Docker (in)security to the Rescue

1 minute read

How Not to Diff Config Files

While cleaning up some new config files under /etc I accidentally deleted my /etc/shadow file (aka password file). Oh shit. Note that I typed rm not meld as intended. Oh snap. Quick! Try to recover if sudo will let me back in without a password:

$ sudo rm /etc/shadow /etc/shadow.pacnew
$ sudo su -
su: Authentication service cannot retrieve authentication info

Fail. Of course I can’t ssh back in as root because that’s locked down.

I prepared for a reboot and an adventure into single user mode. When suddenly my annoyance with Docker security returned to the rescue!

Docker and Backups to the Rescue

Why don’t I just mount my root file system and run a container as the root user with a volume mount of my broke file system?

$ docker run -v /:/wtf --rm -it ubuntu cp /wtf/mnt/backup/core/etc/shadow /wtf/etc/shadow

Done. What did I learn? docker >> sudo

If I didn’t have a back-up I could just use the Docker container to write a new shadow file.

Case for Backups

Who doesn’t keep back-ups these days? Back-ups primarily protect me from sketchy btrfs incidents with the second biggest offender being myself when armed with a keyboard. Somewhere at the end of the spectrum is hardware failure and physical loss.

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