2022-01-25 21:00:16 |
MegaBrutal |
bug |
|
|
added bug |
2022-03-18 13:57:25 |
Luca Boccassi |
bug watch added |
|
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/22760 |
|
2022-03-18 13:59:51 |
Luca Boccassi |
systemd (Ubuntu): status |
New |
Confirmed |
|
2022-03-18 14:02:56 |
Luca Boccassi |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Lukas Märdian |
2022-03-24 13:50:54 |
Christian Ehrhardt |
tags |
jammy |
jammy rls-jj-incoming |
|
2022-03-24 13:52:14 |
Christian Ehrhardt |
tags |
jammy rls-jj-incoming |
jammy |
|
2022-03-24 13:54:55 |
Christian Ehrhardt |
bug task added |
|
lxd (Ubuntu) |
|
2022-03-24 13:55:05 |
Christian Ehrhardt |
nominated for series |
|
Ubuntu Focal |
|
2022-03-24 13:55:05 |
Christian Ehrhardt |
bug task added |
|
systemd (Ubuntu Focal) |
|
2022-03-24 13:55:05 |
Christian Ehrhardt |
bug task added |
|
lxd (Ubuntu Focal) |
|
2022-03-24 13:55:05 |
Christian Ehrhardt |
nominated for series |
|
Ubuntu Bionic |
|
2022-03-24 13:55:05 |
Christian Ehrhardt |
bug task added |
|
systemd (Ubuntu Bionic) |
|
2022-03-24 13:55:05 |
Christian Ehrhardt |
bug task added |
|
lxd (Ubuntu Bionic) |
|
2022-03-24 13:55:05 |
Christian Ehrhardt |
nominated for series |
|
Ubuntu Impish |
|
2022-03-24 13:55:05 |
Christian Ehrhardt |
bug task added |
|
systemd (Ubuntu Impish) |
|
2022-03-24 13:55:05 |
Christian Ehrhardt |
bug task added |
|
lxd (Ubuntu Impish) |
|
2022-03-24 13:55:16 |
Christian Ehrhardt |
bug task deleted |
lxd (Ubuntu Focal) |
|
|
2022-03-24 13:55:19 |
Christian Ehrhardt |
bug task deleted |
lxd (Ubuntu Impish) |
|
|
2022-03-24 16:09:23 |
Stéphane Graber |
lxd (Ubuntu): status |
New |
Invalid |
|
2022-03-24 23:55:17 |
Simon Déziel |
description |
The version of systemd (249.5-2ubuntu4) currently packaged for the Ubuntu development version (22.04 Jammy Jellyfish) totally ignores the RootDirectory= option in systemd service files. With RootDirectory, systemd should start the service after calling chroot() on the supplied directory.
To test/reproduce, create a test service file with the following contents:
# /etc/systemd/system/lsb-release.service
[Unit]
Description=LSB Release Information
[Service]
Type=simple
RootDirectory=/var/chroot/trusty
ExecStartPre=/bin/pwd
ExecStart=/usr/bin/lsb_release -a
You should have a chroot environment in the specified RootDirectory, even though you can still deduce if systemd attempted to chroot or not from the resulting error message.
In my example, I installed an end-of-life Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr in the chroot environment. On systems NOT affected by the problem, I get the following result when I start this test service. This is what I'd expect.
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly systemd[1]: Starting LSB Release Information...
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly pwd[361]: /
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly systemd[1]: Started LSB Release Information.
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: No LSB modules are available.
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Distributor ID: Ubuntu
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Description: Ubuntu 14.04 LTS
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Release: 14.04
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Codename: trusty
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly systemd[1]: lsb-release.service: Succeeded.
On the problematic system, however, I get the following result.
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog systemd[1]: Starting LSB Release Information...
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog systemd[1]: Started LSB Release Information.
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog pwd[81114]: /
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: No LSB modules are available.
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Distributor ID: Ubuntu
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Description: Ubuntu Jammy Jellyfish (development branch)
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Release: 22.04
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Codename: jammy
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog systemd[1]: lsb-release.service: Deactivated successfully.
It totally run the service on the host's root filesystem, it didn't care even the slightest that a RootDirectory is specified.
Tested on the following releases / systemd versions:
Ubuntu 18.04.6 Bionic Beaver – ISSUE NOT PRESENT
systemd 237
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +IMA +APPARMOR +SMACK +SYSVINIT +UTMP +LIBCRYPTSETUP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS +ACL +XZ +LZ4 +SECCOMP +BLKID +ELFUTILS +KMOD -IDN2 +IDN -PCRE2 default-hierarchy=hybrid
Ubuntu 20.04.3 Focal Fossa – ISSUE NOT PRESENT
systemd 245 (245.4-4ubuntu3.15)
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +IMA +APPARMOR +SMACK +SYSVINIT +UTMP +LIBCRYPTSETUP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS +ACL +XZ +LZ4 +SECCOMP +BLKID +ELFUTILS +KMOD +IDN2 -IDN +PCRE2 default-hierarchy=hybrid
Ubuntu 21.10 Impish Indri – ISSUE NOT PRESENT
systemd 248 (248.3-1ubuntu8.2)
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +APPARMOR +IMA +SMACK +SECCOMP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS -OPENSSL +ACL +BLKID +CURL +ELFUTILS -FIDO2 +IDN2 -IDN +IPTC +KMOD +LIBCRYPTSETUP -LIBFDISK +PCRE2 -PWQUALITY -P11KIT -QRENCODE +BZIP2 +LZ4 +XZ +ZLIB +ZSTD -XKBCOMMON +UTMP +SYSVINIT default-hierarchy=unified
Ubuntu 22.04 Jammy Jellyfish (development branch) – ISSUE PRESENT
systemd 249 (249.5-2ubuntu4)
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +APPARMOR +IMA +SMACK +SECCOMP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS -OPENSSL +ACL +BLKID +CURL +ELFUTILS -FIDO2 +IDN2 -IDN +IPTC +KMOD +LIBCRYPTSETUP -LIBFDISK +PCRE2 -PWQUALITY -P11KIT -QRENCODE +BZIP2 +LZ4 +XZ +ZLIB +ZSTD -XKBCOMMON +UTMP +SYSVINIT default-hierarchy=unified
Note that the problem is produced under an LXC container; since systemd detects virtualization, it might change how it behaves.
It's either a bug or an intentional change I don't understand yet (i.e. the RootDirectory option has deprecated and is about to be replaced with something else, or there are additional conditions to be met before RootDirectory is considered), but I think in the latter case I should at least get a warning that there is a change in configuration. I imagine suddenly everyone's existing service units utilizing RootDirectory silently stop working without any information regarding why. |
[Impact]
Ubuntu carries a patch on top of systemd [a] to silence
namespace set up failures. This is meant as a workaround
for a bug in the LXD version shipped in Ubuntu 18.04.
Masking namespace set up failures creates a false sense of
security for the user/admin.
As mentioned in comment #1, systemd upstream explains that silencing
this kind of error is dangerous and should be avoided.
Backporting the LXD fix [b] to Ubuntu 18.04 would allow namespaces
to work inside containers. This is the goal of this SRU.
Ultimately, once LXD in Ubuntu 18.04 includes the fix [b], it would
be possible to drop the Ubuntu-specific patch for systemd [a]. This
is however *not an immediate concern for this SRU*.
[Test Plan]
1) Create a 18.04 VM:
$ lxc launch images:ubuntu/18.04 lp1959047 --vm
$ sleep 30 # give it time to boot
2) Install and initialize LXD in it:
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- apt-get update
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- apt-get install -y lxd
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxd init --auto
3) Create a Jammy container and enable systemd debugging:
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxc init images:ubuntu/22.04 c1
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxc config set c1 raw.lxc 'lxc.init.cmd = /sbin/init systemd.log_level=debug'
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxc start c1
4) Check if namespace set up failures are logged:
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxc exec c1 -- journalctl -b0 --grep 'Failed to set up namespace'
Mar 24 23:29:19 c1 systemd[99]: systemd-udevd.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:19 c1 systemd[132]: systemd-networkd.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:19 c1 systemd[131]: systemd-logind.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:20 c1 systemd[136]: systemd-resolved.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:20 c1 systemd[128]: e2scrub_reap.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:23 c1 systemd[243]: systemd-hostnamed.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
If LXD in Ubuntu 18.04 has the patch, the "Failed to set up namespace" messages wouldn't be there.
[Where problems could occur]
The LXD fix changes the Apparmor profile used for containers. This essentially
loosen the mount restrictions applied to containers.
Weakening the Apparmor profile could make it easier for a process in the container
to do damage that would have otherwise been blocked. On the other hand, this
allows making use of namespaces/sandboxing inside the container.
Upstream LXD has the fix since 2019 which make it less likely to run into
problems with the backport.
The backported fix was also tested manually to ensure LXD still behaved normally
and that it avoided the namespace set up failures in Jammy containers.
[a]: https://git.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/systemd/tree/debian/patches/debian/UBUNTU-Revert-namespace-be-more-careful-when-handling-namespacin.patch?h=ubuntu/jammy
[b]: https://github.com/lxc/lxd/commit/a6b780703350faff8328f3d565f6bac7b6dcf59f
[Initial bug description]
The version of systemd (249.5-2ubuntu4) currently packaged for the Ubuntu development version (22.04 Jammy Jellyfish) totally ignores the RootDirectory= option in systemd service files. With RootDirectory, systemd should start the service after calling chroot() on the supplied directory.
To test/reproduce, create a test service file with the following contents:
# /etc/systemd/system/lsb-release.service
[Unit]
Description=LSB Release Information
[Service]
Type=simple
RootDirectory=/var/chroot/trusty
ExecStartPre=/bin/pwd
ExecStart=/usr/bin/lsb_release -a
You should have a chroot environment in the specified RootDirectory, even though you can still deduce if systemd attempted to chroot or not from the resulting error message.
In my example, I installed an end-of-life Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr in the chroot environment. On systems NOT affected by the problem, I get the following result when I start this test service. This is what I'd expect.
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly systemd[1]: Starting LSB Release Information...
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly pwd[361]: /
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly systemd[1]: Started LSB Release Information.
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: No LSB modules are available.
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Distributor ID: Ubuntu
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Description: Ubuntu 14.04 LTS
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Release: 14.04
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Codename: trusty
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly systemd[1]: lsb-release.service: Succeeded.
On the problematic system, however, I get the following result.
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog systemd[1]: Starting LSB Release Information...
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog systemd[1]: Started LSB Release Information.
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog pwd[81114]: /
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: No LSB modules are available.
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Distributor ID: Ubuntu
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Description: Ubuntu Jammy Jellyfish (development branch)
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Release: 22.04
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Codename: jammy
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog systemd[1]: lsb-release.service: Deactivated successfully.
It totally run the service on the host's root filesystem, it didn't care even the slightest that a RootDirectory is specified.
Tested on the following releases / systemd versions:
Ubuntu 18.04.6 Bionic Beaver – ISSUE NOT PRESENT
systemd 237
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +IMA +APPARMOR +SMACK +SYSVINIT +UTMP +LIBCRYPTSETUP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS +ACL +XZ +LZ4 +SECCOMP +BLKID +ELFUTILS +KMOD -IDN2 +IDN -PCRE2 default-hierarchy=hybrid
Ubuntu 20.04.3 Focal Fossa – ISSUE NOT PRESENT
systemd 245 (245.4-4ubuntu3.15)
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +IMA +APPARMOR +SMACK +SYSVINIT +UTMP +LIBCRYPTSETUP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS +ACL +XZ +LZ4 +SECCOMP +BLKID +ELFUTILS +KMOD +IDN2 -IDN +PCRE2 default-hierarchy=hybrid
Ubuntu 21.10 Impish Indri – ISSUE NOT PRESENT
systemd 248 (248.3-1ubuntu8.2)
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +APPARMOR +IMA +SMACK +SECCOMP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS -OPENSSL +ACL +BLKID +CURL +ELFUTILS -FIDO2 +IDN2 -IDN +IPTC +KMOD +LIBCRYPTSETUP -LIBFDISK +PCRE2 -PWQUALITY -P11KIT -QRENCODE +BZIP2 +LZ4 +XZ +ZLIB +ZSTD -XKBCOMMON +UTMP +SYSVINIT default-hierarchy=unified
Ubuntu 22.04 Jammy Jellyfish (development branch) – ISSUE PRESENT
systemd 249 (249.5-2ubuntu4)
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +APPARMOR +IMA +SMACK +SECCOMP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS -OPENSSL +ACL +BLKID +CURL +ELFUTILS -FIDO2 +IDN2 -IDN +IPTC +KMOD +LIBCRYPTSETUP -LIBFDISK +PCRE2 -PWQUALITY -P11KIT -QRENCODE +BZIP2 +LZ4 +XZ +ZLIB +ZSTD -XKBCOMMON +UTMP +SYSVINIT default-hierarchy=unified
Note that the problem is produced under an LXC container; since systemd detects virtualization, it might change how it behaves.
It's either a bug or an intentional change I don't understand yet (i.e. the RootDirectory option has deprecated and is about to be replaced with something else, or there are additional conditions to be met before RootDirectory is considered), but I think in the latter case I should at least get a warning that there is a change in configuration. I imagine suddenly everyone's existing service units utilizing RootDirectory silently stop working without any information regarding why. |
|
2022-03-25 00:06:54 |
Simon Déziel |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Simon Déziel |
2022-03-25 00:06:56 |
Launchpad Janitor |
lxd (Ubuntu Bionic): status |
New |
Confirmed |
|
2022-03-25 00:06:56 |
Launchpad Janitor |
systemd (Ubuntu Bionic): status |
New |
Confirmed |
|
2022-03-25 00:06:56 |
Launchpad Janitor |
systemd (Ubuntu Focal): status |
New |
Confirmed |
|
2022-03-25 00:06:56 |
Launchpad Janitor |
systemd (Ubuntu Impish): status |
New |
Confirmed |
|
2022-03-25 00:11:41 |
Stéphane Graber |
lxd (Ubuntu Bionic): status |
Confirmed |
In Progress |
|
2022-03-29 21:07:56 |
Brian Murray |
lxd (Ubuntu Bionic): status |
In Progress |
Fix Committed |
|
2022-03-29 21:07:58 |
Brian Murray |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Ubuntu Stable Release Updates Team |
2022-03-29 21:08:00 |
Brian Murray |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber SRU Verification |
2022-03-29 21:08:04 |
Brian Murray |
tags |
jammy |
jammy verification-needed verification-needed-bionic |
|
2022-03-29 23:46:29 |
Simon Déziel |
description |
[Impact]
Ubuntu carries a patch on top of systemd [a] to silence
namespace set up failures. This is meant as a workaround
for a bug in the LXD version shipped in Ubuntu 18.04.
Masking namespace set up failures creates a false sense of
security for the user/admin.
As mentioned in comment #1, systemd upstream explains that silencing
this kind of error is dangerous and should be avoided.
Backporting the LXD fix [b] to Ubuntu 18.04 would allow namespaces
to work inside containers. This is the goal of this SRU.
Ultimately, once LXD in Ubuntu 18.04 includes the fix [b], it would
be possible to drop the Ubuntu-specific patch for systemd [a]. This
is however *not an immediate concern for this SRU*.
[Test Plan]
1) Create a 18.04 VM:
$ lxc launch images:ubuntu/18.04 lp1959047 --vm
$ sleep 30 # give it time to boot
2) Install and initialize LXD in it:
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- apt-get update
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- apt-get install -y lxd
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxd init --auto
3) Create a Jammy container and enable systemd debugging:
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxc init images:ubuntu/22.04 c1
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxc config set c1 raw.lxc 'lxc.init.cmd = /sbin/init systemd.log_level=debug'
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxc start c1
4) Check if namespace set up failures are logged:
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxc exec c1 -- journalctl -b0 --grep 'Failed to set up namespace'
Mar 24 23:29:19 c1 systemd[99]: systemd-udevd.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:19 c1 systemd[132]: systemd-networkd.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:19 c1 systemd[131]: systemd-logind.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:20 c1 systemd[136]: systemd-resolved.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:20 c1 systemd[128]: e2scrub_reap.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:23 c1 systemd[243]: systemd-hostnamed.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
If LXD in Ubuntu 18.04 has the patch, the "Failed to set up namespace" messages wouldn't be there.
[Where problems could occur]
The LXD fix changes the Apparmor profile used for containers. This essentially
loosen the mount restrictions applied to containers.
Weakening the Apparmor profile could make it easier for a process in the container
to do damage that would have otherwise been blocked. On the other hand, this
allows making use of namespaces/sandboxing inside the container.
Upstream LXD has the fix since 2019 which make it less likely to run into
problems with the backport.
The backported fix was also tested manually to ensure LXD still behaved normally
and that it avoided the namespace set up failures in Jammy containers.
[a]: https://git.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/systemd/tree/debian/patches/debian/UBUNTU-Revert-namespace-be-more-careful-when-handling-namespacin.patch?h=ubuntu/jammy
[b]: https://github.com/lxc/lxd/commit/a6b780703350faff8328f3d565f6bac7b6dcf59f
[Initial bug description]
The version of systemd (249.5-2ubuntu4) currently packaged for the Ubuntu development version (22.04 Jammy Jellyfish) totally ignores the RootDirectory= option in systemd service files. With RootDirectory, systemd should start the service after calling chroot() on the supplied directory.
To test/reproduce, create a test service file with the following contents:
# /etc/systemd/system/lsb-release.service
[Unit]
Description=LSB Release Information
[Service]
Type=simple
RootDirectory=/var/chroot/trusty
ExecStartPre=/bin/pwd
ExecStart=/usr/bin/lsb_release -a
You should have a chroot environment in the specified RootDirectory, even though you can still deduce if systemd attempted to chroot or not from the resulting error message.
In my example, I installed an end-of-life Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr in the chroot environment. On systems NOT affected by the problem, I get the following result when I start this test service. This is what I'd expect.
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly systemd[1]: Starting LSB Release Information...
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly pwd[361]: /
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly systemd[1]: Started LSB Release Information.
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: No LSB modules are available.
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Distributor ID: Ubuntu
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Description: Ubuntu 14.04 LTS
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Release: 14.04
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Codename: trusty
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly systemd[1]: lsb-release.service: Succeeded.
On the problematic system, however, I get the following result.
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog systemd[1]: Starting LSB Release Information...
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog systemd[1]: Started LSB Release Information.
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog pwd[81114]: /
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: No LSB modules are available.
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Distributor ID: Ubuntu
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Description: Ubuntu Jammy Jellyfish (development branch)
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Release: 22.04
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Codename: jammy
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog systemd[1]: lsb-release.service: Deactivated successfully.
It totally run the service on the host's root filesystem, it didn't care even the slightest that a RootDirectory is specified.
Tested on the following releases / systemd versions:
Ubuntu 18.04.6 Bionic Beaver – ISSUE NOT PRESENT
systemd 237
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +IMA +APPARMOR +SMACK +SYSVINIT +UTMP +LIBCRYPTSETUP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS +ACL +XZ +LZ4 +SECCOMP +BLKID +ELFUTILS +KMOD -IDN2 +IDN -PCRE2 default-hierarchy=hybrid
Ubuntu 20.04.3 Focal Fossa – ISSUE NOT PRESENT
systemd 245 (245.4-4ubuntu3.15)
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +IMA +APPARMOR +SMACK +SYSVINIT +UTMP +LIBCRYPTSETUP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS +ACL +XZ +LZ4 +SECCOMP +BLKID +ELFUTILS +KMOD +IDN2 -IDN +PCRE2 default-hierarchy=hybrid
Ubuntu 21.10 Impish Indri – ISSUE NOT PRESENT
systemd 248 (248.3-1ubuntu8.2)
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +APPARMOR +IMA +SMACK +SECCOMP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS -OPENSSL +ACL +BLKID +CURL +ELFUTILS -FIDO2 +IDN2 -IDN +IPTC +KMOD +LIBCRYPTSETUP -LIBFDISK +PCRE2 -PWQUALITY -P11KIT -QRENCODE +BZIP2 +LZ4 +XZ +ZLIB +ZSTD -XKBCOMMON +UTMP +SYSVINIT default-hierarchy=unified
Ubuntu 22.04 Jammy Jellyfish (development branch) – ISSUE PRESENT
systemd 249 (249.5-2ubuntu4)
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +APPARMOR +IMA +SMACK +SECCOMP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS -OPENSSL +ACL +BLKID +CURL +ELFUTILS -FIDO2 +IDN2 -IDN +IPTC +KMOD +LIBCRYPTSETUP -LIBFDISK +PCRE2 -PWQUALITY -P11KIT -QRENCODE +BZIP2 +LZ4 +XZ +ZLIB +ZSTD -XKBCOMMON +UTMP +SYSVINIT default-hierarchy=unified
Note that the problem is produced under an LXC container; since systemd detects virtualization, it might change how it behaves.
It's either a bug or an intentional change I don't understand yet (i.e. the RootDirectory option has deprecated and is about to be replaced with something else, or there are additional conditions to be met before RootDirectory is considered), but I think in the latter case I should at least get a warning that there is a change in configuration. I imagine suddenly everyone's existing service units utilizing RootDirectory silently stop working without any information regarding why. |
[Impact]
Ubuntu carries a patch on top of systemd [a] to silence
namespace set up failures. This is meant as a workaround
for a bug in the LXD version shipped in Ubuntu 18.04.
Masking namespace set up failures creates a false sense of
security for the user/admin.
As mentioned in comment #1, systemd upstream explains that silencing
this kind of error is dangerous and should be avoided.
Backporting the LXD fix [b] to Ubuntu 18.04 would allow namespaces
to work inside containers. This is the goal of this SRU.
Ultimately, once LXD in Ubuntu 18.04 includes the fix [b], it would
be possible to drop the Ubuntu-specific patch for systemd [a]. This
is however *not an immediate concern for this SRU*.
[Test Plan]
1) Create a 18.04 VM:
$ lxc launch images:ubuntu/18.04 lp1959047 --vm
$ sleep 30 # give it time to boot
1.5) Enable bionic-proposed:
$ echo "deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-proposed main restricted universe multiverse" | lxc file push - lp1959047/etc/apt/sources.list.d/proposed.list
2) Install and initialize LXD in it:
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- apt-get update
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- apt-get install -y lxd
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxd init --auto
3) Create a Jammy container and enable systemd debugging:
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxc init images:ubuntu/22.04 c1
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxc config set c1 raw.lxc 'lxc.init.cmd = /sbin/init systemd.log_level=debug'
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxc start c1
4) Check if namespace set up failures are logged:
$ lxc exec lp1959047 -- lxc exec c1 -- journalctl -b0 --grep 'Failed to set up namespace'
Mar 24 23:29:19 c1 systemd[99]: systemd-udevd.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:19 c1 systemd[132]: systemd-networkd.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:19 c1 systemd[131]: systemd-logind.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:20 c1 systemd[136]: systemd-resolved.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:20 c1 systemd[128]: e2scrub_reap.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
Mar 24 23:29:23 c1 systemd[243]: systemd-hostnamed.service: Failed to set up namespace, assuming containerized execution, ignoring: Permission denied
If LXD in Ubuntu 18.04 has the patch, the "Failed to set up namespace" messages wouldn't be there.
[Where problems could occur]
The LXD fix changes the Apparmor profile used for containers. This essentially
loosen the mount restrictions applied to containers.
Weakening the Apparmor profile could make it easier for a process in the container
to do damage that would have otherwise been blocked. On the other hand, this
allows making use of namespaces/sandboxing inside the container.
Upstream LXD has the fix since 2019 which make it less likely to run into
problems with the backport.
The backported fix was also tested manually to ensure LXD still behaved normally
and that it avoided the namespace set up failures in Jammy containers.
[a]: https://git.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/systemd/tree/debian/patches/debian/UBUNTU-Revert-namespace-be-more-careful-when-handling-namespacin.patch?h=ubuntu/jammy
[b]: https://github.com/lxc/lxd/commit/a6b780703350faff8328f3d565f6bac7b6dcf59f
[Initial bug description]
The version of systemd (249.5-2ubuntu4) currently packaged for the Ubuntu development version (22.04 Jammy Jellyfish) totally ignores the RootDirectory= option in systemd service files. With RootDirectory, systemd should start the service after calling chroot() on the supplied directory.
To test/reproduce, create a test service file with the following contents:
# /etc/systemd/system/lsb-release.service
[Unit]
Description=LSB Release Information
[Service]
Type=simple
RootDirectory=/var/chroot/trusty
ExecStartPre=/bin/pwd
ExecStart=/usr/bin/lsb_release -a
You should have a chroot environment in the specified RootDirectory, even though you can still deduce if systemd attempted to chroot or not from the resulting error message.
In my example, I installed an end-of-life Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr in the chroot environment. On systems NOT affected by the problem, I get the following result when I start this test service. This is what I'd expect.
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly systemd[1]: Starting LSB Release Information...
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly pwd[361]: /
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly systemd[1]: Started LSB Release Information.
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: No LSB modules are available.
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Distributor ID: Ubuntu
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Description: Ubuntu 14.04 LTS
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Release: 14.04
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly lsb_release[362]: Codename: trusty
Jan 25 20:40:40 dolly systemd[1]: lsb-release.service: Succeeded.
On the problematic system, however, I get the following result.
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog systemd[1]: Starting LSB Release Information...
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog systemd[1]: Started LSB Release Information.
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog pwd[81114]: /
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: No LSB modules are available.
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Distributor ID: Ubuntu
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Description: Ubuntu Jammy Jellyfish (development branch)
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Release: 22.04
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog lsb_release[81115]: Codename: jammy
Jan 25 21:21:08 savelog systemd[1]: lsb-release.service: Deactivated successfully.
It totally run the service on the host's root filesystem, it didn't care even the slightest that a RootDirectory is specified.
Tested on the following releases / systemd versions:
Ubuntu 18.04.6 Bionic Beaver – ISSUE NOT PRESENT
systemd 237
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +IMA +APPARMOR +SMACK +SYSVINIT +UTMP +LIBCRYPTSETUP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS +ACL +XZ +LZ4 +SECCOMP +BLKID +ELFUTILS +KMOD -IDN2 +IDN -PCRE2 default-hierarchy=hybrid
Ubuntu 20.04.3 Focal Fossa – ISSUE NOT PRESENT
systemd 245 (245.4-4ubuntu3.15)
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +IMA +APPARMOR +SMACK +SYSVINIT +UTMP +LIBCRYPTSETUP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS +ACL +XZ +LZ4 +SECCOMP +BLKID +ELFUTILS +KMOD +IDN2 -IDN +PCRE2 default-hierarchy=hybrid
Ubuntu 21.10 Impish Indri – ISSUE NOT PRESENT
systemd 248 (248.3-1ubuntu8.2)
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +APPARMOR +IMA +SMACK +SECCOMP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS -OPENSSL +ACL +BLKID +CURL +ELFUTILS -FIDO2 +IDN2 -IDN +IPTC +KMOD +LIBCRYPTSETUP -LIBFDISK +PCRE2 -PWQUALITY -P11KIT -QRENCODE +BZIP2 +LZ4 +XZ +ZLIB +ZSTD -XKBCOMMON +UTMP +SYSVINIT default-hierarchy=unified
Ubuntu 22.04 Jammy Jellyfish (development branch) – ISSUE PRESENT
systemd 249 (249.5-2ubuntu4)
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +APPARMOR +IMA +SMACK +SECCOMP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS -OPENSSL +ACL +BLKID +CURL +ELFUTILS -FIDO2 +IDN2 -IDN +IPTC +KMOD +LIBCRYPTSETUP -LIBFDISK +PCRE2 -PWQUALITY -P11KIT -QRENCODE +BZIP2 +LZ4 +XZ +ZLIB +ZSTD -XKBCOMMON +UTMP +SYSVINIT default-hierarchy=unified
Note that the problem is produced under an LXC container; since systemd detects virtualization, it might change how it behaves.
It's either a bug or an intentional change I don't understand yet (i.e. the RootDirectory option has deprecated and is about to be replaced with something else, or there are additional conditions to be met before RootDirectory is considered), but I think in the latter case I should at least get a warning that there is a change in configuration. I imagine suddenly everyone's existing service units utilizing RootDirectory silently stop working without any information regarding why. |
|
2022-03-29 23:51:47 |
Simon Déziel |
tags |
jammy verification-needed verification-needed-bionic |
jammy verification-done verification-done-bionic |
|
2022-05-18 02:58:01 |
Launchpad Janitor |
lxd (Ubuntu Bionic): status |
Fix Committed |
Fix Released |
|
2022-05-18 02:58:06 |
Chris Halse Rogers |
removed subscriber Ubuntu Stable Release Updates Team |
|
|
|
2022-08-27 09:52:30 |
Benoit S. |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Benoit S. |
2024-02-14 18:27:49 |
Launchpad Janitor |
systemd (Ubuntu): status |
Confirmed |
Fix Released |
|
2024-07-26 13:46:29 |
Brian Murray |
systemd (Ubuntu Impish): status |
Confirmed |
Won't Fix |
|