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The verity fec_* parameters allows to use Forward Error Correction to
recover from corruption if hash verification fails.
This adds the options fec_device, fec_offset and fec_roots (sixth
argument) which are the equivalent of the options --fec-device,
--fec-offset and --fec-roots in the veritysetup world.
- fec-device=FILE
- fec-offset=BYTES
- fec-roots=UINT64
See `veritysetup(8)` for more details.
The verity parameter no_superblock allows to format/open an hash device
without the superblock. However, the superblock data must be set to open
the data-device.
This adds the option superblocks (sixth argument) and all the underlying
options which are implied to set the superblock manually if hash device
has no superblock:
- superblock=BOOL
- format=NUMBER (hash version type, 0 for original ChromeOS, 1 for
modern)
- data-block-size=BYTES (max page-size, multiple of 512)
- hash-block-size=BYTES (max page-size, multiple of 512)
- data-blocks=BLOCKS (size of data-device in blocks)
- salt=HEXSTR (salt used at format, max 256 bytes)
- uuid=UUID
- hash=STR (algorithm name for dm-verity used at format, default is
sha256)
See `veritysetup(8)` for more details.
The verity parameter hash_area_offset allows to locate the superblock in
the hash device. It can be used to have a single device which contains
both data and hashes.
This adds the option hash-offset=BYTES (sixth argument) which is the
equivalent of the option --hash-offset in the veritysetup world.
See `veritysetup(8)` for more details.
Correct what appears to be a copy/paste error in config_parse_exec_coredump_filter that is preventing the coredump_filter setting from working correctly.
/bin/login is shipped in util-linux, however, systemd.spec on Fedora has
"Requires: (util-linux-core or util-linux)". If the dependency is
fulfilled just by installation of util-linux-core then users won't be
able to log in into the container after it boots. Let's add util-linux
package to the package list so that /bin/login is always present.
Let's honour the flag if it is set, just to be safe.
(This only handles the case for the writing side: whenever the client
code hands us a json object with the flag set we'll honour it till the
it's out of reach for us. This does *not* handle the reading side, which
is left for a later patch once needed. We probably should add a
per-connection flag that simply globally enables the sensitive logic for
all messages coming in on a specific varlink conneciton.)
Let's add infrastructure to implement fd passing in varlink, when used
over AF_UNIX.
This will optionally associate one or more fds with a message sent via
varlink and deliver it to the server.
Some minor refactoring. This adds a helper call whose only job is to
unref the JSON object of the currently processed incoming message.
This doesn't make too much sense on its own, given this just replaces
one line by another. However, in a later patch when we'll add fd passing
we'll extend the function to also destroy associated fds, and then it
will start to make more sense.
So far, if we do a synchronous varlink call from the client side via
varlink_call(), we'll
move the returned json object from "v->current" into "v->reply", and
keep it referenced there until the next call. We then return a pointer
to it. This ensures that the json object remains valid between two
varlink_call() invocations.
But the thing is, we don't need a separate field for that, we can just
leave the data in "v->current". This means VARLINK_IDLE_CLIENT state
will be permitted with and without v->current initialized. Initially,
after connection setup it will be set to NULL, but after the first
varlink_call() it will be set to the most recent response, pinning it
into memory.
When running in a container, we can propagate the exit status of
pid1 as usual via the process exit status. This is not possible
when running in a VM. Instead, let's send EXIT_STATUS=%i via the
notify socket if one is configured. The user running the VM can then
pick up the exit status from the notify socket after the VM has shut
down.
While merge 3af48a86d99b3117a44bc22258ab4d34d0ba7655 was for a working
PR it was based on an older version of git main. Let's catch up with the
search path changes from de862276eddbbe76b436213b4d427205356d1886.
systemd-nspawn now optionally supports colon-separated pair of
host interface name and container interface name for --network-macvlan, --network-ipvlan and --network-interface options.
Also supported in .nspawn configuration files (i.e Interface=, MACVLAN=, IPVLAN= parameters).
man page changed for ntwk interface naming
Neither of the callers of bus_deserialize_and_dump_unit_file_changes()
touches the changes array, so let's simplify things and keep it internal
to the function.
Stripping the binaries in the test images makes potential stack straces
quite useless, so let's drop the stripping stuff to make test fails a bit
more developer friendly.
Related: https://github.com/systemd/systemd-centos-ci/pull/616
On x86 EFI follows the windows ABI, which expects 8-byte aligned long
long. The x86 sysv ELF ABI expects them to be 8-byte aligned when used
alone, but 4-byte aligned when they appear inside of structs:
struct S {
int i;
long long ll;
};
// _Static_assert(sizeof(struct S) == 12, "x86 sysv ABI");
_Static_assert(sizeof(struct S) == 16, "EFI/MS ABI");
To get the behavior we need when building with sysv ELF ABI we need to
pass '-malign-double' to the compiler as done by EDK2.
This in turn will make ubsan unhappy as the stack may not be properly
aligned on entry, so we have to tell the compiler explicitly to re-align
the stack on entry to efi_main.
This fixes loading EFI drivers on x86 that were previously always
rejected as the EFI_LOADED_IMAGE_PROTOCOL had a wrong memory layout.
See also: https://github.com/rhboot/shim/pull/516