Wraps the engine itself with an AppArmor policy.
This restricts what may be done by applications
we call out to, such as 'xz'.
Significantly, this policy also restricts the policies
to which a container may be spawned into. By default,
users will be able to transition to an unconfined
policy or any policy prefaced with 'docker-'.
Local operators may add new local policies prefaced
with 'docker-' without needing to modify this policy.
Operators choosing to disable privileged containers
will need to modify this policy to remove access
to change_policy to unconfined.
Signed-off-by: Eric Windisch <eric@windisch.us>
The automatic installation of AppArmor policies prevents the
management of custom, site-specific apparmor policies for the
default container profile. Furthermore, this change will allow
a future policy for the engine itself to be written without demanding
the engine be able to arbitrarily create and manage AppArmor policies.
- Add deb package suggests for apparmor.
- Ubuntu postinst use aa-status & fix policy path
- Add the policies to the debian packages.
- Add apparmor tests for writing proc files
Additional restrictions against modifying files in proc
are enforced by AppArmor. Ensure that AppArmor is preventing
access to these files, not simply Docker's configuration of proc.
- Remove /proc/k?mem from AA policy
The path to mem and kmem are in /dev, not /proc
and cannot be restricted successfully through AppArmor.
The device cgroup will need to be sufficient here.
- Load contrib/apparmor during integration tests
Note that this is somewhat dirty because we
cannot restore the host to its original configuration.
However, it should be noted that prior to this patch
series, the Docker daemon itself was loading apparmor
policy from within the tests, so this is no dirtier or
uglier than the status-quo.
Signed-off-by: Eric Windisch <eric@windisch.us>
Adding in other areas per comments
Updating with comments; equalizing generating man page info
Updating with duglin's comments
Doug is right here again;fixing.
Signed-off-by: Mary Anthony <mary@docker.com>
Using "DEST" for our build artifacts inside individual bundlescripts was already well-established convention, but this officializes it by having `make.sh` itself set the variable and create the directory, also handling CYGWIN oddities in a single central place (instead of letting them spread outward from `hack/make/binary` like was definitely on their roadmap, whether they knew it or not; sneaky oddities).
Signed-off-by: Andrew "Tianon" Page <admwiggin@gmail.com>
This also removes the now-defunct `*maintainer*.sh` scripts that don't work with the new TOML format, and moves a couple not-build-or-release-related scripts to `contrib/` instead.
Signed-off-by: Andrew "Tianon" Page <admwiggin@gmail.com>
We might want to break it up into smaller pieces (eg. tools in one
place, documents in another) but let's worry about that later.
Signed-off-by: Solomon Hykes <solomon@docker.com>
Update md2man script to generate manpages inside docs/man/ directory. Update
usage documentation in the readme to point to the new docs/man path. Update
Ubuntu makefile to use new path to manpages
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Matthew Heon <mheon@redhat.com> (github: mheon)
I tested to verify that if neither package is available (for example, on Debian Wheezy), apt still continues installing properly.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Andrew Page <admwiggin@gmail.com> (github: tianon)
This also removes all the old man pages, .gitignores their directory, and updates the md2man-all.sh script to be easier to read and more friendly to being called within hack/make/ubuntu.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Andrew Page <admwiggin@gmail.com> (github: tianon)
This *should* have the same effect as the previous strategy: Instead of
'mkdir empty; fpm -s dir -C empty ...' we can simply do 'fpm -s empty'
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Jordan Sissel <jls@semicomplete.com> (github: jordansissel)
It's only in "Recommends" because it's only required for all but the esoteric configurations (since you can't "docker pull" from the index without it, but that's about it).
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Andrew Page <admwiggin@gmail.com> (github: tianon)
This reverts commit c81bb20f5b.
After re-reading the documentation: "The Recommends field should list packages that would be found together with this one in all but unusual installations."
Thus, "Recommends" is an acceptable place for this dep, and anyone disabling that gets to keep the pieces.
The main crux of why this needs to be reverted is because it breaks Debian completely because "lxc" and "cgroup-bin" can't be installed concurrently.
Since cgroup-bin is only "recommended" by the lxc package on Ubuntu, but is necessary for having the proper cgroups mounted for Docker to function, this makes some sense for us to add separately.
Fixes#2990