Provided by: xchpst_0.4.1-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       xchpst — eXtended CHange Process STate

SYNOPSIS

       xchpst --help
       xchpst --version
       xchpst --exit[=retcode]
       xchpst [OPTIONS] [--] command ...

DESCRIPTION

       The  xchpst  utility  changes  process state according to the supplied options and then calls exec() on a
       named executable with the positional arguments.

       xchpst is a backwards-compatible extension to the chpst(8) tool which is  supplied  with  runit.   xchpst
       enables  runit  service  scripts  to take advantage of hardening capabilities available with recent Linux
       kernels such as namespaces and capabilities.  xchpst can set up shadow  subtrees  within  the  filesystem
       hierarchy  to  isolate  long-running  services  from  parts  of the system to which they ought to need no
       access, e.g. with private /tmp areas and read-only /usr.

   Extended xchpst options
       The extra options provided by xchpst are as follows:

       --help      Show help text and usage.

       --exit[=retcode]
                   Exit immediately with exit  status  0  if  the  given  options  are  supported.   retcode  if
                   specified.

       --mount-ns  Create new mount namespace.  Various other options also implicitly enable mount namespaces as
                   this  is  important  to  their  operation;  this  option  is rarely likely to be needed to be
                   specified explicitly.

       --net-ns    Create new network namespace.  This will more or less isolate the process from the networking
                   subsystem.

       --uts-ns    Create new UTS namespace.

       --pid-ns    Create a PID namespace.  This implies --fork-join because a new process is needed to  act  as
                   PID 1 and in order to be able to mount a new procfs for the namespace.

       --fork-join
                   Fork  a  new  process  and wait for it to finish, passing on to the child process any signals
                   received by the  xchpst  process.   This  option  is  necessary  to  take  advantage  of  PID
                   namespaces.  The exit status is that of the child process.

       --user-ns   Create a user namespace.

       --adopt-net path
                   Adopt  the  network namespace bound to path.  The binding will be deleted from the filesystem
                   meaning that the namespace will disappear when the  process  exits,  if  there  is  no  other
                   reference  to  it. This allows the calling script to set up a suitable networking environment
                   for the process and hand it over.

       --new-root  Create a new root filesystem (will implicitly enable the creation of a new mount  namespace).
                   The  new  root  filesystem  is  created  as  a tmpfs and all the top-level directories in the
                   original root filesystem are bind mounted and any symlinks are replicated.

       --private-run
                   Mount an isolated /run directory for the process.  Unless /X.Fl -new-root is also  specified,
                   the old shared /run directory will still be accessible if the stacked mount is removed.

       --private-tmp
                   Mount  an  isolated /tmp directory for the process.  Unless --new-root is also specified, the
                   old shared /run directory will still be accessible if the stacked mount is removed.

       --protect-home
                   Mount isolated /home, /root and /run/user directories for the process.  Unless --new-root  is
                   also  specified,  the  old  shared  host  directories will still be accessible if the stacked
                   mounts are removed.

       --ro-sys    Create a read-only filesystem hierarchy.  Converts /usr  and  /boot  into  read-only  mounts.
                   Note  that  if  the hardened process has the rights to unmount filesystems, it can reveal the
                   original writable filesystems.  The --new-root option is designed to prevent this.

       --caps-bs-keep capability[,capability...]
                   Keeps only the listed capabilities in the bounding set.

       --caps-bs-drop capability[,capability...]
                   Drops the listed capabilities from the bounding  set.   Use  only  one  of  the  two  options
                   governing the bounding set.

       --caps-keep capability[,capability...]
                   Retain the listed capabilities when dropping to a non-root user.

       --caps-drop capability[,capability...]
                   Drop the listed capabilities when dropping to a non-root user, but retain all others.

       --no-new-privs
                   Prevent    the    target    application    from    obtaining   any   new   privileges.    See
                   PR_SET_NO_NEW_PRIVS(2const).

       --scheduler other | batch | idle
                   Set the scheduler policy, as per sched_setscheduler(2).

       --io-nice rt|best-effort|idle[:priority]
                   Set the I/O scheduler policy and priority, as per ionice(1).

       --cpus start[-end[:stride]][,...]
                   Set CPU affinity in the same format as taskset(1).

       --umask mode
                   Set umask to the octal value mode.

       --app name  Override program name used for pre-creating system directories.

       --run-dir   Create a directory for the program under /run, owned by the appropriate user.

       --state-dir
                   Create a directory for the program under /var/lib, owned by the appropriate user.

       --log-dir   Create a directory for the program under /var/log, owned by the appropriate user.

       --cache-dir
                   Create a directory for the program under /var/cache, owned by the appropriate user.

       --login     Create a login environment, using the user specified by -u, -U or the current user, in  order
                   of  preference.  If this option is specified and no command is specified to be executed, then
                   the shell defined for the given user is launched, instead of an error being returned.

       -s bytes    Set soft limit for stack segment size.

       -a bytes    Set soft limit for address space size.

       --memlock bytes
                   Set soft limit for amount of locked memory.

       -@          Switches to chpst-compatible option handling only for  the  remaining  options.  This  is  to
                   support scripts that can convert an xchpst invocation into a command line for chpst if xchpst
                   is not present on the system.

   chpst-compatible options
       The options compatible with classic chpst are as follows:

       -u user[:group]...
                 Set  uid,  gid and supplementary groups. Prepend the argument with a colon for numerical inputs
                 rather than names to be looked up. If no group is specified then the specified user's group  is
                 used. There is no space within the argument.

       -U user[:group]
                 Like  -u  but  the  environment  variables  UID  and  GID are set instead of changing the user.
                 Supplementary groups are ignored.

       -b argv0  Set argv[0] to argv0 instead of the target executable path when launching the program.

       -e dir    Populate environment.  For every file  within  dir,  the  filename  represents  an  environment
                 variable  that  will be set or unset.  The first line of the corresponding files is the content
                 to be set, with NUL characters replaced by LF and trailing whitespace removed.  If the file  is
                 0  bytes  long  then  the  variable  is  unset.   (So a file with just a newline results in the
                 variable being set with an empty value.)

       -/ dir    Run in a chroot.  Change to the dir directory and make it the new root.

       -C dir    Change directory.  Change to the dir directory (after any chroot setting is applied).

       -n inc    Increase niceness by inc, which can be negative, resulting  in  the  process  taking  a  higher
                 priority.

       -l file   Wait for lock. Take a lock out on file and wait to obtain it before proceeding to exec().

       -L file   Try to obtain lock; bail out if it can't be obtained.

       -m bytes  Set soft limit for data and stack segments and virtual memory size and locked memory.

       -d bytes  Set soft limit for data segment size.

       -o files  Set soft limit for the number of open files.

       -p procs  Set soft limit for the number of processes for this user.

       -f bytes  Set soft limit for the size of file that this process may create.

       -c bytes  Set soft limit for the size of core this process may dump.

       -t seconds
                 Set soft limit for the amount of CPU time this process may consume.

       -v        Be verbose. This option may be repeated for increased verbosity to support debugging.

       -V        Show xchpst version number.

       -P        Make this process the process group leader, allocating a new session idea.

       -0        Close stdin.

       -1        Close stout.

       -2        Close stderr.

   Emulating ancestor tools
       When  invoked  as  chpst,  envdir,  envuidgid,  pgrphack,  setlock,  setuidgid,  or softlimit, the xchpst
       executable emulates the corresponding tools from the “runit” or “daemontools” packages respectively.   As
       an additional feature, all these tools when so invoked, accept the -v option to increase verbosity.

EXIT STATUS

       0       The  default  exit  status  when --exit is specified is 0. This can be used for a quick test that
               xchpst is available on the system in shell scripts and that the given options are supported.

       100     The return code when an invalid option or option argument is specified, including if  a  username
               cannot be resolved, for example.

       111     When the requested process state cannot be changed.

       other   The --exit option takes an optional argument with a return code to use.

       If  there  is  no  error  and  the  intended application is exec()'d, the exit status will be that of the
       application, not xchpst.

EXAMPLES

       Testing the emulation of ‘envdir’:
             xchpst -b envdir -- xchpst

       Launch with read-only filesystem if xchpst is available, else use chpst:
             xchpst  --exit  &&  exec  xchpst  --ro-sys  -l  /var/lock/ntpsec-ntpdate  ntpd;   exec   chpst   -l
             /var/log/ntpsec-ntpdate ntpd

       Drop a capability from the bounding set:
             xchpst --cap-bs-drop CAP_SYS_ADMIN -- acmed

       Drop user while retaining some capabilities:
             xchpst  -u  :500:500  --caps-keep  CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE fakeroot /usr/sbin/gpm -D -m /dev/input/mice -t
             exps2

   Diagnostics
       To see what is going on, including options enabled implicitly due to other options, add  the  ‘--verbose’
       option.

       Use ‘--login’ without a command name to explore the hardened environment from a shell.

       You can enter the created namespaces (but not other aspects of hardening), including any synthesised root
       filesystem, by identifying the process id of the hardened application and running:
             nsenter -a -t PID

SEE ALSO

       chpst(8), runit(8), unshare(1), capsh(1), taskset(1,) chrt(1)

HISTORY

       xchpst version 0.x has an unstable interface for initial feature development.

       xchpst  was  written  from  scratch  to  be  backwards  compatible with chpst.  The extent of the planned
       extensions dwarfing the complexity of the original options led to the decision to write a new tool rather
       than extending the existing one.  The new xchpst tool is targeted at new versions of Linux  distributions
       so is written with a recent tooling and kernel baseline.

       xchpst  has  different  design  principles  from chpst.  Use xchpst if you need the additional options to
       harden runit-supervised tasks; use chpst if you do not need them, for a minimal footprint.

AUTHORS

       Andrew Bower <andrew@bower.uk>

BUGS

       Please raise bug reports at: https://gitlab.com/abower/xchpst/-/issues

Debian                                          December 25, 2024                                      xchpst(8)