Using the error prefixing in the delta processing allows us to
do new code style. Also strip trailing whitespace.
Use error prefixing in a few other random places. I didn't
hunt for all of them, just testing out the new API.
Use `glnx_fchmod()`. Also note I dropped one `fchmod (tmpf, 0600)`
which is no longer necessary.
Update submodule: libglnx
Closes: #1011
Approved by: jlebon
There's lots of mechanically replacing `OtTmpFile` with `GLnxTmpfile`;
the biggest changes are in the commit path. Symlink commits are now
very clearly separated from regular files. Symlinks are `OtCleanupUnlinkat`,
and regular files are `GLnxTmpfile`.
The commit codepath separates those as `_ostree_repo_commit_path_final()` and
`_ostree_repo_commit_tmpf_final()`. A nice aspect of all of this is that they
both *consume* the temporary on success. This avoids an extra spurious
`unlink()` call.
One of the biggest bits of code motion is in `commit_loose_regfile_object()`,
which no longer needs to care about symlinks. For the most parth though it's
just removing conditionals.
Update submodule: libglnx
Closes: #958
Approved by: jlebon
Unbreaks mounting in CentOS. Newer systemd in Fedora pulls didn't need this, I
think due to `RequiresMountsFor=`. Anyways, this is what the fstab generator
does, and it's clearly right ✓.
Closes: https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/867Closes: #869
Approved by: jlebon
I noticed an instance of this while working on https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/pull/861
Which apparently I cargo-culted into the new system generator bits.
Let's break this out as a small concise change.
Closes: #866
Approved by: jlebon
If one wants to set up a mount for `/var` in `/etc/fstab`, it
won't be mounted since `ostree-prepare-root` set up a bind mount for
`/var` to `/sysroot/ostree/$stateroot/var`, and systemd will take
the already extant mount over what's in `/etc/fstab`.
There are a few options to fix this, but what I settled on is parsing
`/etc/fstab` in a generator (exactly like `systemd-fstab-generator` does),
except here we look for an explicit mount for `/var`, and if one *isn't* found,
synthesize the default ostree mount to the stateroot. Another nice property is
that if an admin creates a `var.mount` unit in `/etc` for example, that will
also override our mount.
Note that today ostree doesn't hard depend on systemd, so this behavior only
kicks in if we're built with systemd *and* libmount support (for parsing
`/etc/fstab`). I didn't really test that case though.
Initially I started writing this as a "pure libc" program, but at one point
decided to use `libostree.so` to find the booted deployment. That didn't work
out because `/boot` wasn't necessarily mounted and hence we couldn't find the
bootloader config. A leftover artifact from this is that the generator code
calls into libostree via the "cmd private" infrastructure. But it's an easy way
to share code, and doesn't hurt.
Closes: #859
Approved by: jlebon