cpuguy83 / gonso

Library to work with linux namespaces in go

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Gonso (Go-ns-o)

Gonso is a library to do safe Linux namespace manipulation in Go.

Why?

Linux namespaces are per-thread, but Go programs don't have direct access to threads. Doing namespace manipulation in Go requires careful use of runtime.LockOSThread() and runtime.UnlockOSThread(). Linux namespaces can have special rules for how they interact with each other and when/how you can join them. Gonso tries to handle these things for you.

While you can definitely use gonso to help learn Linux namespaces with Go since it helps take care of Go's quirks due to the threading model, you should take great care when using gonso in real code.

Usage

Gonso has a concept called a Set which is a collection of namespaces. When you create a Set you specify which namespaces are part of that set. You can then Unshare namespaces from that Set to create a new Set with the new namespaces. When you have the set setup with the namespaces you want you call Do and pass a function in, this will run the function in the Set's namespaces.

current, _ := gonso.Current()
newSet, _ := current.Unshare(unix.CLONE_NEWNS)
newSet.Do(false, func() bool {
    // do stuff in the new mount namespace
})

When calling Do you have some control over if the thread that was used to run the function should be restored to the original namespaces or dropped. You can completely disable thread restoration by passing false to Do. You can also do the same by returning false from the function you pass to Do. In either case, false will cause Go to exit the thread after the goroutine is done and the thread cannot be re-used. When true is returned from the function and true is passed to Do gonso will make a best effort to restore the thread to the original namespaces. If there are any errors restoring the thread the thread will be dropped. In some cases, as with CLONE_NEWNS, the thread cannot be restored to the original namespaces and will be dropped.

The reason you may want to restore the thread is that creating new threads is not free, which is why Go manages a pool of threads to schedule your goroutines on. Of course restoring the thread is also not free, and once you have a certain number of namespaces that need to be restored the cost of restoring the thread can become greater. Gonso leaves this up to you to decide.

Some actions cannot be undone in a thread so you will still need to be careful to not try to restore a thread that has had such changes applied. Gonso also can't track if you have done other things to the thread that would make it unsafe to restore. For the most part this shouldn't be a problem as the Linux kernel is pretty good about return an error in these cases, but it is something to be aware of.

Gonso never changes the current thread or goroutine, it always runs the function in a new goroutine.

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Library to work with linux namespaces in go

License:MIT License


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Language:Go 100.0%