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submitted 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) by brokenwing@discuss.tchncs.de to c/linux@lemmy.ml

I want to run a shell script that might open my browser to a specific website. I don't want the page to load when this happen. But I cannot switch off my internet access also (as I use the internet to remotely access another system at the same time). So I am planning to isolate the run time environment for the shell script.

I an on Arch and I used to use a AUR package called bubblejail to do this. But with the whole AUR security fiasco, I am not trusting any packages from AUR. I can switch to another distro if needed, like Rocky or something.

So my requirement is, Internet sandboxing for a terminal and the processes it spawns. Preferably using flatpak commands.

Edit: I tried disabling the internet usage for a terminal from Flathub using Flatseal. Sure I cannot curl after this, but when I launch my browser using it, it had Internet access.

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[-] RheumatoidArthritis@mander.xyz 1 points 1 day ago

There is likely a less complicated way to do it but sudo to another user account and then run it with the protection. This way it can't reach your web browser. Or - I don't know if your program can do it, but Firejail certainly can - hide browser binaries and xdg-open from it, but I don't know how effective this will be against your particular script.

If you don't trust something maybe don't run it on your main OS?

this post was submitted on 14 Jun 2026
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