I was getting a weird hang in the installed tests with the shell as a
zombie process, not reaped by the parent, which was just stuck in
select() on the output pipes. The thing is we don't actually want to
capture stdout/stderr, we just want to inherit.
GSystem.Subprocess makes that possible, so let's just use it now that
it's a proper installed library.
Code like rpm-ostree generates disk images directly. In order to
ensure SELinux labeling is correct, it currently has a helper program
that runs over the deployment root, then over the whole disk and to
only set a label if none exist.
In order to make it easier to write installers such as Anaconda
without having them depend on rpm-ostree (or whatever other
build-server side program), pull in the helper code here.
We shouldn't g_print() from a library, particularly when the
expectation is that the client has an async progress set up.
This should fix the pull output extending the status line.
If a MITM attacker (or just network corruption) causes a temporary
downloaded object in tmp/ to be corrupted, we'll end up
continually trying to commit it, and fail.
Fix this unlinking the temp file immediately after opening it. This
will ensure that if we exit due to an error (or crash), the kernel
will clean up the space for us.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725924
The idea with this is that things like yum should be able to look for
it and determine whether or not they should assume that they can
change things on the system.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725380
This is a bit more efficient in that we're not walking full paths, and
it helps avoid security/reliability issues if an attacker (or just a
misbehaving process) has the ability to mutate paths in the middle.
Mixing async and threads has proved to be too much for my little mind.
It has race conditions that I've tried repeatedly to fix, but failed.
The threading here was scanning metadata objects - and there are
two parts to that:
1) Physically loading them from disk
2) Parsing them
Now #1 has been partially addressed by avoiding a storm of lstat() if
we're starting from a known working state. If pull gets interrupted,
then we do need to rescan all objects. Also, we can address this with
local metadata packfiles.
The other potentially slow bit is that we recurse across the metadata,
blocking the main thread. We could ameliorate that in the future by
scheduling metadata parsing as idle "chunks".
Anyways, let's move the needle back to reliability, and readd speed
more carefully.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=706456
We don't want to allow MITM attackers to intercept upgrade requests
and provide clients with older OS versions vulnerable to security
flaws.
Only "ostree admin upgrade" gets this behavior for now - whether we
want to do it for "ostree admin switch" is another question.
It's better if this is independent from the OstreeSysroot; for
example, a policy is active in a given deployment root at once, not
for a sysroot globally.
We can also collect SELinux-related API in one place.
Unfortunately at the moment there can be only one instance of this
class per process.
We're seeing some hangs while ostree is fetching updates.
I imagine the fact that SoupSessionAsync has no timeout by default
could be the cause of this.
Set timeout values to 60 seconds, which is the default for the new
SoupSession API which we may switch to later.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724310
tmpfiles.d configurations generally require write access to some places
that are read-only until ostree-remount runs.
Make sure ostree-remount has run first.
Thanks to Cosimo Cecchi for finding and diagnosing this problem.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724183
These GPG tests were failing for me on EL7 - it appears to be because
we had only one directory for both private and public keys, and we
were giving that to ostree for verification, which passed them onto
gpgv.
In EL7 beta at least, gpgv now barfs if it finds a private key where
it is just expecting to find public keys.
Fix this by splitting out the public trusted directory from the
private key directory. Except now for signing, we still need the
public key there, so symlink it. Whee!
The instructions one finds on the internets are apparently wrong, we
really need to keep the default here, since gpgme uses it to actually
find the helper binary it runs.
This fixes the GPG tests for me on EL7 at least.
This has a very basic level of functionality (deltas can be generated,
and applied offline). There is only some stubbed out pull code to
fetch them via HTTP.
But, better to commit this now and improve it from a known starting
point, rather than have it languish in a branch.
First, /var needs to be labeled at least once. We should probably
rearrange things so that /var is only created (and labeled) on the
first deployment, but this patch adds a /var/.ostree-selabeled file
instead.
Second, when doing the /etc merge, we compare the xattrs of the old
/usr/etc versus the current /etc. The problem with that is that the
policy has different labels for /usr/etc on disk than the real /etc.
The correct fix for this is a bit invasive - we have to take the
physical content of the old /usr/etc, but compare the labels as if
they were really in /etc.
Instead for now, just ignore changes to xattrs. If the file
content/mode changes, then we take the new file (including any changed
xattrs).
Bottom line: just doing chcon -t blah_t /etc/foo.conf may be lost on
upgrade (for now).
This will be used by guestmount - it's WAY faster. We only take disks
as a unit, so it's safe. If the process fails halfway through, we
just start over from scratch the next time anyways.