From 56a863f9f11340a9310907e4131b9dc7483df623 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Cullum Smith Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2024 12:25:01 -0400 Subject: initial commit --- src/blog/desktop-linux-with-nfs-homedirs/index.md | 226 ++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 226 insertions(+) create mode 100644 src/blog/desktop-linux-with-nfs-homedirs/index.md (limited to 'src/blog/desktop-linux-with-nfs-homedirs/index.md') diff --git a/src/blog/desktop-linux-with-nfs-homedirs/index.md b/src/blog/desktop-linux-with-nfs-homedirs/index.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e01581a --- /dev/null +++ b/src/blog/desktop-linux-with-nfs-homedirs/index.md @@ -0,0 +1,226 @@ +--- +title: Desktop Linux with NFS Home Directories +date: January 19, 2023 +subtitle: Something no one does anymore, apparently. +description: Issues you'll face with NFS-mounted homedirs, and some workarounds. +--- + +I manage multiple [Rocky Linux](https://rockylinux.org/) workstations that automount +users' home directories via kerberized NFS. Unfortunately, I don't think this is a common +setup anymore--I encountered a few bugs and performance issues that needed non-obvious +workarounds. + +## Problems + +### 1. Things break when you log in from two places at once + +If you can somehow restrict your users to a single GNOME session at any given time, +you'll probably be fine. However, as soon as someone leaves his desktop running and +logs into another workstation, strange things begin to happen. Here are some oddities +I've observed: + + - GNOME settings on one machine are clobbered by the other (this may or may not be desirable). + + - Firefox refuses to run, because the profile directory is already in use. + + - `gnome-keyring` freaks out and creates many login keyrings under `~/.local/share/keyrings`, + losing previously stored secrets in the process! + + - Sound quits working (I suspect this is due to `~/.config/pulse/cookie` being clobbered). + + - Flatpak apps completely blow up (each app stores its state in `~/.var`, and + [this is nonconfigurable](https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/issues/1651)). Running + multiple instances of `signal-dekstop` instantly corrupts the sqlite database. + + - `goa-daemon` generates thousands of syslog messages per minute (I am unsure if this is + due to `~/.config/goa-1.0/accounts.conf` getting clobbered, or a symptom of + [this bug](https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-online-accounts/-/issues/32)). + I have no idea what `goa-daemon` does, nor do I want to. I have been victimized by + [the bazaar](http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/cathedral-bazaar/) + enough for one lifetime. + +### 2. It's slow + +I/O-heavy tasks, like compiling and grepping, will be much slower over NFS than the local +disk. Browser profiles stored on NFS (`~/.mozilla`, `~/.cache/chromium`, etc.) provide +a noticeably poor experience. + +File browsing is also painful if you have lots of images or videos. Thumbnails for +files stored on NFS will be cached in `~/.cache/thumbnails`, which is **also** stored +on NFS! + +## Solution: Move stuff to local storage + +The [XDG Base Directory Specification](https://specifications.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-latest.html) +lets you change the default locations of `~/.cache`, `~/.config`, and the like by setting +some environment variables in the user's session. We can solve most of these problems +by moving the various XDG directories to the local disk. + +### Automatically provision local home directories + +First, let's write a script that automatically provisions a _local_ home directory +whenever someone logs in: + +````bash +#!/bin/bash + +# /usr/local/sbin/create-local-homedir.sh + +# Log all output to syslog. +exec 1> >(logger -s -t $(basename "$0")) 2>&1 + +PAM_UID=$(id -u "${PAM_USER}") + +if (( PAM_UID >= 1000 )); then + install -o "${PAM_USER}" -g "${PAM_USER}" -m 0700 -d "/usr/local/home/${PAM_USER}" +fi +```` + +Of course, it needs to be executable: + +````bash +chmod 755 /usr/local/sbin/create-local-homedir.sh +```` + +Next, we modify the PAM configuration to execute our script whenever anyone logs in +via GDM or SSH: + +````diff +--- /etc/pam.d/gdm-password ++++ /etc/pam.d/gdm-password +@@ -1,5 +1,6 @@ + auth [success=done ignore=ignore default=bad] pam_selinux_permit.so + auth substack password-auth ++auth optional pam_exec.so /usr/local/sbin/create-local-homedir.sh + auth optional pam_gnome_keyring.so + auth include postlogin + +--- /etc/pam.d/sshd ++++ /etc/pam.d/sshd +@@ -15,3 +15,4 @@ + session optional pam_motd.so + session include password-auth + session include postlogin ++session optional pam_exec.so /usr/local/sbin/create-local-homedir.sh +```` + +
+A note on SELinux + +If you're using SELinux, you'll need a separate copy of the `create-local-homedir` script +for use with GDM, labeled with `xdm_unconfined_exec_t`: + +````bash +ln /usr/local/sbin/create-local-homedir{,-gdm}.sh +semanage fcontext -a -t xdm_unconfined_exec_t /usr/local/sbin/create-local-homedir-gdm.sh +restorecon -v /usr/local/sbin/create-local-homedir-gdm.sh +```` + +Be sure to modify `/etc/pam.d/gdm-password` appropriately. + +
+ +### Set XDG Environment Variables + +We need to tell the user's applications to use the new local home directory +for storage. We have to do this early in the PAM stack for GDM, because `$XDG_DATA_HOME` +must be set before `gnome-keyring` gets executed. + +Edit your PAM files again, adding one more line: + +````diff +--- /etc/pam.d/gdm-password ++++ /etc/pam.d/gdm-password +@@ -1,6 +1,7 @@ + auth [success=done ignore=ignore default=bad] pam_selinux_permit.so + auth substack password-auth + auth optional pam_exec.so /usr/local/sbin/create-local-homedir.sh ++auth optional pam_env.so conffile=/etc/security/pam_env_xdg.conf + auth optional pam_gnome_keyring.so + auth include postlogin + +--- /etc/pam.d/sshd ++++ /etc/pam.d/sshd +@@ -16,3 +16,4 @@ + session include password-auth + session include postlogin + session optional pam_exec.so /usr/local/sbin/create-local-homedir.sh ++session optional pam_env.so conffile=/etc/security/pam_env_xdg.conf +```` + +Then, create the corresponding `pam_env.conf(5)` file: + +````default +# /etc/security/pam_env_xdg.conf + +XDG_DATA_HOME DEFAULT=/usr/local/home/@{PAM_USER}/.local/share +XDG_STATE_HOME DEFAULT=/usr/local/home/@{PAM_USER}/.local/state +XDG_CACHE_HOME DEFAULT=/usr/local/home/@{PAM_USER}/.cache +XDG_CONFIG_HOME DEFAULT=/usr/local/home/@{PAM_USER}/.config +```` + +### Hacks for Non-XDG-Compliant Apps + +Unfortunately, since a majority of open source developers follow the +[CADT model](https://www.jwz.org/doc/cadt.html), there are many apps that ignore the +XDG specification. Sometimes these apps have their own environment variables +for specifying their storage locations. Otherwise, symlinks can provide us with an escape +hatch. + +Create a script in `/etc/profile.d` for these workarounds. Scripts in this directory +are executed within the context of the user's session, so we can freely write inside +his NFS home directory using his UID (and kerberos ticket, if applicable). + +````bash +# /etc/profile.d/local-homedirs.sh + +if (( UID >= 1000 )); then + # Building code is *much* faster on the local disk. Modify as needed: + export PYTHONUSERBASE="/usr/local/home/${USER}/.local" # python + export npm_config_cache="/usr/local/home/${USER}/.npm" # nodejs + export CARGO_HOME="/usr/local/home/${USER}/.cargo" # rust + export GOPATH="/usr/local/home/${USER}/go" # golang + + # Firefox doesn't provide an environment variable for setting the default profile + # path, so we'll just symlink it to /usr/local/home. + mkdir -p "/usr/local/home/${USER}/.mozilla" + ln -sfn "/usr/local/home/${USER}/.mozilla" "${HOME}/.mozilla" + + # Flatpak hardcodes ~/.var, so symlink it to /opt/flatpak. + ln -sfn "/opt/flatpak/${USER}" "${HOME}/.var" +fi +```` + +If you use any Flatpak apps, each user will need his own local Flatpak directory. +The Flatpak runtime appears to shadow the entire `/usr` using mount namespaces, +so any `/usr/local/home` symlinks will disappear into the abyss. Luckily, `/opt` +appears to be undefiled. Modify your original script like so: + +````diff +--- /usr/local/sbin/create-local-homedir.sh ++++ /usr/local/sbin/create-local-homedir.sh +@@ -6,4 +6,5 @@ + + if (( PAM_UID >= 1000 )); then + install -o "${PAM_USER}" -g "${PAM_USER}" -m 0700 -d "/usr/local/home/${PAM_USER}" ++ install -o "${PAM_USER}" -g "${PAM_USER}" -m 0700 -d "/opt/flatpak/${PAM_USER}" + fi +```` + +## Closing Thoughts + +Most of my users are nontechnical, so I'm pleased that these workarounds do not require +any manual intervention on their part. + +I am sad that `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME` can't be shared between multiple workstations reliably. +When I change my desktop background or add a new password to `gnome-keyring`, it only +affects the local machine. + +Initially, I tried symlinking various subdirectories of `~/.config` to the local disk +individually as I encountered different bugs (e.g. `~/.config/pulse`). Unfortunately this +proved brittle, as I was constantly playing whack-a-mole with apps that abused `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME` +for storing local state. In the end, it was less of a headache to just dump the whole thing +onto the local disk. + +I suppose if you verified an app behaved properly with multiple simultaneous NFS clients, +you could always symlink `/usr/local/home/$USER/.config/$APP` **back** onto NFS! -- cgit v1.2.3