One-command development sandboxes on Firecracker microVMs. https://git.thaloco.com/thaloco/banger/
Find a file
Thales Maciel b1fbf695ca
ssh-config: narrow the legacy-dir cleanup so it can't delete a user key
Bug: syncVMSSHClientConfig did os.RemoveAll on $ConfigDir/ssh every
daemon Open. The intent was to migrate off the pre-opt-in layout,
where banger used to write $ConfigDir/ssh/ssh_config. But a user who
sets ssh_key_path = "~/.config/banger/ssh/id_ed25519" in config.toml
has their key live exactly in that dir — and the scrub deletes it
along with every other file in the tree.

This is the same class of bug that cost the default key until
ebe6517 moved it to StateDir, but that fix was scoped to the default
path. A configured ssh_key_path pointed under the legacy dir still
dies.

Fix: replace os.RemoveAll with a narrow two-step cleanup:

 1. Skip the cleanup entirely when the configured ssh_key_path
    resolves under the legacy dir. A user who pointed banger at a
    key there must keep the enclosing directory.
 2. Otherwise, os.Remove the specific legacy file ($ConfigDir/ssh/
    ssh_config) and then os.Remove the directory. The second
    os.Remove fails with ENOTEMPTY if the dir still holds anything
    (e.g. a user-managed sibling file we don't own). Both errors
    are swallowed — this is best-effort migration, not a hard
    failure.

Tests pin all three paths: user key under legacy dir survives,
legacy dir empties and is removed when the user moved on, and a
user-managed sibling file in the legacy dir is preserved.

Also fix stale doc claims in README.md and AGENTS.md — both still
pointed at the old ~/.config/banger/ssh/id_ed25519 default, which
moved to ~/.local/state/banger/ssh/id_ed25519 in ebe6517.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-22 16:31:07 -03:00
cmd cli: restrict ExitCodeError unwrap to the CLI's own type 2026-04-17 15:37:47 -03:00
configs Generic kernel + init= boot path for OCI-pulled images 2026-04-16 20:12:56 -03:00
docs docs: resync package docs, AGENTS, and kernel-catalog with current code 2026-04-22 13:01:11 -03:00
images/golden supply chain: verify signatures and pins across image + kernel builds 2026-04-21 19:38:13 -03:00
internal ssh-config: narrow the legacy-dir cleanup so it can't delete a user key 2026-04-22 16:31:07 -03:00
scripts supply chain: verify signatures and pins across image + kernel builds 2026-04-21 19:38:13 -03:00
.gitignore remove experimental web UI 2026-04-19 14:28:08 -03:00
AGENTS.md ssh-config: narrow the legacy-dir cleanup so it can't delete a user key 2026-04-22 16:31:07 -03:00
go.mod Phase 1: imagepull package — pull, flatten, ext4 2026-04-16 17:22:13 -03:00
go.sum Phase 1: imagepull package — pull, flatten, ext4 2026-04-16 17:22:13 -03:00
LICENSE Add LICENSE, update .gitignore, add security note to README 2026-04-14 16:54:33 -03:00
Makefile drop unused bench-create script + Makefile target 2026-04-20 13:33:09 -03:00
README.md ssh-config: narrow the legacy-dir cleanup so it can't delete a user key 2026-04-22 16:31:07 -03:00

banger

One-command development sandboxes on Firecracker microVMs.

Quick start

make install
banger vm run --name sandbox

That's it. banger vm run auto-pulls the default golden image (Debian bookworm with systemd, sshd, Docker CE, git, jq, mise, and the usual dev tools) and kernel, creates a VM, starts it, and drops you into an interactive ssh session. First run takes a couple minutes (bundle download); subsequent vm runs are seconds.

Requirements

  • x86_64 / amd64 Linux — arm64 is not supported today. The companion binaries, the published kernel catalog, and the OCI import path all assume linux/amd64. banger doctor surfaces this as a failing check on other architectures.
  • /dev/kvm
  • sudo
  • Firecracker on PATH, or firecracker_bin set in config
  • host tools checked by banger doctor

Build + install

make install

Installs banger (CLI), bangerd (daemon, auto-starts on first CLI call), and banger-vsock-agent (companion, under $PREFIX/lib/banger/).

To remove the binaries (and stop the daemon):

make uninstall

User data stays in place — the target prints the paths so you can rm -rf them if you want a full purge:

  • ~/.config/banger/ — config, managed SSH keys
  • ~/.local/state/banger/ — VM records, rootfs images, kernels, daemon DB/log
  • ~/.cache/banger/ — OCI layer cache

Shell completion

banger ships completion scripts for bash, zsh, fish, and powershell. Tab-completion covers subcommands, flags, and live resource names (VM, image, kernel) looked up from the daemon. With the daemon down, resource completion silently returns nothing — no file-completion fallback.

# bash (system-wide)
banger completion bash | sudo tee /etc/bash_completion.d/banger

# zsh (user-local; ~/.zfunc must be on fpath)
banger completion zsh > ~/.zfunc/_banger

# fish
banger completion fish > ~/.config/fish/completions/banger.fish

banger completion --help shows the shell-specific loading recipes.

vm run

One command, four common shapes:

banger vm run                          # bare sandbox — drops into ssh
banger vm run ./repo                   # workspace at /root/repo — drops into ssh
banger vm run ./repo -- make test      # workspace + run command, exits with its status
banger vm run --rm -- script.sh        # ephemeral: VM is deleted on exit
  • Bare mode gives you a clean shell.
  • Workspace mode (path given) copies the repo's git-tracked files into /root/repo and kicks off a best-effort mise tooling bootstrap from the repo's .mise.toml / .tool-versions. Log: /root/.cache/banger/vm-run-tooling-<repo>.log. Untracked files (including local .env, scratch notes, credentials that aren't gitignored) are skipped by default — pass --include-untracked to also ship them. Pass --dry-run to print the exact file list and exit without creating a VM.
  • Command mode (-- <cmd>) runs the command in the guest; exit code propagates through banger.

Disconnecting from an interactive session leaves the VM running. Use vm stop / vm delete to clean up — or pass --rm so the VM auto-deletes once the session / command exits.

--branch, --from, --include-untracked, and --dry-run apply only to workspace mode. --rm skips the delete when the initial ssh wait times out, so a wedged sshd leaves the VM alive for banger vm logs inspection.

Hostnames: reaching <vm>.vm

banger's daemon runs a DNS server for the .vm zone. With host-side DNS routing you can curl http://sandbox.vm:3000 from anywhere on the host — no copy-pasting guest IPs. On systemd-resolved hosts this is auto-wired; everywhere else there's a short recipe. See docs/dns-routing.md.

Optional: ssh <name>.vm shortcut

banger vm ssh <name> works out of the box. If you'd also like plain ssh sandbox.vm from any terminal (using banger's key + known_hosts), opt in:

banger ssh-config --install    # adds `Include ~/.config/banger/ssh_config`
                               # to ~/.ssh/config in a marker-fenced block
banger ssh-config --uninstall  # reverse it
banger ssh-config              # show the include line to paste manually

banger never touches ~/.ssh/config on its own — the daemon keeps its file fresh at ~/.config/banger/ssh_config; whether and how it's pulled into your SSH config is up to you.

Image catalog

banger image pull <name> fetches a pre-built bundle from the embedded catalog. vm run calls this for you on demand.

Today's catalog:

Name What it is
debian-bookworm Debian 12 slim + sshd + docker + dev tools

See docs/image-catalog.md for the bundle format and how to publish a new entry.

Config

Config lives at ~/.config/banger/config.toml. All keys optional.

Most commonly set:

  • default_image_name — image used when --image is omitted (default debian-bookworm, auto-pulled from the catalog if not local).
  • ssh_key_path — host SSH key. If unset, banger creates ~/.local/state/banger/ssh/id_ed25519.
  • firecracker_bin — override the auto-resolved PATH lookup.

Full key list in internal/config/config.go.

vm_defaults — sizing for new VMs

Every vm run / vm create prints a spec: line up front showing the vCPU, RAM, and disk the VM will get. When the flags aren't set, those values come from:

  1. [vm_defaults] in config (if present, wins).
  2. Host-derived heuristics (roughly: cpus/4 capped at 4, ram/8 capped at 8 GiB, 8 GiB disk).
  3. Built-in constants (floor).

banger doctor prints the effective defaults with provenance.

[vm_defaults]
vcpu = 4
memory_mib = 4096
disk_size = "16G"

All keys optional — omit whichever you want banger to decide.

file_sync — host → guest file copies

[[file_sync]]
host = "~/.aws"          # whole directory, recursive
guest = "~/.aws"

[[file_sync]]
host = "~/.config/gh/hosts.yml"
guest = "~/.config/gh/hosts.yml"

[[file_sync]]
host = "~/bin/my-script"
guest = "~/bin/my-script"
mode = "0755"            # optional; default 0600 for files

Runs at vm create time. Each entry copies hostguest onto the VM's work disk (mounted at /root in the guest). Guest paths must live under ~/ or /root/.... Default is no entries — add the ones you want.

Advanced

The common path is vm run. Power-user flows (vm create, OCI pull for arbitrary images, image register, manual workspace prepare) are documented in docs/advanced.md.

Security

Guest VMs are single-user development sandboxes, not multi-tenant servers. Each guest's sshd is configured with:

PermitRootLogin prohibit-password
PubkeyAuthentication yes
PasswordAuthentication no
KbdInteractiveAuthentication no
AuthorizedKeysFile /root/.ssh/authorized_keys

The host SSH key is the only authentication mechanism. StrictModes is on (sshd's default); banger normalises /root, /root/.ssh, and authorized_keys perms at provisioning time so the default passes.

VMs are reachable only through the host bridge network (172.16.0.0/24 by default). Do not expose the bridge interface or guest IPs to an untrusted network.

Further reading