Its even worse when you force Firefox to use wayland its icon doesn’t even show.
Edit: Oh since everyone now is confused; I only have the flatpak version of Firefox installed yet it doesn’t use the pinned icon and doesn’t even use the firefox icon under wayland at all.
bwrap
is so much better without Flatpak.To start you off:
$ bwrap --dev-bind / / --tmpfs ~ bash
This basically gives you a shell in a clean virtual home directory (but no meaningful security improvement yet). You can test new builds of software as if you have only the default settings. If you need to access files, move them to
/tmp/
.To see the clean virtual home directory, replace
--tmpfs ~
with--bind "$(mktemp -d)" ~
. You can browse it wheremktemp
puts it (usually/tmp/*
).To start to lock down security, replace the
--dev-bind
with--ro-bind
, and add various--new-session
,--uid
/--gid
, and--unshare-all
/--unshare-*
flags. You can run untrusted and semi-trusted/less-trusted applications with less security risk this way (as long as you’re aware of pitfalls, such as the/tmp/.X11-unix/X0
socket and other possible avenues of escape).To block network access, use
--unshare-net
or--unshare-all
. To virtualize/dev
and/proc
, use--dev /dev
and--proc /proc
.Some programs might need
--dev-bind /dev/dri /dev/dri
for graphics driver access, or similar constructs.