Before Go 1.5, GOMAXPROCS defaulted to 1, hence it made
sense to unconditionally increase it to 4.
But since Go 1.5, GOMAXPROCS defaults to the number of cores,
so don't keep it from increasing above 4.
Also, update the performance numbers.
We have accumulated so many options over time that they
no longer fit on the screen.
Display only a useful subset of options to the user unless
they pass "-hh".
This commit defines all exit codes in one place in the exitcodes
package.
Also, it adds a test to verify the exit code on incorrect
password, which is what SiriKali cares about the most.
Fixes https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/77 .
Now looks like this:
$ ./gocryptfs -version
gocryptfs [GitVersion not set - please compile using ./build.bash]; go-fuse [GitVersionFuse not set - please compile using ./build.bash]; 0000-00-00 go1.8
Hopefully easier to grep for.
A crypto benchmark mode like "openssl speed".
Example run:
$ ./gocryptfs -speed
AES-GCM-256-OpenSSL 180.89 MB/s (selected in auto mode)
AES-GCM-256-Go 48.19 MB/s
AES-SIV-512-Go 37.40 MB/s
From the comment:
// CheckTrailingGarbage tries to read one byte from stdin and exits with a
// fatal error if the read returns any data.
// This is meant to be called after reading the password, when there is no more
// data expected. This helps to catch problems with third-party tools that
// interface with gocryptfs.
For compatability with mount(1), options are also accepted as
"-o COMMA-SEPARATED-OPTIONS" at the end of the command line.
For example, "-o q,zerokey" is equivalent to "-q -zerokey".
...unless "-nosyslog" is passed.
All gocryptfs messages already go to syslog, but the messages
that the go-fuse lib emits were still printed to stdout.
Fixes issue #13 ( https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/13 )
Device files and suid binaries are often not needed when running
gocryptfs as root. As they are potentially dangerous, let the
user enable them explicitely via the new "-o" option instead of
always enabling them when running as root.
FUSE filesystems are mounted with "nosuid" by default. If we run as root,
we can use device files by passing the opposite mount option, "suid".
Also we have to use syscall.Chmod instead of os.Chmod because the
portability translation layer "syscallMode" messes up the sgid
and suid bits.
Fixes 70% of the failures in xfstests generic/193. The remaining are
related to truncate, but we err on the safe side:
$ diff -u tests/generic/193.out /home/jakob/src/fuse-xfstests/results//generic/193.out.bad
[...]
check that suid/sgid bits are cleared after successful truncate...
with no exec perm
before: -rwSr-Sr--
-after: -rw-r-Sr--
+after: -rw-r--r--
FUSE filesystems are mounted with "nodev" by default. If we run as root,
we can use device files by passing the opposite mount option, "dev".
Fixes xfstests generic/184.