XFS returns a different error code if you try to overwrite
a non-empty directory with a directory:
XFS: mv: cannot move ‘foo’ to ‘bar/foo’: File exists
ext4: mv: cannot move 'foo' to 'bar/foo': Directory not empty
So have EEXIST trigger the Rmdir logic as well.
Fixes issue #20
Link: https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/20
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--
Support truncate(2) by opening the file and calling ftruncate(2)
While the glibc "truncate" wrapper seems to always use ftruncate, fsstress from
xfstests uses this a lot by calling "truncate64" directly.
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' {} +
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.
Paths in statfs() calls were not encrypted resulting in
an Function not implemented error, when the unencrypted
path didn't exist in the underlying (encrypted)
filesystem.
$ df plain/existingdir
df: ‘plain/existingdir’: Function not implemented