# Firejail profile for PROGRAM_NAME # Description: DESCRIPTION # This file is overwritten after every install/update # --- CUT HERE --- # This is a generic template to help you with creation of profiles # for new programs. PRs welcome at https://github.com/netblue30/firejail/ # # Rules to follow: # - lines with one # are often used in profiles # - lines with two ## are only needed in special situations # - make the profile as restrictive as possible while still keeping the program useful # (e. g. a program that is unable to save user's work is considered a bad practice) # - dedicate some time (based on how complex the application is) to profile testing before raising # a pull request # - keep the sections structure, use a single empty line as a separator # - entries within sections are alphabetically sorted # - consider putting binary into src/firecfg/firecfg.config (keep list sorted) but beware # to not do this for essential utilities as this may *break* your OS! (related discussion: # https://github.com/netblue30/firejail/issues/2507) # - remove this comment section and any generic comment past 'Persistent global definitions' # # Sections structure # HEADER # COMMENTS # IGNORES # NOBLACKLISTS # ALLOW INCLUDES # BLACKLISTS # DISABLE INCLUDES # MKDIRS # WHITELISTS # WHITELIST INCLUDES # OPTIONS (caps*, net*, no*, protocol, seccomp*, shell none, tracelog) # PRIVATE OPTIONS (disable-mnt, private-*, writable-*) # SPECIAL OPTIONS (mdwx, noexec, read-only, join-or-start) # REDIRECT INCLUDES # # The following macros may be used in path names to substitute common locations: # ${DESKTOP} # ${DOCUMENTS} # ${DOWNLOADS} # ${HOME} (user's home) # ${PATH} (contents of PATH envvar) # ${MUSIC} # ${VIDEOS} # # Check contents of ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs to see how they translate to actual paths. # # --- CUT HERE --- ##quiet # Persistent local customizations include PROFILE.local # Persistent global definitions include globals.local ##ignore noexec ${HOME} ##ignore noexec /tmp ##blacklist PATH # Disable X11 (CLI only), see also 'x11 none' below #blacklist /tmp/.X11-unix # It is common practice to add files/dirs containing program-specific configuration # (often ${HOME}/PROGRAMNAME or ${HOME}/.config/PROGRAMNAME) into disable-programs.inc # (keep list sorted) and then disable blacklisting below. # One way to retrieve the files a program uses is: # - launch binary with --private naming a sandbox # `firejail --name=test --ignore=private-bin [--profile=PROFILE] --private BINARY` # - work with the program, do some configuration changes and save them, open new documents, # install plugins if they exists, etc # - join the sandbox with bash: # `firejail --join=test bash` # - look what has changed and use that information to populate blacklist and whitelist sections # `ls -aR` #noblacklist PATH # Allow python (blacklisted by disable-interpreters.inc) #include allow-python2.inc #include allow-python3.inc # Allow perl (blacklisted by disable-interpreters.inc) #include allow-perl.inc # Allow java (blacklisted by disable-devel.inc) #include allow-java.inc # Allow lua (blacklisted by disable-interpreters.inc) #include allow-lua.inc #include disable-common.inc #include disable-devel.inc #include disable-exec.inc #include disable-interpreters.inc #include disable-passwdmgr.inc #include disable-programs.inc #include disable-xdg.inc # This section often mirrors noblacklist section above. The idea is # that if a user feels too restricted (he's unable to save files into # home directory for instance) he/she may disable whitelist (nowhitelist) # in PROFILE.local but still be protected by BLACKLISTS section # (further explanation at https://github.com/netblue30/firejail/issues/1569) #mkdir PATH ##mkfile PATH #whitelist PATH #include whitelist-common.inc #include whitelist-var-common.inc #apparmor #caps.drop all ##caps.keep CAPS ##hostname NAME # CLI only ##ipc-namespace # breaks sound and sometime dbus related functions #machine-id # 'net none' or 'netfilter' #net none #netfilter #no3d #nodbus #nodvd #nogroups #nonewprivs #noroot #nosound #notv #nou2f #novideo # Remove every not needed protocol # - unix is usually needed # - inet,inet6 only if internet access is requiered (see 'net none'/'netfilter' above) # - netlink is rarely needed # - packet almost never #protocol unix,inet,inet6,netlink,packet #seccomp ##seccomp.drop SYSCALLS (see also syscalls.txt) #shell none #tracelog # Prefer 'x11 none' instead of 'blacklist /tmp/.X11-unix' if 'net none' is set ##x11 none #disable-mnt ##private # It's common practice to refer to the python executable(s) in private-bin with `python*`, which covers both v2 and v3 #private-bin PROGRAMS #private-cache #private-dev #private-etc FILES # private-etc templates (see also #1734, #2093) # Common: alternatives,ld.so.cache,ld.so.conf,ld.so.conf.d,ld.so.preload,locale,locale.alias,locale.conf,localtime,mime.types,xdg # Extra: magic,magic.mgc,passwd,group # Networking: ca-certificates,ssl,pki,crypto-policies,nsswitch.conf,resolv.conf,hosts,host.conf,hostname,protocols,services,rpc # Extra: proxychains.conf,gai.conf # Sound: alsa,asound.conf,pulse,machine-id # GUI: fonts,pango,X11 # GTK: dconf,gconf,gtk-2.0,gtk-3.0 # Qt: Trolltech.conf # KDE: kde4rc,kde5rc # 3D: drirc,glvnd,bumblebee,nvidia # D-Bus: dbus-1,machine-id ##private-lib LIBS ##private-opt NAME #private-tmp ##writable-etc ##writable-run-user ##writable-var ##writable-var-log ##env VAR=VALUE #memory-deny-write-execute ##noexec PATH ##read-only ${HOME} ##join-or-start NAME