cri-o/vendor/github.com/opencontainers/runc/libcontainer/nsenter
Mrunal Patel 970b8d61a7 test: Bump up runc to 9f9c96235cc97674e935002fc3d78361b696a69e
This brings in a fix for a cgroups setup race condition
that we hit sometimes in the tests.

Signed-off-by: Mrunal Patel <mrunalp@gmail.com>
2018-01-23 11:06:21 -08:00
..
namespace.h bump runc@b263a43430ac6996a4302b891688544225197294 2017-02-07 10:57:46 +01:00
nsenter.go Switch to github.com/golang/dep for vendoring 2017-01-31 16:45:59 -08:00
nsenter_gccgo.go Switch to github.com/golang/dep for vendoring 2017-01-31 16:45:59 -08:00
nsenter_unsupported.go Switch to github.com/golang/dep for vendoring 2017-01-31 16:45:59 -08:00
nsexec.c test: Bump up runc to 9f9c96235cc97674e935002fc3d78361b696a69e 2018-01-23 11:06:21 -08:00
README.md bump runc@b263a43430ac6996a4302b891688544225197294 2017-02-07 10:57:46 +01:00

nsenter

The nsenter package registers a special init constructor that is called before the Go runtime has a chance to boot. This provides us the ability to setns on existing namespaces and avoid the issues that the Go runtime has with multiple threads. This constructor will be called if this package is registered, imported, in your go application.

The nsenter package will import "C" and it uses cgo package. In cgo, if the import of "C" is immediately preceded by a comment, that comment, called the preamble, is used as a header when compiling the C parts of the package. So every time we import package nsenter, the C code function nsexec() would be called. And package nsenter is now only imported in main_unix.go, so every time before we call cmd.Start on linux, that C code would run.

Because nsexec() must be run before the Go runtime in order to use the Linux kernel namespace, you must import this library into a package if you plan to use libcontainer directly. Otherwise Go will not execute the nsexec() constructor, which means that the re-exec will not cause the namespaces to be joined. You can import it like this:

import _ "github.com/opencontainers/runc/libcontainer/nsenter"

nsexec() will first get the file descriptor number for the init pipe from the environment variable _LIBCONTAINER_INITPIPE (which was opened by the parent and kept open across the fork-exec of the nsexec() init process). The init pipe is used to read bootstrap data (namespace paths, clone flags, uid and gid mappings, and the console path) from the parent process. nsexec() will then call setns(2) to join the namespaces provided in the bootstrap data (if available), clone(2) a child process with the provided clone flags, update the user and group ID mappings, do some further miscellaneous setup steps, and then send the PID of the child process to the parent of the nsexec() "caller". Finally, the parent nsexec() will exit and the child nsexec() process will return to allow the Go runtime take over.

NOTE: We do both setns(2) and clone(2) even if we don't have any CLONE_NEW* clone flags because we must fork a new process in order to enter the PID namespace.