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Implement grab/drop functions to increase/decrease reference count
and destroy the object if the count drops to 0.
Make sure that all objects that maintain internal references actually
grab that reference, duplicate it in the copy function, drop it in
the destroy handler.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Print a proper error description instead of just an error code.
If the error is ERROR_FILE_EXISTS, print out a hint that this might
be caused by a case in-sensitivity issue.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Test against various invariants:
- Every non-root node must have a name
- The root node muts not have a name
- The name must not be ".." or "."
- The name must not contain '/'
- The loop that chases parent pointers must terminate, i.e. we must
never reach the starting state again (link loop).
Furthermore, make sure the sum of all path components plus separators
does not overflow.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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If rdsquashfs unpacks a directory tree that contains a symlink,
followed by something else with the exact same name, it will
follow the symlink and can be tricked into writing to an
arbitrary filesystem location controlled by the SquashFS image.
Because there might actually be a reasonable use case, where an
image is unpacked into an directory existing directory tree, with
symlinks that should be followed, this is solved as follows:
- Before unpacking, recursively sort the directory by filename.
- FAIL if (after sorting) two consequtive entries at the same
hierarchy level have the same name.
This solution is more generic and prevents the unpacker from accessing
the same thing twice in generall, thus also excluding the symlink issue.
Hardlinks are already unfolded into duplicate tree nodes by the tree
reader (with loop detection) so that should not prompt further issues.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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On systems like Windows, the dynamic library and applications can
easily end up being linked against different runtime libraries, so
applications cannot be expected to be able to free() any malloc'd
pointer that the library returns.
This commit adds an sqfs_free function so the application can pass
pointers back to the library to call the correct free() implementation.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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This commit mainly serves the static analysis tooling.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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If rdsquashfs describes a filesystem, is configured to use a prefix-path
and a file contains a space, the resulting input path has the prefix
printed as is and the rest of the string in quotation marks.
gensquashfs simply takes the entire rest of the line as is as its
input path and no longer finds the file.
Fix this by omitting the escapes and quotation marks for the
input path.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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This commit rewrites the libtar write paths to use libfstream insead of
a FILE pointer. Also, the libcommon file extraction function is remodeled
to use libfstream.
In accordance, rdsquashfs, sqfs2tar and sqfsdiff have some minor
adjustments made to work with the ported libtar and libcommon.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Behave the same way as the POSIX port and do not treat
that as an error.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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This commit adds a --stat option to rdsquashfs that dumps a lot of
information about and inode that tunred out to be usefull in
debugging.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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If a SquashFS archive contains file names with '..', '/' or similar
nonsense in them, the unpacking code already refuses to process them,
but the 'describe' code path simply triggers an assert that might not
be there if the binary was compiled with NDEBUG defined.
This commit replaces the assert with propper error handling that also
reports on why things are failing and adds an additional check in the
describe_tree function that tests if the file name is sane.
Reported-by: Zachary Dremann <dremann@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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- Split up the huge file in bin/ into one small file per sub directory
- Remove the stub in doc/
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Until now, when packing or unpacking a SquashFS image, files where
created with paranoid permissions (i.e. 0600). The rational behind
this was that otherwise, the tools may inadvertently expose secrets,
e.g. if a root user packs files that that aren't world readable,
such as the /etc/shadows file, but the packed SquashFS image is, we
have accidentally leaked this file to other users that can access
the newly created SquashFS image. The same line of reasoning also
applies when unpacking files.
Unfortunately, this breaks a list of other, more common standard use
cases (e.g. a build server where the an image is built by a deamon
running as user X but then has to be accessed by another deamon
running as Y).
This commit changes to a more standard approach of using permissive
file permissions by default and asking paranoid users to simply use
a paranoid umask.
For tar2sqfs & gensquashfs this simply means chaning the default
permissions in the libsquashfs file implementation.
For rdsquashfs on the other hand there is still the use case where
the unpacked files get the permissions from the [secret] image, so
setting a strict umask is not applicable and changing to permissive
file mode leaks something. For this case a second code path needs to
be added that derives the permissions from the ones in the image.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Instead of having the binary programs in randomly named subdirectories,
move all of them to a "bin" subdirectory, similar to the utility
libraries that have subdirectories within "lib" and give the
subdirectories the propper names (e.g. have gensquashfs source in a
directory *actually* named "gensquashfs").
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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