Since the previous commit, some strings logged by write_log() contain a
literal newline, which leads to errors like this one:
> # time="2020-06-07T15:41:37Z" level=error msg="failed to decode \"{\\\"level\\\":\\\"debug\\\", \\\"msg\\\": \\\"nsexec-0[2265]: update /proc/2266/uid_map to '0 1000 1\\n\" to json: invalid character '\\n' in string literal"
The fix is to escape such characters.
Add a simple (as much as it can be) routine which implements JSON string
escaping as required by RFC4627, section 2.5, plus escaping of DEL (0x7f)
character (not required, but allowed by the standard, and usually done
by tools such as jq).
As much as I hate to code something like this, I was not able to find
a ready to consume and decent C implementation (not using glib).
Added a test case (and some additional asserts in C code, conditionally
enabled by the test case) to make sure the implementation is correct.
The test case have to live in a separate directory so we can use
different C flags to compile the test, and use C from go test.
[v2: try to simplify the code, add more tests]
[v3: don't do exit(1), try returning an error instead]
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
nsenter
The nsenter package registers a special init constructor that is called before
the Go runtime has a chance to boot. This provides us the ability to setns on
existing namespaces and avoid the issues that the Go runtime has with multiple
threads. This constructor will be called if this package is registered,
imported, in your go application.
The nsenter package will import "C" and it uses cgo
package. In cgo, if the import of "C" is immediately preceded by a comment, that comment,
called the preamble, is used as a header when compiling the C parts of the package.
So every time we import package nsenter, the C code function nsexec() would be
called. And package nsenter is only imported in init.go, so every time the runc
init command is invoked, that C code is run.
Because nsexec() must be run before the Go runtime in order to use the
Linux kernel namespace, you must import this library into a package if
you plan to use libcontainer directly. Otherwise Go will not execute
the nsexec() constructor, which means that the re-exec will not cause
the namespaces to be joined. You can import it like this:
import _ "github.com/opencontainers/runc/libcontainer/nsenter"
nsexec() will first get the file descriptor number for the init pipe
from the environment variable _LIBCONTAINER_INITPIPE (which was opened
by the parent and kept open across the fork-exec of the nsexec() init
process). The init pipe is used to read bootstrap data (namespace paths,
clone flags, uid and gid mappings, and the console path) from the parent
process. nsexec() will then call setns(2) to join the namespaces
provided in the bootstrap data (if available), clone(2) a child process
with the provided clone flags, update the user and group ID mappings, do
some further miscellaneous setup steps, and then send the PID of the
child process to the parent of the nsexec() "caller". Finally,
the parent nsexec() will exit and the child nsexec() process will
return to allow the Go runtime take over.
NOTE: We do both setns(2) and clone(2) even if we don't have any
CLONE_NEW* clone flags because we must fork a new process in order to
enter the PID namespace.