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Folder based containers that isolate project environments with escapes to the host for development

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Workspaces using containers which can be executed against a project folder. Allowing the development environment to be separate from the host, while still providing sandbox escapes.

Aims

  • Provide an isolated per project or topic developer environment from the host
  • Automatic integration with audio, permissions, sound, SSH, windowing etc
  • Works on any system with pipewire, podman, ssh, wayland, x11 installed
  • Allow for development on immutable systems, such as Fedora Silverblue, and executing from inside distrobox
  • Provide a container environment for IDEs (such as VSCode) to attach to

Usage

Run the install.sh for an automated install, this creates the common and containers folders in ~/.local/share/com.ahayzen.folderbox and symlinks the folderbox script into ~/.local/bin.

# expects .folderbox folder with box definition
folderbox ~/path/to/project

# expects boxname in ~/.local/share/com.ahayzen.folderbox/containers
folderbox boxname ~/path/to/project

To rebuild or pull a container simply remove the container and run folderbox again, podman rmi folderbox-boxname.

See the sandbox folder for supported sandbox escapes.

Project Format

A folderbox is defined either in the .folderbox folder of the project or in the shared ~/.local/share/com.ahayzen.folderbox/containers folder.

Inside the folder a Containerfile.in or Containerfile is expected, this should setup the environment - if it's a .in file then note you can use #include "path/to/common/snippet". Note that common snippets are installed into ~/.local/share/com.ahayzen.folderbox/common.

See data/containers/example-cpp as an example of a container and data/common for snippets.

There also can be a runargs file, each line of this file are added as arguments to the podman run command. (eg runargs could container --volume=/custom/path:/custom/path which would then volume mount /custom/path).

my-project/
  .folderbox/
    Containerfile.in
    runargs
    ...other_context_items...
  src/

~/.local/share/com.ahayzen.folderbox/containers/my-env/
  Containerfile.in
  runargs
  ...other_context_items...

These would then be used with either folderbox /path/to/my-project or folderbox my-env /path/to/project, note that the my-env can be used with multiple projects.

Persistence

The $HOME folder in the container is stored for each folderbox in ~/.local/share/com.ahayzen.folderbox/persist/<boxname>-<cksum of project>-<basename of project>, this allows for user installs, repositories, configuration, and bash history to be preserved between sessions.

Note that the container itself is removed once it is stopped, so if packages or changes to the root of the container were made, these should be written into the Containerfile and the folderbox rebuilt.

If root folders do need to be persistent then mount them as volumes using the runargs file.

VSCode

Visual Studio Code can attach to the folderbox container by using the Remote Containers extension.

  • Install the extension ms-vscode-remote.remote-containers
  • Start the folderbox container
  • View -> Command Palette...
  • > Dev Containers: Attach to Running Container...
  • Pick your folderbox container

Flatpak

With the flatpak of Visual Studio Code this works in a similar way, just the path to podman needs to be set so that it can reach the host.

Run the following commands to create a podman-host command in your ~/.local/bin, this is the same as the distrobox setup for Visual Studio Code.

mkdir -p ~/.local/bin
sudo tee ~/.local/bin/podman-host <<EOF
#!/bin/bash
set -x
if [ "\$1" == "exec" ]; then
 # Remove 'exec' from \$@
 shift
 script='
     result_command="podman exec"
        for i in \$(printenv | grep "=" | grep -Ev " |\"" |
            grep -Ev "^(HOST|HOSTNAME|HOME|PATH|SHELL|USER|_)"); do

            result_command=\$result_command --env="\$i"
     done

        exec \${result_command} "\$@"
    '
 exec flatpak-spawn --host sh -c "\$script" - "\$@"
else
 exec flatpak-spawn --host podman "\$@"
fi
EOF

# ensure this file isn't writable, vscode has corrupted it before
sudo chmod 0500 ~/.local/bin/podman-host
sudo chown "$USER:$USER" ~/.local/bin/podman-host

Then in your Visual Studio Code settings set podman-host to the path.

"dev.containers.dockerPath": "${HOME}/.local/bin/podman-host",

Other projects

There are other projects that are similar to folderbox but with different goals, folderbox tries to keep your projects isolated while integrating with the host.

Project Declarative Sandbox Custom Sandbox Control Packaging System Default Folder Access
devbox Yes None - Nix All
distrobox No Weak Minimal OCI Home
folderbox Yes Partial Raw OCI Directory
x11docker Yes Strong Yes OCI None
  • devbox - "Instant, easy, and predictable development environments"
    • Uses Nix packaging to provide packages but doesn't isolate file access from the host, whereas folderbox is isolated to project folders
  • distrobox - "Use any linux distribution inside your terminal. Enable both backward and forward compatibility with software and freedom to use whatever distribution you're more comfortable with."
    • Tries to create a terminal that has access to the whole of $HOME and feels like it is running as the host, whereas folderbox is isolated to project folders
  • x11docker - "Run GUI applications and desktops in docker and podman containers. Focus on security."
    • Tries to isolate applications with opt-in confinement escapes, whereas folderbox enables all confinement escapes by default

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Folder based containers that isolate project environments with escapes to the host for development

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