Use exec.LookPath() to find fusermount in the user's PATH
first. Fall back to /bin/fusermount for the case that PATH
is not set, like go-fuse does.
Fixes https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/448
fusermount3 (i.e. fusermount from libfuse 3.x) has dropped
the `nonempty` option.
Detect fusermount3 and don't add `nonempty` in this case.
Fixes https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/pull/440
Move the statusTxtContent to fix this confusing error
when running `go get github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/...`:
$ go get github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/...
# github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/tests/example_filesystems
tests/example_filesystems/example_test_helpers.go:22:16: undefined: statusTxtContent
tests/example_filesystems/example_test_helpers.go:75:16: undefined: statusTxtContent
Feedback received during the recent Go user group. If you haven't
used FUSE before, you don't know how to unmount, and it was not
described in the man page!
As for the options, there are many, and new users are intimidated
by it. State clearly that defaults are fine.
Error from Travis CI was:
+GOOS=darwin
+GOARCH=amd64
+go build -tags without_openssl
# github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/internal/fusefrontend
internal/fusefrontend/fs.go:88:45: cannot use st.Dev (type int32) as type uint64 in argument to openfiletable.NewInumMap
Add uint64 to fix it.
The comment is outdated, at this point, we should
really not get any errors from ReadDirIVAt.
The change is best seen when running the fsck tests. Before:
fsck: error opening dir "missing_diriv": 2=no such file or directory
After:
OpenDir "K2m0E6qzIfoLkVZJanoUiQ": could not read gocryptfs.diriv: no such file or directory
fsck: error opening dir "missing_diriv": 5=input/output error
See https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/403 , where
the extra info would have been helpful.
This was meant as a way to inform the user that
something is very wrong, however, users are hitting
the condition on MacOS due to ".DS_Store" files, and
also on NFS due to ".nfsXXX" files.
Drop the whole thing as it seems to cause more pain
than gain.
Fixes https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/431
On Fedora, /tmp is tmpfs, which behaves differently than ext4
(inode numbers are never reused, for example).
Use /var/tmp, which is ext4 on Fedora, to get a more realistic
test environment.
This also allows us to drop the xattr workaround.
Closing the fd means the inode number may be reused immediately
by a new file, so we have to get the old fileID out of the table
beforehand!
Hopefully fixes https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/363
When running
$ go test ./tests/matrix/
in isolation, it failed like this:
fd leak? before, after:
[0r=/dev/null 3w=/dev/null 5r=/proc/8078/fd (hidden:4)]
[0r=/dev/null 3w=/dev/null 5w=/tmp/go-build366655199/b001/testlog.txt 7r=/proc/8078/fd (hidden:4)]
Filter by prefix to get rid of this spurious test failure.
When generating man pages, pandoc marks indented code blocks with the
roff macro '.nf'. That avoids a warning from man related to the long
line about the master key.
The local user ID (1026 jakob) appears in the source tarballs gocryptfs_v1.7_src.tar.gz and gocryptfs_v1.7_src-deps.tar.gz as the owner of VERSION, Documentation, and vendor. This issue is already fixed for the binary releases by commit 07f57314af, and the solution here is the same: use "tar --owner=root --group=root".