D-Bus: bind the
/run/user/$UID/bus
socket, set$DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS
. - Audio: bind the PulseAudio socket.
- Video: dev-bind the
/dev/video0
device.
The directory on the host where you want to keep the Skype profile can be configured with $HOST_PROFILE_PATH
.
env -i bwrap \ --ro-bind /usr /usr \ --dir /home/r \ --dir /tmp \ --dir /var \ --dir /run/user/$UID \ --proc /proc \ --dev /dev \ --symlink usr/lib /lib \ --symlink usr/lib64 /lib64 \ --symlink usr/bin /bin \ --symlink usr/sbin /sbin \ --symlink ../tmp /var/tmp \ --bind "$HOST_PROFILE_PATH" /home/r/.config/skypeforlinux \ --ro-bind /etc/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf \ --ro-bind /tmp/.X11-unix/X0 /tmp/.X11-unix/X0 \ --ro-bind /run/user/$UID/bus /run/user/$UID/bus \ --ro-bind /run/user/$UID/pulse /run/user/$UID/pulse \ --dev-bind /dev/video0 /dev/video0 \ --chdir / \ --unshare-all \ --share-net \ --hostname RESTRICTED \ --die-with-parent \ --new-session \ --setenv PATH /usr/bin \ --setenv HOME /home/r \ --setenv XDG_RUNTIME_DIR "/run/user/$UID" \ --setenv DISPLAY "$DISPLAY" \ --setenv DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS "unix:path=/run/user/$UID/bus" \ /usr/share/skypeforlinux/skypeforlinux
Steam
A simple Steam sandbox
#!/usr/bin/bash set -e STEAM_HOME="$HOME/.local/share/steam_sandbox" RUN_USER="/run/user/$UID" mkdir -p "$STEAM_HOME" _bind() { _bind_arg=$1 shift for _path in "$@"; do args+=("$_bind_arg" "$_path" "$_path") done } bind() { _bind --bind-try "$@" } robind() { _bind --ro-bind-try "$@" } devbind() { _bind --dev-bind-try "$@" } args=( --tmpfs /tmp --proc /proc --dev /dev --dir /etc --dir /var --dir "$RUN_USER" --bind "$STEAM_HOME" "$HOME" --dir "$HOME" --dir "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME" --dir "$XDG_CACHE_HOME" --dir "$XDG_DATA_HOME" --dir "$XDG_STATE_HOME" --symlink /usr/lib /lib --symlink /usr/lib /lib64 --symlink /usr/bin /bin --symlink /usr/bin /sbin --symlink /run /var/run ) robind \ /usr \ /etc \ /opt \ /sys \ /var/empty \ /var/lib/alsa \ /var/lib/dbus \ "$RUN_USER/systemd/resolve" devbind \ /dev/dri \ /dev/nvidia* \ # steam bind \ "$HOME/.Xauthority" \ "$HOME/.local/bin/proton" \ "$HOME/.pki" \ "$HOME/.steam" \ "$HOME/.steampath" \ "$HOME/.steampid" \ "$HOME/Downloads" \ "$RUN_USER"/.mutter-X* \ "$RUN_USER"/ICE* \ "$RUN_USER"/dbus* \ "$RUN_USER"/gnome* \ "$RUN_USER"/pipewire* \ "$RUN_USER"/pulse* \ "$RUN_USER"/wayland* \ "$RUN_USER/at-spi" \ "$RUN_USER/bus" \ "$RUN_USER/dconf" \ "$RUN_USER/systemd" \ "$XDG_CACHE_HOME/mesa_shader_cache" \ "$XDG_CACHE_HOME/nv" \ "$XDG_CACHE_HOME/nvidia" \ "$XDG_CACHE_HOME/radv_builtin_shaders64" \ "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/Epic" \ "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/Loop_Hero" \ "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/MangoHud" \ "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/ModTheSpire" \ "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/RogueLegacy" \ "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/RogueLegacyStorageContainer" \ "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/cef_user_data" \ "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/proton" \ "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/pulse" \ "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/unity3d" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/3909/PapersPlease" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/Colossal Order" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/Dredmor" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/FasterThanLight" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/HotlineMiami" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/IntoTheBreach" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/Paradox Interactive" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/PillarsOfEternity" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/RogueLegacy" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/RogueLegacyStorageContainer" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/Steam" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/SuperHexagon" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/Terraria" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/applications" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/aspyr-media" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/bohemiainteractive" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/cdprojektred" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/feral-interactive" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/frictionalgames" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/icons" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/proton" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/vpltd" \ "$XDG_DATA_HOME/vulkan" \ "/var/lib/bluetooth" \ /run/systemd \ /tmp/.ICE-unix \ /tmp/.X11-unix exec bwrap "${args[@]}" /usr/lib/steam/steam "$@"
Filesystem isolation
To further hide the contents of the file system (such as those in /var
, /usr/bin
and /usr/lib
) and to sandbox even the installation of software, pacman can be made to install Arch packages into isolated filesystem trees.
In order to use pacman for installing software into the filesystem trees, you will need to install fakeroot and fakechroot.
Suppose you want to install the xterm
package with pacman into an isolated filesystem tree. You should prepare your tree like this:
$ MYPACKAGE=xterm $ mkdir -p ~/sandboxes/${MYPACKAGE}/files/var/lib/pacman $ mkdir -p ~/sandboxes/${MYPACKAGE}/files/etc $ cp /etc/pacman.conf ~/sandboxes/${MYPACKAGE}/files/etc/pacman.conf
You may want to edit ~/sandboxes/${MYPACKAGE}/files/etc/pacman.conf
and adjust the pacman configuration used:
- Remove any undesired custom repositories and
IgnorePkg
,IgnoreGroup
,NoUpgrade
andNoExtract
settings that are needed only for the host system. - You may need to remove the
CheckSpace
option so pacman will not complain about errors finding the root filesystem for checking disk space.
Then install the base
group along with the needed fakeroot into the isolated filesystem tree:
$ fakechroot fakeroot pacman -Syu \ --root ~/sandboxes/${MYPACKAGE}/files \ --dbpath ~/sandboxes/${MYPACKAGE}/files/var/lib/pacman \ --config ~/sandboxes/${MYPACKAGE}/files/etc/pacman.conf \ base fakeroot
Since you will be repeatedly calling bubblewrap with the same options, make an alias:
$ alias bw-install='bwrap \ --bind ~/sandboxes/${MYPACKAGE}/files/ / \ --ro-bind /etc/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf \ --tmpfs /tmp \ --proc /proc \ --dev /dev \ --chdir / '
You will need to set up the locales by editing ~/sandboxes/${MYPACKAGE}/files/etc/locale.gen
and running:
$ bw-install locale-gen
Then set up pacman’s keyring:
$ bw-install fakeroot pacman-key --init $ bw-install fakeroot pacman-key --populate
Now you can install the desired xterm
package.
$ bw-install fakeroot pacman -S ${MYPACKAGE}
If the pacman command fails here, try running the command for populating the keyring again.
Congratulations. You now have an isolated filesystem tree containing xterm
. You can use bw-install
again to upgrade your filesystem tree.
You can now run your software with bubblewrap. command
should be xterm
in this case.
$ bwrap \ --ro-bind ~/sandboxes/${MYPACKAGE}/files/ / \ --ro-bind /etc/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf \ --tmpfs /tmp \ --proc /proc \ --dev /dev \ --chdir / \ command
Note that some files can be shared between packages. You can hardlink to all files of an existing parent filesystem tree to reuse them in a new tree:
$ cp -al ~/sandboxes/${MYPARENTPACKAGE} ~/sandboxes/${MYPACKAGE}
Then proceed with the installation as usual by calling pacman from bw-install fakechroot fakeroot pacman ...
.