.TH FIREJAIL-PROFILE 5 "MONTH YEAR" "VERSION" "firejail profiles man page" .SH NAME profile \- Security profile file syntax for Firejail .SH USAGE .TP firejail \-\-profile=filename.profile .SH DESCRIPTION Several command line options can be passed to the program using profile files. Firejail chooses the profile file as follows: \fB1.\fR If a profile file is provided by the user with \-\-profile option, the profile file is loaded. Example: .PP .RS $ firejail --profile=/home/netblue/icecat.profile icecat .br Reading profile /home/netblue/icecat.profile .br [...] .RE \fB2.\fR If a profile file with the same name as the application is present in ~/.config/firejail directory or in /etc/firejail, the profile is loaded. ~/.config/firejail takes precedence over /etc/firejail. Example: .PP .RS $ firejail icecat .br Command name #icecat# .br Found icecat profile in /home/netblue/.config/firejail directory .br Reading profile /home/netblue/.config/firejail/icecat.profile .br [...] .RE \fB3.\fR Use a default.profile file if the sandbox is started by a regular user, or a server.profile file if the sandbox is started by root. Firejail looks for these files in ~/.config/firejail directory, followed by /etc/firejail directory. To disable default profile loading, use --noroot command option. Example: .PP .RS $ firejail .br Reading profile /etc/firejail/generic.profile .br Parent pid 8553, child pid 8554 .br Child process initialized .br [...] .br .br $ firejail \-\-noprofile .br Parent pid 8553, child pid 8554 .br Child process initialized .br [...] .RE .SH Scripting Scripting commands: .TP \fB# this is a comment .TP \fBinclude other.profile Include other.profile file. Example: "include /etc/firejail/disable-common.inc" other.profile file name can be prefixed with ${HOME}. This will force Firejail to look for the file in user home directory. Example: "include ${HOME}/myprofiles/profile1" will load "~/myprofiles/profile1" file. .TP \fBnoblacklist file_name If the file name matches file_name, the file will not be blacklisted in any blacklist commands that follow. Example: "noblacklist ${HOME}/.mozilla" .TP \fBignore command Ignore command. Example: "ignore seccomp" .SH Filesystem These profile entries define a chroot filesystem built on top of the existing host filesystem. Each line describes a file element that is removed from the filesystem (\fBblacklist\fR), a read-only file or directory (\fBread-only\fR), a tmpfs mounted on top of an existing directory (\fBtmpfs\fR), or mount-bind a directory or file on top of another directory or file (\fBbind\fR). Use \fBprivate\fR to set private mode. File globbing is supported, and PATH and HOME directories are searched. Examples: .TP \fBblacklist file_or_directory Blacklist directory or file. Examples: .br .br blacklist /usr/bin .br blacklist /usr/bin/gcc* .br blacklist ${PATH}/ifconfig .br blacklist ${HOME}/.ssh .TP \fBread-only file_or_directory Make directory or file read-only. .TP \fBtmpfs directory Mount an empty tmpfs filesystem on top of directory. .TP \fBbind directory1,directory2 Mount-bind directory1 on top of directory2. This option is only available when running as root. .TP \fBbind file1,file2 Mount-bind file1 on top of file2. This option is only available when running as root. .TP \fBprivate Mount new /root and /home/user directories in temporary filesystems. All modifications are discarded when the sandbox is closed. .TP \fBprivate-bin file,file Build a new /bin in a temporary filesystem, and copy the programs in the list. The same directory is also bind-mounted over /sbin, /usr/bin and /usr/sbin. .TP \fBprivate directory Use directory as user home. .TP \fBprivate-home file,directory Build a new user home in a temporary filesystem, and copy the files and directories in the list in the new home. All modifications are discarded when the sandbox is closed. .TP \fBprivate-dev Create a new /dev directory. Only dri, null, full, zero, tty, pts, ptmx, random, urandom, log and shm devices are available. .TP \fBprivate-etc file,directory Build a new /etc in a temporary filesystem, and copy the files and directories in the list. All modifications are discarded when the sandbox is closed. .TP \fBwhitelist file_or_directory Build a new user home in a temporary filesystem, and mount-bind file_or_directory. The modifications to file_or_directory are persistent, everything else is discarded when the sandbox is closed. .TP \fBtracelog Blacklist violations logged to syslog. .SH Security filters The following security filters are currently implemented: .TP \fBcaps Enable default Linux capabilities filter. .TP \fBcaps.drop all Blacklist all Linux capabilities. .TP \fBcaps.drop capability,capability,capability Blacklist given Linux capabilities. .TP \fBcaps.keep capability,capability,capability Whitelist given Linux capabilities. .TP \fBprotocol protocol1,protocol2,protocol3 Enable protocol filter. The filter is based on seccomp and checks the first argument to socket system call. Recognized values: \fBunix\fR, \fBinet\fR, \fBinet6\fR, \fBnetlink\fR and \fBpacket\fR. .TP \fBseccomp Enable default seccomp filter. The default list is as follows: mount, umount2, ptrace, kexec_load, open_by_handle_at, init_module, finit_module, delete_module, iopl, ioperm, swapon, swapoff, syslog, process_vm_readv and process_vm_writev, sysfs,_sysctl, adjtimex, clock_adjtime, lookup_dcookie, perf_event_open, fanotify_init and kcmp. .TP \fBseccomp syscall,syscall,syscall Enable seccomp filter and blacklist the system calls in the list on top of default seccomp filter. .TP \fBseccomp.drop syscall,syscall,syscall Enable seccomp filter and blacklist the system calls in the list. .TP \fBseccomp.keep syscall,syscall,syscall Enable seccomp filter and whitelist the system calls in the list. .TP \fBnoroot Use this command to enable an user namespace. The namespace has only one user, the current user. There is no root account (uid 0) defined in the namespace. .SH Resource limits These profile entries define the limits on system resources (rlimits) for the processes inside the sandbox. The limits can be modified inside the sandbox using the regular \fBulimit\fR command. Example: .TP \fBrlimit-fsize 1024 Set the maximum file size that can be created by a process to 1024 bytes. .TP \fBrlimit-nproc 1000 Set the maximum number of processes that can be created for the real user ID of the calling process to 1000. .TP \fBrlimit-nofile 500 Set the maximum number of files that can be opened by a process to 500. .TP \fBrlimit-sigpending 200 Set the maximum number of processes that can be created for the real user ID of the calling process to 200. .SH CPU Affinity Set the CPU cores available for this sandbox using \fBcpu\fR command. Examples: .TP cpu 1,2,3 Use only CPU cores 0, 1 and 2. .SH Control Groups Place the sandbox in an existing control group specified by the full path of the task file using \fBcgroup\fR. Example: .TP cgroup /sys/fs/cgroup/g1/tasks The sandbox is placed in g1 control group. .SH User Environment .TP \fBname sandboxname Set sandbox name. Example: .br .br name browser .TP \fBenv name=value Set environment variable. Examples: .br .br env LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/test/lib .br env CFLAGS="-W -Wall -Werror" .TP \fBnogroups Disable supplementary user groups .TP \fBshell none Run the program directly, without a shell. .SH Networking Networking features available in profile files. .TP \fBnetfilter If a new network namespace is created, enabled default network filter. .TP \fBnetfilter filename If a new network namespace is created, enabled the network filter in filename. .TP \fBnet none Enable a new, unconnected network namespace. The only interface available in the new namespace is a new loopback interface (lo). Use this option to deny network access to programs that don't really need network access. .TP \fBdns address Set a DNS server for the sandbox. Up to three DNS servers can be defined. .TP \fBhostname name Set a hostname for the sandbox. .SH RELOCATING PROFILES For various reasons some users might want to keep the profile files in a different directory. Using \fB--profile-path\fR command line option, Firejail can be instructed to look for profiles into this directory. This is an example of relocating the profile files into a new directory, /home/netblue/myprofiles. Start by creating the new directory and copy all the profile files in: .br .br $ mkdir ~/myprofiles && cd ~/myprofiles && cp /etc/firejail/* . .br .br Using \fBsed\fR utility, modify the absolute paths for \fBinclude\fR commands: .br .br $ sed -i "s/\\/etc\\/firejail/\\/home\\/netblue\\/myprofiles/g" *.profile .br $ sed -i "s/\\/etc\\/firejail/\\/home\\/netblue\\/myprofiles/g" *.inc .br .br Start Firejail using the new path: .br .br $ firejail --profile-path=~/myprofiles .SH FILES /etc/firejail/filename.profile, $HOME/.config/firejail/filename.profile .SH LICENSE Firejail is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. .PP Homepage: http://github.com/netblue30/firejail .SH SEE ALSO \&\flfirejail\fR\|(1), \&\flfiremon\fR\|(1), \&\flfirejail-login\fR\|(5)