I’ve got a long running, daemonized Python process that uses subprocess to spawn new child processes when certain events occur. The long running process is started by a user with super user privileges. I need the child processes it spawns to run as a different user (e.g., “nobody”) while retaining the super user privileges for the parent process.
I’m currently using
su -m nobody -c <program to execute as a child>
but this seems heavyweight and doesn’t die very cleanly.
Is there a way to accomplish this programmatically instead of using su? I’m looking at the os.set*uid methods, but the doc in the Python std lib is quite sparse in that area.
Since you mentioned a daemon, I can conclude that you are running on a Unix-like operating system. This matters, because how to do this depends on the kind operating system. This answer applies only to Unix, including Linux, and Mac OS X.
subprocess.Popen will use the fork/exec model to use your preexec_fn. That is equivalent to calling os.fork(), preexec_fn() (in the child process), and os.exec() (in the child process) in that order. Since os.setuid, os.setgid, and preexec_fn are all only supported on Unix, this solution is not portable to other kinds of operating systems.
The following code is a script (Python 2.4+) that demonstrates how to do this:
You can invoke this script like this:
Start as root…
Become non-root in a child process…
When the child process exits, we go back to root in parent …
Note that having the parent process wait around for the child process to exit is for demonstration purposes only. I did this so that the parent and child could share a terminal. A daemon would have no terminal and would seldom wait around for a child process to exit.