The Qube worker can run either as a daemon (a "system service" on Windows), or a user process. When it runs as a daemon, it's said to be running in service mode. When it's run as a user process, it's said to be running in Desktop User mode.
Service mode vs. Desktop User mode
Service mode:
- the worker process is usually started at system boot time and runs as long as the system is up
- the worker process runs as either a Windows service or a daemon owned by the root user on OS X and linux.
- the worker process will run jobs under a user other than root or the system service. This user is determined by the proxy_execution_mode value:
proxy_execution_mode = proxy
means it will always authenticate as the user defined in proxy_account.proxy_execution_mode = user
means it will always authenticate as the user who submitted the job.
Note the worker process will be unable to access screenspace on Windows and OS X; no processes will be able to render to a hardware buffer, applications that can only run by displaying their full GUI will usually not be able to start, etc.
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- the worker process is started by a logged in user, usually when that user logs in, and is killed when the user logs out
- the worker process is owned by the logged in user
- the worker process does not re-authenticate, and all jobs are run by the user who owns the worker process
- the worker process has full access to the screenspace
Worker authentication when running in Service mode
When the Worker launches a remote job as dispatched by the Supervisor, it can potentially create several processes, all controlled by the Worker. Since Qube is designed to emulate a user executing jobs on a remote host, the Worker will have to run these processes as some user.
Unix & OS X
Under Unix-based operating systems, the Worker does a setuid in order to switch user identities before starting the process.
Windows
On Windows, this is handled quite differently. Under Windows, any process attempting to impersonate another user will have to provide certain security information, including the user's encrypted password.
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The Worker creates an authentication token when it creates a new process, and the Windows Operating System then permits the process access to the user's environment and files. For this reason, if running with |
See Also
How to switch a worker from Service mode to Desktop User mode
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