# Firejail
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Firejail is a SUID sandbox program that reduces the risk of security breaches
by restricting the running environment of untrusted applications using Linux
namespaces, seccomp-bpf and Linux capabilities. It allows a process and all
its descendants to have their own private view of the globally shared kernel
resources, such as the network stack, process table, mount table. Firejail can
work in a SELinux or AppArmor environment, and it is integrated with Linux
Control Groups.
Written in C with virtually no dependencies, the software runs on any Linux
computer with a 3.x kernel version or newer. It can sandbox any type of
processes: servers, graphical applications, and even user login sessions. The
software includes sandbox profiles for a number of more common Linux programs,
such as Mozilla Firefox, Chromium, VLC, Transmission etc.
The sandbox is lightweight, the overhead is low. There are no complicated
configuration files to edit, no socket connections open, no daemons running in
the background. All security features are implemented directly in Linux kernel
and available on any Linux computer.
## Videos
## Links
* Project webpage:
* IRC:
* Download and Installation:
* Features:
* Documentation:
* FAQ:
* Wiki:
* GitHub Actions:
* GitLab CI:
* Video Channel:
* Backup Video Channel:
## Security vulnerabilities
See [SECURITY.md](SECURITY.md).
## Installing
### Debian
Debian stable (bullseye): We recommend to use the
[backports](https://packages.debian.org/bullseye-backports/firejail) package.
### Ubuntu
For Ubuntu 18.04+ and derivatives (such as Linux Mint), users are **strongly
advised** to use the
[PPA](https://launchpad.net/~deki/+archive/ubuntu/firejail).
How to add and install from the PPA:
```sh
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:deki/firejail
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install firejail firejail-profiles
```
Reason: The firejail package for Ubuntu 20.04 has been left vulnerable to
CVE-2021-26910 for months after a patch for it was posted on Launchpad:
* [CVE-2021-26910](https://github.com/advisories/GHSA-2q4h-h5jp-942w)
* [firejail version in Ubuntu 20.04 LTS is vulnerable to
CVE-2021-26910](https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/firejail/+bug/1916767)
See also :
> What software is supported by the Ubuntu Security team?
>
> Ubuntu is currently divided into four components: main, restricted, universe
> and multiverse. All binary packages in main and restricted are supported by
> the Ubuntu Security team for the life of an Ubuntu release, while binary
> packages in universe and multiverse are supported by the Ubuntu community.
Additionally, the PPA version is likely to be more recent and to contain more
profile fixes.
See the following discussions for details:
* [Should I keep using the version of firejail available in my distro
repos?](https://github.com/netblue30/firejail/discussions/4666)
* [How to install the latest version on Ubuntu and
derivatives](https://github.com/netblue30/firejail/discussions/4663)
### Other
Firejail is available in multiple Linux distributions:
Repology
[![Packaging status (Repology)](https://repology.org/badge/vertical-allrepos/firejail.svg)](https://repology.org/project/firejail/versions)
Other than the [aforementioned exceptions](#installing), as long as your
distribution provides a [supported version](SECURITY.md) of firejail, it's
generally a good idea to install it from the distribution.
The version can be checked with `firejail --version` after installing.
You can also install one of the [released
packages](https://github.com/netblue30/firejail/releases).
Or clone the source code from our git repository and build manually:
```sh
git clone https://github.com/netblue30/firejail.git
cd firejail
./configure && make && sudo make install-strip
```
On Debian/Ubuntu you will need to install git and gcc. AppArmor development
libraries and pkg-config are required when using the `--enable-apparmor`
./configure option:
```sh
sudo apt-get install git build-essential libapparmor-dev pkg-config gawk
```
For `--selinux` option, add libselinux1-dev (libselinux-devel for Fedora).
Detailed information on using firejail from git is available on the
[wiki](https://github.com/netblue30/firejail/wiki/Using-firejail-from-git).
## Running the sandbox
To start the sandbox, prefix your command with `firejail`:
```sh
firejail firefox # starting Mozilla Firefox
firejail transmission-gtk # starting Transmission BitTorrent
firejail vlc # starting VideoLAN Client
sudo firejail /etc/init.d/nginx start
```
Run `firejail --list` in a terminal to list all active sandboxes. Example:
```console
$ firejail --list
1617:netblue:/usr/bin/firejail /usr/bin/firefox-esr
7719:netblue:/usr/bin/firejail /usr/bin/transmission-qt
7779:netblue:/usr/bin/firejail /usr/bin/galculator
7874:netblue:/usr/bin/firejail /usr/bin/vlc --started-from-file file:///home/netblue/firejail-whitelist.mp4
7916:netblue:firejail --list
```
## Desktop integration
Integrate your sandbox into your desktop by running the following two commands:
```sh
firecfg --fix-sound
sudo firecfg
```
The first command solves some shared memory/PID namespace bugs in PulseAudio
software prior to version 9. The second command integrates Firejail into your
desktop. You would need to logout and login back to apply PulseAudio changes.
Start your programs the way you are used to: desktop manager menus, file
manager, desktop launchers.
The integration applies to any program supported by default by Firejail. There
are over 900 default applications in the current Firejail version, and the
number goes up with every new release.
We keep the application list in
[src/firecfg/firecfg.config](src/firecfg/firecfg.config)
(/etc/firejail/firecfg.config when installed).
## Security profiles
Most Firejail command line options can be passed to the sandbox using profile
files.
You can find the profiles for all supported applications in [etc/](etc/)
(/etc/firejail/ when installed).
We also keep a list of profile fixes for previous released versions in
[etc-fixes/](etc-fixes/).
If you keep additional Firejail security profiles in a public repository,
please give us a link:
*
*
Use this issue to request new profiles:
* [Profile requests](https://github.com/netblue30/firejail/issues/1139)
You can also use this tool to get a list of syscalls needed by a program:
* [contrib/syscalls.sh](contrib/syscalls.sh)
## Uninstalling
firecfg creates symlinks in /usr/local/bin, so to fully remove firejail, run
the following before uninstalling:
```sh
sudo firecfg --clean
```
See `man firecfg` for details.
Note: Broken symlinks are ignored when searching for an executable in `$PATH`,
so uninstalling without doing the above should not cause issues.
## Latest released version: 0.9.72
## Current development version: 0.9.73
### --keep-shell-rc
```text
--keep-shell-rc
By default, when using a private home directory, firejail copies
files from the system's user home template (/etc/skel) into it,
which overrides attempts to whitelist the original files (such
as ~/.bashrc and ~/.zshrc). This option disables this feature,
and enables the user to whitelist the original files.
```
### private-etc rework
```text
--private-etc, --private-etc=file,directory,@group
The files installed by --private-etc are copies of the original
system files from /etc directory. By default, the command
brings in a skeleton of files and directories used by most
console tools:
$ firejail --private-etc dig debian.org
For X11/GTK/QT/Gnome/KDE programs add @x11 group as a
parameter. Example:
$ firejail --private-etc=@x11,gcrypt,python* gimp
gcrypt and /etc/python* directories are not part of the generic
@x11 group. File globbing is supported.
For games, add @games group:
$ firejail --private-etc=@games,@x11 warzone2100
Sound and networking files are included automatically, unless
--nosound or --net=none are specified. Files for encrypted
TLS/SSL protocol are in @tls-ca group.
$ firejail --private-etc=@tls-ca,wgetrc wget https://debian.org
Note: The easiest way to extract the list of /etc files accessed
by your program is using strace utility:
$ strace /usr/bin/transmission-qt 2>&1 | grep open | grep etc
```
We keep the list of groups in
[src/include/etc_groups.h](src/include/etc_groups.h).
Discussion:
* [private-etc rework](https://github.com/netblue30/firejail/discussions/5610)
### Profile Statistics
A small tool to print profile statistics. Compile and install as usual. The
tool is installed in the /usr/lib/firejail directory.
Run it over the profiles in /etc/profiles:
```console
$ /usr/lib/firejail/profstats /etc/firejail/*.profile
No include .local found in /etc/firejail/noprofile.profile
Warning: multiple caps in /etc/firejail/transmission-daemon.profile
Stats:
profiles 1209
include local profile 1208 (include profile-name.local)
include globals 1181 (include globals.local)
blacklist ~/.ssh 1079 (include disable-common.inc)
seccomp 1096
capabilities 1202
noexec 1087 (include disable-exec.inc)
noroot 1003
memory-deny-write-execute 272
restrict-namespaces 958
apparmor 753
private-bin 704
private-dev 1058
private-etc 550
private-lib 71
private-tmp 932
whitelist home directory 585
whitelist var 870 (include whitelist-var-common.inc)
whitelist run/user 1176 (include whitelist-runuser-common.inc
or blacklist ${RUNUSER})
whitelist usr/share 640 (include whitelist-usr-share-common.inc
net none 410
dbus-user none 679
dbus-user filter 141
dbus-system none 851
dbus-system filter 12
```