The v0.6-plaintextnames example FS lacks the GCMIV128 feature
flag, is no longer mountable and can no longer be used for testing.
Add a new "-plaintextnames" filesystem created by gocryptfs v0.7.
There have been no format changes to "-plaintextnames" since then.
As v0.4 introduced ext4-style feature flags, the on-disk format version
is unlinkely to change. Drop it from the version output to reduce
clutter. Use "gocryptfs -version -debug" to see it.
Add the Go version string because only Go 1.6 and newer have an optimized
AES-GCM implementation. This will help users to understand the performance
of their build.
tlog is used heavily everywhere and deserves a shorter name.
Renamed using sed magic, without any manual rework:
find * -type f -exec sed -i 's/toggledlog/tlog/g' {} +
Also, capture all stderr and stdout but pass "-q".
This way we get to see error messages if there are any, or
spurious output when there should be none due to "-q".
This used to fail in an ugly way:
$ ./build.bash
./build.bash: line 13: go: command not found
./build.bash: line 15: [: too many arguments
./build.bash: line 20: go: command not found
Warnings were:
main.go:234: declaration of err shadows declaration at main.go:163:
internal/fusefrontend/file.go:401: declaration of err shadows declaration at internal/fusefrontend/file.go:379:
internal/fusefrontend/file.go:419: declaration of err shadows declaration at internal/fusefrontend/file.go:379:
internal/fusefrontend/fs_dir.go:140: declaration of err shadows declaration at internal/fusefrontend/fs_dir.go:97:
If /proc/self/fd/X did not exist, the actual error is that the file
descriptor was invalid.
go-fuse's pathfs prefers using an open fd even for path-based operations
but does not take any locks to prevent the fd from being closed.
Instead, it retries the operation by path if it get EBADF. So this
change allows the retry logic to work correctly.
This fixes the error
rsync: failed to set times on "/tmp/ping.Kgw.mnt/linux-3.0/[...]/.dvb_demux.c.N7YlEM":
No such file or directory (2)
that was triggered by pingpong-rsync.bash.
Mounts two gocryptfs filesystems, "ping" and "pong" and moves the
linux-3.0 kernel tree back and forth between them.
When called as "pingpong-rsync.bash" it uses "rsync --remove-source-files"
for moving the files, otherwise plain "mv".
We (actually, go-fuse) used to call Chown() instead of Lchown()
which meant that the operation would fail on dangling symlinks.
Fix this by calling os.Lchown() ourself. Also add a test case
for this.
Running these tests from integration_tests' TestMain() was awkward
because they were run twice with unchanged settings.
integration_tests tests everything with OpenSSL and with native
Go crypto, but this does not take affect for the example filesystems.
To make this work, test_helpers is also split into its own package.
Several fatal errors were just printed to stdout, which
meant they were invisible when running the test suite.
Fix this by introducing toggledlog.Fatal and convert as
follows:
Fatal errors -> toggledlog.Fatal
Warnings -> toggledlog.Warn
Password prompts -> fmt.Fprintf
This should make things saner and more extensible. It prepares
the infrastructure for "required feature flags" that will be used
to deprecate old gocryptfs version.
This field is added for the convenience of users and
may help them to identify which gocryptfs version
they need to mount a filesystem.
The same information is essentially contained in FeatureFlags,
but this is more difficult to decode for humans.
It is completely ignored programmatically (also by older gocryptfs
versions).
Just presenting an empty directory means that the user does not know
that things went wrong unless he checks the syslog or tries to delete
the directory.
It would be nice to report the error even if only some files were
invalid. However, go-fuse does not allow returning the valid
directory entries AND an error.
gocryptfs v0.9 introduced long file names, so lets add an
example filesystem that has that feature flag set.
Operations on long file names are tested in the regular integration
tests as well.
... but only if the relative path does not start with "..".
Makes the message easier to grasp. Example:
$ gocryptfs -init -scryptn=10 v0.9
[...]
The filesystem has been created successfully.
Before:
You can now mount it using: gocryptfs /home/jakob/src/github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/integration_tests/example_filesystems/v0.9 MOUNTPOINT
After:
You can now mount it using: gocryptfs v0.9 MOUNTPOINT