Questions tagged [jail]

"The FreeBSD jail mechanism is an implementation of operating system-level virtualization that allows administrators to partition a FreeBSD-based computer system into several independent mini-systems called jails." source: Wikipedia

A jail is characterized by four elements:

  • A directory subtree -- the starting point from which a jail is entered. Once inside the jail, a process is not permitted to escape outside of this subtree. Traditional security issues which plagued the original chroot(2) design will not affect FreeBSD jails.

  • A hostname -- the hostname which will be used within the jail. Jails are mainly used for hosting network services, therefore having a descriptive hostname for each jail can really help the system administrator.

  • An IP address -- this will be assigned to the jail and cannot be changed in any way during the jail's life span. The IP address of a jail is usually an alias address for an existing network interface, but this is not strictly necessary.

  • A command -- the path name of an executable to run inside the jail. This is relative to the root directory of the jail environment, and may vary a lot, depending on the type of the specific jail environment.

source: https://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/jails.html#jails-synopsis

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More than one php jail

I coulnd't find anything on the internet how to create seperate php jails so I can create a "webspace" directory for someone in /var/www/html/ and their scripts cannot leave their webspace directory so that that folder is the root for php scripts in…
shobor
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