fakeroot
run a command in an environment faking root privileges for file manipulation
see also :
dpkg-buildpackage
Synopsis
fakeroot
[-l|--lib library]
[--faked faked-binary]
[-i load-file] [-s
save-file]
[-u|--unknown-is-real ]
[-b|--fd-base ]
[-h|--help ]
[-v|--version ] [--]
[command]
add an example, a script, a trick and tips
examples
Here is an example session with fakeroot. Notice that
inside the fake root environment file manipulation that requires
root privileges succeeds, but is not really happening.
$ whoami
joost
$ fakeroot /bin/bash
# whoami
root
# mknod hda3 b 3 1
# ls -ld hda3
brw-r--r-- 1 root root 3, 1 Jul 2 22:58 hda3
# chown joost:root hda3
# ls -ld hda3
brw-r--r-- 1 joost root 3, 1 Jul 2 22:58 hda3
# ls -ld /
drwxr-xr-x 20 root root 1024 Jun 17 21:50 /
# chown joost:users /
# chmod a+w /
# ls -ld /
drwxrwxrwx 20 joost users 1024 Jun 17 21:50 /
# exit
$ ls -ld /
drwxr-xr-x 20 root root 1024 Jun 17 21:50 //
$ ls -ld hda3
-rw-r--r-- 1 joost users 0 Jul 2 22:58 hda3
Only the effects that user joost could do anyway happen
for real.
fakeroot was specifically written to enable users to
create Debian GNU/Linux packages (in the deb(5) format)
without giving them root privileges. This can be done by commands
like dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot or debuild
-rfakeroot (actually, -rfakeroot is default in debuild
nowadays, so you don’t need that argument).
source
fakeroot debian/rules clean
description
fakeroot
runs a command in an environment wherein it appears to have
root privileges for file manipulation. This is useful for
allowing users to create archives (tar, ar, .deb etc.) with
files in them with root permissions/ownership. Without
fakeroot one would need to have root privileges to
create the constituent files of the archives with the
correct permissions and ownership, and then pack them up, or
one would have to construct the archives directly, without
using the archiver.
fakeroot
works by replacing the file manipulation library functions
(chmod(2), stat(2) etc.) by ones that simulate the effect
the real library functions would have had, had the user
really been root. These wrapper functions are in a shared
library /usr/lib/libfakeroot.so* which is loaded
through the LD_PRELOAD mechanism of the dynamic
loader. (See ld.so(8))
If you intend
to build packages with fakeroot, please try building
the fakeroot package first: the "debian/rules
build" stage has a few tests (testing mostly for bugs
in old fakeroot versions). If those tests fail (for example
because you have certain libc5 programs on your system),
other packages you build with fakeroot will quite likely
fail too, but possibly in much more subtle ways.
Also, note that
it’s best not to do the building of the binaries
themselves under fakeroot. Especially configure and friends
don’t like it when the system suddenly behaves
differently from what they expect. (or, they randomly unset
some environment variables, some of which fakeroot
needs).
options
-l
library, --lib library
Specify an alternative wrapper
library.
--faked binary
Specify an alternative binary
to use as faked.
[--] command
Any command you want to be ran
as fakeroot. Use ’--’ if in the
command you have other options that may confuse
fakeroot’s option parsing.
-s save-file
Save the fakeroot environment
to save-file on exit. This file can be used to restore the
environment later using -i. However, this file will
leak and fakeroot will behave in odd ways unless you leave
the files touched inside the fakeroot alone when outside the
environment. Still, this can be useful. For example, it can
be used with rsync(1) to back up and restore whole directory
trees complete with user, group and device information
without needing to be root. See
/usr/share/doc/fakeroot/README.saving for more
details.
-i load-file
Load a fakeroot environment
previously saved using -s from load-file. Note that
this does not implicitly save the file, use -s as well
for that behaviour. Using the same file for both -i
and -s in a single fakeroot invocation is
safe.
-u,
--unknown-is-real
Use the real ownership of files
previously unknown to fakeroot instead of pretending they
are owned by root:root.
-b fd
Specify fd base (TCP mode only). fd is the minimum file
descriptor number to use for TCP connections; this may be
important to avoid conflicts with the file descriptors used
by the programs being run under fakeroot.
-h
Display help.
-v
Display version.
copying
fakeroot is distributed under the GNU General Public
License. (GPL 2.0 or greater).
environment
FAKEROOTKEY
The key used to communicate with the fakeroot daemon. Any program
started with the right LD_PRELOAD and a FAKEROOTKEY
of a running daemon will automatically connect to that daemon,
and have the same "fake" view of the file system’s
permissions/ownerships. (assuming the daemon and connecting
program were started by the same user).
LD_LIBRARY_PATH
LD_PRELOAD
Fakeroot is implemented by wrapping system calls. This is
accomplished by setting LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/fakeroot and
LD_PRELOAD=libfakeroot.so.0. That library is loaded before the
system’s C library, and so most of the library functions are
intercepted by it. If you need to set either
LD_LIBRARY_PATH or LD_PRELOAD from within a
fakeroot environment, it should be set relative to the given
paths, as in LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/foo/bar/
files
/usr/lib/libfakeroot/libfakeroot.so* The shared library
containing the wrapper functions.
limitations
Library versions
Every command executed within fakeroot needs to be linked
to the same version of the C library as fakeroot itself.
open()/create()
fakeroot doesn’t wrap open(), create(), etc. So, if user
joost does either
touch foo
fakeroot
ls -al foo
or the other way around,
fakeroot
touch foo
ls -al foo
fakeroot has no way of knowing that in the first case, the owner
of foo really should be joost while the second case it
should have been root. For the Debian packaging,
defaulting to giving all "unknown" files uid=gid=0, is always OK.
The real way around this is to wrap open() and
create(), but that creates other problems, as demonstrated
by the libtricks package. This package wrapped many more
functions, and tried to do a lot more than fakeroot . It
turned out that a minor upgrade of libc (from one where the
stat() function didn’t use open() to one with a
stat() function that did (in some cases) use
open()), would cause unexplainable segfaults (that is, the
libc6 stat() called the wrapped open(), which would
then call the libc6 stat(), etc). Fixing them wasn’t all
that easy, but once fixed, it was just a matter of time before
another function started to use open(), never mind trying to port
it to a different operating system. Thus I decided to keep the
number of functions wrapped by fakeroot as small as possible, to
limit the likelihood of ’collisions’.
GNU configure (and other such programs)
fakeroot, in effect, is changing the way the system behaves.
Programs that probe the system like GNU configure may get
confused by this (or if they don’t, they may stress fakeroot so
much that fakeroot itself becomes confused). So, it’s advisable
not to run "configure" from within fakeroot. As configure should
be called in the "debian/rules build" target, running
"dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot" correctly takes care of this.
manual page
mostly by J.H.M. Dassen <jdassen[:at:]debian[:dot:]org>
Rather a lot mods/additions by joost and Clint.
security aspects
fakeroot is a regular, non-setuid program. It does not
enhance a user’s privileges, or decrease the system’s security.
bugs
It
doesn’t wrap open(). This isn’t bad by itself,
but if a program does open("file", O_WRONLY, 000),
writes to file "file", closes it, and then again
tries to open to read the file, then that open fails, as the
mode of the file will be 000. The bug is that if root does
the same, open() will succeed, as the file permissions
aren’t checked at all for root. I choose not to wrap
open(), as open() is used by many other functions in libc
(also those that are already wrapped), thus creating loops
(or possible future loops, when the implementation of
various libc functions slightly change).
see also
faked
dpkg-buildpackage , debuild
/usr/share/doc/fakeroot/DEBUG
authors
joost
witteveen
<joostje[:at:]debian[:dot:]org>
Clint Adams
<clint[:at:]debian[:dot:]org>
Timo Savola