A [disposable](/doc/glossary/#disposable) is a lightweight [qube](/doc/glossary/#qube) that can be created quickly and will self-destruct when closed. Disposables are usually created in order to host a single application, like a viewer, editor, or web browser.
From inside an app qube, choosing the `Open in disposable` option on a file will launch a disposable for just that file. Changes made to a file opened in a disposable are passed back to the originating qube. This means that you can safely work with untrusted files without risk of compromising your other qubes. Disposables can be launched either directly from dom0's app menu or terminal window, or from within app qubes. Disposables are generated with names like `disp####`, where `####` is random number.
This diagram provides a general example of how disposables can be used to safely open untrusted links and attachments in disposables. See [this article](https://blog.invisiblethings.org/2010/06/01/disposable-vms.html) for more on why one would want to use a disposable.
If a [disposable template](/doc/glossary/#disposable-template) becomes compromised, then any disposable based on that disposable template could be compromised. In particular, the *default* disposable template is important because it is used by the "Open in disposable" feature. This means that it will have access to everything that you open with this feature. For this reason, it is strongly recommended that you base the default disposable template on a trusted template.
At this time, disposables should not be relied upon to circumvent local forensics, as they do not run entirely in RAM. For details, see [this thread](https://groups.google.com/d/topic/qubes-devel/QwL5PjqPs-4/discussion).
Similarly to how app qubes are based on their underlying [template](/doc/glossary/#template), disposables are based on their underlying [disposable template](/doc/glossary/#disposable-template). R4.0 introduces the concept of multiple disposable templates, whereas R3.2 was limited to only one.
On a fresh installation of Qubes, the default disposable template is called `fedora-X-dvm` or `debian-X-dvm` (where `X` is a release number). If you have included the Whonix option in your install, there will also be a `whonix-ws-dvm` disposable template available for your use.
The default system wide disposable template can be changed with `qubes-prefs default_dispvm`. By combining the two, choosing `Open in disposable` from inside an app qube will open the document in a disposable based on the default disposable template you specified.
You can change this behavior for individual qubes: in the Application Menu, open Qube Settings for the qube in question and go to the "Advanced" tab. Here you can edit the "Default disposable" setting to specify which disposable template will be used to launch disposables from that qube. This can also be changed from the command line with:
For example, `anon-whonix` has been set to use `whonix-ws-dvm` as its `default_dispvm`, instead of the system default. You can even set an app qube that has also been configured as a disposable template to use itself, so disposables launched from within the app qube/disposable template would inherit the same settings.
Network and firewall settings for disposable templates can be set as they can for a normal qube. By default a disposable will inherit the network and firewall settings of the disposable template on which it is based. This is a change in behavior from R3.2, where disposables would inherit the settings of the app qube from which they were launched. Therefore, launching a disposable from an app qube will result in it using the network/firewall settings of the disposable template on which it is based. For example, if an app qube uses sys-net as its net qube, but the default system disposable uses sys-whonix, any disposable launched from this app qube will have sys-whonix as its net qube.
**Warning:** The opposite is also true. This means if you have changed `anon-whonix`'s `default_dispvm` to use the system default, and the system default disposable uses sys-net, launching a disposable from inside `anon-whonix` will result in the disposable using `sys-net`.
A disposable launched from the app menu inherits the net qube and firewall settings of the disposable template on which it is based. Note that changing the net qube setting for the system default disposable template *does* affect the net qube of disposables launched from the app menu. Different disposable templates with individual net qube settings can be added to the app menu.
**Important Notes:** Some disposable templates will automatically create a menu item to launch a disposable. If you do not see an entry and want to add one, please use the command:
In an app qube's file manager, right click on the file you wish to open in a disposable, then choose "View in disposable" or "Edit in disposable". Wait a few seconds and the default application for this file type should appear displaying the file content. This app is running in its own dedicated qube -- a disposable created for the purpose of viewing or editing this very file. Once you close the viewing application the whole disposable will be destroyed. If you have edited the file and saved the changes, the changed file will be saved back to the original app qube, overwriting the original.
Sometimes it is desirable to open an instance of Firefox within a new fresh disposable. This can be done easily using the app menu: just go to **Application Menu -> Disposable -> Disposable: Firefox web browser**. Wait a few seconds until a web browser starts. Once you close the viewing application the whole disposable will be destroyed.
## Making a particular application open everything in a disposable
You can use the `qvm-service` command or the services GUI to cause an application in a qube to open files and URLs in a disposable. To do this, enable a service named `app-dispvm.X` in that qube, where `X` is the application ID. For instance, to have Thunderbird open all attachments in a disposable, enable the `app-dispvm.thunderbird` service.
This feature is currently somewhat experimental, and only works for Linux qubes. It is known to work with Thunderbird and Wire, but it may fail to work with some applications that do not honor all XDG environment variables. If the feature does not work for you, please file a bug report.
## Opening particular types of files in a disposable
You can set `qvm-open-in-dvm.desktop` as the handler for a given MIME type. This will cause all files of that type to open in a disposable. This works in disposable templates too, but be careful: if your disposable template is set to use `qvm-open-in-dvm.desktop` to open a certain kind of file, every disposable based on it will be as well. If the disposable template is its own default disposable template (as is often the case), this will result in a loop: `qvm-open-in-dvm` will execute `qubes.OpenURL` in a new disposable, but that will in turn execute `qvm-open-in-dvm`. The cycle will repeat until no new disposables can be created, most likely because your system has run out of memory.
This will _not_ override the internal handling of PDF documents in Web browsers. This is typically okay, though: in-browser PDF viewers have a fairly good security record, especially when compared to non-browser PDF viewers. In particular, the attack surface of PDF viewing in Firefox is usually less than that of viewing an ordinary Web page.
Sometimes it can be useful to start an arbitrary program in a disposable. The disposable will stay running so long as the process which started the disposable has not exited. Some applications, such as GNOME Terminal, do not wait for the application to close before the process exits (details [here](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-issues/issues/2581#issuecomment-272664009)). Starting an arbitrary program can be done from an app qube by running
The Application Launcher has shortcuts for opening a terminal and a web browser in dedicated disposables, since these are very common tasks. The disposable will stay running so long as the process which started the disposable has not exited. Some applications, such as GNOME Terminal, do not wait for the application to close before the process exits (details [here](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-issues/issues/2581#issuecomment-272664009)). It is possible to start an arbitrary application in a disposable directly from dom0 by running:
The label color will be inherited from `<DISPOSABLE_TEMPLATE>`. (The disposable Application Launcher shortcut used for starting programs runs a very similar command to the one above.)
Suppose that the default disposable template for your `email` qube has no networking (e.g., so that untrusted attachments can't phone home). However, sometimes you want to open email links in disposables. Obviously, you can't use the default disposable template, since it has no networking, so you need to be able to specify a different disposable template. You can do that with this command from the `email` qube (as long as your RPC policies allow it):
This will create a new disposable based on `<ONLINE_DISPOSABLE_TEMPLATE>`, open the default web browser in that disposable, and navigate to `https://www.qubes-os.org`.
#### Example of RPC policies to allow this behavior
In dom0, add the following line at the beginning of the file `/etc/qubes-rpc/policy/qubes.OpenURL`
You can change the template used to generate the disposables, and change settings used in the disposable savefile. These changes will be reflected in every new disposable based on that template. Full instructions can be found [here](/doc/disposable-customization/).