# Running containerd as a non-root user A non-root user can execute containerd by using [`user_namespaces(7)`](http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/user_namespaces.7.html). For example [RootlessKit](https://github.com/rootless-containers/rootlesskit) can be used for setting up a user namespace (along with mount namespace and optionally network namespace). Please refer to RootlessKit documentation for further information. See also https://rootlesscontaine.rs/ . ## "Easy way" The easiest way is to use `containerd-rootless-setuptool.sh` included in [containerd/nerdctl](https://github.com/containerd/nerdctl). ```console $ containerd-rootless-setuptool.sh install $ nerdctl run -d --restart=always --name nginx -p 8080:80 nginx:alpine ``` See https://github.com/containerd/nerdctl/blob/master/docs/rootless.md for the further information. ## "Hard way"
Click here to show the "hard way"

### Daemon ```console $ rootlesskit --net=slirp4netns --copy-up=/etc --copy-up=/run \ --state-dir=/run/user/1001/rootlesskit-containerd \ sh -c "rm -f /run/containerd; exec containerd -c config.toml" ``` * `--net=slirp4netns --copy-up=/etc` is only required when you want to unshare network namespaces. See [RootlessKit documentation](https://github.com/rootless-containers/rootlesskit/blob/v0.14.1/docs/network.md) for the further information about the network drivers. * `--copy-up=/DIR` mounts a writable tmpfs on `/DIR` with symbolic links to the files under the `/DIR` on the parent namespace so that the user can add/remove files under `/DIR` in the mount namespace. `--copy-up=/etc` and `--copy-up=/run` are needed on typical setup. Depending on the containerd plugin configuration, you may also need to add more `--copy-up` options. * `rm -f /run/containerd` removes the "copied-up" symbolic link to `/run/containerd` on the parent namespace (if exists), which cannot be accessed by non-root users. The actual `/run/containerd` directory on the host is not affected. * `--state-dir` is set to a random directory under `/tmp` if unset. RootlessKit writes the PID to a file named `child_pid` under this directory. * You need to provide `config.toml` with your own path configuration. e.g. ```toml version = 2 root = "/home/penguin/.local/share/containerd" state = "/run/user/1001/containerd" [grpc] address = "/run/user/1001/containerd/containerd.sock" ``` ### Client A client program such as `ctr` also needs to be executed inside the daemon namespaces. ```console $ nsenter -U --preserve-credentials -m -n -t $(cat /run/user/1001/rootlesskit-containerd/child_pid) $ export CONTAINERD_ADDRESS=/run/user/1001/containerd/containerd.sock $ export CONTAINERD_SNAPSHOTTER=native $ ctr images pull docker.io/library/ubuntu:latest $ ctr run -t --rm --fifo-dir /tmp/foo-fifo --cgroup "" docker.io/library/ubuntu:latest foo ``` * The `overlayfs` snapshotter does not work inside user namespaces before kernel 5.11, except on Ubuntu and Debian kernels. However, [`fuse-overlayfs` snapshotter](https://github.com/containerd/fuse-overlayfs-snapshotter) can be used instead if running kernel >= 4.18. * Enabling cgroup requires cgroup v2 and systemd, e.g. `ctr run --cgroup "user.slice:foo:bar" --runc-systemd-cgroup ...` . See also [runc documentation](https://github.com/opencontainers/runc/blob/v1.0.0-rc93/docs/cgroup-v2.md).