On 08/08/2024 12:16, Stefano Brivio wrote:
On Thu, 8 Aug 2024 11:37:38 +0200
Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com> wrote:

On 08/08/2024 06:02, Stefano Brivio wrote:
Given that pasta supports specifying a command to be executed on the
command line, even without the usual -- separator as long as there's
no ambiguity, we shouldn't eat up options that are not meant for us.

Paul reports, for instance, that with:

   pasta --config-net ip -6 route

-6 is taken by pasta to mean --ipv6-only, and we execute 'ip route'.
That's because getopt_long(), by default, shuffles the argument list
to shift non-option arguments at the end.

Avoid that by adding '+' at the beginning of 'optstring'.

Reported-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com>
---
v3: Use '+' in optstring and drop first non-option tracking

v2: Instead of overriding 'name' in the getopt_long() loop, to force
     exiting the loop, adjust the exit condition

  conf.c | 4 ++--
  util.c | 2 +-
  2 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
 
I like this change but I like to point out that this is a breaking 
change for any user that sets options after the main argument, i.e. pid.
Oh, right, that actually happens to work, even if we never really
supported that, the man page has only this form:

       pasta [OPTION]... PID

I could go back to v2, and, on top of that, if we find a single
non-option argument that looks like a PID (a number), we would push it
to the end of argv and continue parsing.

If we find any other number, including one that's after all the other
options but before the presumed PID we just pushed, we'll report error.

We have anyway the following problem, which we won't make any worse (it
can't be done without an actual file with POSIX shell, Bash only):

  $ 1() { echo a; }
  $ pasta 1; echo
  Couldn't open user namespace /proc/1/ns/user: Permission denied
  
  $ pasta echo; 1
  
  a

I can tell you that this will not effect podman but I don't know what 
other users exists out there...
As far as I know, the only other tool using pasta(1) at the moment is
rootless-containers (Docker, Usernetes):

  https://github.com/rootless-containers/rootlesskit/blob/master/pkg/network/pasta/pasta.go

which is also fine. Other users are developers and people who try out
network topologies and namespaces stuff without root, but I suppose
adding the PID at the end is pretty natural anyway.

On the other hand, if we can make sure we avoid this kind of breakage
at a small cost, why not. I'll try.

I am not sure if it is worth the risk just to improve the UX for the 
command use case but I guess you already decided it is otherwise you 
would have not posted this patch.
No, not really, I wasn't actually aware of the fact that adding the PID
before options worked. Thanks for pointing that out.

Well not just pid, it works the same with a command:

$ pasta ip addr --config-net

With this patch this no longer works, as --config-net is now passed to the ip command. I don't think using it like that makes any sense and it is super confusing so I like the new way but whoever does use such a syntax will get broken. Thus it is a trade off to be made.

-- 
Paul Holzinger