Provided by: flatpak_1.0.9-0ubuntu0.4_amd64 bug

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

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 install for.

       --command=COMMAND
           The command to run instead of the one listed in the application metadata.

       --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. 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. 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, 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, 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=FS
           Allow the application access to a subset of the filesystem. This overrides to the
           Context section from the application metadata. FS can be one of: home, host,
           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.

       --nofilesystem=FILESYSTEM
           Remove access to the specified subset of the filesystem from the application. This
           overrides to the Context section from the application metadata. FILESYSTEM can be one
           of: home, host, xdg-desktop, xdg-documents, xdg-download xdg-music, xdg-pictures,
           xdg-public-share, xdg-templates, xdg-videos, an absolute path, or a homedir-relative
           path like ~/dir. This option can be used multiple times.

       --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.

       --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.

       --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.

       --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.

       --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.

       --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.

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)