This is an option which is intended mostly for flatpak;
see: https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/issues/845
We're adding an option for pulling into *all*
repo modes that has an effect similar to the `bare-user-only`
change from https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/pull/909
This way one can pull content into e.g. a root-owned `bare` repository and
ensure that there aren't any setuid or world-writable files.
Closes: #926
Approved by: alexlarsson
Thinking about the problem of flatpak converting from `bare-user` to `bare-user-only`
"in place" by creating a new repo and doing a `pull-local`, I realized
that we can optimize this process by doing hardlinks for both metadata
and regular files. The repo formats are *almost* compatible, the
exception being symlinks.
An earlier patch caused us to do hardlinks for metadata, this patch takes things
to the next step and special cases this specific conversion. In this case we
need to parse the source object to determine whether or not it's a symlink.
Closes: #922
Approved by: alexlarsson
Our previous logic for import-via-hardlink only tried if the repo modes match,
but we *can* hardlink metadata between e.g. `archive` and `bare-user` repos, and
that's quite useful thing to do. Our documentation encourages converting to/from
those repo modes locally for build systems.
Closes: #922
Approved by: alexlarsson
Before this, if one had repos of matching mode but different owners,
which could happen if one e.g. makes a `bare` non-root repo in
`/ostree/deploy/$stateroot/var/tmp`, every time we tried to call `linkat()`
we'd get `EPERM` and fall back to a copy.
Fix this by saving the repo owner uid, and avoid trying to call `linkat()` if we
know it's going to fail. Of course most commonly in this scenario we'll
immediately fail trying to `chown` the files to `0`, but this is prep for a
future patch to improve `bare-user` → `bare-user-only` imports where we'll be a
bit more sophisticated.
Closes: #922
Approved by: alexlarsson
This code looks like it was supposed to build a refspec, but it used a
slash as a separator rather than a colon. The following code does
recover by supporting prefix matching with slashes, but it seems like
this was perhaps not the intention.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #912
Approved by: cgwalters
Its often the case that we want to look at objects inside a commit,
before the objects the transaction is finished. For instance:
https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/pull/837
Which tries to verify the file permissions before committing the
transaction.
And:
1e5ffa926a
Which collects the storage size of the objects so that we can
put the total download size in the commit metadata.
I tried to find all the places where we did reads from the
object directories, and in particular this fixes:
- `ostree_repo_load_file()` for `bare` repos (`archive` was already working).
- `ostree_repo_query_object_storage_size()`
- Applying deltas that reference not-yet-commited objects
Closes: #916
Approved by: cgwalters
This came up in: https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/pull/881
Basically doing streaming for metadata is dumb. Split up the metadata/content
paths so we pass metadata around as `GVariant`. This drops the last internal
caller of `ostree_repo_write_metadata_stream_trusted()` which was the dumb
function mentioned.
Closes: #923
Approved by: jlebon
See https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/pull/909 for more information on the
rationale. Basically there's no reason for flatpak (which uses `bare-user-only`)
to have world-writable dirs. Particularly with the presence of the system
helper.
An approach I considered instead was to parse and validate directory metadata
objects at commit time. We still may do that in addition; for file objects we *had*
to do it that way because the actual files would be laid down suid. But directories
live only as inert `.dirmeta` objects until we do a checkout (i.e. `mkdir()`), so
we can solve the problem at checkout time.
Closes: #914
Approved by: alexlarsson
Both callers of `commit_loose_object_trusted()` were passing
`OSTREE_OBJECT_TYPE_FILE`, so drop that parameter. This in turn
allows us to drop lots of checking of that inside the function.
Add a doc comment, and rename to `commit_loose_content_object()` for clarity.
Closes: #914
Approved by: alexlarsson
I noticed my previous patches incorrectly started doing `return glnx_throw*`
inside a `goto out;` function. Fix this by porting forward consistently to new
style. We just do the error prefixing in the caller.
Closes: #914
Approved by: alexlarsson
When a transaction is finished and we have moved all the staged loose
objects into the repo we fsync all the object directory, to ensure the
filenames are stable before we update the refs files to point to the
new commits.
With out this an unclean shutdown after the transaction is finished
could result in a refs file that points to an incomplete commit.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759442Closes: #918
Approved by: cgwalters
These exist in the wild for flatpak, and aren't really a problem. The canonical
permissions are still either `0755` or `0644`, we just support the additional
writable bit for the group (i.e. extend the set to include `0775` and `0664`)
now to avoid breaking some flatpak content.
Closes: #913
Approved by: alexlarsson
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
This is only used internally (the header is not public), so it doesn’t
have to go in ostree-autocleanups.h. It will be used in some following
commits.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #911
Approved by: cgwalters
If there are no deltas to be listed in the summary file, don’t bother
including the key for them in the additional metadata section of the
file. This saves a few bytes in some cases.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #911
Approved by: cgwalters
It’s a bit neater to initialise the loop iterator and maximum in the
same place.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #911
Approved by: cgwalters
This makes it a bit more easily separable from the rest of the code in
the function. No functional changes.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #911
Approved by: cgwalters
For the flatpak use case where bare-user-only was introduced, we actually
don't want to support s{u,g} id files in particular.
Actually, I can't think of a reason to have anything outside of the
`0755 i.e. (u=rwx,g=rx,o=rx)` mask, so that's what we do here.
This will have the effect of treating existing `bare-user-only` repositories as
corrupted if they have files outside of that mask, but I think we should do this
now; most of the flatpak users will still be on `bare-user`, and we haven't
changed the semantics of that mode yet.
Note that in this patch we will also *reject* file content that doesn't
match this. This is somewhat asymmetric, since we aren't similarly rejecting
e.g. directory metadata. But, this will close off the biggest source
of the problem for flatpak (setuid binaries).
See: https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/pull/908
See: https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/pull/837Closes: #909
Approved by: alexlarsson
Copying xattrs when manipulating the GPG keyring for a repository
causes errors when the underlying filesystem doesn't support writing
xattrs - overlayfs is a common example. It also causes the selinux
attributes of the keyring files to be copied from the temporary
location instead of properly inherited from the destination directory
(ending up, for example, as unconfined_u:object_r:user_tmp_t:s0, rather
than unconfined_u:object_r:data_home_t:s0)
Closes: #910
Approved by: cgwalters
When falling back to copying, we previously would only chmod checked out
files in the non-user-checkout mode. Fix this by always doing chmod.
The file_mode was being prepared but never actually applied.
Add a basic test in the archive-z2 --> usermode checkout case in which
we're guaranteed to always fall back to copy mode.
Closes: #633Closes: #903
Approved by: cgwalters
This was making it impossible to pull or mirror a large ostree repo, and
according to Colin is no longer necessary. It works fine with a test
against a repo with 2741 commit and 451468 objects in it.
Closes: #899Closes: #904
Approved by: jlebon
This reverts commit 1eff3e8343. There
are a few issues with it. It's not a critical thing for now, so
let's ugly up the git history and revisit when we have time to
debug it and add more tests.
Besides the below issue, I noticed that the simple `ostree remote add`
now writes to `/ostree/repo/config` because we *aren't* using the
`--sysroot` argument.
Closes: https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/901Closes: #902
Approved by: mike-nguyen
There was a lot of conditionals inside `write_object()` differentating
between metadata/content, and then for content, on the different repo
types. Further, in the metadata path since the logic is simpler, can
present a non-streaming API, and further use `OtTmpfile`, etc.
Splitting them up helps drop a lot of conditionals. We introduce a small
`CleanupUnlinkat` that allows us to fully convert to the new code style in both
functions.
This itself is still prep for fully switching to `GLnxTmpfile`.
Closes: #881
Approved by: jlebon
If we have an expected checksum, call `fstatat(repo_dfd, checksum)`
early on before we do much else. This actually duplicates code,
but future work here is going to split up the metadata/content
commit paths, so they'll need to diverge anyways.
Closes: #881
Approved by: jlebon
First, the streaming metadata API is pretty dumb, since metadata
should be small. Really we should have supported a `GBytes`
version. Currently, this API *is* used when we do local pulls,
so this commit has test coverage. However, I plan to change
the object import to avoid using this. But that's fine, since
I can't think of why someone would use this API.
Next, the only difference between `ostree_repo_write_metadata()` and
`ostree_repo_write_metadata_trusted()` is whether or not we pass
an output checksum; so just dedup the implementations.
Also while I'm here break out the input length validation and do
it early in the streaming case.
Closes: #881
Approved by: jlebon
Using `${sysroot}` to mean the physical storage root: We don't want to write to
`${sysroot}/etc/ostree/remotes.d`, since nothing will read it, and really
`${sysroot}` should just have `/ostree` (ideally). Today the Anaconda rpmostree
code ends up writing there. Fix this by adding a notion of "physical" sysroot.
We determine whether the path is physical by checking for `/sysroot`, which
exists in deployment roots (and there shouldn't be a `${sysroot}/sysroot`).
In order to unit test this, I added a `--sysroot` argument to `remote add`.
However, doing this better would require reworking the command line parsing for
the `remote` argument to support specifying `--repo` or `--sysroot`, and I
didn't quite want to do that yet in this patch.
Closes: https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/892Closes: #896
Approved by: jlebon
Having a failable accessor is annoying, since it's really common
to reference both. Instead, open the repo once when we load
the sysroot, and provide a non-failable accessor.
This is also prep for `ostree_repo_open_at()`, which collapses the separation
between `ostree_repo_new()` and `ostree_repo_open()`.
Closes: #886
Approved by: jlebon
This is prep for introducing a fd-relative `ostree_repo_new_at()`.
Previously, `ostree_repo_is_system()` compared `GFile` paths, but
there's a much simpler check we can do first - if this repository
was created via `OstreeSysroot`, it must be a system repo.
Closes: #886
Approved by: jlebon
This is a de-scoping of work I did in preparation for
rpm-ostree [live updates](https://github.com/projectatomic/rpm-ostree/pull/652).
Originally I was going to expose this as a public API.
However, I decided to do things differently, but the cleanup here for new code
style and fd-relative is nice to have anyways.
We rework things to use `OstreeDeployment*`, which the caller is expected to
already have, rather than `GFile*`s pointing to the config directories.
Closes: #741
Approved by: jlebon
The summary file can get large, but it compresses well (something
which is not true of other files in the ostree repo which are
already compressed). By sending Accept-Encoding: gzip (and
handling the compressed results) we send a lot less data.
I set up the flathub repo (http://flathub.org/repo) to enable
gzip for the summary file (only), and the result is that the
331514 byte large summary was transferred in 122889 bytes.
On my (fast) network this decreased the time i took to do
"flatpak remote-ls flathub" by about 100msec.
This fixes https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/802Closes: #882
Approved by: cgwalters
It's hard right now to do a full port to the new libglnx tmpfile
API since there are complex cases in the commit path which deal
with symlinks as well.
Let's make things more gradual by introducing the important part (struct with
autocleanup) here in libotutil, port what we can. This will make a future
complete port easier.
Closes: #871
Approved by: jlebon
A commit can now include a "ostree.endoflife-rebase" metadata key
pointing to a new ref.
When updating, the sysroot upgrader will see this and proceed to
pull and deploy the new ref instead. The origin file in the new
deployment will point to the new ref.
This functionality is planned to be used in Endless OS. We will create
a lesser tested branch for brand new, cutting edge hardware support,
and ship that on hardware platforms that require the latest drivers.
However, once our slower-moving official release is later updated to
support the new hardware, we will use this functionality to migrate
those bleeding-edge users over to the official release.
Closes: #874
Approved by: cgwalters
The whole ostree-remote.h file is only included in the public ostree.h
header if OSTREE_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL_API is defined, so there’s no need
to change the set of methods defined in it according to whether we’re
compiling with experimental API.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #875
Approved by: cgwalters
Make it an internal, not static, API; like _ostree_repo_add_remote(). It
will be used in many the same situations.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #875
Approved by: cgwalters
Return whether the remote already existed. This is an internal API, so
it’s not an API break. The return value will be useful in upcoming
commits for working out whether to later remove a remote again.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #875
Approved by: cgwalters
Add a name argument to the internal OstreeRemote constructor,
since this member (and several derived from it) is non-nullable,
and hence must always be set at construction time.
This changes the only call sites of the constructor to use the new API,
which is internal.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #875
Approved by: cgwalters