Cgroup namespaces virtualize the view of a process's cgroups (see cgroups(7)) as seen via /proc/[pid]/cgroup and /proc/[pid]/mountinfo.
Each cgroup namespace has its own set of cgroup root directories. These root directories are the base points for the relative locations displayed in the corresponding records in the /proc/[pid]/cgroup file. When a process creates a new cgroup namespace using clone(2) or unshare(2) with the CLONE_NEWCGROUP flag, its current cgroups directories become the cgroup root directories of the new namespace. (This applies both for the cgroups version 1 hierarchies and the cgroups version 2 unified hierarchy.)
When reading the cgroup memberships of a "target" process from /proc/[pid]/cgroup, the pathname shown in the third field of each record will be relative to the reading process's root directory for the corresponding cgroup hierarchy. If the cgroup directory of the target process lies outside the root directory of the reading process's cgroup namespace, then the pathname will show ../ entries for each ancestor level in the cgroup hierarchy.
The following shell session demonstrates the effect of creating a new cgroup namespace.
First, (as superuser) in a shell in the initial cgroup namespace, we create a child cgroup in the freezer hierarchy, and place a process in that cgroup that we will use as part of the demonstration below:
# mkdir -p /sys/fs/cgroup/freezer/sub2 # sleep 10000 & # Create a process that lives for a while [1] 20124 # echo 20124 > /sys/fs/cgroup/freezer/sub2/cgroup.procs
We then create another child cgroup in the freezer hierarchy and put the shell into that cgroup:
# mkdir -p /sys/fs/cgroup/freezer/sub # echo $$ # Show PID of this shell 30655 # echo 30655 > /sys/fs/cgroup/freezer/sub/cgroup.procs # cat /proc/self/cgroup | grep freezer 7:freezer:/sub
Next, we use unshare(1) to create a process running a new shell in new cgroup and mount namespaces:
# PS1="sh2# " unshare -Cm bash
From the new shell started by unshare(1), we then inspect the /proc/[pid]/cgroup files of, respectively, the new shell, a process that is in the initial cgroup namespace (init, with PID 1), and the process in the sibling cgroup (sub2):
sh2# cat /proc/self/cgroup | grep freezer 7:freezer:/ sh2# cat /proc/1/cgroup | grep freezer 7:freezer:/.. sh2# cat /proc/20124/cgroup | grep freezer 7:freezer:/../sub2
From the output of the first command, we see that the freezer cgroup membership of the new shell (which is in the same cgroup as the initial shell) is shown defined relative to the freezer cgroup root directory that was established when the new cgroup namespace was created. (In absolute terms, the new shell is in the /sub freezer cgroup, and the root directory of the freezer cgroup hierarchy in the new cgroup namespace is also /sub. Thus, the new shell's cgroup membership is displayed as '/'.)
However, when we look in /proc/self/mountinfo we see the following anomaly:
sh2# cat /proc/self/mountinfo | grep freezer 155 145 0:32 /.. /sys/fs/cgroup/freezer ...
The fourth field of this line (/..) should show the directory in the cgroup filesystem which forms the root of this mount. Since by the definition of cgroup namespaces, the process's current freezer cgroup directory became its root freezer cgroup directory, we should see '/' in this field. The problem here is that we are seeing a mount entry for the cgroup filesystem corresponding to the initial cgroup namespace (whose cgroup filesystem is indeed rooted at the parent directory of sub). To fix this problem, we must remount the freezer cgroup filesystem from the new shell (i.e., perform the mount from a process that is in the new cgroup namespace), after which we see the expected results:
sh2# mount --make-rslave / # Don't propagate mount events
# to other namespaces
sh2# umount /sys/fs/cgroup/freezer
sh2# mount -t cgroup -o freezer freezer /sys/fs/cgroup/freezer
sh2# cat /proc/self/mountinfo | grep freezer
155 145 0:32 / /sys/fs/cgroup/freezer rw,relatime ...
The virtualization provided by cgroup namespaces serves a number of purposes: