doc: Update to match current state & extend docs

- Update "See also" sections

Toolbox does not use Buildah for a considerable time now[0]. We can stop
referencing it in the "See also" sections of the documentation.

In some places mention podman command man pages where they are relevant.

- Add section about toolbox images/containers

Toolbox only supports certain OCI images. These should be documented.
Also, document the change of fedora-toolbox image name.

- Add a section about toolbox container setup

Toolbox containers are specifically configured OCI containers. This
should be documented so that users know what they're using.

- Remove redundant part documentation

The description of what `toolbox init-container` does is already in
toolbox-init-container(1). There's no need to have it in
toolbox-create(1). Instead, replace the text with a hint to visit the
other part of documentation.

- Clarify behaviour of --image option

The fact that Toolbox by default tries to pull from the Fedora
registry[1] should be noted.

- Update synopsis & description of commands

Mention options passed to `podman exec`. Remove redundant paragraph
about container names (is already dealt with in toolbox-create(1)).

There's no need to mention the name of the default container on Fedora
since Toolbox now also supports RHEL.

Mention the default used image on unrecognised systems.

Emphasize the fact that toolboxes are not a fully sandboxed environment.

Update the wording of the description and splits it into a few
subsections.

The description of the --monitor-host was inaccurate and while the
option will go away in the future[2], it is currently in and should be
more documented.

[0] https://github.com/containers/toolbox/pull/160
[1] https://registry.fedoraproject.org
[2] https://github.com/containers/toolbox/pull/617

https://github.com/containers/toolbox/pull/512
This commit is contained in:
Ondřej Míchal 2021-03-04 20:36:22 +01:00
parent 3db59abf2a
commit ea452d7ced
9 changed files with 161 additions and 61 deletions

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@ -26,37 +26,43 @@ the image had a tag, then the tag is included in the name of the container,
but it's separated by a hyphen, not a colon. A different name can be assigned
by using the CONTAINER argument.
If the host system is not recognized the used image will be `fedora-toolbox`.
Toolbox containers are primarily created in a way to be tightly integrated with
the host system. They are not meant to be secure.
### Entry Point
A key feature of toolbox containers is their entry point, the `toolbox
init-container` command.
OCI containers are inherently immutable. Configuration options passed through
`podman create` are baked into the definition of the OCI container, and can't
be changed later. This means that changes and improvements made in newer
versions of Toolbox can't be applied to pre-existing toolbox containers
created by older versions of Toolbox. This is avoided by using the entry point
to configure the container at runtime.
Read more about the entry-point in `toolbox-init-container(1)`.
The entry point of a toolbox container customizes the container to fit the
current user by ensuring that it has a user that matches the one on the host.
It ensures that configuration files, such as `/etc/host.conf`, `/etc/hosts`,
`/etc/localtime`, `/etc/resolv.conf` and `/etc/timezone`, inside the container
are kept synchronized with the host. The entry point also bind mounts various
subsets of the host's filesystem hierarchy to their corresponding locations
inside the container to provide seamless integration with the host. This
includes `/run/libvirt`, `/run/systemd/journal`, `/run/udev/data`,
`/var/lib/libvirt`, `/var/lib/systemd/coredump`, `/var/log/journal` and others.
### Toolbox setup
On some host operating systems, important paths like `/home`, `/media` or
`/mnt` are symbolic links to other locations. The entry point ensures that
paths inside the container match those on the host, to avoid needless
confusion.
`toolbox-create(1)` passes several options to `podman-create(1)` when creating
toolbox containers to provide the needed functionality. The options have the
following effects:
- Toolboxes share with the host system:
- network stack, including dns
- IPC (shared memory, semaphores, message queues,..)
- PID namespace
- ulimits
- Toolboxes have access to cherry-picked parts of host filesystem made
available under /run/host/
- Toolboxes are privileged containers
- SELinux label separation is disabled for toolboxes
- Toolboxes use as their entry-point `toolbox-init-container(1)`
Despite being privileged, rootless containers cannot have more privileges than
the user that created them.
Thanks to these options, `toolbox-init-container(1)` can futher set up the
containers. Read more about the entry-point in `toolbox-init-container(1)`.
## OPTIONS ##
The following options are understood:
**--distro** DISTRO, **-d** DISTRO
Create a toolbox container for a different operating system DISTRO than the
@ -68,6 +74,9 @@ Change the NAME of the base image used to create the toolbox container. This
is useful for creating containers from custom-built base images. Cannot be used
used with `--release`.
If NAME does not contain a domain, the image will be pulled from
`registry.fedoraproject.org`.
**--release** RELEASE, **-r** RELEASE
Create a toolbox container for a different operating system RELEASE than the
@ -95,4 +104,4 @@ $ toolbox create --image bar foo
## SEE ALSO
`buildah(1)`, `podman(1)`
`toolbox(1)`, `toolbox-init-container(1)`, `podman(1)`, `podman-create(1)`

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@ -16,9 +16,8 @@ if it's not available inside the container then it falls back to `/bin/bash`.
When invoked without any options, `toolbox enter` will try to enter the default
toolbox container for the host, or if there's only one container available then
it will use it. On Fedora, the default container is known as
`fedora-toolbox-N`, where N is the release of the host. If there aren't any
containers, `toolbox enter` will offer to create the default one for you.
it will use it. If there aren't any containers, `toolbox enter` will offer to
create one for you.
A specific container can be selected using the CONTAINER argument.
@ -61,4 +60,5 @@ $ toolbox enter foo
## SEE ALSO
`buildah(1)`, `podman(1)`, `podman-exec(1)`, `podman-start(1)`
`toolbox(1)`, `toolbox-run(1)`, `podman(1)`, `podman-exec(1)`,
`podman-start(1)`

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@ -29,3 +29,7 @@ $ toolbox help
```
$ toolbox help create
```
## SEE ALSO
`toolbox(1)`

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@ -21,8 +21,7 @@ be used as the entry point for all toolbox containers, and must be run inside
the container that's to be initialized. It is not expected to be directly
invoked by humans, and cannot be used on the host.
A key feature of toolbox containers is their entry point, the `toolbox
init-container` command.
### Shortcoming of container configuration
OCI containers are inherently immutable. Configuration options passed through
`podman create` are baked into the definition of the OCI container, and can't
@ -31,21 +30,35 @@ versions of Toolbox can't be applied to pre-existing toolbox containers
created by older versions of Toolbox. This is avoided by using the entry point
to configure the container at runtime.
### Entry point utilization
The entry point of a toolbox container customizes the container to fit the
current user by ensuring that it has a user that matches the one on the host.
It ensures that configuration files, such as `/etc/host.conf`, `/etc/hosts`,
The passwords of the current user and root in the container are deleted.
Crucial configuration files, such as `/etc/host.conf`, `/etc/hosts`,
`/etc/localtime`, `/etc/resolv.conf` and `/etc/timezone`, inside the container
are kept synchronized with the host. The entry point also bind mounts various
subsets of the host's filesystem hierarchy to their corresponding locations
inside the container to provide seamless integration with the host. This
includes `/run/libvirt`, `/run/systemd/journal`, `/run/udev/data`,
`/var/lib/libvirt`, `/var/lib/systemd/coredump`, `/var/log/journal` and others.
are kept synchronized with the host. This is something not very common in
classic containers where the configuration is permanently baked in.
The entry point also bind mounts various subsets of the host's filesystem
hierarchy to their corresponding locations inside the container to provide
seamless integration with the host. This includes `/run/libvirt`,
`/run/systemd/journal`, `/run/udev/data`, `/var/lib/libvirt`,
`/var/lib/systemd/coredump`, `/var/log/journal` and others.
On some host operating systems, important paths like `/home`, `/media` or
`/mnt` are symbolic links to other locations. The entry point ensures that
paths inside the container match those on the host, to avoid needless
confusion.
If KCM is used as the default Kerberos credentials cache, it is also set up
inside of a toolbox container.
To give users the ability to tell programatically if they are in a toolbox, the
entry point creates `/run/.toolboxenv` which is an empty file analogous to
`/run/.containerenv`.
## OPTIONS ##
The following options are understood:
@ -57,7 +70,23 @@ container.
**--home** HOME
Create a user inside the toolbox container whose login directory is HOME.
Create a user inside the toolbox container whose login directory is HOME. This
option is required.
**--shell** SHELL
Create a user inside the toolbox container whose login shell is SHELL. This
option is required.
**--uid** UID
Create a user inside the toolbox container whose numerical user ID is UID. This
option is required.
**--user** USER
Create a user inside the toolbox container whose login name is LOGIN. This
option is required.
**--home-link**
@ -74,21 +103,34 @@ Make `/mnt` a symbolic link to `/var/mnt`.
**--monitor-host**
Ensure that certain configuration files inside the toolbox container are kept
synchronized with their counterparts on the host. Currently, these files are
`/etc/hosts` and `/etc/resolv.conf`.
synchronized with their counterparts on the host.
**--shell** SHELL
The synchronized files are:
Create a user inside the toolbox container whose login shell is SHELL.
- `/etc/host.conf`
- `/etc/hosts`
- `/etc/localtime`
- `/etc/resolv.conf`
- `/etc/timezone`
**--uid** UID
The following paths are bind mounted to paths from the host's filesystem
available in the container:
Create a user inside the toolbox container whose numerical user ID is UID.
- `/etc/machine-id`
- `/run/libvirt`
- `/run/systemd/journal`
- `/run/systemd/resolve`
- `/run/udev/data`
- `/tmp`
- `/var/lib/flatpak`
- `/var/lib/libvirt`
- `/var/lib/systemd/coredump`
- `/var/log/journal`
- `/var/mnt`
**--user** USER
Create a user inside the toolbox container whose login name is LOGIN.
If path `/sys/fs/selinux` is found in the container, path `/usr/share/empty` is
bind-mounted to that location to suppress SELinux.
## SEE ALSO
`podman(1)`, `podman-create(1)`, `podman-start(1)`
`toolbox(1)`, `podman(1)`, `podman-create(1)`, `podman-start(1)`

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@ -45,4 +45,4 @@ $ toolbox list --images
## SEE ALSO
`buildah(1)`, `podman(1)`
`toolbox(1)`, `podman(1)`, `podman-ps(1)`, `podman-images(1)`

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@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
toolbox\-rm - Remove one or more toolbox containers
## SYNOPSIS
**toolbox rm** [*--all*] [*--force*] [*CONTAINER*...]
**toolbox rm** [*--all* | *-a*] [*--force* | *-f*] [*CONTAINER*...]
## DESCRIPTION
@ -49,4 +49,4 @@ $ toolbox rm --all --force
## SEE ALSO
`buildah(1)`, `podman(1)`, `podman-rm(1)`
`toolbox(1)`, `podman(1)`, `podman-rm(1)`

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@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
toolbox\-rmi - Remove one or more toolbox images
## SYNOPSIS
**toolbox rmi** [*--all*] [*--force*] [*IMAGE*...]
**toolbox rmi** [*--all* | *-a*] [*--force* | *-f*] [*IMAGE*...]
## DESCRIPTION
@ -49,4 +49,4 @@ $ toolbox rmi --all --force
## SEE ALSO
`buildah(1)`, `podman(1)`, `podman-rmi(1)`
`toolbox(1)`, `podman(1)`, `podman-rmi(1)`

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@ -13,13 +13,17 @@ toolbox\-run - Run a command in an existing toolbox container
Runs a command inside an existing toolbox container. The container should have
been created using the `toolbox create` command.
`toolbox run` wraps around `podman exec` and by default passes several options
to it. It allocates a tty, connects to stdin, runs the passed command as the
current user in the current directory and shares common environmental
variables.
The executed command is wrapped in `capsh` that gets rid of all extra
capabilities that could negatively affect the experience.
A toolbox container is an OCI container. Therefore, `toolbox run` is analogous
to a `podman start` followed by a `podman exec`.
By default, the toolbox containers are tagged with the version of the OS that
corresponds to the content inside them. Their names are prefixed with the name
of the base image and suffixed with the current user name.
## OPTIONS ##
The following options are understood:
@ -62,4 +66,5 @@ $ toolbox run --container foo uptime
## SEE ALSO
`buildah(1)`, `podman(1)`, `podman-exec(1)`, `podman-start(1)`
`toolbox(1)`, `podman(1)`, `podman-exec(1)`, `podman-start(1)`, `capsh(1)`,
`sh(1)`

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@ -4,7 +4,11 @@
toolbox - Unprivileged development environment
## SYNOPSIS
**toolbox** [*--verbose* | *-v*] *COMMAND* [*ARGS*]
**toolbox** [*--assumeyes* | *-y*]
[*--help* | *-h*]
[*--log-level LEVEL*]
[*--log-podman*]
*COMMAND* [*ARGS*...]
## DESCRIPTION
@ -34,7 +38,7 @@ seamlessly integrates with the rest of the operating system by providing
access to the user's home directory, the Wayland and X11 sockets, SSH agent,
etc..
## OPTIONS ##
## GLOBAL OPTIONS ##
The following options are understood:
@ -46,10 +50,15 @@ Automatically answer yes for all questions.
Print a synopsis of this manual and exit.
**--verbose, -v**
**--log-level**=*level*
Print debug information including standard error stream of internal commands.
Use `-vv` for more detail.
Log messages above specified level: debug, info, warn, error, fatal or panic
(default: error)
**--log-podman**
Show log messages of invocations of Podman based on the logging level specified
by option **log-level**.
## COMMANDS
@ -87,6 +96,37 @@ Remove one or more toolbox images.
Run a command in an existing toolbox container.
## Toolbox images
Toolbox currently supports these images:
registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora-toolbox
: default image on Fedora
registry.access.redhat.com/ubi8
: default image on RHEL
Images in this list are tested to be working with Toolbox. Any other image may
work as well, but it is not guaranteed.
### NOTE: Name change of default Fedora image
Since version 0.0.99.1 Toolbox started to use registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora-toolbox
instead of registry.fedoraproject.org/f{version}/fedora-toolbox. The image is
still the same, only the name has changed.
Existing containers are not affected by this change, only new ones.
## Toolbox containers
Information about how toolbox containers are created can be found in
`toolbox-create(1)`.
Information about the entry-point of toolbox containers can be found in
`toolbox-init-container(1)`.
## SEE ALSO
`buildah(1)`, `podman(1)`
`podman(1)`, `toolbox-create(1)`, `toolbox-enter(1)`, `toolbox-run(1)`,
`toolbox-init-container(1)`, `toolbox-list(1)`, `toolbox-rm(1)`,
`toolbox-rmi(1)` `toolbox-help(1)`, https://github.com/containers/toolbox