In test-basic-root.sh we make assertions about the permissions
of files like baz/cow, which were created without an explicit chmod.
We can't do that unless we control the permissions.
For some reason the "debomatic" autobuilder used to do some Debian
archive rebuilds does the entire build including build-time tests
as uid 0 with umask 002, which broke those assertions. This seems
a weird thing to do, and I've opened a bug, but it also seems
reasonable to fix this test.
This also lets us remove a couple of existing workarounds for the
same issue.
Bug-Debian: https://bugs.debian.org/876138
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Closes: #1192
Approved by: cgwalters
Some of the Jenkins jobs for Fedora Atomic Host broke after updating
to 2017.7, and it turns out that we regressed handling unreadable
files in `bare-user` mode. An example of this is `/etc/shadow`, which
ends up in the ostree-as-host content as `/usr/etc/shadow`.
Now there are better fixes here; we should probably delete it and create it
during the config merge if it doesn't exist. In general, having secret files in
ostree really isn't supported, so it doesn't make sense to include them.
But let's fix this regression - when operating as an unprivileged user we don't
have `CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE` and hence will fail to open un-user-readable objects.
(We still preserve the actual `0` mode of course in the xattr and will
apply it in `bare`)
Closes: #989
Approved by: jlebon
Having every object in a bare-user repo (and checkouts) be executable
is ugly. I can't think of a good reason to do that; they should only
be executable if their input is. This does
for `bare-user` what we did for `bare-user-only` in
https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/pull/909
It's also a stronger version of what we do with `checkout -U` in suppressing
suid - here we also strip world-writable files and the sticky bit (even though
that's meaningless today, it might not be in the future).
Closes: https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/907Closes: #908
Approved by: alexlarsson
In its initial commit, Alexander Larsson wrote
This works standalone, but unfortunately it breaks in
gnome-desktop-testing-runner as /tmp doesn't support
xattrs, so it is not installed atm.
but we now (a) use /var/tmp, and (b) explicitly skip the test if
xattr support is unavailable. So it should be OK to run now.
Closes: #652
Approved by: cgwalters
Some autobuilder environments place the entire build chroot on tmpfs, so
even /var/tmp might not have this.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
Closes: #232
Approved by: cgwalters
I noticed in the static deltas tests, there were some tests that
should have been under `-o pipefail` to ensure we properly propagate
errors.
There were a few places where we were referencing undefined variables.
Overall, this is clearly a good idea IMO.
This just does whatever test-basic.sh does, but on a bare-user
repo.
This works standalone, but unfortunately it breaks in
gnome-desktop-testing-runner as /tmp doesn't support
xattrs, so it is not installed atm.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741125