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`libsodium` is an implementation detail. In particular, I'd like
to consider using OpenSSL for ed25519 (if libsodium isn't configured
and openssl is).
So switch the name of the exposed feature and adjust the tests.
Using fs-verity is natural for OSTree because it's file-based,
as opposed to block based (like dm-verity). This only covers
files - not symlinks or directories. And we clearly need to
have integrity for the deployment directories at least.
Also, what we likely need is an API that supports signing files
as they're committed.
So making this truly secure would need a lot more work. Nevertheless,
I think it's time to start experimenting with it. Among other things,
it does *finally* add an API that makes files immutable, which will
help against some accidental damage.
This is basic enablement work that is being driven by
Fedora CoreOS; see also https://github.com/coreos/coreos-assembler/pull/876
17db0f15a7 ("configure: add option for libsystemd") exposed
--without-libsystemd to allow systemd to be disabled even if the systemd
pkgconfig script was present, introducing a new variable
with_libsystemd; there are now three, almost identical variables:
- with_libsystemd [yes, no, maybe] - controlled by --without-libsystemd,
resolved into yes/no by the initial checks
- have_libsystemd [yes, no, <undefined>] - only set if with_libsystemd
is yes/maybe, otherwise undefined
- with_systemd [yes, <undefined>] - yes if have_systemd is yes,
otherwise undefined
with_systemd is the earliest variable and was previously set by a set of
checks for dracut and mkinitcpio. These checks were changed for a
systemd check in 9e2763106b ("lib: Use sd_journal directly
(optionally)"). This commit also introduced BUILDOPT_LIBSYSTEMD, which
will always match BUILDOPT_SYSTEMD.
Fix the confusion by removing with_systemd which will always be yes when
with_libsystemd=yes, or undefined if with_libsystemd=no. We can ignore
the with_libsystemd=maybe case because it will always be resolved into
yes/no before with_systemd is set.
And replace all uses of BUILDOPT_SYSTEMD with BUILDOPT_LIBSYSTEMD, since
they again always match.
This fixes both the advertised features and the summary output when
systemd is disabled by using with_libsystemd which is always defined.
Signed-off-by: Alex Kiernan <alex.kiernan@gmail.com>
Fixes: 5c62a7e4d0 ("build: Expose systemd in OSTREE_FEATURES")
Fixes: 17db0f15a7 ("configure: add option for libsystemd")
Supersedes: #1992
This way it's clearer this bit is only about the CLI entrypoint
also living in `ostree trivial-httpd`, not the underlying
`ostree-trivial-httpd` binary that's separate now.
Delete the automake conditional for this, and make the manpage
conditional use `if USE_LIBSOUP` the same way the C build does.
Suggested-by: Jonathan Lebon <jonathan@jlebon.com>
When building without --enable-trivial-httpd-cmdline, don't build or install
the ostree-trivial-httpd binary.
Signed-off-by: Alex Kiernan <alex.kiernan@gmail.com>
Tiny release. Just want to get out the important bugfixes instead of
backporting patches (notably the gpg-agent stuff and
`ostree-finalize-staged.service` ordering).
Closes: #1927
Approved by: cgwalters
Allow to disable GPGME support with option "--without-gpgme" for
configure.
Signed-off-by: Denis Pynkin <denis.pynkin@collabora.com>
Closes: #1889
Approved by: cgwalters
This way projects can dispatch at run-time based on ostree's
build time options, e.g. detect the availability of GPG.
Closes: #1890
Approved by: jlebon
Some downstreams — namely, the Yocto Project — ship gpg-error with a
pkg-config file, and modify gpg-error-config to error out when you try
using it instead of pkg-config.
We can check for gpg-error via pkg-config, and if it's not available,
fall back to gpg-error-config.
Signed-off-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@gnome.org>
Closes: #1682
Approved by: cgwalters
We use the API, and not linking breaks the build with e.g.
`-fuse-ld=gold` in a Fedora 28 buildroot as gold doesn't do the
"search indirect dependencies" thing.
Closes: #1679
Approved by: jlebon
Currently the API that allows P2P operations (e.g. pulling an ostree ref
from a LAN or USB source) is hidden behind the configure flag
--enable-experimental-api. This commit makes the API public and makes
that flag essentially a no-op (leaving it in place in case we want to
use it again in the future). The P2P API has been tested over the last
several months and proven to work.
This means that since we're no longer using the "experimental" feature
flag, P2P builds of Flatpak will fail when using versions of OSTree from
this commit onwards, until Flatpak is patched in the near future. If you
want to build Flatpak < 0.11.8 with P2P enabled and link against OSTree
2018.6, you'll have to patch Flatpak. However, since Flatpak won't yet
have a hard dependency on OSTree 2018.6, it needs a new way to determine
if the P2P API in OSTree is available, so this commit adds a "p2p"
feature flag. This way the feature set is more semantically correct than
if we had continued to use the "experimental" feature flag.
In addition to making the P2P API public, this commit makes the P2P unit
tests run by default, removes the f27-experimental CI instance that's no
longer needed, changes a few man pages to reflect the changes, and
updates the bash completion script to accept the new commands and
options.
Closes: #1596
Approved by: cgwalters
A quick turnaround to include one PR: https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/pull/1508
"switchroot: Ensure /run/ostree-booted is created even without initramfs"
This fixes ostree when booting without an initramfs. Thanks to @akiernan for the
bug report and helping review the fix! I'm working on enhancing
the test suite, which will help in adding some coverage here.
Also for this release I'm going to avoid adding a "stub" symbol section
to the `-released.sym` file; I don't believe it's necessary.
Closes: #1512
Approved by: jlebon
It's been over a month since 2018.2; we have a few features and various fixes,
and the "stage" work pending which is pretty invasive. Time for a new release!
Closes: #1506
Approved by: jlebon
Until now ostree checked for libsystemd and enabled
support for it if it found it. This commit changes that
behavior by adding an option to enable/disable libsystemd.
This is especially useful if one uses a source based distro
(like Gentoo/Exherbo), where one wants to avoid such automagic
detection of dependencies and prefers switches for that instead.
Closes: #1490
Approved by: cgwalters
There are enough fixes here, and there are some potentially larger patches
incoming like wmanley's checkout speedups and the payload link that will need
soak time in master.
Closes: #1455
Approved by: jlebon
In particular I'd like to get the `--copyup` changes out for an rpm-ostree
release that will use them. But there are other good changes here, and let's
keep up a regular release train 🚄 in general.
Closes: #1413
Approved by: jlebon
Some people (particularly embedded) may find it simpler to
drop libsoup from the build dependency side, but still use libcurl.
Note though this currently neuters almost all of the tests.
Signed-off-by: Anton Gerasimov <anton.gerasimov@openmailbox.org>
Closes: #1397
Approved by: cgwalters
Let's do a new release with the locking preview, the http2 disable options and
other misc bugfixes to close out the year.
Closes: #1386
Approved by: jlebon
See discussion in https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=791622
This is what e.g. systemd, the Linux kernel, and lots of other projects do. It's
astonishingly hard to reliably get right; the optimization IMO only really
matters for truly high performance inner loops, but if you're doing
that kind of stuff today you're probably doing it on a GPU anyways.
Closes: #1384
Approved by: pwithnall
Time to cut a new release, we've got the libcurl cleanup ordering patch which
several people have hit, along with safe early fixes for tmpdir cleanup. Let's
try to land the locking PR early next cycle.
Closes: #1359
Approved by: jlebon
The main thing here is that a ton of stuff has happened in gnulib since we
imported `parse-datetime.y`. I cherry-picked a little bit of it, but that
upstream doesn't seem to build with `-Wundef`, so I just deleted some hunks.
(Note I reindented the warnings consistently)
Update submodule: libglnx
Closes: #1320
Approved by: jlebon
Introduce support for GnuTLS for computing cryptograpic
hashes, similar to the OpenSSL backend. A reason to do
this is some distributors want to avoid GPLv3, and GPG
pulls that in.
A possible extension of using GnuTLS would be replacing the GPG signing
with `PKCS#7` signatures and `X.509` keys.
We also support `--with-crypto=openssl`, which has the same effect
as `--with-openssl`, and continues to be supported.
Changes by Colin Walters <walters@verbum.org>:
- Drop libgcrypt option for now
- Unify buildsystem on --with-crypto
Link: https://mail.gnome.org/archives/ostree-list/2017-June/msg00002.html
Signed-off-by: Jussi Laako <jussi.laako@linux.intel.com>
Closes: #1189
Approved by: cgwalters
We use the "exhaustive enum" pattern (i.e. no `default:`) in some places so
we're forced to touch all users when adding cases.
Closes: #1167
Approved by: peterbaouoft
I find "libOSTree" awkward to type and really to look at. Let's be nicer on
people's pinky fingers and eyes and drop it all down to lowercase.
Closes: #1093
Approved by: jlebon
This is in line with the "/etc is for sysadmins", "/usr is OS" model;
e.g. systemd's bash completions go there.
Making this change since I was looking at the required spec file changes.
Closes: #1083
Approved by: mbarnes
This commit sets prgname correctly so that the "ostree subcommand
--help" output prints the subcommand rather than just "ostree".
This was removed in commit f0519e541f because it tripped the thread
sanitizer, but it's being added back conditionally so most users who
don't compile with -fsanitize=adress see proper help output.
Closes: #1054
Approved by: cgwalters
Our CI runs use `-Werror`; there's no point to our default warning set kicking
in, it just bloats the command line output.
Closes: #1023
Approved by: jlebon
This is a more complex implementation of OstreeRepoFinder which resolves
ref names to remote URIs by looking for refs advertised by peers on the
local network using DNS-SD records and mDNS (Avahi). The idea is to
allow OS and app updates to be propagated over local networks, without
the internet.
It requires an OSTree server and code to generate the DNS-SD adverts in
order to be fully functional — support for this will be added
separately.
Unit tests are included.
Includes fixes by Krzesimir Nowak <krzesimir@kinvolk.io>.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #924
Approved by: cgwalters
test-symbols.sh was looking for the DevelBuild string, which is actually
part of the output from `ostree --version`, not $OSTREE_FEATURES.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #948
Approved by: cgwalters
And use it in `test-symbols.sh`, to fix the `distcheck` case;
the previous change stopped distributing `libostree-devel.sym`
in release builds.
Closes: #944
Approved by: jlebon
I was trying to do a release and move the symbols from `-devel.sym` into
`-release.sym`, but it turns out that at least GNU binutils `ld` treats an empty
version script as a syntax error. Fix this by adding a "release build"
flag, and only include `-devel` in non-release builds.
This would also make it easier to inject that flag into our `.pc` and
`ostree-version.h` and `ostree --version` metadata, but I didn't do that yet.
EDIT: Turns out a simpler fix is just to add an empty section. However I kept
this commit since it's a useful sanity check for whether we should include
`-devel.sym` in builds, and we may want to inject the metadata later.
Closes: #942
Approved by: jlebon
So far a lot of submitted PR have added symbols into the first
section. Split the file into `-released` and `-devel` to make
this more obvious.
To further enforce things, we hardcode a checksum of the `-released`
file in `test-symbols.sh`. Only release commits should update that
checksum.
Did you notice I like checksums?
Closes: #931
Approved by: pwithnall
If one wants to set up a mount for `/var` in `/etc/fstab`, it
won't be mounted since `ostree-prepare-root` set up a bind mount for
`/var` to `/sysroot/ostree/$stateroot/var`, and systemd will take
the already extant mount over what's in `/etc/fstab`.
There are a few options to fix this, but what I settled on is parsing
`/etc/fstab` in a generator (exactly like `systemd-fstab-generator` does),
except here we look for an explicit mount for `/var`, and if one *isn't* found,
synthesize the default ostree mount to the stateroot. Another nice property is
that if an admin creates a `var.mount` unit in `/etc` for example, that will
also override our mount.
Note that today ostree doesn't hard depend on systemd, so this behavior only
kicks in if we're built with systemd *and* libmount support (for parsing
`/etc/fstab`). I didn't really test that case though.
Initially I started writing this as a "pure libc" program, but at one point
decided to use `libostree.so` to find the booted deployment. That didn't work
out because `/boot` wasn't necessarily mounted and hence we couldn't find the
bootloader config. A leftover artifact from this is that the generator code
calls into libostree via the "cmd private" infrastructure. But it's an easy way
to share code, and doesn't hurt.
Closes: #859
Approved by: jlebon
There are currently no unstable APIs, but some will be added in
following commits. They will be built and exposed in the libostree
global symbol list iff configured with --enable-experimental-api.
Distributions should not package OSTree with --enable-experimental-api.
This is designed for previewing new APIs on controlled platforms; any of
the APIs hidden behind this option may be changed or removed at any
point.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #832
Approved by: cgwalters
The major reason to do this is that running tests *both* installed
and uninstalled in our CI is a mostly pointless waste of time.
Particularly given we have a few expensive tests.
We *do* have tests that only run uninstalled (since they require
the source code) like `test-symbols.sh`.
Hence, add `--enable-installed-tests=exclusive` to mean *only* do installed for
most tests.
We'll still have uninstalled coverage via the Travis/Debian configs, and we
could perhaps do another build with a subset of uninstalled tests, but I'm not
really concerned about it.
I'd like to do a renewed push for the InstalledTests model since
I feel it's just fundamentally better. (`g-d-t-r` kind of sucks,
but then so does the automake runner).
Also while we're here - fix the CI to use the correct context,
which started this mess.
Closes: #837
Approved by: dbnicholson
This commit won't actually *be* 2017.5 since due to the way our infrastructure
works, we still want to increment git master to 2017.5.
See https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/pull/800Closes: #800
Approved by: jlebon
(Also rename the other CI contexts to be more consistent)
We pass this right now. I just noticed an instance of this in bwrap, and I think
we should be trying to match the RPM build baseline.
Closes: #765
Approved by: jlebon
This actually worked before because `pkg-config --cflags openssl`
is empty, and the linker was satisfying `-lssl -lcrypto` from our
indirect dependencies.
Also, in fact we *currently* just want `pkg-config libcrypto` i.e.
`-lcrypto`, since we aren't actually using openssl to speak TLS.
This doesn't actually matter on Fedora at least since they're both in the
`openssl-libs` package, but they are separate for a reason.
Closes: #749
Approved by: jlebon