Alternative to https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/pull/2197
Python's (usually) zero-sized `__init__.py` files can provoke
us hitting the hardlink limits on some filesystems (`EMLINK`).
At least one Fedora rpm-ostree user hit this.
The benefits of hardlinking here are quite marginal; lots
of hardlinks can behave suboptimally in particular filesystems
like BTRFS too.
This builds on prior code which made this an option, introduced
in 673cacd633
Now we just do it uncondtionally.
Also this provoked a different bug in a very obscure user mode checkout
case; when the "real" permissions were different from the "physical"
permissions, we would still hardlink. Fix the test case for this.
Otherwise, fall back to downloading and reading them from the `config`
file. See the previous commit for details.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #2165
Currently, they are set in the `config` file and cause that to be
downloaded on every pull. Given that the client is already pulling the
`summary` file, it makes sense to avoid an additional network round trip
and cache those options in the `summary` file.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #2165
In FCOS and RHCOS, the need to configure software in the initramfs has
come up multiple times. Sometimes, using kernel arguments suffices.
Other times, it really must be a configuration file. Rebuilding the
initramfs on the client-side however is a costly operation. Not only
does it add complexity to the update workflow, it also erodes a lot of
the value obtained from using the baked "blessed" initramfs from the
tree itself.
One elegant way to address this is to allow specifying multiple
initramfses. This is supported by most bootloaders (notably GRUB) and
results in each initrd being overlayed on top of each other.
This patch allows libostree clients to leverage this so that they can
avoid regenerating the initramfs entirely. libostree itself is agnostic
as to what kind and how much data overlay initrds contain. It's up to
the clients to enforce such boundaries.
To implement this, we add a new ostree_sysroot_stage_overlay_initrd
which takes a file descriptor and returns a checksum. Then users can
pass these checksums when calling the deploy APIs via the new array
option `overlay_initrds`. We copy these files into `/boot` and add them
to the BLS as another `initrd` entry.
And make the `override_kernel_argv` one of those options. This is mostly
a mechanical move here, no functional change otherwise.
Prep for adding a new option.
When support for devicetree was added, it created a problem
because old and new ostree versions would compute different
checksums for the "boot data". The scenario here is:
- Have system with ostree < 2020.4
- Reboot into system with ostree 2020.5
- Try to perform an operation that would retain
that previous booted deployment (common)
Currently ostree iterates over all the deployments
that will be retained and calls `install_deployment_kernel()`,
even for the booted one (which is a bit silly), but
just to verify that all boot data for the targeted
deployments are installed.
This then re-computes the checksum and we'd trip this
assertion.
In practice though, we don't strictly require them to match;
the only thing that will happen if they don't is that we'll
end up with another copy of the kernel/initramfs - and
that only temporarily until the previous deployment
gets GC'd.
Longer term, I think what we really want to do anyways
is probably closer to like a little ostree repo for `/boot`
so that we can e.g. still hardlink kernels there even if
the initramfs changes, or hardlink both kernel/initramfs
if just the devicetree changes, etc.
Closes: https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/2154
The extreme special case of "zero mode" files like `/etc/shadow`
comes up again. What we want is for "user mode" checkouts to
override it to make the file readable; otherwise when operating
as non-root without `CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE` it becomes very difficult
to work with.
Previously, we were hardlinking these files, but then it intersects
with *another* special case around zero sized files, which is
*also* true for `/etc/shadow`.
Trying to avoid hardlinking there unveiled this bug - when
we go to do a copy checkout, we need to override the mode.
Add a new function `ostree_repo_static_delta_execute_offline_with_signature`
which takes a signature engine to verify the delta before applying it.
The `ostree_repo_static_delta_execute_offline` is just a wrapper to this
new function, passing a NULL signature engine.
When this function is called without signature engine, but with a sign
delta, it will only fails if `sign-verify-deltas` is set to true in repo
core options.
This commits move signature existence check and delta signature
verification to share common parts between existing APIs and the new
function.
Signed-off-by: Frédéric Danis <frederic.danis@collabora.com>
This checks if the static delta file is signed or not to be able to
correctly get the superblock to dump.
Signed-off-by: Frédéric Danis <frederic.danis@collabora.com>
This checks if the static delta file is signed or not to be able to
correctly get the superblock to apply.
Signed-off-by: Frédéric Danis <frederic.danis@collabora.com>
This retrieves the signatures and pass the static delta block as an array
of bytes to ostree_sign_data_verify().
Signed-off-by: Frédéric Danis <frederic.danis@collabora.com>
While the commits contained in the single static-delta file are signed so
we can check them and operate on trusted data, the superblock isn't signed
in any way, so it end up operating on untrusted data to:
1. actually find where the trusted data is, and
2. check whether the update is fit for the current device by looking at
the collection id stored in the metadata
This commit generates signatures of all static data, and concatenate them
to the existing static delta format, i.e. as a GVariant layout `a{sv}ay`
where
- a{sv}: signatures
- ay: existing delta variant
Signed-off-by: Frédéric Danis <frederic.danis@collabora.com>
This was only used in one place, and (especially with the simplification
with GMainContextPopDefault) and the one caller doesn't really do
much more than call the helper. Additionally, what little it does (saving
the result in the cache) is inherently tied to how the helper work,
and will become even more so when we support summary indexes.
This is a preparatory cleanup for supporting summary indexes. It
doesn't change any behaviour and passes make check on its own.
This loads and makes a digest for a delta superblock. The previous
code was used when generating the deltas section in the summary
file. This changes nothing, but is in preparation for using similar
formats in a separate delta index file.
The change in cbf1aca1d5c08d2f40832d16670484ba878d95fb actually
only mmaps the signature file, not the summary. This change makes
use mmap both, as well as extract the cache loading into a helper
function that we will later use in more places.
ostree_repo_list_static_delta_names() tried to validate that
any second-level directory element was a directory, but there was
a cut-and-paste issue, and it used `dent->d_type` instead
of `sub_dent->d_type`.
This fixes the code, but all old ostree versions will break if
there are non-directories in a subdirectory of the deltas directory
in the repo, so be wary.
Looking at
https://github.com/coreos/coreos-assembler/issues/1703
a user is getting a bare:
`error: fsetxattr: Permission denied`
I don't think it's these code paths since a deploy
isn't happening but on inspection I noticed we didn't
have error prefixing here.
Don't mention deprecation in the description for
`ostree_sysroot_deploy_tree` since there are legitimate use cases for it
(e.g. to create the first deployment via `ostree admin deploy`).
Instead, make the comment clearly redirect to the staging API when
booted into the sysroot.
Tighten up how we handle kargs here so it's more clear. When we call
`sysroot_finalize_deployment`, any karg overrides have already been set
on the bootconfig object of the deployment. So re-setting it here is
redundant and confusing.
I was thinking a bit more recently about the "live" changes
stuff https://github.com/coreos/rpm-ostree/issues/639
(particularly since https://github.com/coreos/rpm-ostree/pull/2060 )
and I realized reading the last debates in that issue that
there's really a much simpler solution; do exactly the same
thing we do for `ostree admin unlock`, except mount it read-only
by default.
Then, anything that wants to modify it does the same thing
libostree does for `/sysroot` and `/boot` as of recently; create
a new mount namespace and do the modifications there.
The advantages of this are numerous. First, we already have
all of the code, it's basically just plumbing through a new
entry in the state enumeration and passing `MS_RDONLY` into
the `mount()` system call.
"live" changes here also naturally don't persist, unlike what
we are currently doing in rpm-ostree.
These allow the `summary` and `summary.sig` files to be cached at a
higher layer (for example, flatpak) between related pull operations (for
example, within a single flatpak transaction). This avoids
re-downloading `summary.sig` multiple times throughout a transaction,
which increases the transaction’s latency and introduces the possibility
for inconsistency between parts of the transaction if the server changes
its `summary` file part-way through.
In particular, this should speed up flatpak transactions on machines
with high latency network connections, where network round trips have a
high impact on the latency of an overall operation.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
We use a similar trick to having a `sysroot -> .` symlink on the real root
here to support both /boot on root as well as on a separate filesystem. No
matter how it's mounted `/boot/xyz` will always refer to the file you'd
expect.
This is nicer than my previous attempts at this because there's no
configuration nor auto-detection required.
The "new style" code generally avoids `goto err` because it conflicts
with `__attribute__((cleanup))`. This fixes a compiler warning.
Signed-off-by: Frédéric Danis <frederic.danis@collabora.com>
If `glnx_make_lock_file` falls back to `flock`, on NFS this uses POSIX
locks (`F_SETLK`). As such, we need to be able to handle `EACCES` as
well as `EAGAIN` (see `fnctl(2)`).
I think this is what coreos-ostree-importer has been hitting, which runs
on RHEL7 in the Fedora infra and does locking over an NFS share where
multiple apps could concurrently pull things into the repo.
This came in with 5af403be0c but
was never implemented.
I noticed this now because the Rust ostree bindings generate a
wrapper for it which the linker tries to use.
This is the dual of 1f3c8c5b3d
where we output more detail when signapi fails to validate.
Extend the API to return a string for success, which we output
to stdout.
This will help the test suite *and* end users validate that the expected
thing is happening.
In order to make this cleaner, split the "verified commit" set
in the pull code into GPG and signapi verified sets, and have
the signapi verified set contain the verification string.
We're not doing anything with the verification string in the
pull code *yet* but I plan to add something like
`ostree pull --verbose` which would finally print this.
To aid debuggability, when we find a commit that isn't signed
by our expected key, output a specific error message with the
key.
(And then add code to switch to just printing the count beyond 3
because the test suite injects 100 keys and hopefully no one
ever actually does that)
Add a standard key for this. We actually had a case in OpenShift
builds recently where a `ppc64le` image was pushed over an `x86_64`
one and this started failing at runtime with a not immediately
obvious error.
I'll probably end up changing rpm-ostree at least to use
the RPM architecture for this key and fail if it doesn't match
the booted value.
Possibly that should live in ostree but it would involve adding
architecture schema here, which gets into a big mess. Let's
just standardize the key.
xref e02ef2683d
Add support for a devicetree directory at /usr/lib/modules/$kver/dtb/.
In ARM world a general purpose distribution often suppports multiple
boards with a single operating system. However, OSTree currently only
supports a single device tree, which does not allow to use the same
OSTree on different ARM machines. In this scenario typically the boot
loader selects the effective device tree.
This adds device tree directory support for the new boot artefact
location under /usr/lib/modules. If the file `devicetree` does not
exist, then the folder dtb will be checked. All devicetrees are hashed
into the deployment hash. This makes sure that even a single devicetree
change leads to a new deployment and hence can be rolled back.
The loader configuration has a new key "devicetreepath" which contains
the path where devicetrees are stored. This is also written to the
U-Boot variable "fdtdir". The boot loader is expected to use this path
to load a particular machines device tree from.
Closes: #1900
Signed-off-by: Stefan Agner <stefan.agner@toradex.com>
One OpenShift user saw this from rpm-ostree:
```
client(id:cli dbus:1.583 unit:machine-config-daemon-host.service uid:0) added; new total=1
Initiated txn UpdateDeployment for client(id:cli dbus:1.583 unit:machine-config-daemon-host.service uid:0): /org/projectatomic/rpmostree1/rhcos
Txn UpdateDeployment on /org/projectatomic/rpmostree1/rhcos failed: File header size 4294967295 exceeds size 0
```
which isn't very helpful. Let's add some error
prefixing here which would at least tell us which
object was corrupted.
The goal here is to move the code towards a model
where the *client* can explicitly specify which signature types
are acceptable.
We retain support for `sign-verify=true` for backwards compatibility.
But in that configuration, a missing public key is just "no signatures found".
With `sign-verify=ed25519` and no key configured, we can
explicitly say `No keys found for required signapi type ed25519`
which is much, much clearer.
Implementation side, rather than maintaining `gboolean sign_verify` *and*
`GPtrArray sign_verifiers`, just have the array. If it's `NULL` that means
not to verify.
Note that currently, an explicit list is an OR of signatures, not AND.
In practice...I think most people are going to be using a single entry
anyways.
There's a lot of historical baggage associated with GPG verification
and `ostree pull` versus `ostree pull-local`. In particular nowadays,
if you use a `file://` remote things are transparently optimized
to e.g. use reflinks if available.
So for anyone who doesn't trust the "remote" repository, you should
really go through through the regular
`ostree remote add --sign-verify=X file://`
path for example.
Having a mechanism to say "turn on signapi verification" *without*
providing keys goes back into the "global state" debate I brought
up in https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/2080
It's just much cleaner architecturally if there is exactly one
path to find keys: from a remote config.
So here in contrast to the GPG code, for `pull-local` we explictily
disable signapi validation, and the `ostree_repo_pull()` API just
surfaces flags to disable it, not enable it.
For the same reason as https://github.com/coreos/rpm-ostree/pull/2094.
What we care most about is that the new commit we pull is newer than the
one we're currently sitting on, not necessarily that it's newer than the
branch itself, which it might not be if e.g. we're trying to deploy a
commit older than the tip but still newer than the deployment (via
`--override-commit`).
The way `timestamp-check` works might be too restrictive in some
situations. Essentially, we need to support the case where users want to
pull an older commit than the current tip, but while still guaranteeing
that it is newer than some even older commit.
This will be used in Fedora CoreOS. For more information see:
https://github.com/coreos/rpm-ostree/pull/2094https://github.com/coreos/fedora-coreos-tracker/issues/481
Previously in the pull code, every time we went to verify
a commit we would re-initialize an `OstreeSign` instance
of each time, re-parse the remote configuration
and re-load its public keys etc.
In most cases this doesn't matter really because we're
pulling one commit, but if e.g. pulling a commit with
history would get a bit silly.
This changes things so that the pull code initializes the
verifiers once, and reuses them thereafter.
This is continuing towards changing the code to support
explicitly configured verifiers, xref
https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/2080
This cleans up the verification code; it was weird how
we'd get the list of known names and then try to create
an instance from it (and throw an error if that failed, which
couldn't happen).
The GI scanner decides if an `enum` is really a `bitfield` if it finds
any values that have left shifts. With an `enumeration`, the
introspecting language may error or convert to a different type if the
user tries to combine values. Change all Flags `enum`s to use
left-shifted values so that they're represented as `bitfield`s in the
GIR.
The primary bug here is that you can't combine `REFS_ONLY` and
`NO_PRUNE` when calling `OSTree.Repo.prune()` from an introspected
language.
This is an IABI break since the typelib will change from `enumeration`
to `bitfield`. `OstreeRepoImportFlags` is internal but the change is
included here to prepare for a subsequent name that would require bit
shifting to operate correctly as a flag.
Explicitly expose functions for querying the metadata format
and key name used by OstreeSign object:
- ostree_sign_metadata_format
- ostree_sign_metadata_key
This allows to use the same metadata format and key name
by 3-rd party applications using signapi.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
I've only noticed this by inspection. But I think it's possible for
`cleanup_txn_dir` to get called with the `staging-...-lock` file since
it matches the prefix.
Make the checking here stronger by verifying that it's a directory. If
it's not a directory (lockfile), then follow the default pruning expiry
logic so that we still cleanup stray lockfiles eventually.
`ostree-repo-pull.c` is rather monstrous; I plan to split it
up a bit. There's actually already a `pull-private.h` but
that's just for the binding verification API. I think that one
isn't really pull specific. Let's move it into the "catchall"
`repo.c`.
Previously we would pass the `verification-key` and `verification-file`
to all backends, ignoring errors from loading keys until we
found one that worked.
Instead, change the options to be `verification-<engine>-key`
and `verification-<engine>-file`, and then
rework this to use standard error handling; barf explicitly if
we can't load the public keys for example. Preserve
the semantics of accepting the first valid signature. The
first signature error is captured, the others are currently
compressed into a `(and %d more)` prefix.
And now that I look at this more closely there's a lot of
duplication between the two code paths in pull.c for verifying;
will dedup this next.
I'm mainly doing this to sanity check the CI state right now.
However, I also want to more cleanly/clearly distinguish
the "sign" code from the "gpg" code.
Rename one function to include `gpg`.
For the other...I think what it's really doing is using the remote
config, so change it to include `remote` in its name.
If GPG support is disabled in a build time we should to check if any of
options "gpg_verify" or "gpg_verify_summary" is set to TRUE instead
of checking if they are passed via options while pulling from remote.
Fixed the failure with assertion of `ostree find-remotes --pull --mirror`
calling (`tests/test-pull-collections.sh`) if libostree has been compiled
without GPG support.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
This code wasn't written with idiomatic GError usage; it's not standard
to construct an error up front and continually append to its
message. The exit from a function is usually `return TRUE`,
with error conditions before that.
Updating it to match style reveals what I think is a bug;
we were silently ignoring failure to parse key files.
When we're only pulling a subset of the refs available in the remote, it
doesn't make sense to copy the remote's summary (which may not be valid
for the local repo). This makes the check here match the one done
several lines above when we decide whether to error out if there's no
remote summary available.
This extends the fix in https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/pull/935 for
the case of collection-refs.
Also, add a unit test for this issue, based on the existing one in
pull-test.sh.
Noticed this while writing tests for a core `ostree_sysroot_load()`
entrypoint. And decided to do the same for `ostree_repo_open()`,
and while there also noted we had a duplicate error prefixing
for the open (more recently `glnx_opendirat()` automatically
prefixes with the path).
Correctly return "error" from `ostree_repo_sign_commit()`
in case if GPG is not enabled.
Use glnx_* functions in signature related pull code for clear
error handling if GPG isn't enabled.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Do not mask implementation anymore since we have a working
engines integrated with pulling mechanism.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
The "new style" code generally avoids `goto err` because it conflicts
with `__attribute__((cleanup))`. This fixes a compiler warning.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
The "new style" code generally avoids `goto err` because it conflicts
with `__attribute__((cleanup))`. This fixes a compiler warning.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Improve error handling for signatures checks -- passthrough real
reasons from signature engines instead of using common messages.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Return the collected errors from signing engines in case if verification
failed for the commit.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Add more precise error handling for ed25519 initialization.
Check the initialization status at the beginning of every public
function provided by ed25519 engine.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Change the API of supporting functions `_load_public_keys()` and
`_ostree_repo_sign_verify()` -- pass repo object and remote name
instead of OtPullData object. This allows to use these functions
not only in pull-related places.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
We don't need anymore stubs for verification options for remotes
in case if ostree built without GPG support.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Usage of 'g_warning()' inside keys loading funcrion lead to false
failure: the key loading attempt for the wrong engine breaks the
pulling process instead of trying to use this key with correct engine.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
The initial implementation with single key for secret and public parts
doesn't allow to test pulling with several signing engines used.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Skip public keys verification if key is marked as invalid key.
Allow to redefine system-wide directories for ed25519 verification.
Minor bugfixes.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Add function `_load_public_keys()` to pre-load public keys according
remote's configuration. If no keys configured for remote, then use
system-wide configuration.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Allow to add public and secret key for ed25519 module as based64 string.
This allows to use common API for pulling and builtins without knowledge
of used signature algorithm.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Removed from public `ostree_sign_detached_metadata_append` function.
Renamed `metadata_verify` into `data_verify` to fit to real
functionality.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Return `const char *` instead of copy of the string -- this allow to
avoid unneeded copying and memory leaks in some constructions.
Minor code cleanup and optimisations.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
If not provided key of file name with keys for remote, then try to use
system defaults:
- /etc/ostree/trusted.ed25519
- /etc/ostree/trusted.ed25519.d/*
- /usr/share/ostree/trusted.ed25519
- /usr/share/ostree/trusted.ed25519.d/*
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
If `verification-key` is set for remote it is used as a public key for
checking the commit pulled from that remote.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
API changes:
- added function `ostree_sign_add_pk()` for multiple public keys using.
- `ostree_sign_set_pk()` now substitutes all previously added keys.
- added function `ostree_sign_load_pk()` allowed to load keys from file.
- `ostree_sign_ed25519_load_pk()` able to load the raw keys list from file.
- use base64 encoded public and private ed25519 keys for CLI and keys file.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Added the initial version of signing interface allowing to allowing to
sign and verify commits.
Implemented initial signing modules:
- dummy -- simple module allowing to sign/verify with ASCII string
- ed25519 -- module allowing to sign/verify commit with ed25519
(EdDSA) signature scheme provided by libsodium library.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
The [dev-overlay](332c6ab3b9/src/cmd-dev-overlay)
script shipped in coreos-assembler mostly exists to deal
with the nontrivial logic around SELinux policy. Let's make
the use case of "commit some binaries overlaying a base tree, using
the base's selinux policy" just require a magical
`--selinux-policy-from-base` argument to `ostree commit`.
A new C API was added to implement this in the case of `--tree=ref`;
when the base directory is already checked out, we can just reuse
the existing logic that `--selinux-policy` was using.
Requires: https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/pull/2039
Add G_IO_ERROR_PARTIAL_INPUT to the list of error codes caused by
transient networking errors which lead us to retry the request. When
attempting to install the spotify flatpak you often get the error
message "Connection terminated unexpectedly" and the download of the deb
file fails. In this case, libsoup is setting G_IO_ERROR_PARTIAL_INPUT
and sometimes a subsequent download attempt is successful, so we should
treat it as transient.
Ideally we would behave as wget does in this case and retry the download
picking up where we left off in the file rather than starting over, but
that would require changes to libsoup I think.
Sadly this patch does not fix the flatpak installation of spotify in the
face of such errors, because flatpak doesn't use libostree to download
extra data, but presumably it's possible we could encounter such an
error pulling from an ostree repo, so the patch is still correct.
These had been added assuming 2019.7 would be the next version, but now
it's 2020 and there's been a release. In the case of
`OstreeCommitSizesEntry`, I'd forgotten to move it forward from 2019.5
to 2019.7 in the time between when I started working on the feature and
it landed.
For repo structure directories like `objects`, `refs`, etc... we should
be more permissive and let the system's `umask` narrow down the
permission bits as wanted.
This came up in a context where we want to be able to have read/write
access on an OSTree repo on NFS from two separate OpenShift apps by
using supplemental groups[1] so we don't require SCCs for running as the
same UID (supplemental groups are part of the default restricted SCC).
[1] https://docs.openshift.com/container-platform/3.11/install_config/persistent_storage/persistent_storage_nfs.html#nfs-supplemental-groups
For some reason I haven't fully debugged (probably a recent
kernel change), in the case where the immutable bit isn't set,
trying to call `EXT2_IOC_SETFLAGS` without it set returns `EINVAL`.
Let's avoid calling the `ioctl()` if we don't have anything to do.
This fixes a slew of `make check` failures here in my toolbox
environment.
(kernel is `5.5.0-0.rc6.git0.1.fc32.x86_64` with `xfs`)
Using fs-verity is natural for OSTree because it's file-based,
as opposed to block based (like dm-verity). This only covers
files - not symlinks or directories. And we clearly need to
have integrity for the deployment directories at least.
Also, what we likely need is an API that supports signing files
as they're committed.
So making this truly secure would need a lot more work. Nevertheless,
I think it's time to start experimenting with it. Among other things,
it does *finally* add an API that makes files immutable, which will
help against some accidental damage.
This is basic enablement work that is being driven by
Fedora CoreOS; see also https://github.com/coreos/coreos-assembler/pull/876
Currently `ostree_gpg_verify_result_require_valid_signature` always
returns an error that the key used for the signature is missing from the
keyring. However, all that's been determined is that there are no valid
signatures. The error could also be from an expired signature, an
expired key, a revoked key or an invalid signature.
Provide values for these missing errors and return them from
`ostree_gpg_verify_result_require_valid_signature`. The description of
each result is appended to the error message, but since the result can
contain more than one signature but only a single error can be returned,
the status of the last signature is used for the error code. See the
comment for rationale.
Related: flatpak/flatpak#1450
This function parses the object listing in the `ostree.sizes` metadata
and returns an array of `OstreeCommitSizesEntry` structures.
Unfortunately, for reasons I don't understand, the linker wants to
resolve `_ostree_read_varuint64` from `ostree-core.c` even though it's
not used by `test-checksum.c` at all.
Append a byte encoding the OSTree object type for each object in the
metadata. This allows the commit metadata to be fetched and then for the
program to see which objects it already has for an accurate calculation
of which objects need to be downloaded.
This slightly breaks the `ostree.sizes` `ay` metadata entries. However,
it's unlikely anyone was asserting the length of the entries since the
array currently ends in 2 variable length integers. As far as I know,
the only users of the sizes metadata are the ostree test suite and
Endless' eos-updater[1]. The former is updated here and the latter
already expects this format.
1. https://github.com/endlessm/eos-updater/
If the object was already in the repo then the sizes metadata entry was
skipped. Move the sizes entry creation after the data has been computed
but before the early return for an existing object.
The object sizes hash table was only being cleared when the repo was
finalized. That means that performing multiple commits while the repo
was open would reuse all the object sizes metadata for each commit.
Clear the hash table when the sizes metadata is setup and when it's
added to a commit. This still does not fix the issue all the way since
it does nothing to prevent the program from constructing multiple
commits simultaneously. To handle that, the object sizes hash table
should be attached to the MutableTree since that has the commit state.
However, the MutableTree is gone when the commit is actually created.
The hash table would have to be transferred to the root file when
writing the MutableTree. That would be an awkward addition to
OstreeRepoFile, though. Add a FIXME to capture that.
We want to support extending the read-only state to cover `/sysroot`
and `/boot`, since conceptually all of the data there should only
be written via libostree. Or at least for `/boot` should *mostly*
just be written by ostree.
This change needs to be opt-in though to avoid breaking anyone.
Add a `sysroot/readonly` key to the repository config which instructs
`ostree-remount.service` to ensure `/sysroot` is read-only. This
requires a bit of a dance because `/sysroot` is actually the same
filesystem as `/`; so we make `/etc` a writable bind mount in this case.
We also need to handle `/var` in the "OSTree default" case of a bind
mount; the systemd generator now looks at the writability state of
`/sysroot` and uses that to determine whether it should have the
`var.mount` unit happen before or after `ostree-remount.service.`
Also add an API to instruct the libostree shared library
that the caller has created a new mount namespace. This way
we can freely remount read-write.
This approach extends upon in a much better way previous work
we did to support remounting `/boot` read-write.
Closes: https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/1265
This allows copying the state from one OstreeAsyncProgress object to
another, atomically, without invoking the callback. This is needed in
libflatpak, in order to chain OstreeAsyncProgress objects so that you
can still receive progress updates when iterating a different
GMainContext than the one that the OstreeAsyncProgress object was
created under.
See https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/pull/3211 for the application of
this API.
Define an `OstreeKernelArgsEntry` structure, which holds
both the key and the value. The kargs order array stores
entries for each key/value pair, instead of just the keys.
The hash table is used to locate entries, by storing
entries in a pointer array for each key. The same public
interface is preserved, while maintaining ordering
information of each key/value pair when
appending/replacing/deleting kargs.
Fixes: #1859
To allow for FIPS mode, we need to also install the HMAC file from
`/usr/lib/modules` to `/boot` alongside the kernel image where the
`fips` dracut module will find it. For details, see:
https://github.com/coreos/fedora-coreos-tracker/issues/302
Note I didn't include the file in the boot checksum since it's itself a
checksum of the kernel, so we don't really gain much here other than
potentially causing an unnecessary bootcsum bump.
I was hitting `SIGSEGV` when running `cosa build` and narrowed it down
to #1954. What's happening here is that because we're using the default
context, when we unref it in the out path, it may not actually destroy
the `GSource` if it (the context) is still ref'ed elsewhere. So then,
we'd still get events from it if subsequent operations iterated the
context.
This patch is mostly a revert of #1954, except that we still keep a ref
on the `GSource`. That way it is always safe to destroy it afterwards.
(And I've also added a comment to explain this better.)
We're creating the timer source and then passing ownership to the
context, but because we didn't free the pointer, we would still call
`g_source_destroy` in the exit path. We'd do this right after doing
`unref` on the context too, which would have already destroyed and
unref'ed the source.
Drop that and just restrict the scope of that variable down to make
things more obvious.
Just noticed this after reviewing #1953.
In glib 2.62 this has been changed to emitting a warning. Use G_STRFUNC
instead, which has been available for a long time and is already used in
other places in ostree.
zipl is a bit special in that it parses the BLS config files
directly *but* we need to run the command to update the "boot block".
Hence, we're not generating a separate config file like the other
backends. Instead, extend the bootloader interface with a `post_bls_sync`
method that is run in the same place we swap the `boot/loader` symlink.
We write a "stamp file" in `/boot` that says we need to run this command.
The reason we use stamp file is to prevent the case where the system is
interrupted after BLS file is updated, but before zipl is triggered,
then zipl boot records are not updated.
This opens the door to making things eventually-consistent/reconcilable
by later adding a systemd unit to run `zipl` if we're interrupted via
a systemd unit - I think we should eventually take this approach
everywhere rather than requiring `/boot/loader` to be a symlink.
Author: Colin Walters <walters@verbum.org>
Tested-by: Tuan Hoang <tmhoang@linux.ibm.com>
Co-Authored-By: Tuan Hoang <tmhoang@linux.ibm.com>
More "scan-build doesn't understand GError and our out-param conventions"
AKA "these errors would be impossible with Rust's sum type Result<> approach".
Got this error when trying to rebase libostree in RHEL:
```
Error: CLANG_WARNING: [#def1]
libostree-2019.2/src/libostree/ostree-repo-checkout.c:375:21: warning: Access to field 'disable_xattrs' results in a dereference of a null pointer (loaded from variable 'repo')
```
I think what's happening is it sees us effectively testing
`if (repo == NULL)` via the `while (current_repo)`. Let's
tell it we're sure it's non-null right after the loop.
Tiny release. Just want to get out the important bugfixes instead of
backporting patches (notably the gpg-agent stuff and
`ostree-finalize-staged.service` ordering).
Closes: #1927
Approved by: cgwalters
After the corruption has been fixed with "ostree fsck -a --delete", a
second run of the "ostree fsck" command will print X partial commits
not verified and exit with a zero.
The zero exit code makes it hard to detect if a repair operation needs
to be run. When ever fsck creates a partial commit it should add a
reason for the partial commit to the state file found in
state/<hash>.commitpartial. This will allow a future execution of the
fsck to still return an error indicating that the repository is still
in the damaged state, awaiting repair.
Additional reason codes could be added in the future for why a partial
commit exists.
Text from: https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/pull/1880
====
cgwalters commented:
To restate, the core issue is that it's valid to have partial commits
for reasons other than fsck pruned bad objects, and libostree doesn't
have a way to distinguish.
Another option perhaps is to write e.g. fsck-partial into the
statefile state/<hash>.commitpartial which would mean "partial, and
expected to exist but was pruned by fsck" and fsck would continue to
error out until the commit was re-pulled. Right now the partial stamp
file is empty, so it'd be fully compatible to write a rationale into
it.
====
Signed-off-by: Jason Wessel <jason.wessel@windriver.com>
Closes: #1910
Approved by: cgwalters
If there are different deployments for the same commit version, the BLS
snippets will have the same title fields (but different version fields):
$ grep title *
ostree-1-testos.conf:title TestOS 42 20190902.0 (ostree)
ostree-2-testos.conf:title TestOS 42 20190902.0 (ostree)
ostree-3-testos.conf:title TestOS 42 20190902.0 (ostree)
But bootloaders could expect the title field to be unique for BLS files.
For example, the zipl bootloader used in the s390x architecture uses the
field to name the boot sections that are created from the BLS snippets.
So two BLS snippets having the same title would lead to zipl failing to
create the IPL boot sections because they would have duplicated names:
$ zipl
Using config file '/etc/zipl.conf'
Using BLS config file '/boot/loader/entries/ostree-3-testos.conf'
Using BLS config file '/boot/loader/entries/ostree-2-testos.conf'
Using BLS config file '/boot/loader/entries/ostree-1-testos.conf'
Error: Config file '/etc/zipl.conf': Line 0: section name 'TestOS 42 20190902.0 (ostree)' already specified
Avoid this by always including the deployment index along with the commit
version in the title field, so this will be unique even if there are BLS
files for deployments that use the same commit version:
$ grep title *
ostree-1-testos.conf:title TestOS 42 20190902.0 (ostree:2)
ostree-2-testos.conf:title TestOS 42 20190902.0 (ostree:1)
ostree-3-testos.conf:title TestOS 42 20190902.0 (ostree:0)
$ zipl
Using config file '/etc/zipl.conf'
Using BLS config file '/boot/loader/entries/ostree-3-testos.conf'
Using BLS config file '/boot/loader/entries/ostree-2-testos.conf'
Using BLS config file '/boot/loader/entries/ostree-1-testos.conf'
Building bootmap in '/boot'
Building menu 'zipl-automatic-menu'
Adding #1: IPL section 'TestOS 42 20190902.0 (ostree:0)' (default)
Adding #2: IPL section 'TestOS 42 20190902.0 (ostree:1)'
Adding #3: IPL section 'TestOS 42 20190902.0 (ostree:2)'
Preparing boot device: dasda (0120).
Done.
Closes: #1911
Approved by: cgwalters
Currently the BLS fragments fields write is non-determinisitc. The order
of the fields will depend on how the iterator of the options GHashTable
iterates over the key/value pairs.
But some bootloaders expect the fields to be written in a certain order.
For example the zipl bootloader (used in the s390x architecture) fails to
parse BLS files if the first field is not the 'title' field, since that's
used to name the zipl boot sections that are created from the BLS files.
Write the fields in a deterministic order, following what is used in the
example file of the BootLoaderspec document:
https://systemd.io/BOOT_LOADER_SPECIFICATION
Related: https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/1888Closes: #1904
Approved by: cgwalters
OSTree has some logic to preserve comment lines in the BLS fragments, but
the BLS fragments are always created on new deployments so the comments
are never carried.
Also, OSTree never writes BLS fragments with comments so these will only
be present in BLS files that were modified outside of OSTree. Something
that should be avoided in general.
Finally, there is a bug in the logic that causes BLS files to have lines
with only a newline character.
The ostree_bootconfig_parser_parse_at() function reads the bootconfig file
using glnx_fd_readall_utf8() but this function NUL terminates the returned
string with the file contents.
So when the string is later split using '\n' as delimiter, the last token
is set to '\0' and a wrong GVariant will be added to the lines GPtrArray
in the OstreeBootconfigParser struct.
This will lead to bootconfig files that contains lines with only a newline
character, since the key in the GVariant would be set to NUL and won't be
present in the options GHashTable of the OstreeBootconfigParser struct.
So let's just remove that logic since is never used and makes BLS files to
have wrong empty lines.
Before this patch:
$ tail -n 4 /boot/loader/entries/ostree-1-testos.conf | hexdump -C
00000000 74 69 74 6c 65 20 54 65 73 74 4f 53 20 34 32 20 |title TestOS 42 |
00000010 32 30 31 39 30 38 32 34 2e 30 20 28 6f 73 74 72 |20190824.0 (ostr|
00000020 65 65 29 0a 0a 0a 0a |ee)....|
00000027
After this patch:
$ tail -n 4 /boot/loader/entries/ostree-1-testos.conf | hexdump -C
00000000 76 65 72 73 69 6f 6e 20 31 0a 6f 70 74 69 6f 6e |version 1.option|
00000010 73 20 72 6f 6f 74 3d 4c 41 42 45 4c 3d 4d 4f 4f |s root=LABEL=MOO|
00000020 20 71 75 69 65 74 20 6f 73 74 72 65 65 3d 2f 6f | quiet ostree=/o|
00000030 73 74 72 65 65 2f 62 6f 6f 74 2e 31 2f 74 65 73 |stree/boot.1/tes|
00000040 74 6f 73 2f 61 65 34 36 34 39 36 38 30 64 33 65 |tos/ae4649680d3e|
00000050 38 33 62 32 34 65 34 37 66 38 64 66 31 30 38 31 |83b24e47f8df1081|
00000060 38 62 66 36 39 38 39 64 36 34 37 61 62 32 38 38 |8bf6989d647ab288|
00000070 64 31 63 30 39 38 30 36 65 34 61 33 36 61 34 65 |d1c09806e4a36a4e|
00000080 62 62 66 36 2f 30 0a 6c 69 6e 75 78 20 2f 6f 73 |bbf6/0.linux /os|
00000090 74 72 65 65 2f 74 65 73 74 6f 73 2d 61 65 34 36 |tree/testos-ae46|
000000a0 34 39 36 38 30 64 33 65 38 33 62 32 34 65 34 37 |49680d3e83b24e47|
000000b0 66 38 64 66 31 30 38 31 38 62 66 36 39 38 39 64 |f8df10818bf6989d|
000000c0 36 34 37 61 62 32 38 38 64 31 63 30 39 38 30 36 |647ab288d1c09806|
000000d0 65 34 61 33 36 61 34 65 62 62 66 36 2f 76 6d 6c |e4a36a4ebbf6/vml|
000000e0 69 6e 75 7a 2d 33 2e 36 2e 30 0a 74 69 74 6c 65 |inuz-3.6.0.title|
000000f0 20 54 65 73 74 4f 53 20 34 32 20 32 30 31 39 30 | TestOS 42 20190|
00000100 38 32 34 2e 30 20 28 6f 73 74 72 65 65 29 0a |824.0 (ostree).|
0000010f
Closes: #1904
Approved by: cgwalters
I've seen people confused by this error in the case where
`/boot` isn't mounted or the BLS fragments were deleted, etc.
If you understand ostree deeply it's clear but, let's do
better here and a direct error message for the case where
we can't find `/boot/loader` which is the majority of these.
The other case could happen if e.g. just the BLS fragment
for the booted deployment was deleted; let's reword that
one a bit too.
Closes: #1905
Approved by: rfairley
When running under qemu, unimplemented ioctls such as FIFREEZE
return ENOSYS, and this causes the deployment to fail.
Catch this and handle it like EOPNOTSUPP.
I'm not sure if qemu's behaviour is fully correct here (or if it should
return EOPNOTSUPP) but it's trivial to handle regardless.
Closes: #1901
Approved by: cgwalters
Add dummy stubs for GPG public functions to be compiled instead of
original code in case if support of GPG is disabled.
Need that to keep API backward compatibility.
Based on original code from file `ostree-gpg-verify-result.c`.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Closes: #1889
Approved by: cgwalters
Some gpg-named functions/variables should be used for any signature
system, so remove "gpg_" prefix from them to avoid confusion.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Closes: #1889
Approved by: cgwalters
Do not build the code related to GPG sign and verification if
GPGME support is disabled.
Public functions return error 'G_IO_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED' in case if
gpg-related check is rquested.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Closes: #1889
Approved by: cgwalters
There's a valid use case for enabling the timestamp downgrade check
while still also using override commits.
We'll make use of this in Fedora CoreOS, where the agent specifies the
exact commit to upgrade to, while still enforcing that it be newer.
Closes: #1891
Approved by: cgwalters
This way projects can dispatch at run-time based on ostree's
build time options, e.g. detect the availability of GPG.
Closes: #1890
Approved by: jlebon
Move the OstreeKernelArgs autoptr cleanup definition to
ostree-autocleanups.h, which will only expose the definitions when
building ostree or if glib is new enough. The include of
ostree-kernel-args.h needs to be moved before ostree-autocleanups.h in
ostree.h so that the OstreeKernelArgs type is declared when the autoptr
cleanup is defined. All the places it's used already pull in libglnx.h
first so that the compat macros are picked up if glib it too old during
the ostree build.
Closes: #1892
Approved by: jlebon
When a temporary directory is used for GPG operations, it's pretty clear
that the running agent will be useless after the directory is deleted.
Call the new `ot_gpgme_kill_agent ()` helper to kill gpg-agent rather
than leaving them it hanging around forever.
As it turns out, gnupg does have code to make gpg-agent automatically
exit when the homedir is removed (https://dev.gnupg.org/T2756), but
that's only available on gnupg 2.2 or newer. Possibly this code can be
dropped later when that's more widely deployed or users/distros have
been advised to backport the necessary changes.
Closes: #1799
Approved by: cgwalters
Introduce a new signature attribute for the key expiration timestamp and
display it when the key has a non-zero expiration time. Without this,
the error shown is `BAD signature`, which isn't correct.
Closes: #1872
Approved by: cgwalters
This change makes public the current kargs API in src/libostree/ostree-kernel-args.c
and adds documentations.
Upstreams the new kargs API from rpm-ostree/src/libpriv/rpmostree-kargs-process.c
Merges libostree_kernel_args_la_SOURCES to libostree_1_la_SOURCES in Makefile-libostree.am
Upstreams tests/check/test-kargs.c from rpm-ostree.
Closes: #1833Closes: #1869
Approved by: jlebon
Similar to ostree_repo_write_archive_to_mtree(), but takes
a file descriptor to read the archive from instead of mandating
a file path.
Usefull for importing archives into an OSTree repo over a socket
or from standard input in command line tools.
Closes: #1862
Approved by: jlebon
Use GIOErrorEnum as the return value for
_ostree_fetcher_http_status_code_to_io_error(), to avoid an
implicit cast from GIOError.
Closes: #1857
Approved by: cgwalters
Teach `ostree-finalize-staged.service` to check for a file in `/run` to
determine if it should do the finalization. This will be used in
RPM-OSTree, where we want to be able to separate out "preparing updates"
from "making update the default" for more fine-grained control. See:
https://github.com/projectatomic/rpm-ostree/issues/1748Closes: #1841
Approved by: cgwalters
This can happen if a deployment was staged and later cleaned up. Though
just as a helper when debugging issues, let's explicitly mention that
case.
Closes: #1841
Approved by: cgwalters
Rather than wrapping each instance of `sd_journal_*` with
`HAVE_SYSTEMD`, let's just add some convenience macros that are just
no-op if we're not compiling with systemd.
Closes: #1841
Approved by: cgwalters
Generate a grub2 config using the pending deployment, if a grub2
bootloader is detected in the sysroot. Allows grub2-mkconfig
to run if there are no previous deployments.
Fixes: #1774Closes: #1831
Approved by: jlebon
Otherwise, we'll be subject to whatever `umask` is currently. Normally,
processes should respect `umask` when creating files and directories,
but specifically for `ostree admin unlock` (or `rpm-ostree usroverlay`),
this poses a problem since e.g. a `/usr` with mode 0700 will break any
daemon that doesn't run as root and needs to read files under `/usr`,
such as polkitd.
This patch just does a `chmod()` after the `mkdir()`. An alternative
would be to do `umask(0000)` after forking into the child process
that'll call `mount()`, but that'd require also moving the `mkdir()`
calls into there, making for a more intrusive patch.
Closes: #1843
Approved by: cgwalters
Currently for a "normal" refspec you can choose to use
ostree_repo_resolve_rev_ext() instead of ostree_repo_resolve_rev() if
you only want to look at local refs (in refs/heads/) not remote ones.
This commit provides the analogous functionality for
ostree_repo_resolve_collection_ref() by adding a flag
OSTREE_REPO_RESOLVE_REV_EXT_LOCAL_ONLY and implementing it. This
will be used by Flatpak.
Closes: #1825
Approved by: jlebon
Currently the flag OSTREE_REPO_LIST_REFS_EXT_EXCLUDE_REMOTES for
ostree_repo_list_collection_refs() means that refs in refs/remotes/
should be excluded but refs in refs/mirrors/ should still be checked, in
addition to refs/heads/ which is always checked. However in some
situations you want to exclude both remote and mirrored refs and only
check local "owned" ones. So this
commit adds a new flag OSTREE_REPO_LIST_REFS_EXT_EXCLUDE_MIRRORS which
lets you exclude refs/mirrors/ from the listing.
This way we can avoid breaking API but still allow the listing of local
collection-refs.
The impetus for this change is that I'm changing Flatpak to make more
use of refs/mirrors, and we need a way to specify that a collection-ref
is local when using ostree_repo_resolve_collection_ref() in, for
example, the implementation of the repo command. The subsequent commit
will make the changes needed there.
Closes: #1825
Approved by: jlebon
My last commit "lib/repo-refs: Resolve collection-refs in-memory and in
parent repos" changed ostree_repo_resolve_collection_ref() to check the
in-memory set of refs *after* failing to find the ref on disk but that's
not what we want. We want to use the in-memory set of refs first,
because those are the most up to date commits, and then fall back to the
on-disk repo and finally fall back to checking any parent repo. This
commit makes such a change to the order of operations, which is
consistent with how ostree_repo_resolve_rev() works.
Aside from this change being logical, it also fixes some unit test
failures on an unmerged branch of flatpak:
https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/pull/2705
Also, tweak the comments here.
Closes: #1825
Approved by: jlebon
On at least one user's computer, g_getenv("http_proxy") returns the
empty string, so check for that and treat it as no proxy rather than
printing a warning.
See https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/issues/2790Closes: #1835
Approved by: cgwalters
Currently the P2P code requires you to trust every remote you have
configured to the same extent, because a remote controlled by a
malicious actor can serve updates to refs (such as Flatpak apps)
installed from other remotes.[1] The way this attack would play out is
that the malicious remote would deploy the same collection ID as the
victim remote, and would then be able to serve updates for it.
One possible remedy would be to make it an error to configure remotes
such that two have the same collection ID but differing GPG keys. I
attempted to do that in Flatpak[2] but it proved difficult because it is
valid to configure two remotes with the same collection ID, and they may
then each want to update their keyrings which wouldn't happen
atomically.
Another potential solution I've considered is to add a `trusted-remotes`
option to ostree_repo_find_remotes_async() which would dictate which
keyring to use when pulling each ref. However the
ostree_repo_finder_resolve_async() API would still remain vulnerable,
and changing that would require rewriting a large chunk of libostree's
P2P support.
So this commit represents a third attempt at mitigating this security
hole, namely to have the client specify which remote to use for GPG
verification at pull time. This way the pull will fail if the commits
are signed with anything other than the keys we actually trust to serve
updates.
This is implemented as an option "ref-keyring-map" for
ostree_repo_pull_from_remotes_async() and
ostree_repo_pull_with_options() which dictates the remote to be used for
GPG verification of each collection-ref. I think specifying a keyring
remote for each ref is better than specifying a remote for each
OstreeRepoFinderResult, because there are some edge cases where a result
could serve updates to refs which were installed from more than one
remote.
The PR to make Flatpak use this new option is here[3].
[1] https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/issues/1447
[2] https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/pull/2601
[3] https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/pull/2705Closes: #1810
Approved by: cgwalters
When writing a delta to a file this may not always be recorded
in the filename, and it's useful data.
Ref: https://mail.gnome.org/archives/ostree-list/2019-February/msg00000.html
This also required teaching `show` to accept a file path.
Note...for some reason `test-deltas.sh` breaks when run from
a tty - we get `SIGTTIN` which implies something is reading from
the tty but it wasn't obvious to me what.
Closes: #1823
Approved by: jlebon
In Silverblue right now, the boot menu title looks like this:
Fedora 29.20190301.0 (Workstation Edition) 29.20190301.0 (ostree)
This is because RPM-OSTree's `mutate-os-release` feature is enabled,
which injects the OSTree version string directly into `VERSION` and
`PRETTY_NAME`. So appending the version string again is a bit redundant.
Let's just do a simple substring check here before adding the version to
the title.
Closes: #1829
Approved by: cgwalters
The sysroot.bootloader key configures the bootloader
that OSTree uses when deploying a sysroot. Having this key
allows specifying behavior not to use the default bootloader
backend code, which is preferable when creating a first
deployment from the sysroot (#1774).
As of now, the key can take the values "auto" or "none". If
the key is not given, the value defaults to "auto".
"auto" causes _ostree_sysroot_query_bootloader() to be used
when writing a new deployment, which is the original behavior
that dynamically detects which bootloader to use.
"none" avoids querying the bootloader dynamically. The BLS
config fragments are still written to
sysroot/boot/loader/entries for use by higher-level software.
More values can be supported in future to specify a single
bootloader, different behavior for the bootloader code, or
a list of bootloaders to try.
Resolves: #1774Closes: #1814
Approved by: jlebon
Rename ot_keyfile_get_string_as_list() to
ot_keyfile_get_string_list_with_separator_choice() which expresses
more clearly why the function is needed. Also shorten the
function comment.
Closes: #1814
Approved by: jlebon
Currently the behavior of ostree_repo_resolve_rev() is that it tries to
resolve a ref to a commit by checking the refs/ directories, but also by
checking for in-memory ref-checksum pairs which are part of an
in-progress transaction and also by checking the parent repo if one
exists. Currently ostree_repo_resolve_collection_ref() only checks the
refs/ directories, so this commit makes its behavior analagous since it
is the analagous API which supports collection-refs.
The impetus for this was that currently Flatpak uses
ostree_repo_resolve_rev() to load a commit after doing a P2P pull in
flatpak_dir_do_resolve_p2p_refs(), but that assumes the ref came from
the same remote that originally provided it, which might not be the case
if more than one remote has the same collection ID configured. And
changing Flatpak to use ostree_repo_resolve_collection_ref() doesn't
work without this patch.
Closes: #1821
Approved by: pwithnall
Add the OSTREE_REPO_REMOTE_CHANGE_REPLACE operation to the
OstreeRepoRemoteChange enum. This operation will add a remote or replace
an existing one. It respects the location of the remote configuration
file when replacing and the remotes config dir settings when adding a
new remote.
Closes: #1166
Approved by: cgwalters
We have a `http2=[0|1]` remote config option; let's have the
`--disable-http2` build option define the default for that. This way
it's easy to still enable http2 for testing even if
we have it disabled by default.
Closes: #1798
Approved by: jlebon
Similar as available for u-boot (ce2995e1dc)
and syslinux (c5112c25e4), enable parsing
and writing devicetree filename into grub.cfg.
This is required by arm64-based devices running edk2 instead of u-boot
as the main bootloader (e.g. 96boards HiKey and HiKey960).
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Salveti <ricardo@foundries.io>
Closes: #1790
Approved by: cgwalters
We want a case where we can disable the min-free-space check. Initially,
it felt like to add a OSTREE_REPO_PULL_FLAGS_DISABLE_FREE_SPACE_CHECK but
the problem is prepare_transaction() does not have a OstreeRepoPullFlags
parameter which we can parse right here. On top of it, prepare_transaction()
enforces min-free-space check and won't let the transaction proceed if
the check failed.
This is pretty bad in conjunction with "inherit-transaction" as what
Flatpak uses. There is no way to disable this check unless we remove
it altogether from prepare_transaction.
This issue came out to light when flatpak wasn't able to write metadata
after fetching from remote:
[uajain@localhost ~]$ flatpak remote-info flathub org.kde.Platform//5.9
error: min-free-space-size 500MB would be exceeded
Metadata objects helps in housekeeping and restricting them means
restricting crucial UX (like search, new updates) functionalities
in clients like gnome-software. The error banners originated from
these issues are also abrupt and not much helpful to the user. This
is the specific instance of the issue this patches tries to address.
See https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/issues/2139 for discussion.
Closes: #1779
Approved by: mwleeds
The way _ostree_repo_import_object() is written, a hardlink copy is only
attempted if the source repo is trusted, so update the docs for
ostree_repo_import_object_from_with_trust() to reflect that.
Closes: #1777
Approved by: cgwalters
This allows specifying gpgpath as list of
paths that can point to a file or a directory. If a directory path
is given, paths to all regular files in the directory are added
to the remote as gpg ascii keys. If the path is not a directory,
the file is directly added (whether regular file, empty - errors
will be reported later when verifying gpg keys e.g. when pulling).
Adding the gpgkeypath property looks like:
ostree --repo=repo remote add --set=gpgpath="/path/key1.asc,/path/keys.d" R1 https://example.com/some/remote/ostree/repoCloses#773Closes: #1773
Approved by: cgwalters
When falling back to copying objects when importing them into a
bare-user repo, we only actually need to transfer over the
`user.ostreemeta` xattr.
This allows the destination repo to be on a separate filesystem that
might not even support `security.selinux`. (I hit this while importing
over virtio-9p).
Closes: #1771
Approved by: cgwalters
I found this useful while hacking on rpm-ostree but I think it might be
useful enough to upstream. This stat is really helpful for validating
that a pipeline is hitting the devino cache sweet spot.
Closes: #1772
Approved by: cgwalters
if a file ".wh..wh..opq" is present in a directory, delete anything
from lower layers that is already in that directory.
Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Scrivano <gscrivan@redhat.com>
Closes: #1486
Approved by: cgwalters
This renames a config key to make its semantics more obvious. Despite
what the commit message says, it only applies when a set of repo finders
is not specified (either on the command line or in a library API call).
This also renames the corresponding ostree_repo_get function. We can do
this since it hasn't been released yet.
Closes: #1763
Approved by: pwithnall
Rather than manually starting the `ostree-finalize-staged.service` unit,
we can leverage systemd's path units for this. It fits quite nicely too,
given that we already have a path we drop iif we have a staged
deployment.
To give some time for the preset to make it to systems, we don't yet
drop the explicit call to `systemctl start`. Though we do make it
conditional based on a DEBUG env var so that we can actually test it in
CI for now. Once we're sure this has propagated, we can drop the
`systemctl start` path and the env var together.
Closes: #1740
Approved by: cgwalters
This commit disables searching on the local network for refs, unless
explicitly requested by the user either by changing the value of the
"core.repo-finders" config option, or by passing an OstreeRepoFinderAvahi to
ostree_repo_find_remotes_async() / ostree_repo_finder_resolve_async(),
or by specifying "lan" in the --finders option of the find-remotes
command.
The primary reason for this is that ostree_repo_find_remotes_async()
takes about 40% longer to complete with the LAN finder enabled, and that
API is used widely (e.g. in every flatpak operation). It's also probable
that some users don't want ostree doing potentially unexpected traffic
on the local network, even though everything pulled from a peer is GPG
verified.
Flathub will soon deploy collection IDs to everyone[1] so these code
paths will soon see a lot more use and that's why this change is being
made now.
Endless is the only potential user of the LAN updates feature, and we
can revert this patch on our fork of ostree. For it to be used outside
Endless OS we will need to upstream eos-updater-avahi and
eos-update-server into ostree.
[1] https://github.com/flathub/flathub/issues/676Closes: #1758
Approved by: cgwalters
Currently libostree essentially has two modes when it's pulling refs:
the "legacy" code paths pull only from the Internet, and the code paths
that are aware of collection IDs try to pull from the Internet, the
local network, and mounted filesystems (such as USB drives). The problem
is that while we eventually want to migrate everyone to using collection
IDs, we don't want to force checking LAN and USB sources if the user
just wants to pull from the Internet, since the LAN/USB code paths can
have privacy[1], security[2], and performance[3] implications.
So this commit implements a new repo config option called "repo-finders"
which can be configured to, for example, "config;lan;mount;" to check
all three sources or "config;mount;" to disable searching the LAN. The
set of values mirror those used for the --finders option of the
find-remotes command. This configuration affects pulls in three places:
1. the ostree_repo_find_remotes_async() API, regardless of whether or
not the user of the API provided a list of OstreeRepoFinders
2. the ostree_repo_finder_resolve_async() /
ostree_repo_finder_resolve_all_async() API
3. the find-remotes command
This feature is especially important right now since we soon want to
have Flathub publish a metadata key which will have Flatpak clients
update the remote config to add a collection ID.[4]
This effectively fixes https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/issues/1863
but I'll patch Flatpak too, so it doesn't pass finders to libostree only
to then have them be removed.
[1] https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/issues/1863#issuecomment-404128824
[2] https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/1527
[3] Based on how long the "ostree find-remotes" command takes to
complete, having the LAN finder enabled slows down that step of the
pull process by about 40%. See also
https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/issues/1862
[4] https://github.com/flathub/flathub/issues/676Closes: #1758
Approved by: cgwalters
The idea is that if the process is running as root, it can change
ownership of newly written files to match the owner of the repo.
Unfortunately, it currently applies in the other direction, too - a
non-root user writing to a root owned repository. If the repo is
writable by the user but owned by root, it can still create files and
directories there, but it can't change ownership of them.
This feature comes from
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738954. As it turns out, this
feature was never completed. It only works on content objects and not
metadata objects, refs, deltas, summaries, etc. Rather than try to fix
all of those, remove the feature until someone has interest in
completing it.
Closes: #1754
Approved by: cgwalters
Actually testing the patch to add `--force-copy-zerosized` to
rpm-ostree tripped over the fact that it uses `--union-identical`,
and we just hit an assertion failure with that combination.
Fix this by copying over the logic we have for the hardlink case.
Closes: #1753
Approved by: jlebon
In rpm-ostree we've hit a few cases where hardlinking zero-sized
files causes us problems. The most prominent is lock files in
`/usr/etc`, such as `/usr/etc/selinux/semanage.LOCK`. If there
are two zero-sized lock files to grab, but they're hardlinked,
then locking will fail.
Another case here is if one is using ostree inside a container
and don't have access to FUSE (i.e. `rofiles-fuse`), then the
ostree hardlinking can cause files that aren't ordinarily hardlinked
to become so, and mutation of one mutates all. An example where
this is concerning is Python `__init__.py` files.
Now, these lock files should clearly not be in the tree to begin
with, but - we're not gaining a huge amount by hardlinking these
files either, so let's add an option to disable it.
Closes: #1752
Approved by: jlebon
Write to the journal when starting to finalize a staged deployment.
Combined with the "Transaction completed" message we already emit, this
makes it easy later on to determine whether the operation was successful
by inspecting the journal. This will be used by `rpm-ostree status`.
Closes: #1750
Approved by: cgwalters
There are use cases for libostree as a local content store
for content derived or delivered via other mechanisms (e.g. OCI
images, RPMs, etc.). rpm-ostree today imports RPMs into OSTree
branches, and puts the RPM header value as commit metadata.
Some of these can be quite large because the header includes
permissions for each file. Similarly, some OCI metadata is large.
Since there's no security issues with this, support committing
such content.
We still by default limit the size of metadata fetches, although
for good measure we make this configurable too via a new
`max-metadata-size` value.
Closes: https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/1721Closes: #1744
Approved by: jlebon
Currently the locking code checks if the value -1 was set for the config
key "lock-timeout-secs" and if so, a thread trying to acquire a lock
will block indefinitely. Positive values specify how long to attempt to
acquire a lock in a non-blocking way (the attempt is made once every
second). But when the value is read from the config file,
g_ascii_strtoull() is used, which converts it to an unsigned integer.
This commit makes libostree use g_ascii_strtoll() instead, so that it's
possible to set that key to -1 as intended.
Closes: #1737
Approved by: jlebon
Copying the xattrs on metadata objects is wrong in general, we
don't "own" them. Notably this would fail in the situation of
doing a pull from e.g. a `bare-user` source to a destination
that was on a different mount point (so we couldn't hardlink),
and the source had e.g. a `security.selinux` attribute.
Closes: #1734Closes: #1736
Approved by: jlebon
Just include the whole URL that failed if libcurl failed with something
elementary like CURLE_COULDNT_CONNECT or CURLE_COULDNT_RESOLVE_HOST.
Closes: #1731Closes: #1732
Approved by: cgwalters
There's some subtlety to this, we don't handle all cases.
But the 99% cases are using `--sysroot deploy` to create an
initial deployment, and then doing upgrades from inside
a booted deployment.
It was only the latter case that didn't work with a separate `/var`.
Fixing all of them would probably require libostree to learn
how to e.g. look at `/etc/fstab` (or worse, systemd mount units?)
and handle the mounting. I don't think we want to do anything
like that right now, since there are no active drivers for the
use case.
Closes: https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/1729Closes: #1730
Approved by: akiernan
Earlier, the actual reserved space (in blocks) were calculated inside the
transaction codepath ostree_repo_prepare_transaction(). However, while
reworking on ostree_repo_get_min_free_space_bytes() API, it was realized that
this calculation can be done independently from the transaction's codepaths, hence
enabling the usage for ostree_repo_get_min_free_space_bytes() API irrespective
of whether there is an ongoing transaction or not.
https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/1720Closes: #1722
Approved by: pwithnall
This commit defines a metadata key that tells clients to update their
remote config to add a collection ID. This functionality is currently
implemented in Flatpak for the key "xa.collection-id", but there are two
good reasons for moving the key to OSTree:
1) Servers such as Flathub shouldn't set xa.collection-id in their
metadata now or in the medium term future, because many users are still
using old versions of Flatpak and OSTree[1] which would hit various
bugs[2][3][4] on the P2P code paths that are enabled by collection IDs.
Defining a new key means that only clients running recent
(as-yet-unreleased) versions of Flatpak and OSTree will pay attention to
it and deploy the collection ID, leaving the users on old versions
unaffected.
2) OSTree is as "invested" in collection IDs as Flatpak, so there's no
reason the key should be defined in Flatpak rather than here. According
to Philip Withnall, the reason the key was put in Flatpak originally was
that at the time there was uncertainty about tying OSTree to collection
IDs.
[1] https://ahayzen.com/direct/flathub.html#downloadsbyflatpakstacked
[2] https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/commit/e4e6d85ea
[3] https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/commit/5813639f
[4] https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/commit/5b21a5b7Closes: #1726
Approved by: pwithnall