The directory was already created, so return success even if Fchownat fails.
The same error handling is already used if fs.args.PlaintextNames is false.
This ensures that ./build.bash still works when the LDFLAGS environment
variable contains multiple options, e.g., LDFLAGS="-lpthread -lm". The
correct way of passing multiple options is discussed here:
https://github.com/golang/go/issues/6234
For some unknown reason, the method only works when -extldflags is the
last argument - is this a bug in Go?
Old XFS filesystems always return DT_UNKNOWN. Downgrade the message
to "info" level if we are on XFS.
Using the "warning" level means that users on old XFS filesystems
cannot run the test suite as it intentionally aborts on any
warnings.
Fixes https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/267
The hardcoded full paths were introduced to handle the
case of an empty PATH environment variable. However,
since commit 10212d791a we set PATH to a default
value if empty. The hardcoded paths are no longer neccessary,
and cause problems on some distros:
User voobscout on
https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/225#issuecomment-438682034 :
just to chime in - please don't hardcode paths, for example I'm on
NixOS and logger lives in /run/current-system/sw/bin/logger
Drop the hardcoded paths.
When gocryptfs was started on a terminal and later
daemonized, the color codes stayed active in the syslog
output.
The codes are not visible in "journalctl -f", which is why
I have not noticed it yet, but they do show up in normal
syslog as the usual "#033[33m" crap.
The messages would still be collected via gocryptfs-logger,
but let's do it right.
Before:
Oct 17 21:58:12 brikett gocryptfs[9926]: testing info
Oct 17 21:58:12 brikett gocryptfs[9926]: testing warn
Oct 17 21:58:12 brikett gocryptfs-9926-logger[9935]: testing fatal
After:
Oct 17 22:00:53 brikett gocryptfs[10314]: testing info
Oct 17 22:00:53 brikett gocryptfs[10314]: testing warn
Oct 17 22:00:53 brikett gocryptfs[10314]: testing fatal
Even though filesystem notifications aren't implemented for FUSE, I decided to
try my hand at implementing the autounmount feature (#128). I based it on the
EncFS autounmount code, which records filesystem accesses and checks every X
seconds whether it's idled long enough to unmount.
I've tested the feature locally, but I haven't added any tests for this flag.
I also haven't worked with Go before. So please let me know if there's
anything that should be done differently.
One particular concern: I worked from the assumption that the open files table
is unique per-filesystem. If that's not true, I'll need to add an open file
count and associated lock to the Filesystem type instead.
https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/pull/265
Retry with length 1000 if length 4000 fails, which
should work on all filesystems.
Failure was:
--- FAIL: TestTooLongSymlink (0.00s)
correctness_test.go:198: symlink xxx[...]xxxx /tmp/xfs.mnt/gocryptfs-test-parent/549823072/365091391/TooLongSymlink: file name too long
https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/267
Error was:
# github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/internal/fusefrontend
internal/fusefrontend/fs.go:179: cannot use perms | 256 (type uint16) as type uint32 in argument to syscall.Fchmod
internal/fusefrontend/fs.go:185: cannot use perms (type uint16) as type uint32 in argument to syscall.Fchmod
Instead of reporting the consequence:
matrix_test.go:906: modeHave 0664 != modeWant 0777
Report it if chmod itself fails, and also report the old file mode:
matrix_test.go:901: chmod 000 -> 777 failed: bad file descriptor
The cipherdir path is used as the fsname, as displayed
in "df -T". Now, having a comma in fsname triggers a sanity check
in go-fuse, aborting the mount with:
/bin/fusermount: mount failed: Invalid argument
fuse.NewServer failed: fusermount exited with code 256
Sanitize fsname by replacing any commas with underscores.
https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/262
Rename openBackingPath to openBackingDir and use OpenDirNofollow
to be safe against symlink races. Note that openBackingDir is
not used in several important code paths like Create().
But it is used in Unlink, and the performance impact in the RM benchmark
to be acceptable:
Before
$ ./benchmark.bash
Testing gocryptfs at /tmp/benchmark.bash.bYO: gocryptfs v1.6-12-g930c37e-dirty; go-fuse v20170619-49-gb11e293; 2018-09-08 go1.10.3
WRITE: 262144000 bytes (262 MB, 250 MiB) copied, 1.07979 s, 243 MB/s
READ: 262144000 bytes (262 MB, 250 MiB) copied, 0.882413 s, 297 MB/s
UNTAR: 16.703
MD5: 7.606
LS: 1.349
RM: 3.237
After
$ ./benchmark.bash
Testing gocryptfs at /tmp/benchmark.bash.jK3: gocryptfs v1.6-13-g84d6faf-dirty; go-fuse v20170619-49-gb11e293; 2018-09-08 go1.10.3
WRITE: 262144000 bytes (262 MB, 250 MiB) copied, 1.06261 s, 247 MB/s
READ: 262144000 bytes (262 MB, 250 MiB) copied, 0.947228 s, 277 MB/s
UNTAR: 17.197
MD5: 7.540
LS: 1.364
RM: 3.410
The function used to do two things:
1) Walk the directory tree in a manner safe from symlink attacks
2) Open the final component in the mode requested by the caller
This change drops (2), which was only used once, and lets the caller
handle it. This simplifies the function and makes it fit for reuse in
forward mode in openBackingPath(), and for using O_PATH on Linux.
These were silently ignored until now (!) but
are rejected by Go 1.11 stdlib.
Drop the flags so the tests work again, until
we figure out a better solution.
https://github.com/golang/go/issues/20130