YARN-8520. Document best practice for user management. Contributed by Eric Yang
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@ -296,7 +296,8 @@ owner as the container user. If the application owner is not a valid user
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in the Docker image, the application will fail. The container user is specified
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in the Docker image, the application will fail. The container user is specified
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by the user's UID. If the user's UID is different between the NodeManager host
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by the user's UID. If the user's UID is different between the NodeManager host
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and the Docker image, the container may be launched as the wrong user or may
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and the Docker image, the container may be launched as the wrong user or may
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fail to launch because the UID does not exist.
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fail to launch because the UID does not exist. See
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[User Management in Docker Container](#user-management) section for more details.
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Second, the Docker image must have whatever is expected by the application
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Second, the Docker image must have whatever is expected by the application
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in order to execute. In the case of Hadoop (MapReduce or Spark), the Docker
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in order to execute. In the case of Hadoop (MapReduce or Spark), the Docker
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@ -412,6 +413,197 @@ the environment variable would be set to "/sys/fs/cgroup:/sys/fs/cgroup:ro".
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The destination path is not restricted, "/sys/fs/cgroup:/cgroup:ro" would also
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The destination path is not restricted, "/sys/fs/cgroup:/cgroup:ro" would also
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be valid given the example admin whitelist.
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be valid given the example admin whitelist.
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<a href="#user-management"></a>User Management in Docker Container
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-----------------------------------
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YARN's Docker container support launches container processes using the uid:gid
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identity of the user, as defined on the NodeManager host. User and group name
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mismatches between the NodeManager host and container can lead to permission
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issues, failed container launches, or even security holes. Centralizing user and
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group management for both hosts and containers greatly reduces these risks. When
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running containerized applications on YARN, it is necessary to understand which
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uid:gid pair will be used to launch the container's process.
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As an example of what is meant by uid:gid pair, consider the following. By
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default, in non-secure mode, YARN will launch processes as the user `nobody`
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(see the table at the bottom of
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[Using CGroups with YARN](./NodeManagerCgroups.html) for how the run as user is
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determined in non-secure mode). On CentOS based systems, the `nobody` user's uid
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is `99` and the `nobody` group is `99`. As a result, YARN will call `docker run`
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with `--user 99:99`. If the `nobody` user does not have the uid `99` in the
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container, the launch may fail or have unexpected results.
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One exception to this rule is the use of Privileged Docker containers.
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Privileged containers will not set the uid:gid pair when launching the container
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and will honor the USER or GROUP entries in the Dockerfile. This allows running
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privileged containers as any user which has security implications. Please
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understand these implications before enabling Privileged Docker containers.
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There are many ways to address user and group management. Docker, by default,
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will authenticate users against `/etc/passwd` (and `/etc/shadow`) within the
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container. Using the default `/etc/passwd` supplied in the Docker image is
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unlikely to contain the appropriate user entries and will result in launch
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failures. It is highly recommended to centralize user and group management.
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Several approaches to user and group management are outlined below.
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### Static user management
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The most basic approach to managing user and groups is to modify the user and
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group within the Docker image. This approach is only viable in non-secure mode
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where all container processes will be launched as a single known user, for
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instance `nobody`. In this case, the only requirement is that the uid:gid pair
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of the nobody user and group must match between the host and container. On a
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CentOS based system, this means that the nobody user in the container needs the
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UID `99` and the nobody group in the container needs GID `99`.
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One approach to change the UID and GID is by leveraging `usermod` and
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`groupmod`. The following sets the correct UID and GID for the nobody
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user/group.
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```
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usermod -u 99 nobody
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groupmod -g 99 nobody
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```
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This approach is not recommended beyond testing given the inflexibility to add
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users.
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### Bind mounting
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When organizations already have automation in place to create local users on
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each system, it may be appropriate to bind mount /etc/passwd and /etc/group
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into the container as an alternative to modifying the container image directly.
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To enable the ability to bind mount /etc/passwd and /etc/group, update
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`docker.allowed.ro-mounts` in `container-executor.cfg` to include those paths.
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When submitting the application, `YARN_CONTAINER_RUNTIME_DOCKER_MOUNTS` will
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need to include `/etc/passwd:/etc/passwd:ro` and `/etc/group:/etc/group:ro`.
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There are several challenges with this bind mount approach that need to be
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considered.
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1. Any users and groups defined in the image will be overwritten by the host's users and groups
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2. No users and groups can be added once the container is started, as /etc/passwd and /etc/group are immutible in the container. Do not mount these read-write as it can render the host inoperable.
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This approach is not recommended beyond testing given the inflexibility to
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modify running containers.
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### SSSD
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An alternative approach that allows for centrally managing users and groups is
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SSSD. System Security Services Daemon (SSSD) provides access to different
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identity and authentication providers, such as LDAP or Active Directory.
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The traditional schema for Linux authentication is as follows:
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```
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application -> libpam -> pam_authenticate -> pam_unix.so -> /etc/passwd
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```
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If we use SSSD for user lookup, it becomes:
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```
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application -> libpam -> pam_authenticate -> pam_sss.so -> SSSD -> pam_unix.so -> /etc/passwd
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```
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We can bind-mount the UNIX sockets SSSD communicates over into the container.
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This will allow the SSSD client side libraries to authenticate against the SSSD
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running on the host. As a result, user information does not need to exist in
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/etc/passwd of the docker image and will instead be serviced by SSSD.
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Step by step configuration for host and container:
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1. Host config
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- Install packages
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```
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# yum -y install sssd-common sssd-proxy
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```
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- create a PAM service for the container.
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```
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# cat /etc/pam.d/sss_proxy
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auth required pam_unix.so
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account required pam_unix.so
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password required pam_unix.so
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session required pam_unix.so
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```
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- create SSSD config file, /etc/sssd/sssd.conf
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Please note that the permissions must be 0600 and the file must be owned by root:root.
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```
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# cat /etc/sssd/sssd/conf
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[sssd]
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services = nss,pam
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config_file_version = 2
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domains = proxy
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[nss]
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[pam]
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[domain/proxy]
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id_provider = proxy
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proxy_lib_name = files
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proxy_pam_target = sss_proxy
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```
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- start sssd
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```
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# systemctl start sssd
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```
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- verify a user can be retrieved with sssd
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```
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# getent passwd -s sss localuser
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```
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2. Container setup
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It's important to bind-mount the /var/lib/sss/pipes directory from the host to the container since SSSD UNIX sockets are located there.
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```
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-v /var/lib/sss/pipes:/var/lib/sss/pipes:rw
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```
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3. Container config
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All the steps below should be executed on the container itself.
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- Install only the sss client libraries
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```
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# yum -y install sssd-client
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```
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- make sure sss is configured for passwd and group databases in
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```
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/etc/nsswitch.conf
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```
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- configure the PAM service that the application uses to call into SSSD
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```
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# cat /etc/pam.d/system-auth
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#%PAM-1.0
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# This file is auto-generated.
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# User changes will be destroyed the next time authconfig is run.
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auth required pam_env.so
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auth sufficient pam_unix.so try_first_pass nullok
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auth sufficient pam_sss.so forward_pass
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auth required pam_deny.so
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account required pam_unix.so
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account [default=bad success=ok user_unknown=ignore] pam_sss.so
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account required pam_permit.so
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password requisite pam_pwquality.so try_first_pass local_users_only retry=3 authtok_type=
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password sufficient pam_unix.so try_first_pass use_authtok nullok sha512 shadow
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password sufficient pam_sss.so use_authtok
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password required pam_deny.so
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session optional pam_keyinit.so revoke
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session required pam_limits.so
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-session optional pam_systemd.so
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session [success=1 default=ignore] pam_succeed_if.so service in crond quiet use_uid
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session required pam_unix.so
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session optional pam_sss.so
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```
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- Save the docker image and use the docker image as base image for your applications.
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- test the docker image launched in YARN environment.
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```
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$ id
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uid=5000(localuser) gid=5000(localuser) groups=5000(localuser),1337(hadoop)
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```
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Privileged Container Security Consideration
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Privileged Container Security Consideration
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-------------------------------------------
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-------------------------------------------
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