nsenter(1)


NAME

   nsenter - run program with namespaces of other processes

SYNOPSIS

   nsenter [options] [program [arguments]]

DESCRIPTION

   Enters  the namespaces of one or more other processes and then executes
   the specified program.  Enterable namespaces are:

   mount namespace
          Mounting and unmounting filesystems will not affect the rest  of
          the  system (CLONE_NEWNS flag), except for filesystems which are
          explicitly marked as shared (with mount --make-shared; see /proc
          /self/mountinfo for the shared flag).

   UTS namespace
          Setting  hostname  or domainname will not affect the rest of the
          system.  (CLONE_NEWUTS flag)

   IPC namespace
          The process will have an  independent  namespace  for  System  V
          message  queues,  semaphore  sets  and  shared  memory segments.
          (CLONE_NEWIPC flag)

   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.  (CLONE_NEWNET flag)

   PID namespace
          Children will have a set of PID  to  process  mappings  separate
          from the nsenter process (CLONE_NEWPID flag).  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.

   user namespace
          The  process  will  have  a  distinct  set  of  UIDs,  GIDs  and
          capabilities.  (CLONE_NEWUSER flag)

   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.  (CLONE_NEWCGROUP flag)

   See clone(2) for the exact semantics of the flags.

   If program is not given, then ``${SHELL}'' is run (default: /bin/sh).

OPTIONS

   -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/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.

   -G, --setgid gid
          Set the group ID which will be used in the entered namespace and
          drop  supplementary groups.  nsenter(1) 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(1)  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.

   -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.

   -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.)

   -V, --version
          Display version information and exit.

   -h, --help
          Display help text and exit.

SEE ALSO

   setns(2), clone(2)

AUTHORS

   Eric Biederman biederm@xmission.com
   Karel Zak kzak@redhat.com

AVAILABILITY

   The  nsenter command is part of the util-linux package and is available
   from Linux Kernel  Archive  ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-
   linux/.





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