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authorLudovic Courtès <ludovic.courtes@inria.fr>2019-03-14 17:02:53 +0100
committerLudovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>2019-03-15 23:27:59 +0100
commit99aec37a78e7be6a591d0e5b7439896d669a75d1 (patch)
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parentc9b3a72b6792c8195b0cdd8e5d7809db29419c7d (diff)
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pack: "-RR" produces PRoot-enabled relocatable binaries.
* gnu/packages/aux-files/run-in-namespace.c (exec_with_proot): New function. (main): When 'clone' fails, call 'rm_rf'. [PROOT_PROGRAM]: When 'clone' fails, call 'exec_with_proot'. * guix/scripts/pack.scm (wrapped-package): Add #:proot?. [proot]: New procedure. [build]: Compile with -DPROOT_PROGRAM when PROOT? is true. * guix/scripts/pack.scm (%options): Set the 'relocatable?' value to 'proot when "-R" is passed several times. (guix-pack): Pass #:proot? to 'wrapped-package'. * tests/guix-pack-relocatable.sh: Use "-RR" on Intel systems that lack user namespace support. * doc/guix.texi (Invoking guix pack): Document -RR.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/guix.texi')
-rw-r--r--doc/guix.texi39
1 files changed, 30 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guix.texi b/doc/guix.texi
index a720f3f3bb..8d51bdf7f4 100644
--- a/doc/guix.texi
+++ b/doc/guix.texi
@@ -4760,14 +4760,24 @@ symlinks, as well as empty mount points for virtual file systems like
procfs.
@end table
+@cindex relocatable binaries
@item --relocatable
@itemx -R
Produce @dfn{relocatable binaries}---i.e., binaries that can be placed
-anywhere in the file system hierarchy and run from there. For example,
-if you create a pack containing Bash with:
+anywhere in the file system hierarchy and run from there.
+
+When this option is passed once, the resulting binaries require support for
+@dfn{user namespaces} in the kernel Linux; when passed
+@emph{twice}@footnote{Here's a trick to memorize it: @code{-RR}, which adds
+PRoot support, can be thought of as the abbreviation of ``Really
+Relocatable''. Neat, isn't it?}, relocatable binaries fall to back to PRoot
+if user namespaces are unavailable, and essentially work anywhere---see below
+for the implications.
+
+For example, if you create a pack containing Bash with:
@example
-guix pack -R -S /mybin=bin bash
+guix pack -RR -S /mybin=bin bash
@end example
@noindent
@@ -4786,12 +4796,23 @@ In that shell, if you type @code{ls /gnu/store}, you'll notice that
altogether! That is probably the simplest way to deploy Guix-built
software on a non-Guix machine.
-There's a gotcha though: this technique relies on the @dfn{user
-namespace} feature of the kernel Linux, which allows unprivileged users
-to mount or change root. Old versions of Linux did not support it, and
-some GNU/Linux distributions turn it off; on these systems, programs
-from the pack @emph{will fail to run}, unless they are unpacked in the
-root file system.
+@quotation Note
+By default, relocatable binaries rely on the @dfn{user namespace} feature of
+the kernel Linux, which allows unprivileged users to mount or change root.
+Old versions of Linux did not support it, and some GNU/Linux distributions
+turn it off.
+
+To produce relocatable binaries that work even in the absence of user
+namespaces, pass @option{--relocatable} or @option{-R} @emph{twice}. In that
+case, binaries will try user namespace support and fall back to PRoot if user
+namespaces are not supported.
+
+The @uref{https://proot-me.github.io/, PRoot} program provides the necessary
+support for file system virtualization. It achieves that by using the
+@code{ptrace} system call on the running program. This approach has the
+advantage to work without requiring special kernel support, but it incurs
+run-time overhead every time a system call is made.
+@end quotation
@item --expression=@var{expr}
@itemx -e @var{expr}