man
1 flatpak-run
FLATPAK RUN(1) flatpak run FLATPAK RUN(1)
NAME
flatpak-run - Run an application or open a shell in a runtime
SYNOPSIS
flatpak run [OPTION...] REF [ARG...]
DESCRIPTION
If REF names an installed application, flatpak runs the application in
a sandboxed environment. Extra arguments are passed on to the
application.
If REF names a runtime, a shell is opened in the runtime. This is
useful for development and testing.
By default, flatpak will look for the application or runtime in all
per-user and system installations. This can be overridden with the
--user, --system and --installation options.
flatpak creates a sandboxed environment for the application to run in
by mounting the right runtime at /usr and a writable directory at /var,
whose content is preserved between application runs. The application
itself is mounted at /app.
The details of the sandboxed environment are controlled by the
application metadata and various options like --share and --socket that
are passed to the run command: Access is allowed if it was requested
either in the application metadata file or with an option and the user
hasn't overridden it.
The remaining arguments are passed to the command that gets run in the
sandboxed environment. See the --file-forwarding option for handling of
file arguments.
Environment variables are generally passed on to the sandboxed
application, with certain exceptions. The application metadata can
override environment variables, as well as the --env option. Apart from
that, Flatpak always unsets or overrides the following variables, since
their session values are likely to interfere with the functioning of
the sandbox:
PATH
LD_LIBRARY_PATH
XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
XDG_DATA_DIRS
SHELL
TMPDIR
PYTHONPATH
PERLLIB
PERL5LIB
XCURSOR_PATH
Flatpak also overrides the XDG environment variables to point sandboxed
applications at their writable filesystem locations below
~/.var/app/$APPID/:
XDG_DATA_HOME
XDG_CONFIG_HOME
XDG_CACHE_HOME
The host values of these variables are made available inside the
sandbox via these HOST_-prefixed variables:
HOST_XDG_DATA_HOME
HOST_XDG_CONFIG_HOME
HOST_XDG_CACHE_HOME
Flatpak sets the environment variable FLATPAK_ID to the application ID
of the running app.
Flatpak also bind-mounts as read-only the host's /etc/os-release (if
available, or /usr/lib/os-release as a fallback) to
/run/host/os-release in accordance with the os-release
specification[1].
If parental controls support is enabled, flatpak will check the current
user's parental controls settings, and will refuse to run an app if it
is blocklisted for the current user.
OPTIONS
The following options are understood:
-h, --help
Show help options and exit.
--user
Look for the application and runtime in per-user installations.
--system
Look for the application and runtime in the default system-wide
installations.
--installation=NAME
Look for the application and runtime in the system-wide
installation specified by NAME among those defined in
/etc/flatpak/installations.d/. Using --installation=default is
equivalent to using --system.
-v, --verbose
Print debug information during command processing.
--ostree-verbose
Print OSTree debug information during command processing.
--arch=ARCH
The architecture to run. See flatpak --supported-arches for
architectures supported by the host.
--command=COMMAND
The command to run instead of the one listed in the application
metadata.
--cwd=DIR
The directory to run the command in. Note that this must be a
directory inside the sandbox.
--branch=BRANCH
The branch to use.
-d, --devel
Use the devel runtime that is specified in the application metadata
instead of the regular runtime, and use a seccomp profile that is
less likely to break development tools.
--runtime=RUNTIME
Use this runtime instead of the one that is specified in the
application metadata. This is a full tuple, like for example
org.freedesktop.Sdk/x86_64/1.2, but partial tuples are allowed. Any
empty or missing parts are filled in with the corresponding values
specified by the app.
--runtime-version=VERSION
Use this version of the runtime instead of the one that is
specified in the application metadata. This overrides any version
specified with the --runtime option.
--share=SUBSYSTEM
Share a subsystem with the host session. This overrides the Context
section from the application metadata. SUBSYSTEM must be one of:
network, ipc. This option can be used multiple times.
--unshare=SUBSYSTEM
Don't share a subsystem with the host session. This overrides the
Context section from the application metadata. SUBSYSTEM must be
one of: network, ipc. This option can be used multiple times.
--socket=SOCKET
Expose a well known socket to the application. This overrides to
the Context section from the application metadata. SOCKET must be
one of: x11, wayland, fallback-x11, pulseaudio, system-bus,
session-bus, ssh-auth, pcsc, cups. This option can be used multiple
times.
--nosocket=SOCKET
Don't expose a well known socket to the application. This overrides
to the Context section from the application metadata. SOCKET must
be one of: x11, wayland, fallback-x11, pulseaudio, system-bus,
session-bus, ssh-auth, pcsc, cups. This option can be used multiple
times.
--device=DEVICE
Expose a device to the application. This overrides to the Context
section from the application metadata. DEVICE must be one of: dri,
kvm, shm, all. This option can be used multiple times.
--nodevice=DEVICE
Don't expose a device to the application. This overrides to the
Context section from the application metadata. DEVICE must be one
of: dri, kvm, shm, all. This option can be used multiple times.
--allow=FEATURE
Allow access to a specific feature. This overrides to the Context
section from the application metadata. FEATURE must be one of:
devel, multiarch, bluetooth. This option can be used multiple
times.
See flatpak-build-finish(1) for the meaning of the various
features.
--disallow=FEATURE
Disallow access to a specific feature. This overrides to the
Context section from the application metadata. FEATURE must be one
of: devel, multiarch, bluetooth. This option can be used multiple
times.
--filesystem=FILESYSTEM
Allow the application access to a subset of the filesystem. This
overrides to the Context section from the application metadata.
FILESYSTEM can be one of: home, host, host-os, host-etc,
xdg-desktop, xdg-documents, xdg-download, xdg-music, xdg-pictures,
xdg-public-share, xdg-templates, xdg-videos, xdg-run, xdg-config,
xdg-cache, xdg-data, an absolute path, or a homedir-relative path
like ~/dir or paths relative to the xdg dirs, like
xdg-download/subdir. The optional :ro suffix indicates that the
location will be read-only. The optional :create suffix indicates
that the location will be read-write and created if it doesn't
exist. This option can be used multiple times. See the "[Context]
filesystems" list in flatpak-metadata(5) for details of the
meanings of these filesystems.
--nofilesystem=FILESYSTEM
Undo the effect of a previous --filesystem=FILESYSTEM in the app's
manifest and/or the overrides set up with flatpak-override(1). This
overrides the Context section of the application metadata.
FILESYSTEM can take the same values as for --filesystem, but the
:ro and :create suffixes are not used here. This option can be used
multiple times.
This option does not prevent access to a more narrowly-scoped
--filesystem. For example, if an application has the equivalent of
--filesystem=xdg-config/MyApp in its manifest or as a system-wide
override, and flatpak override --user --nofilesystem=home as a
per-user override, then it will be prevented from accessing most of
the home directory, but it will still be allowed to access
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/MyApp.
As a special case, --nofilesystem=host:reset will ignore all
--filesystem permissions inherited from the app manifest or
flatpak-override(1), in addition to having the behaviour of
--nofilesystem=host.
--add-policy=SUBSYSTEM.KEY=VALUE
Add generic policy option. For example,
"--add-policy=subsystem.key=v1 --add-policy=subsystem.key=v2" would
map to this metadata:
[Policy subsystem]
key=v1;v2;
This option can be used multiple times.
--remove-policy=SUBSYSTEM.KEY=VALUE
Remove generic policy option. This option can be used multiple
times.
--env=VAR=VALUE
Set an environment variable in the application. This overrides to
the Context section from the application metadata. This option can
be used multiple times.
--unset-env=VAR
Unset an environment variable in the application. This overrides
the unset-environment entry in the [Context] group of the metadata,
and the [Environment] group. This option can be used multiple
times.
--env-fd=FD
Read environment variables from the file descriptor FD, and set
them as if via --env. This can be used to avoid environment
variables and their values becoming visible to other users.
Each environment variable is in the form VAR=VALUE followed by a
zero byte. This is the same format used by env -0 and
/proc/*/environ.
--own-name=NAME
Allow the application to own the well known name NAME on the
session bus. If NAME ends with .*, it allows the application to own
all matching names. This overrides to the Context section from the
application metadata. This option can be used multiple times.
--talk-name=NAME
Allow the application to talk to the well known name NAME on the
session bus. If NAME ends with .*, it allows the application to
talk to all matching names. This overrides to the Context section
from the application metadata. This option can be used multiple
times.
--no-talk-name=NAME
Don't allow the application to talk to the well known name NAME on
the session bus. If NAME ends with .*, it allows the application to
talk to all matching names. This overrides to the Context section
from the application metadata. This option can be used multiple
times.
--system-own-name=NAME
Allow the application to own the well known name NAME on the system
bus. If NAME ends with .*, it allows the application to own all
matching names. This overrides to the Context section from the
application metadata. This option can be used multiple times.
--system-talk-name=NAME
Allow the application to talk to the well known name NAME on the
system bus. If NAME ends with .*, it allows the application to talk
to all matching names. This overrides to the Context section from
the application metadata. This option can be used multiple times.
--system-no-talk-name=NAME
Don't allow the application to talk to the well known name NAME on
the system bus. If NAME ends with .*, it allows the application to
talk to all matching names. This overrides to the Context section
from the application metadata. This option can be used multiple
times.
--persist=FILENAME
If the application doesn't have access to the real homedir, make
the (homedir-relative) path FILENAME a bind mount to the
corresponding path in the per-application directory, allowing that
location to be used for persistent data. This overrides to the
Context section from the application metadata. This option can be
used multiple times.
--no-session-bus
Run this instance without the filtered access to the session dbus
connection. Note, this is the default when run with --sandbox.
--session-bus
Allow filtered access to the session dbus connection. This is the
default, except when run with --sandbox.
Isandbox mode, even if you allow access to the session bus the
sandbox cannot talk to or own the application ids (org.the.App.*)
on the bus (unless explicitly added), only names in the .Sandbox
subset (org.the.App.Sandbox.*).
--no-a11y-bus
Run this instance without the access to the accessibility bus.
Note, this is the default when run with --sandbox.
--a11y-bus
Allow access to the accessibility bus. This is the default, except
when run with --sandbox.
--sandbox
Run the application in sandboxed mode, which means dropping all the
extra permissions it would otherwise have, as well as access to the
session/system/a11y busses and document portal.
--log-session-bus
Log session bus traffic. This can be useful to see what access you
need to allow in your D-Bus policy.
--log-system-bus
Log system bus traffic. This can be useful to see what access you
need to allow in your D-Bus policy.
-p, --die-with-parent
Kill the entire sandbox when the launching process dies.
--parent-pid=PID
Specifies the pid of the "parent" flatpak, used by
--parent-expose-pids and --parent-share-pids.
--parent-expose-pids
Make the processes of the new sandbox visible in the sandbox of the
parent flatpak, as defined by --parent-pid.
--parent-share-pids
Use the same process ID namespace for the processes of the new
sandbox and the sandbox of the parent flatpak, as defined by
--parent-pid. Implies --parent-expose-pids.
--instance-id-fd
Write the instance ID string to the given file descriptor.
--file-forwarding
If this option is specified, the remaining arguments are scanned,
and all arguments that are enclosed between a pair of '@@'
arguments are interpreted as file paths, exported in the document
store, and passed to the command in the form of the resulting
document path. Arguments between '@@u' and '@@' are considered
uris, and any file: uris are exported. The exports are
non-persistent and with read and write permissions for the
application.
--app-path=PATH
Instead of mounting the app's content on /app in the sandbox, mount
PATH on /app, and the app's content on /run/parent/app. If the app
has extensions, they will also be redirected into /run/parent/app,
and will not be included in the LD_LIBRARY_PATH inside the sandbox.
--app-path=
As a special case, --app-path= (with an empty PATH) results in an
empty directory being mounted on /app.
--usr-path=PATH
Instead of mounting the runtime's files on /usr in the sandbox,
mount PATH on /usr, and the runtime's normal files on
/run/parent/usr. If the runtime has extensions, they will also be
redirected into /run/parent/usr, and will not be included in the
LD_LIBRARY_PATH inside the sandbox. This option will usually only
be useful if it is combined with --app-path= and
--env=LD_LIBRARY_PATH=....
EXAMPLES
$ flatpak run org.gnome.gedit
$ flatpak run --devel --command=bash org.gnome.Builder
$ flatpak run --command=bash org.gnome.Sdk
SEE ALSO
flatpak(1), flatpak-override(1), flatpak-enter(1)
NOTES
1. os-release specification
https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/os-release.html
flatpak FLATPAK RUN(1)