1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2
3Idmappings
4==========
5
6Most filesystem developers will have encountered idmappings. They are used when
7reading from or writing ownership to disk, reporting ownership to userspace, or
8for permission checking. This document is aimed at filesystem developers that
9want to know how idmappings work.
10
11Formal notes
12------------
13
14An idmapping is essentially a translation of a range of ids into another or the
15same range of ids. The notational convention for idmappings that is widely used
16in userspace is::
17
18 u:k:r
19
20``u`` indicates the first element in the upper idmapset ``U`` and ``k``
21indicates the first element in the lower idmapset ``K``. The ``r`` parameter
22indicates the range of the idmapping, i.e. how many ids are mapped. From now
23on, we will always prefix ids with ``u`` or ``k`` to make it clear whether
24we're talking about an id in the upper or lower idmapset.
25
26To see what this looks like in practice, let's take the following idmapping::
27
28 u22:k10000:r3
29
30and write down the mappings it will generate::
31
32 u22 -> k10000
33 u23 -> k10001
34 u24 -> k10002
35
36From a mathematical viewpoint ``U`` and ``K`` are well-ordered sets and an
37idmapping is an order isomorphism from ``U`` into ``K``. So ``U`` and ``K`` are
38order isomorphic. In fact, ``U`` and ``K`` are always well-ordered subsets of
39the set of all possible ids useable on a given system.
40
41Looking at this mathematically briefly will help us highlight some properties
42that make it easier to understand how we can translate between idmappings. For
43example, we know that the inverse idmapping is an order isomorphism as well::
44
45 k10000 -> u22
46 k10001 -> u23
47 k10002 -> u24
48
49Given that we are dealing with order isomorphisms plus the fact that we're
50dealing with subsets we can embedd idmappings into each other, i.e. we can
51sensibly translate between different idmappings. For example, assume we've been
52given the three idmappings::
53
54 1. u0:k10000:r10000
55 2. u0:k20000:r10000
56 3. u0:k30000:r10000
57
58and id ``k11000`` which has been generated by the first idmapping by mapping
59``u1000`` from the upper idmapset down to ``k11000`` in the lower idmapset.
60
61Because we're dealing with order isomorphic subsets it is meaningful to ask
62what id ``k11000`` corresponds to in the second or third idmapping. The
63straightfoward algorithm to use is to apply the inverse of the first idmapping,
64mapping ``k11000`` up to ``u1000``. Afterwards, we can map ``u1000`` down using
65either the second idmapping mapping or third idmapping mapping. The second
66idmapping would map ``u1000`` down to ``21000``. The third idmapping would map
67``u1000`` down to ``u31000``.
68
69If we were given the same task for the following three idmappings::
70
71 1. u0:k10000:r10000
72 2. u0:k20000:r200
73 3. u0:k30000:r300
74
75we would fail to translate as the sets aren't order isomorphic over the full
76range of the first idmapping anymore (However they are order isomorphic over
77the full range of the second idmapping.). Neither the second or third idmapping
78contain ``u1000`` in the upper idmapset ``U``. This is equivalent to not having
79an id mapped. We can simply say that ``u1000`` is unmapped in the second and
80third idmapping. The kernel will report unmapped ids as the overflowuid
81``(uid_t)-1`` or overflowgid ``(gid_t)-1`` to userspace.
82
83The algorithm to calculate what a given id maps to is pretty simple. First, we
84need to verify that the range can contain our target id. We will skip this step
85for simplicity. After that if we want to know what ``id`` maps to we can do
86simple calculations:
87
88- If we want to map from left to right::
89
90   u:k:r
91   id - u + k = n
92
93- If we want to map from right to left::
94
95   u:k:r
96   id - k + u = n
97
98Instead of "left to right" we can also say "down" and instead of "right to
99left" we can also say "up". Obviously mapping down and up invert each other.
100
101To see whether the simple formulas above work, consider the following two
102idmappings::
103
104 1. u0:k20000:r10000
105 2. u500:k30000:r10000
106
107Assume we are given ``k21000`` in the lower idmapset of the first idmapping. We
108want to know what id this was mapped from in the upper idmapset of the first
109idmapping. So we're mapping up in the first idmapping::
110
111 id     - k      + u  = n
112 k21000 - k20000 + u0 = u1000
113
114Now assume we are given the id ``u1100`` in the upper idmapset of the second
115idmapping and we want to know what this id maps down to in the lower idmapset
116of the second idmapping. This means we're mapping down in the second
117idmapping::
118
119 id    - u    + k      = n
120 u1100 - u500 + k30000 = k30600
121
122General notes
123-------------
124
125In the context of the kernel an idmapping can be interpreted as mapping a range
126of userspace ids into a range of kernel ids::
127
128 userspace-id:kernel-id:range
129
130A userspace id is always an element in the upper idmapset of an idmapping of
131type ``uid_t`` or ``gid_t`` and a kernel id is always an element in the lower
132idmapset of an idmapping of type ``kuid_t`` or ``kgid_t``. From now on
133"userspace id" will be used to refer to the well known ``uid_t`` and ``gid_t``
134types and "kernel id" will be used to refer to ``kuid_t`` and ``kgid_t``.
135
136The kernel is mostly concerned with kernel ids. They are used when performing
137permission checks and are stored in an inode's ``i_uid`` and ``i_gid`` field.
138A userspace id on the other hand is an id that is reported to userspace by the
139kernel, or is passed by userspace to the kernel, or a raw device id that is
140written or read from disk.
141
142Note that we are only concerned with idmappings as the kernel stores them not
143how userspace would specify them.
144
145For the rest of this document we will prefix all userspace ids with ``u`` and
146all kernel ids with ``k``. Ranges of idmappings will be prefixed with ``r``. So
147an idmapping will be written as ``u0:k10000:r10000``.
148
149For example, the id ``u1000`` is an id in the upper idmapset or "userspace
150idmapset" starting with ``u1000``. And it is mapped to ``k11000`` which is a
151kernel id in the lower idmapset or "kernel idmapset" starting with ``k10000``.
152
153A kernel id is always created by an idmapping. Such idmappings are associated
154with user namespaces. Since we mainly care about how idmappings work we're not
155going to be concerned with how idmappings are created nor how they are used
156outside of the filesystem context. This is best left to an explanation of user
157namespaces.
158
159The initial user namespace is special. It always has an idmapping of the
160following form::
161
162 u0:k0:r4294967295
163
164which is an identity idmapping over the full range of ids available on this
165system.
166
167Other user namespaces usually have non-identity idmappings such as::
168
169 u0:k10000:r10000
170
171When a process creates or wants to change ownership of a file, or when the
172ownership of a file is read from disk by a filesystem, the userspace id is
173immediately translated into a kernel id according to the idmapping associated
174with the relevant user namespace.
175
176For instance, consider a file that is stored on disk by a filesystem as being
177owned by ``u1000``:
178
179- If a filesystem were to be mounted in the initial user namespaces (as most
180  filesystems are) then the initial idmapping will be used. As we saw this is
181  simply the identity idmapping. This would mean id ``u1000`` read from disk
182  would be mapped to id ``k1000``. So an inode's ``i_uid`` and ``i_gid`` field
183  would contain ``k1000``.
184
185- If a filesystem were to be mounted with an idmapping of ``u0:k10000:r10000``
186  then ``u1000`` read from disk would be mapped to ``k11000``. So an inode's
187  ``i_uid`` and ``i_gid`` would contain ``k11000``.
188
189Translation algorithms
190----------------------
191
192We've already seen briefly that it is possible to translate between different
193idmappings. We'll now take a closer look how that works.
194
195Crossmapping
196~~~~~~~~~~~~
197
198This translation algorithm is used by the kernel in quite a few places. For
199example, it is used when reporting back the ownership of a file to userspace
200via the ``stat()`` system call family.
201
202If we've been given ``k11000`` from one idmapping we can map that id up in
203another idmapping. In order for this to work both idmappings need to contain
204the same kernel id in their kernel idmapsets. For example, consider the
205following idmappings::
206
207 1. u0:k10000:r10000
208 2. u20000:k10000:r10000
209
210and we are mapping ``u1000`` down to ``k11000`` in the first idmapping . We can
211then translate ``k11000`` into a userspace id in the second idmapping using the
212kernel idmapset of the second idmapping::
213
214 /* Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the second idmapping. */
215 from_kuid(u20000:k10000:r10000, k11000) = u21000
216
217Note, how we can get back to the kernel id in the first idmapping by inverting
218the algorithm::
219
220 /* Map the userspace id down into a kernel id in the second idmapping. */
221 make_kuid(u20000:k10000:r10000, u21000) = k11000
222
223 /* Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the first idmapping. */
224 from_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, k11000) = u1000
225
226This algorithm allows us to answer the question what userspace id a given
227kernel id corresponds to in a given idmapping. In order to be able to answer
228this question both idmappings need to contain the same kernel id in their
229respective kernel idmapsets.
230
231For example, when the kernel reads a raw userspace id from disk it maps it down
232into a kernel id according to the idmapping associated with the filesystem.
233Let's assume the filesystem was mounted with an idmapping of
234``u0:k20000:r10000`` and it reads a file owned by ``u1000`` from disk. This
235means ``u1000`` will be mapped to ``k21000`` which is what will be stored in
236the inode's ``i_uid`` and ``i_gid`` field.
237
238When someone in userspace calls ``stat()`` or a related function to get
239ownership information about the file the kernel can't simply map the id back up
240according to the filesystem's idmapping as this would give the wrong owner if
241the caller is using an idmapping.
242
243So the kernel will map the id back up in the idmapping of the caller. Let's
244assume the caller has the slighly unconventional idmapping
245``u3000:k20000:r10000`` then ``k21000`` would map back up to ``u4000``.
246Consequently the user would see that this file is owned by ``u4000``.
247
248Remapping
249~~~~~~~~~
250
251It is possible to translate a kernel id from one idmapping to another one via
252the userspace idmapset of the two idmappings. This is equivalent to remapping
253a kernel id.
254
255Let's look at an example. We are given the following two idmappings::
256
257 1. u0:k10000:r10000
258 2. u0:k20000:r10000
259
260and we are given ``k11000`` in the first idmapping. In order to translate this
261kernel id in the first idmapping into a kernel id in the second idmapping we
262need to perform two steps:
263
2641. Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the first idmapping::
265
266    /* Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the first idmapping. */
267    from_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, k11000) = u1000
268
2692. Map the userspace id down into a kernel id in the second idmapping::
270
271    /* Map the userspace id down into a kernel id in the second idmapping. */
272    make_kuid(u0:k20000:r10000, u1000) = k21000
273
274As you can see we used the userspace idmapset in both idmappings to translate
275the kernel id in one idmapping to a kernel id in another idmapping.
276
277This allows us to answer the question what kernel id we would need to use to
278get the same userspace id in another idmapping. In order to be able to answer
279this question both idmappings need to contain the same userspace id in their
280respective userspace idmapsets.
281
282Note, how we can easily get back to the kernel id in the first idmapping by
283inverting the algorithm:
284
2851. Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the second idmapping::
286
287    /* Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the second idmapping. */
288    from_kuid(u0:k20000:r10000, k21000) = u1000
289
2902. Map the userspace id down into a kernel id in the first idmapping::
291
292    /* Map the userspace id down into a kernel id in the first idmapping. */
293    make_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, u1000) = k11000
294
295Another way to look at this translation is to treat it as inverting one
296idmapping and applying another idmapping if both idmappings have the relevant
297userspace id mapped. This will come in handy when working with idmapped mounts.
298
299Invalid translations
300~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
301
302It is never valid to use an id in the kernel idmapset of one idmapping as the
303id in the userspace idmapset of another or the same idmapping. While the kernel
304idmapset always indicates an idmapset in the kernel id space the userspace
305idmapset indicates a userspace id. So the following translations are forbidden::
306
307 /* Map the userspace id down into a kernel id in the first idmapping. */
308 make_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, u1000) = k11000
309
310 /* INVALID: Map the kernel id down into a kernel id in the second idmapping. */
311 make_kuid(u10000:k20000:r10000, k110000) = k21000
312                                 ~~~~~~~
313
314and equally wrong::
315
316 /* Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the first idmapping. */
317 from_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, k11000) = u1000
318
319 /* INVALID: Map the userspace id up into a userspace id in the second idmapping. */
320 from_kuid(u20000:k0:r10000, u1000) = k21000
321                             ~~~~~
322
323Idmappings when creating filesystem objects
324-------------------------------------------
325
326The concepts of mapping an id down or mapping an id up are expressed in the two
327kernel functions filesystem developers are rather familiar with and which we've
328already used in this document::
329
330 /* Map the userspace id down into a kernel id. */
331 make_kuid(idmapping, uid)
332
333 /* Map the kernel id up into a userspace id. */
334 from_kuid(idmapping, kuid)
335
336We will take an abbreviated look into how idmappings figure into creating
337filesystem objects. For simplicity we will only look at what happens when the
338VFS has already completed path lookup right before it calls into the filesystem
339itself. So we're concerned with what happens when e.g. ``vfs_mkdir()`` is
340called. We will also assume that the directory we're creating filesystem
341objects in is readable and writable for everyone.
342
343When creating a filesystem object the caller will look at the caller's
344filesystem ids. These are just regular ``uid_t`` and ``gid_t`` userspace ids
345but they are exclusively used when determining file ownership which is why they
346are called "filesystem ids". They are usually identical to the uid and gid of
347the caller but can differ. We will just assume they are always identical to not
348get lost in too many details.
349
350When the caller enters the kernel two things happen:
351
3521. Map the caller's userspace ids down into kernel ids in the caller's
353   idmapping.
354   (To be precise, the kernel will simply look at the kernel ids stashed in the
355   credentials of the current task but for our education we'll pretend this
356   translation happens just in time.)
3572. Verify that the caller's kernel ids can be mapped up to userspace ids in the
358   filesystem's idmapping.
359
360The second step is important as regular filesystem will ultimately need to map
361the kernel id back up into a userspace id when writing to disk.
362So with the second step the kernel guarantees that a valid userspace id can be
363written to disk. If it can't the kernel will refuse the creation request to not
364even remotely risk filesystem corruption.
365
366The astute reader will have realized that this is simply a varation of the
367crossmapping algorithm we mentioned above in a previous section. First, the
368kernel maps the caller's userspace id down into a kernel id according to the
369caller's idmapping and then maps that kernel id up according to the
370filesystem's idmapping.
371
372Let's see some examples with caller/filesystem idmapping but without mount
373idmappings. This will exhibit some problems we can hit. After that we will
374revisit/reconsider these examples, this time using mount idmappings, to see how
375they can solve the problems we observed before.
376
377Example 1
378~~~~~~~~~
379
380::
381
382 caller id:            u1000
383 caller idmapping:     u0:k0:r4294967295
384 filesystem idmapping: u0:k0:r4294967295
385
386Both the caller and the filesystem use the identity idmapping:
387
3881. Map the caller's userspace ids into kernel ids in the caller's idmapping::
389
390    make_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, u1000) = k1000
391
3922. Verify that the caller's kernel ids can be mapped to userspace ids in the
393   filesystem's idmapping.
394
395   For this second step the kernel will call the function
396   ``fsuidgid_has_mapping()`` which ultimately boils down to calling
397   ``from_kuid()``::
398
399    from_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, k1000) = u1000
400
401In this example both idmappings are the same so there's nothing exciting going
402on. Ultimately the userspace id that lands on disk will be ``u1000``.
403
404Example 2
405~~~~~~~~~
406
407::
408
409 caller id:            u1000
410 caller idmapping:     u0:k10000:r10000
411 filesystem idmapping: u0:k20000:r10000
412
4131. Map the caller's userspace ids down into kernel ids in the caller's
414   idmapping::
415
416    make_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, u1000) = k11000
417
4182. Verify that the caller's kernel ids can be mapped up to userspace ids in the
419   filesystem's idmapping::
420
421    from_kuid(u0:k20000:r10000, k11000) = u-1
422
423It's immediately clear that while the caller's userspace id could be
424successfully mapped down into kernel ids in the caller's idmapping the kernel
425ids could not be mapped up according to the filesystem's idmapping. So the
426kernel will deny this creation request.
427
428Note that while this example is less common, because most filesystem can't be
429mounted with non-initial idmappings this is a general problem as we can see in
430the next examples.
431
432Example 3
433~~~~~~~~~
434
435::
436
437 caller id:            u1000
438 caller idmapping:     u0:k10000:r10000
439 filesystem idmapping: u0:k0:r4294967295
440
4411. Map the caller's userspace ids down into kernel ids in the caller's
442   idmapping::
443
444    make_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, u1000) = k11000
445
4462. Verify that the caller's kernel ids can be mapped up to userspace ids in the
447   filesystem's idmapping::
448
449    from_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, k11000) = u11000
450
451We can see that the translation always succeeds. The userspace id that the
452filesystem will ultimately put to disk will always be identical to the value of
453the kernel id that was created in the caller's idmapping. This has mainly two
454consequences.
455
456First, that we can't allow a caller to ultimately write to disk with another
457userspace id. We could only do this if we were to mount the whole fileystem
458with the caller's or another idmapping. But that solution is limited to a few
459filesystems and not very flexible. But this is a use-case that is pretty
460important in containerized workloads.
461
462Second, the caller will usually not be able to create any files or access
463directories that have stricter permissions because none of the filesystem's
464kernel ids map up into valid userspace ids in the caller's idmapping
465
4661. Map raw userspace ids down to kernel ids in the filesystem's idmapping::
467
468    make_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, u1000) = k1000
469
4702. Map kernel ids up to userspace ids in the caller's idmapping::
471
472    from_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, k1000) = u-1
473
474Example 4
475~~~~~~~~~
476
477::
478
479 file id:              u1000
480 caller idmapping:     u0:k10000:r10000
481 filesystem idmapping: u0:k0:r4294967295
482
483In order to report ownership to userspace the kernel uses the crossmapping
484algorithm introduced in a previous section:
485
4861. Map the userspace id on disk down into a kernel id in the filesystem's
487   idmapping::
488
489    make_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, u1000) = k1000
490
4912. Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the caller's idmapping::
492
493    from_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, k1000) = u-1
494
495The crossmapping algorithm fails in this case because the kernel id in the
496filesystem idmapping cannot be mapped up to a userspace id in the caller's
497idmapping. Thus, the kernel will report the ownership of this file as the
498overflowid.
499
500Example 5
501~~~~~~~~~
502
503::
504
505 file id:              u1000
506 caller idmapping:     u0:k10000:r10000
507 filesystem idmapping: u0:k20000:r10000
508
509In order to report ownership to userspace the kernel uses the crossmapping
510algorithm introduced in a previous section:
511
5121. Map the userspace id on disk down into a kernel id in the filesystem's
513   idmapping::
514
515    make_kuid(u0:k20000:r10000, u1000) = k21000
516
5172. Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the caller's idmapping::
518
519    from_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, k21000) = u-1
520
521Again, the crossmapping algorithm fails in this case because the kernel id in
522the filesystem idmapping cannot be mapped to a userspace id in the caller's
523idmapping. Thus, the kernel will report the ownership of this file as the
524overflowid.
525
526Note how in the last two examples things would be simple if the caller would be
527using the initial idmapping. For a filesystem mounted with the initial
528idmapping it would be trivial. So we only consider a filesystem with an
529idmapping of ``u0:k20000:r10000``:
530
5311. Map the userspace id on disk down into a kernel id in the filesystem's
532   idmapping::
533
534    make_kuid(u0:k20000:r10000, u1000) = k21000
535
5362. Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the caller's idmapping::
537
538    from_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, k21000) = u21000
539
540Idmappings on idmapped mounts
541-----------------------------
542
543The examples we've seen in the previous section where the caller's idmapping
544and the filesystem's idmapping are incompatible causes various issues for
545workloads. For a more complex but common example, consider two containers
546started on the host. To completely prevent the two containers from affecting
547each other, an administrator may often use different non-overlapping idmappings
548for the two containers::
549
550 container1 idmapping:  u0:k10000:r10000
551 container2 idmapping:  u0:k20000:r10000
552 filesystem idmapping:  u0:k30000:r10000
553
554An administrator wanting to provide easy read-write access to the following set
555of files::
556
557 dir id:       u0
558 dir/file1 id: u1000
559 dir/file2 id: u2000
560
561to both containers currently can't.
562
563Of course the administrator has the option to recursively change ownership via
564``chown()``. For example, they could change ownership so that ``dir`` and all
565files below it can be crossmapped from the filesystem's into the container's
566idmapping. Let's assume they change ownership so it is compatible with the
567first container's idmapping::
568
569 dir id:       u10000
570 dir/file1 id: u11000
571 dir/file2 id: u12000
572
573This would still leave ``dir`` rather useless to the second container. In fact,
574``dir`` and all files below it would continue to appear owned by the overflowid
575for the second container.
576
577Or consider another increasingly popular example. Some service managers such as
578systemd implement a concept called "portable home directories". A user may want
579to use their home directories on different machines where they are assigned
580different login userspace ids. Most users will have ``u1000`` as the login id
581on their machine at home and all files in their home directory will usually be
582owned by ``u1000``. At uni or at work they may have another login id such as
583``u1125``. This makes it rather difficult to interact with their home directory
584on their work machine.
585
586In both cases changing ownership recursively has grave implications. The most
587obvious one is that ownership is changed globally and permanently. In the home
588directory case this change in ownership would even need to happen everytime the
589user switches from their home to their work machine. For really large sets of
590files this becomes increasingly costly.
591
592If the user is lucky, they are dealing with a filesystem that is mountable
593inside user namespaces. But this would also change ownership globally and the
594change in ownership is tied to the lifetime of the filesystem mount, i.e. the
595superblock. The only way to change ownership is to completely unmount the
596filesystem and mount it again in another user namespace. This is usually
597impossible because it would mean that all users currently accessing the
598filesystem can't anymore. And it means that ``dir`` still can't be shared
599between two containers with different idmappings.
600But usually the user doesn't even have this option since most filesystems
601aren't mountable inside containers. And not having them mountable might be
602desirable as it doesn't require the filesystem to deal with malicious
603filesystem images.
604
605But the usecases mentioned above and more can be handled by idmapped mounts.
606They allow to expose the same set of dentries with different ownership at
607different mounts. This is achieved by marking the mounts with a user namespace
608through the ``mount_setattr()`` system call. The idmapping associated with it
609is then used to translate from the caller's idmapping to the filesystem's
610idmapping and vica versa using the remapping algorithm we introduced above.
611
612Idmapped mounts make it possible to change ownership in a temporary and
613localized way. The ownership changes are restricted to a specific mount and the
614ownership changes are tied to the lifetime of the mount. All other users and
615locations where the filesystem is exposed are unaffected.
616
617Filesystems that support idmapped mounts don't have any real reason to support
618being mountable inside user namespaces. A filesystem could be exposed
619completely under an idmapped mount to get the same effect. This has the
620advantage that filesystems can leave the creation of the superblock to
621privileged users in the initial user namespace.
622
623However, it is perfectly possible to combine idmapped mounts with filesystems
624mountable inside user namespaces. We will touch on this further below.
625
626Remapping helpers
627~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
628
629Idmapping functions were added that translate between idmappings. They make use
630of the remapping algorithm we've introduced earlier. We're going to look at
631two:
632
633- ``i_uid_into_mnt()`` and ``i_gid_into_mnt()``
634
635  The ``i_*id_into_mnt()`` functions translate filesystem's kernel ids into
636  kernel ids in the mount's idmapping::
637
638   /* Map the filesystem's kernel id up into a userspace id in the filesystem's idmapping. */
639   from_kuid(filesystem, kid) = uid
640
641   /* Map the filesystem's userspace id down ito a kernel id in the mount's idmapping. */
642   make_kuid(mount, uid) = kuid
643
644- ``mapped_fsuid()`` and ``mapped_fsgid()``
645
646  The ``mapped_fs*id()`` functions translate the caller's kernel ids into
647  kernel ids in the filesystem's idmapping. This translation is achieved by
648  remapping the caller's kernel ids using the mount's idmapping::
649
650   /* Map the caller's kernel id up into a userspace id in the mount's idmapping. */
651   from_kuid(mount, kid) = uid
652
653   /* Map the mount's userspace id down into a kernel id in the filesystem's idmapping. */
654   make_kuid(filesystem, uid) = kuid
655
656Note that these two functions invert each other. Consider the following
657idmappings::
658
659 caller idmapping:     u0:k10000:r10000
660 filesystem idmapping: u0:k20000:r10000
661 mount idmapping:      u0:k10000:r10000
662
663Assume a file owned by ``u1000`` is read from disk. The filesystem maps this id
664to ``k21000`` according to it's idmapping. This is what is stored in the
665inode's ``i_uid`` and ``i_gid`` fields.
666
667When the caller queries the ownership of this file via ``stat()`` the kernel
668would usually simply use the crossmapping algorithm and map the filesystem's
669kernel id up to a userspace id in the caller's idmapping.
670
671But when the caller is accessing the file on an idmapped mount the kernel will
672first call ``i_uid_into_mnt()`` thereby translating the filesystem's kernel id
673into a kernel id in the mount's idmapping::
674
675 i_uid_into_mnt(k21000):
676   /* Map the filesystem's kernel id up into a userspace id. */
677   from_kuid(u0:k20000:r10000, k21000) = u1000
678
679   /* Map the filesystem's userspace id down ito a kernel id in the mount's idmapping. */
680   make_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, u1000) = k11000
681
682Finally, when the kernel reports the owner to the caller it will turn the
683kernel id in the mount's idmapping into a userspace id in the caller's
684idmapping::
685
686  from_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, k11000) = u1000
687
688We can test whether this algorithm really works by verifying what happens when
689we create a new file. Let's say the user is creating a file with ``u1000``.
690
691The kernel maps this to ``k11000`` in the caller's idmapping. Usually the
692kernel would now apply the crossmapping, verifying that ``k11000`` can be
693mapped to a userspace id in the filesystem's idmapping. Since ``k11000`` can't
694be mapped up in the filesystem's idmapping directly this creation request
695fails.
696
697But when the caller is accessing the file on an idmapped mount the kernel will
698first call ``mapped_fs*id()`` thereby translating the caller's kernel id into
699a kernel id according to the mount's idmapping::
700
701 mapped_fsuid(k11000):
702    /* Map the caller's kernel id up into a userspace id in the mount's idmapping. */
703    from_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, k11000) = u1000
704
705    /* Map the mount's userspace id down into a kernel id in the filesystem's idmapping. */
706    make_kuid(u0:k20000:r10000, u1000) = k21000
707
708When finally writing to disk the kernel will then map ``k21000`` up into a
709userspace id in the filesystem's idmapping::
710
711   from_kuid(u0:k20000:r10000, k21000) = u1000
712
713As we can see, we end up with an invertible and therefore information
714preserving algorithm. A file created from ``u1000`` on an idmapped mount will
715also be reported as being owned by ``u1000`` and vica versa.
716
717Let's now briefly reconsider the failing examples from earlier in the context
718of idmapped mounts.
719
720Example 2 reconsidered
721~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
722
723::
724
725 caller id:            u1000
726 caller idmapping:     u0:k10000:r10000
727 filesystem idmapping: u0:k20000:r10000
728 mount idmapping:      u0:k10000:r10000
729
730When the caller is using a non-initial idmapping the common case is to attach
731the same idmapping to the mount. We now perform three steps:
732
7331. Map the caller's userspace ids into kernel ids in the caller's idmapping::
734
735    make_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, u1000) = k11000
736
7372. Translate the caller's kernel id into a kernel id in the filesystem's
738   idmapping::
739
740    mapped_fsuid(k11000):
741      /* Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the mount's idmapping. */
742      from_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, k11000) = u1000
743
744      /* Map the userspace id down into a kernel id in the filesystem's idmapping. */
745      make_kuid(u0:k20000:r10000, u1000) = k21000
746
7472. Verify that the caller's kernel ids can be mapped to userspace ids in the
748   filesystem's idmapping::
749
750    from_kuid(u0:k20000:r10000, k21000) = u1000
751
752So the ownership that lands on disk will be ``u1000``.
753
754Example 3 reconsidered
755~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
756
757::
758
759 caller id:            u1000
760 caller idmapping:     u0:k10000:r10000
761 filesystem idmapping: u0:k0:r4294967295
762 mount idmapping:      u0:k10000:r10000
763
764The same translation algorithm works with the third example.
765
7661. Map the caller's userspace ids into kernel ids in the caller's idmapping::
767
768    make_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, u1000) = k11000
769
7702. Translate the caller's kernel id into a kernel id in the filesystem's
771   idmapping::
772
773    mapped_fsuid(k11000):
774       /* Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the mount's idmapping. */
775       from_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, k11000) = u1000
776
777       /* Map the userspace id down into a kernel id in the filesystem's idmapping. */
778       make_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, u1000) = k1000
779
7802. Verify that the caller's kernel ids can be mapped to userspace ids in the
781   filesystem's idmapping::
782
783    from_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, k21000) = u1000
784
785So the ownership that lands on disk will be ``u1000``.
786
787Example 4 reconsidered
788~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
789
790::
791
792 file id:              u1000
793 caller idmapping:     u0:k10000:r10000
794 filesystem idmapping: u0:k0:r4294967295
795 mount idmapping:      u0:k10000:r10000
796
797In order to report ownership to userspace the kernel now does three steps using
798the translation algorithm we introduced earlier:
799
8001. Map the userspace id on disk down into a kernel id in the filesystem's
801   idmapping::
802
803    make_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, u1000) = k1000
804
8052. Translate the kernel id into a kernel id in the mount's idmapping::
806
807    i_uid_into_mnt(k1000):
808      /* Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the filesystem's idmapping. */
809      from_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, k1000) = u1000
810
811      /* Map the userspace id down into a kernel id in the mounts's idmapping. */
812      make_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, u1000) = k11000
813
8143. Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the caller's idmapping::
815
816    from_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, k11000) = u1000
817
818Earlier, the caller's kernel id couldn't be crossmapped in the filesystems's
819idmapping. With the idmapped mount in place it now can be crossmapped into the
820filesystem's idmapping via the mount's idmapping. The file will now be created
821with ``u1000`` according to the mount's idmapping.
822
823Example 5 reconsidered
824~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
825
826::
827
828 file id:              u1000
829 caller idmapping:     u0:k10000:r10000
830 filesystem idmapping: u0:k20000:r10000
831 mount idmapping:      u0:k10000:r10000
832
833Again, in order to report ownership to userspace the kernel now does three
834steps using the translation algorithm we introduced earlier:
835
8361. Map the userspace id on disk down into a kernel id in the filesystem's
837   idmapping::
838
839    make_kuid(u0:k20000:r10000, u1000) = k21000
840
8412. Translate the kernel id into a kernel id in the mount's idmapping::
842
843    i_uid_into_mnt(k21000):
844      /* Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the filesystem's idmapping. */
845      from_kuid(u0:k20000:r10000, k21000) = u1000
846
847      /* Map the userspace id down into a kernel id in the mounts's idmapping. */
848      make_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, u1000) = k11000
849
8503. Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the caller's idmapping::
851
852    from_kuid(u0:k10000:r10000, k11000) = u1000
853
854Earlier, the file's kernel id couldn't be crossmapped in the filesystems's
855idmapping. With the idmapped mount in place it now can be crossmapped into the
856filesystem's idmapping via the mount's idmapping. The file is now owned by
857``u1000`` according to the mount's idmapping.
858
859Changing ownership on a home directory
860~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
861
862We've seen above how idmapped mounts can be used to translate between
863idmappings when either the caller, the filesystem or both uses a non-initial
864idmapping. A wide range of usecases exist when the caller is using
865a non-initial idmapping. This mostly happens in the context of containerized
866workloads. The consequence is as we have seen that for both, filesystem's
867mounted with the initial idmapping and filesystems mounted with non-initial
868idmappings, access to the filesystem isn't working because the kernel ids can't
869be crossmapped between the caller's and the filesystem's idmapping.
870
871As we've seen above idmapped mounts provide a solution to this by remapping the
872caller's or filesystem's idmapping according to the mount's idmapping.
873
874Aside from containerized workloads, idmapped mounts have the advantage that
875they also work when both the caller and the filesystem use the initial
876idmapping which means users on the host can change the ownership of directories
877and files on a per-mount basis.
878
879Consider our previous example where a user has their home directory on portable
880storage. At home they have id ``u1000`` and all files in their home directory
881are owned by ``u1000`` whereas at uni or work they have login id ``u1125``.
882
883Taking their home directory with them becomes problematic. They can't easily
884access their files, they might not be able to write to disk without applying
885lax permissions or ACLs and even if they can, they will end up with an annoying
886mix of files and directories owned by ``u1000`` and ``u1125``.
887
888Idmapped mounts allow to solve this problem. A user can create an idmapped
889mount for their home directory on their work computer or their computer at home
890depending on what ownership they would prefer to end up on the portable storage
891itself.
892
893Let's assume they want all files on disk to belong to ``u1000``. When the user
894plugs in their portable storage at their work station they can setup a job that
895creates an idmapped mount with the minimal idmapping ``u1000:k1125:r1``. So now
896when they create a file the kernel performs the following steps we already know
897from above:::
898
899 caller id:            u1125
900 caller idmapping:     u0:k0:r4294967295
901 filesystem idmapping: u0:k0:r4294967295
902 mount idmapping:      u1000:k1125:r1
903
9041. Map the caller's userspace ids into kernel ids in the caller's idmapping::
905
906    make_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, u1125) = k1125
907
9082. Translate the caller's kernel id into a kernel id in the filesystem's
909   idmapping::
910
911    mapped_fsuid(k1125):
912      /* Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the mount's idmapping. */
913      from_kuid(u1000:k1125:r1, k1125) = u1000
914
915      /* Map the userspace id down into a kernel id in the filesystem's idmapping. */
916      make_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, u1000) = k1000
917
9182. Verify that the caller's kernel ids can be mapped to userspace ids in the
919   filesystem's idmapping::
920
921    from_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, k1000) = u1000
922
923So ultimately the file will be created with ``u1000`` on disk.
924
925Now let's briefly look at what ownership the caller with id ``u1125`` will see
926on their work computer:
927
928::
929
930 file id:              u1000
931 caller idmapping:     u0:k0:r4294967295
932 filesystem idmapping: u0:k0:r4294967295
933 mount idmapping:      u1000:k1125:r1
934
9351. Map the userspace id on disk down into a kernel id in the filesystem's
936   idmapping::
937
938    make_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, u1000) = k1000
939
9402. Translate the kernel id into a kernel id in the mount's idmapping::
941
942    i_uid_into_mnt(k1000):
943      /* Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the filesystem's idmapping. */
944      from_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, k1000) = u1000
945
946      /* Map the userspace id down into a kernel id in the mounts's idmapping. */
947      make_kuid(u1000:k1125:r1, u1000) = k1125
948
9493. Map the kernel id up into a userspace id in the caller's idmapping::
950
951    from_kuid(u0:k0:r4294967295, k1125) = u1125
952
953So ultimately the caller will be reported that the file belongs to ``u1125``
954which is the caller's userspace id on their workstation in our example.
955
956The raw userspace id that is put on disk is ``u1000`` so when the user takes
957their home directory back to their home computer where they are assigned
958``u1000`` using the initial idmapping and mount the filesystem with the initial
959idmapping they will see all those files owned by ``u1000``.
960