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How to make any file in a TemplateBasedVM persistent using bind-dirs
What are bind-dirs?
With bind-dirs any arbitrary files or folders can be made persistent in TemplateBasedVMs.
What is it useful for?
In a TemplateBasedVM all of the file system comes from the template except /home
, /usr/local
, and /rw
.
This means that changes in the rest of the filesystem are lost when the TemplateBasedVM is shutdown.
bind-dirs provides a mechanism whereby files usually taken from the template can be persisted across reboots.
For example, in Whonix, Tor's data dir /var/lib/tor has been made persistent in the TemplateBased ProxyVM sys-whonix. In this way sys-whonix can benefit from the Tor anonymity feature 'persistent Tor entry guards' but does not have to be a StandaloneVM.
How to use bind-dirs.sh?
Inside your TemplateBasedVM.
-
Make sure folder
/rw/config/qubes-bind-dirs.d
exists.sudo mkdir -p /rw/config/qubes-bind-dirs.d
-
Create a file
/rw/config/qubes-bind-dirs.d/50_user.conf
with root rights inside a TemplateBasedVM. -
Edit the file 50_user.conf to append a folder or file name to the
binds
variable. (In the following example we are using folder/var/lib/tor
. You can replace that name with a folder or file name of your choice.)binds+=( '/var/lib/tor' )
Multiple entries are possible, each on a separate line.
-
Save.
-
Reboot the TemplateBasedVM.
-
Done.
If you added for example folder /var/lib/tor
to the binds
variable, from now on any files within that folder will persist reboots. If you added for example file /etc/tor/torrc
to the binds
variable, from now on any modifications to that file will persist reboots.
Other Configuration Folders
/usr/lib/qubes-bind-dirs.d
(lowest priority, for packages)/etc/qubes-bind-dirs.d
(intermediate priority, for template wide configuration)/rw/config/qubes-bind-dirs.d
(highest priority, for per VM configuration)
How does it work?
bind-dirs.sh is called on startup of a TemplateBasedVM, and configuration files in the configuration folders above are parsed to build a bash array. Files or folders identified in the array are copied to /rw/bind-dirs if they do not already exist there, and are then bind mounted over the original files/folders.
Creation of the file and folders in /rw/bind-dirs should be automatic the first time the TemplateBasedVM is restarted after configuration.
If you want to circumvent this process, you can create the relevant filestructure under /rw/bind-dirs and make any changes at the same time that you perform the configuration, before reboot.
Limitations
- Files that exist in the TemplateVM root image cannot be deleted in the TemplateBasedVMs root image using bind-dirs.sh.
- Re-running
sudo /usr/lib/qubes/bind-dirs.sh
without a previoussudo /usr/lib/qubes/bind-dirs.sh umount
does not work. - Running
sudo /usr/lib/qubes/bind-dirs.sh umount
after boot (before shutdown) is probably not sane and nothing can be done about that. - Many editors create a temporary file and copy it over the original file. If you have bind mounted an individual file this will break the mount. Any changes you make will not survive a reboot. If you think it likely you will want to edit a file, then either include the parent directory in bind-dirs rather than the file, or perform the file operation on the file in /rw/bind-dirs.
- Some files are altered when a qube boots - e.g.
/etc/hosts
. If you try to use bind-dirs on such files you may break your qube in unpredictable ways.
You can add persistent rules to /etc/hosts
file using script /rw/config/rc.local
that is designed to override configuration in /etc, starting services and etc. For example, to make software inside some TemplateBasedVM resolving the domain example.com
as 127.0.0.1
open /rw/config/rc.local
inside this TemplateBasedVM and add:
echo '127.0.0.1 example.com' >> /etc/hosts
After every boot of the TemplateBasedVM rc.local
script will add line 127.0.0.1 example.com
to /etc/hosts
file and the software inside the TemplateBasedVM will resolve domain example.com
accordingly. You cam add several rules to /etc/hosts
the same way.
How to remove binds from bind-dirs.sh?
binds
is actually just a bash variable (an array) and the bind-dirs.sh configuration folders are source
d as bash snippets in lexical order.
Therefore if you wanted to remove an existing entry from the binds
array, you could do that by using a lexically higher configuration file.
For example, if you wanted to make /var/lib/tor
non-persistant in sys-whonix
without manually editing /usr/lib/qubes-bind-dirs.d/40_qubes-whonix.conf
, you could use the following.
/rw/config/qubes-bind-dirs.d/50_user.conf
binds=( "${binds[@]/'/var/lib/tor'}" )
(Editing /usr/lib/qubes-bind-dirs.d/40_qubes-whonix.conf
directly is strongly discouraged, since such changes get lost when that file is changed in the package on upgrades.)