DESCRIPTION¶
The nsenter command executes program in the
namespace(s) that are specified in the command-line options (described
below). If program is not given, then "${SHELL}" is run
(default: /bin/sh).
Enterable namespaces are:
mount namespace
Mounting and unmounting filesystems will not affect the
rest of the system, except for filesystems which are explicitly marked as
shared (with
mount --make-shared; see
/proc/self/mountinfo for
the
shared flag). For further details, see
mount_namespaces(7)
and the discussion of the
CLONE_NEWNS flag in
clone(2).
UTS namespace
Setting hostname or domainname will not affect the rest
of the system. For further details, see
uts_namespaces(7).
IPC namespace
The process will have an independent namespace for POSIX
message queues as well as System V message queues, semaphore sets and shared
memory segments. For further details, see
ipc_namespaces(7).
network namespace
The process will have independent IPv4 and IPv6 stacks,
IP routing tables, firewall rules, the
/proc/net and
/sys/class/net directory trees, sockets, etc. For further details, see
network_namespaces(7).
PID namespace
Children will have a set of PID to process mappings
separate from the
nsenter process.
nsenter will fork by default
if changing the PID namespace, so that the new program and its children share
the same PID namespace and are visible to each other. If
--no-fork is
used, the new program will be exec’ed without forking. For further
details, see
pid_namespaces(7).
user namespace
The process will have a distinct set of UIDs, GIDs and
capabilities. For further details, see
user_namespaces(7).
cgroup namespace
The process will have a virtualized view of
/proc/self/cgroup, and new cgroup mounts will be rooted at the
namespace cgroup root. For further details, see
cgroup_namespaces(7).
time namespace
The process can have a distinct view of
CLOCK_MONOTONIC and/or
CLOCK_BOOTTIME which can be changed using
/proc/self/timens_offsets. For further details, see
time_namespaces(7).
OPTIONS¶
Various of the options below that relate to namespaces take an
optional file argument. This should be one of the
/proc/[pid]/ns/* files described in namespaces(7), or the
pathname of a bind mount that was created on one of those files.
-a, --all
Enter all namespaces of the target process by the default
/proc/[pid]/ns/* namespace paths. The default paths to the target
process namespaces may be overwritten by namespace specific options (e.g.,
--all --mount=[
path]).
The user namespace will be ignored if the same as the
caller’s current user namespace. It prevents a caller that has
dropped capabilities from regaining those capabilities via a call to
setns(). See setns(2) for more details.
-t, --target PID
Specify a target process to get contexts from. The paths
to the contexts specified by
pid are:
/proc/pid/ns/mnt
the mount namespace
/proc/pid/ns/uts
the UTS namespace
/proc/pid/ns/ipc
the IPC namespace
/proc/pid/ns/net
the network namespace
/proc/pid/ns/pid
the PID namespace
/proc/pid/ns/user
the user namespace
/proc/pid/ns/cgroup
the cgroup namespace
/proc/pid/ns/time
the time namespace
/proc/pid/root
the root directory
/proc/pid/cwd
the working directory respectively
-m, --mount[=file]
Enter the mount namespace. If no file is specified, enter
the mount namespace of the target process. If file is specified, enter
the mount namespace specified by file.
-u, --uts[=file]
Enter the UTS namespace. If no file is specified, enter
the UTS namespace of the target process. If file is specified, enter
the UTS namespace specified by file.
-i, --ipc[=file]
Enter the IPC namespace. If no file is specified, enter
the IPC namespace of the target process. If file is specified, enter
the IPC namespace specified by file.
-n, --net[=file]
Enter the network namespace. If no file is specified,
enter the network namespace of the target process. If file is
specified, enter the network namespace specified by file.
-p, --pid[=file]
Enter the PID namespace. If no file is specified, enter
the PID namespace of the target process. If file is specified, enter
the PID namespace specified by file.
-U, --user[=file]
Enter the user namespace. If no file is specified, enter
the user namespace of the target process. If file is specified, enter
the user namespace specified by file. See also the --setuid and
--setgid options.
-C, --cgroup[=file]
Enter the cgroup namespace. If no file is specified,
enter the cgroup namespace of the target process. If file is specified,
enter the cgroup namespace specified by file.
-T, --time[=file]
Enter the time namespace. If no file is specified, enter
the time namespace of the target process. If file is specified, enter
the time namespace specified by file.
-G, --setgid gid
Set the group ID which will be used in the entered
namespace and drop supplementary groups. nsenter always sets GID for
user namespaces, the default is 0.
-S, --setuid uid
Set the user ID which will be used in the entered
namespace. nsenter always sets UID for user namespaces, the default is
0.
--preserve-credentials
Don’t modify UID and GID when enter user
namespace. The default is to drops supplementary groups and sets GID and UID
to 0.
-r, --root[=directory]
Set the root directory. If no directory is specified, set
the root directory to the root directory of the target process. If directory
is specified, set the root directory to the specified directory. The specified
directory is open before it switches to the requested namespaces.
-w, --wd[=directory]
Set the working directory. If no directory is specified,
set the working directory to the working directory of the target process. If
directory is specified, set the working directory to the specified directory.
The specified directory is open before it switches to the requested
namespaces, it means the specified directory works as "tunnel" to
the current namespace. See also --wdns.
-W, --wdns[=directory]
Set the working directory. The
directory is open
after switch to the requested namespaces and after
chroot(2) call. The
options
--wd and
--wdns are mutually exclusive.
-F, --no-fork
Do not fork before exec’ing the specified program.
By default, when entering a PID namespace, nsenter calls fork
before calling exec so that any children will also be in the newly
entered PID namespace.
-Z, --follow-context
Set the SELinux security context used for executing a new
process according to already running process specified by --target PID.
(The util-linux has to be compiled with SELinux support otherwise the option
is unavailable.)
-h, --help
Display help text and exit.
-V, --version
Print version and exit.