fakeNss
Provides /etc/passwd
and /etc/group
files that contain root
and nobody
, allowing user/group lookups to work in binaries that insist on doing those.
This might be a better choice than a custom script running useradd
and related utilities if you only need those files to exist with some entries.
fakeNss
also provides /etc/nsswitch.conf
, configuring NSS host resolution to first check /etc/hosts
before checking DNS, since the default in the absence of a config file (dns [!UNAVAIL=return] files
) is quite unexpected.
It also creates an empty directory at /var/empty
because it uses that as the home directory for the root
and nobody
users.
The /var/empty
directory can also be used as a chroot
target to prevent file access in processes that do not need to access files, if your container runs such processes.
The user entries created by fakeNss
use the /bin/sh
shell, which is not provided by fakeNss
because in most cases it won't be used.
If you need that to be available, see dockerTools.binSh
or provide your own.
Inputs
fakeNss
is made available in Nixpkgs as a package rather than a function, but it has two attributes that can be overridden and might be useful in particular cases.
For more details on how overriding works, see and .
extraPasswdLines
(List of Strings; optional)
: A list of lines that will be added to /etc/passwd
.
Useful if extra users need to exist in the output of fakeNss
.
If extraPasswdLines
is specified, it will not override the root
and nobody
entries created by fakeNss
.
Those entries will always exist.
Lines specified here must follow the format in {manpage}passwd(5)
.
Default value: []
.
extraGroupLines
(List of Strings; optional)
: A list of lines that will be added to /etc/group
.
Useful if extra groups need to exist in the output of fakeNss
.
If extraGroupLines
is specified, it will not override the root
and nobody
entries created by fakeNss
.
Those entries will always exist.
Lines specified here must follow the format in {manpage}group(5)
.
Default value: []
.
Examples
Example
# Using `fakeNss` with `dockerTools.buildImage`
This example shows how to use fakeNss
as-is.
It is useful with functions in dockerTools
to allow building Docker images that have the /etc/passwd
and /etc/group
files.
This example includes the hello
binary in the image so it can do something besides just have the extra files.
{ dockerTools, fakeNss, hello }:
dockerTools.buildImage {
name = "image-with-passwd";
tag = "latest";
copyToRoot = [ fakeNss hello ];
config = {
Cmd = [ "/bin/hello" ];
};
}
Example
Using fakeNss
with an override to add extra lines
The following code uses override
to add extra lines to /etc/passwd
and /etc/group
to create another user and group entry.
{ fakeNss }:
fakeNss.override {
extraPasswdLines = ["newuser:x:9001:9001:new user:/var/empty:/bin/sh"];
extraGroupLines = ["newuser:x:9001:"];
}