* client: sandbox go-getter subprocess with landlock
This PR re-implements the getter package for artifact downloads as a subprocess.
Key changes include
On all platforms, run getter as a child process of the Nomad agent.
On Linux platforms running as root, run the child process as the nobody user.
On supporting Linux kernels, uses landlock for filesystem isolation (via go-landlock).
On all platforms, restrict environment variables of the child process to a static set.
notably TMP/TEMP now points within the allocation's task directory
kernel.landlock attribute is fingerprinted (version number or unavailable)
These changes make Nomad client more resilient against a faulty go-getter implementation that may panic, and more secure against bad actors attempting to use artifact downloads as a privilege escalation vector.
Adds new e2e/artifact suite for ensuring artifact downloading works.
TODO: Windows git test (need to modify the image, etc... followup PR)
* landlock: fixup items from cr
* cr: fixup tests and go.mod file
This PR fixes a bug where client configuration max_kill_timeout was
not being enforced. The feature was introduced in 9f44780 but seems
to have been removed during the major drivers refactoring.
We can make sure the value is enforced by pluming it through the DriverHandler,
which now uses the lesser of the task.killTimeout or client.maxKillTimeout.
Also updates Event.SetKillTimeout to require both the task.killTimeout and
client.maxKillTimeout so that we don't make the mistake of using the wrong
value - as it was being given only the task.killTimeout before.
This PR is 2 fixes for the flaky TestTaskRunner_TaskEnv_Chroot test.
And also the TestTaskRunner_Download_ChrootExec test.
- Use TinyChroot to stop copying gigabytes of junk, which causes GHA
to fail to create the environment in time.
- Pre-create cgroups on V2 systems. Normally the cgroup directory is
managed by the cpuset manager, but that is not active in taskrunner tests,
so create it by hand in the test framework.
On macOS, `os.TempDir` returns a symlinked path under `/var` which is
outside of the directories shared into the VM used for Docker, and
that fails tests using Docker that need that mount. If we expand the
symlink to get the real path in `/private`, we're in the shared
folders and can safely mount them.