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What Are Namespaces and cgroups, and How Do They Work?

What Are Namespaces and cgroups, and How Do They Work?

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Recently, I have been investigating NGINX Unit, our open source multi-language application server. As part of my investigation, I noticed that Unit supports both namespaces and cgroups, which enables process isolation. In this blog, we’ll look at these two major Linux technologies, which also underlie containers.

Containers and associated tools like Docker and Kubernetes have been around for some time now. They have helped to change how software is developed and delivered in modern application environments. Containers make it possible to quickly deploy and run each piece of software in its own segregated environment, without the need to build individual virtual machines (VMs).

Most people probably give little thought to how containers work under the covers, but I think it’s important to understand the underlying technologies – it helps to inform our decision‑making processes. And personally, fully understanding how something works just makes me happy!

What Are Namespaces?

Namespaces have been part of the Linux kernel since about 2002, and over time more tooling and namespace types have been added. Real container support was added to the Linux kernel only in 2013, however. This is what made namespaces really useful and brought them to the masses.

But what are namespaces exactly? Here’s a wordy definition from Wikipedia:

“Namespaces are a feature of the Linux kernel that partitions kernel resources such that one set of processes sees one set of resources while another set of processes sees a different set of resources.”

In other words, the key feature of namespaces is that they isolate processes from each other. On a server where you are running many different services, isolating each service and its associated processes from other services means that there is a smaller blast radius for changes, as well as a smaller footprint for security‑related concerns. Mostly though, isolating services meets the architectural style of microservices as described by Martin Fowler.

Using containers during the development process gives the developer an isolated environment that looks and feels like a complete VM. It’s not a VM, though – it’s a process running on a server somewhere. If the developer starts two containers, there are two processes running on a single server somewhere – but they are isolated from each other.

Types of Namespaces

Within the Linux kernel, there are different types of namespaces. Each namespace has its own unique properties:

An Example of Parent and Child PID Namespaces

In the diagram below, there are three PID namespaces – a parent namespace and two child namespaces. Within the parent namespace, there are four processes, named PID1 through PID4. These are normal processes which can all see each other and share resources.

The child processes with PID2 and PID3 in the parent namespace also belong to their own PID namespaces in which their PID is 1. From within a child namespace, the PID1 process cannot see anything outside. For example, PID1 in both child namespaces cannot see PID4 in the parent namespace.

This provides isolation between (in this case) processes within different namespaces.

Creating a Namespace

With all that theory under our belts, let’s cement our understanding by actually creating a new namespace. The Linux unshare command is a good place to start. The manual page indicates that it does exactly what we want:

NAME
          unshare - run program in new name namespaces

I’m currently logged in as a regular user, svk, which has its own user ID, group, and so on, but not root privileges:

svk $ id
uid=1000(svk) gid=1000(svk) groups=1000(svk) context=unconfined_u:unconfined_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0.c.1023

Now I run the following unshare command to create a new namespace with its own user and PID namespaces. I map the root user to the new namespace (in other words, I have root privilege within the new namespace), mount a new proc filesystem, and fork my process (in this case, bash) in the newly created namespace.

svk $ unshare --user --pid --map-root-user --mount-proc --fork bash

(For those of you familiar with containers, this accomplishes the same thing as issuing the <runtime> exec -it <image> /bin/bash command in a running container.)

The ps -ef command shows there are two processes running – bash and the ps command itself – and the id command confirms that I’m root in the new namespace (which is also indicated by the changed command prompt):

root # ps -ef
UID         PID     PPID  C STIME TTY        TIME CMD
root          1        0  0 14:46 pts/0  00:00:00 bash
root         15        1  0 14:46 pts/0  00:00:00 ps -ef
root # id
uid=0(root) gid=0(root) groups=0(root) context=unconfined_u:unconfined_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0.c.1023

The crucial thing to notice is that I can see only the two processes in my namespace, not any other processes running on the system. I am completely isolated within my own namespace.

Looking at a Namespace from the Outside

Though I can’t see other processes from within the namespace, with the lsns (list namespaces) command I can list all available namespaces and display information about them, from the perspective of the parent namespace (outside the new namespace).

The output shows three namespaces – of types user, mnt, and pid – which correspond to the arguments on the unshare command I ran above. From this external perspective, each namespace is running as user svk, not root, whereas inside the namespace processes run as root, with access to all of the expected resources. (The output is broken across two lines for easier reading.)

root # lsns --output-all | head -1; lsns --output-all | grep svk
        NS TYPE   PATH                   NPROCS    PID   PPID ...
4026532690 user   /proc/97964/ns/user         2  97964  97944 ...                
4026532691 mnt    /proc/97964/ns/mnt          2  97964  97944 ...        
4026532692 pid    /proc/97965/ns/pid          1  97965  97964 ...

  ... COMMAND                                                       UID USER               
  ... unshare --user --map-root-user --fork –pid --mount-proc bash  1000 svk               
  ... unshare --user --map-root-user --fork –pid --mount-proc bash  1000 svk               
  ... bash                                                          1000 svk

Namespaces and Containers

Namespaces are one of the technologies that containers are built on, used to enforce segregation of resources. We’ve shown how to create namespaces manually, but container runtimes like Docker, rkt, and podman make things easier by creating namespaces on your behalf. Similarly, the isolation application object in NGINX Unit creates namespaces and cgroups.

What Are cgroups?

A control group (cgroup) is a Linux kernel feature that limits, accounts for, and isolates the resource usage (CPU, memory, disk I/O, network, and so on) of a collection of processes.

Cgroups provide the following features:

So basically you use cgroups to control how much of a given key resource (CPU, memory, network, and disk I/O) can be accessed or used by a process or set of processes. Cgroups are a key component of containers because there are often multiple processes running in a container that you need to control together. In a Kubernetes environment, cgroups can be used to implement resource requests and limits and corresponding QoS classes at the pod level.

The following diagram illustrates how when you allocate a particular percentage of available system resources to a cgroup (in this case cgroup‑1), the remaining percentage is available to other cgroups (and individual processes) on the system.

Cgroup Versions

According to Wikipedia, the first version of cgroups was merged into the Linux kernel mainline in late 2007 or early 2008, and “the documentation of cgroups‑v2 first appeared in [the] Linux kernel … [in] 2016”. Among the many changes in version 2, the big ones are a much simplified tree architecture, new features and interfaces in the cgroup hierarchy, and better accommodation of “rootless” containers (with non‑zero UIDs).

My favorite new interface in v2 is for pressure stall information (PSI). It provides insight into per‑process memory use and allocation in a much more granular way than was previously possible (this is beyond the scope of this blog, but is a very cool topic).

Creating a cgroup

The following command creates a v1 cgroup (you can tell by pathname format) called foo and sets the memory limit for it to 50,000,000 bytes (50 MB).

root # mkdir -p /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/foo
root # echo 50000000 > /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/foo/memory.limit_in_bytes

Now I can assign a process to the cgroup, thus imposing the cgroup’s memory limit on it. I’ve written a shell script called test.sh, which prints cgroup testing tool to the screen, and then waits doing nothing. For my purposes, it is a process that continues to run until I stop it.

I start test.sh in the background and its PID is reported as 2428. The script produces its output and then I assign the process to the cgroup by piping its PID into the cgroup file /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/foo/cgroup.procs.

root # ./test.sh &
[1] 2428
root # cgroup testing tool
root # echo 2428 > /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/foo/cgroup.procs

To validate that my process is in fact subject to the memory limits that I defined for cgroup foo, I run the following ps command. The -o cgroup flag displays the cgroups to which the specified process (2428) belongs. The output confirms that its memory cgroup is foo.

root # ps -o cgroup 2428
CGROUP
12:pids:/user.slice/user-0.slice/
session-13.scope,10:devices:/user.slice,6:memory:/foo,...

By default, the operating system terminates a process when it exceeds a resource limit defined by its cgroup.

Conclusion

Namespaces and cgroups are the building blocks for containers and modern applications. Having an understanding of how they work is important as we refactor applications to more modern architectures.

Namespaces provide isolation of system resources, and cgroups allow for fine‑grained control and enforcement of limits for those resources.

Containers are not the only way that you can use namespaces and cgroups. Namespaces and cgroup interfaces are built into the Linux kernel, which means that other applications can use them to provide separation and resource constraints.

Learn more about NGINX Unit and download the source to try it for yourself.

The post What Are Namespaces and cgroups, and How Do They Work? appeared first on NGINX.

Source: What Are Namespaces and cgroups, and How Do They Work?

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