This section provides information about file system issues on a Solaris system with zones installed. Each zone has its own section of the file system hierarchy, rooted at a directory known as the zone root. Processes in the zone can access only files in the part of the hierarchy that is located under the zone root. The chroot utility can be used in a zone, but only to restrict the process to a root path within the zone. For more information about chroot, see chroot(1M).
The -o nosuid option to the mount utility has the following functionality:
Processes from a setuid binary located on a file system that is mounted using the nosetuid option do not run with the privileges of the setuid binary. The processes run with the privileges of the user that executes the binary.
For example, if a user executes a setuid binary that is owned by root, the processes run with the privileges of the user.
Opening device-special entries in the file system is not allowed. This behavior is equivalent to specifying the nodevices option.
This file system-specific option is available to all Solaris file systems that can be mounted with mount utilities, as described in the mount(1M) man page. In this guide, these file systems are listed in Mounting File Systems in Zones. Mounting capabilities are also described. For more information about the -o nosuid option, see “Accessing Network File Systems (Reference)” in System Administration Guide: Network Services.
When file systems are mounted from within a zone, the nodevices option applies. For example, if a zone is granted access to a block device (/dev/dsk/c0t0d0s7) and a raw device (/dev/rdsk/c0t0d0s7) corresponding to a UFS file system, the file system is automatically mounted nodevices when mounted from within a zone. This rule does not apply to mounts specified through a zonecfg configuration.
Options for mounting file systems in non-global zones are described in the following table. Procedures for these mounting alternatives are provided in Configuring, Verifying, and Committing a Zone and Mounting File Systems in Running Non-Global Zones.
Any file system type not listed in the table can be specified in the configuration if it has a mount binary in /usr/lib/fstype/mount.
File System |
Mounting Options in a Non-Global Zone |
---|---|
AutoFS |
Cannot be mounted using zonecfg, cannot be manually mounted from the global zone into a non-global zone. Can be mounted from within the zone. |
CacheFS |
Cannot be used in a non-global zone. |
FDFS |
Can be mounted using zonecfg, can be manually mounted from the global zone into a non-global zone, can be mounted from within the zone. |
HSFS |
Can be mounted using zonecfg, can be manually mounted from the global zone into a non-global zone, can be mounted from within the zone. |
LOFS |
Can be mounted using zonecfg, can be manually mounted from the global zone into a non-global zone, can be mounted from within the zone. |
MNTFS |
Cannot be mounted using zonecfg, cannot be manually mounted from the global zone into a non-global zone. Can be mounted from within the zone. |
NFS |
Cannot be mounted using zonecfg. V2, V3, and V4, which are the versions currently supported in zones, can be mounted from within the zone. |
PCFS |
Can be mounted using zonecfg, can be manually mounted from the global zone into a non-global zone, can be mounted from within the zone. |
PROCFS |
Cannot be mounted using zonecfg, cannot be manually mounted from the global zone into a non-global zone. Can be mounted from within the zone. |
TMPFS |
Can be mounted using zonecfg, can be manually mounted from the global zone into a non-global zone, can be mounted from within the zone. |
UDFS |
Can be mounted using zonecfg, can be manually mounted from the global zone into a non-global zone, can be mounted from within the zone. |
UFS |
Can be mounted using zonecfg, can be manually mounted from the global zone into a non-global zone, can be mounted from within the zone. |
XMEMFS |
Can be mounted using zonecfg, can be manually mounted from the global zone into a non-global zone, can be mounted from within the zone. Support for this file system is being removed from the Solaris system in a future release. |
ZFS |
Can be mounted using the zonecfg dataset and fs resource types. |
For more information, see How to Configure the Zone, Mounting File Systems in Running Non-Global Zones, and the mount(1M) man page.
The ability to unmount a file system will depend on who performed the initial mount. If a file system is specified as part of the zone's configuration using the zonecfg command, the global zone owns this mount and the zone administrator for the non-global cannot unmount the file system. If the file system is mounted from within the non-global zone, for example, by specifying the mount in the zone's /etc/vfstab file, the zone administrator in the non-global zone can unmount the file system.
There are security restrictions on mounting certain file systems from within a zone. Other file systems exhibit special behavior when mounted in a zone. The list of modified file systems follows.
Autofs is a client-side service that automatically mounts the appropriate file system. When a client attempts to access a file system that is not presently mounted, the AutoFS file system intercepts the request and calls automountd to mount the requested directory. AutoFS mounts established within a zone are local to that zone. The mounts cannot be accessed from other zones, including the global zone. The mounts are removed when the zone is halted or rebooted. For more information on AutoFS, see How Autofs Works in System Administration Guide: Network Services.
Each zone runs its own copy of automountd. The auto maps and timeouts are controlled by the zone administrator. You cannot trigger a mount in another zone by crossing an AutoFS mount point for a non-global zone from the global zone.
Certain AutoFS mounts are created in the kernel when another mount is triggered. Such mounts cannot be removed by using the regular umount interface because they must be mounted or unmounted as a group. Note that this functionality is provided for zone shutdown.
MNTFS is a virtual file system that provides read-only access to the table of mounted file systems for the local system. The set of file systems visible by using mnttab from within a non-global zone is the set of file systems mounted in the zone, plus an entry for root (/) . Mount points with a special device that is not accessible from within the zone, such as /dev/rdsk/c0t0d0s0, have their special device set to the same as the mount point. All mounts in the system are visible from the global zone's /etc/mnttab table. For more information on MNTFS, see Chapter 18, Mounting and Unmounting File Systems (Tasks), in System Administration Guide: Devices and File Systems.
NFS mounts established within a zone are local to that zone. The mounts cannot be accessed from other zones, including the global zone. The mounts are removed when the zone is halted or rebooted.
As documented in the mount_nfs(1M) man page, an NFS server should not attempt to mount its own file systems. Thus, a zone should not NFS mount a file system exported by the global zone. Zones cannot be NFS servers. From within a zone, NFS mounts behave as though mounted with the nodevices option.
The nfsstat command output only pertains to the zone in which the command is run. For example, if the command is run in the global zone, only information about the global zone is reported. For more information about the nfsstat command, see nfsstat(1M).
The zlogin command will fail if any of its open files or any portion of its address space reside on NFS. For more information, see zlogin Command.
The /proc file system, or PROCFS, provides process visibility and access restrictions as well as information about the zone association of processes. Only processes in the same zone are visible through /proc.
Processes in the global zone can observe processes and other objects in non-global zones. This allows such processes to have system-wide observability.
From within a zone, procfs mounts behave as though mounted with the nodevices option. For more information about procfs, see the proc(4) man page.
The scope of what can be mounted through LOFS is limited to the portion of the file system that is visible to the zone. Hence, there are no restrictions on LOFS mounts in a zone.
When using the zonecfg command to configure storage-based file systems that have an fsck binary, such as UFS, the zone administrator must specify a raw parameter. The parameter indicates the raw (character) device, such as /dev/rdsk/c0t0d0s7. zoneadmd automatically runs the fsck command in non-interactive check-only mode (fsck -m) on this device before it mounts the file system. If the fsck fails, zoneadmd cannot bring the zone to the ready state. The path specified by raw cannot be a relative path.
It is an error to specify a device to fsck for a file system that does not provide an fsck binary in /usr/lib/fstype/fsck. It is also an error if you do not specify a device to fsck if an fsck binary exists for that file system.
For more information, see The zoneadmd Daemon and the fsck(1M)
You can add a ZFS dataset to a non-global zone by using the zonecfg command with the add dataset resource. The dataset will be visible and mounted in the non-global zone and no longer visible in the global zone. The zone administrator can create and destroy file systems within that dataset, create and destroy clones, and modify the properties of the dataset.
The zoned attribute of zfs indicates whether a dataset has been added to a non-global zone.
# zfs get zoned tank/sales NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE tank/sales zoned on local |
If you want to share a dataset from the global zone, you can add an LOFS-mounted ZFS file system by using the zonecfg command with the add fs subcommand. The global administrator is responsible for setting and controlling the properties of the dataset.
For more information on ZFS, see Chapter 10, Oracle Solaris ZFS Advanced Topics, in Oracle Solaris ZFS Administration Guide.
Zones can be NFS clients. Version 2, version 3, and version 4 protocols are supported. For information on these NFS versions, see Features of the NFS Service in System Administration Guide: Network Services.
The default version is NFS version 4. You can enable other NFS versions on a client by using one of the following methods:
You can edit /etc/default/nfs to set NFS_CLIENT_VERSMAX=number so that the zone uses the specified version by default. See Setting Up NFS Services in System Administration Guide: Network Services. Use the procedure How to Select Different Versions of NFS on a Client by Modifying the /etc/default/nfs File from the task map.
You can manually create a version mount. This method overrides the contents of /etc/default/nfs. See Setting Up NFS Services in System Administration Guide: Network Services. Use the procedure How to Use the Command Line to Select Different Versions of NFS on a Client from the task map.
Note that you cannot use the mknod command documented in the mknod(1M) man page to make a special file in a non-global zone.
A zone's file system namespace is a subset of the namespace accessible from the global zone. Unprivileged processes in the global zone are prevented from traversing a non-global zone's file system hierarchy through the following means:
Specifying that the zone root's parent directory is owned, readable, writable, and executable by root only
Restricting access to directories exported by /proc
Note that attempting to access AutoFS nodes mounted for another zone will fail. The global administrator must not have auto maps that descend into other zones.
After a non-global zone is installed, the zone must never be accessed directly from the global zone by any commands other than system backup utilities. Moreover, a non-global zone can no longer be considered secure after it has been exposed to an unknown environment. An example would be a zone placed on a publicly accessible network, where it would be possible for the zone to be compromised and the contents of its file systems altered. If there is any possibility that compromise has occurred, the global administrator should treat the zone as untrusted.
Any command that accepts an alternative root by using the -R or -b options (or the equivalent) must not be used when the following are true:
The command is run in the global zone.
The alternative root refers to any root path within a non-global zone, whether the path is relative to the current running system's global zone or the global zone in an alternative root.
An example is the -R root_path option to the pkgadd utility run from the global zone with a non-global zone root path.
The list of commands, programs, and utilities that use -R with an alternative root path include the following:
auditreduce
bart
flar
flarcreate
installf
localeadm
makeuuid
metaroot
patchadd
patchrm
pkgadd
pkgadm
pkgask
pkgchk
pkgrm
prodreg
removef
routeadm
showrev
syseventadm
The list of commands and programs that use -b with an alternative root path include the following:
add_drv
pprosetup
rem_drv
roleadd
sysidconfig
update_drv
useradd