Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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As an opaque struct it has a chance to change its layout in the future
without breaking ABI compatibiliy.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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This commit moves stuff like printing help text, command line option
processing and enumerating available processors on stdout out of
the generic compressor code.
The option string is replaced with a structure that directly exposese
the tweakable parameters for all compressors. A function for parsing
the command line arguments into this structure is added in sqfshelper.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Move declarations for stuff that is defined in libsquashfs.so into the
public headers and declarations for stuff that isn't, out of there.
Also move the meta reader/writer helper functions to their respective
headers.
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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This commit does the following:
- canonicalize_name is moved to libfstree
- source_date_epoch is only used inside libfstree, so it's also moved
over and can later be completely internalized
- print_version is moved over to sqfshelper. Mainly so it doesn't end
up in libsquashfs.so for no sane reason.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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This of course entails turning the entire project over to libtool magic.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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The idea is to make libsquashfs.a independend of libfstree.a, so it becomes
a general purpose squashfs manipulation library. All the high level glue code
for libfstree.a and utilites that are overly specific with to tools are moved
to a seperate librarby.
This commit makes the first step by moving the stuff with dependencies on
libfstree to a seperate library.
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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It is shorter and less confusing for coverity.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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size_t is guaranteed to be large enough to measure the size of things in
memory, so when doing exactely that (e.g. strlen(a) + strlen(b)), checking
for overflow is pointless since both objects are already in memory. If the
addition would overflow, the two strings would occupy more memory than
addressable.
(Possible exception being some kind of harward style architecture with
the two strings being in different kinds of memory of course.)
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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The SquashFS kernel implementation insists that a directory header is
followed by no more than an upper bound of entries, way less than what
the filed itself actually supports.
This commit makes sure that the meta_reader_read_dir_header function
also enforces that same limit.
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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In all cases where metadata blocks are read, we can roughly (in some
cases even preciesly) say in what range those metadata blocks will be,
so it makes sense to throw an error if an attempt is made to wander
outside this range.
Furthermore, when reading from an uncompressed block, it is more reasonable
to check against the actual block bounds than to padd it with 0 bytes.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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This commit exchanges some malloc(x + y * z) patterns that can be found
with a simple git grep and are obvious for the new wrappers.
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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The tree deserializer does a recursive depth-first search to populate
the directory tree, moving back and forth between the directory listing
containing the inode references and the inode table pointing to the
list of child inodes. It is completely unaware of hard links and creates
duplicate nodes instead.
It is possible to create a malicious SquashFS image that contains a
directory that contains as child a reference to its own inode. This
can also be done transitively (i.e. directory contains its own parent
or grand parent), leading to infinite recursion (actually finite, since
it terminates once all stack memory is exhausted).
This commit adds a simple check to see if a node has the same inode
number as any of its would-be parents. If it does, the node is discarded
and a warning message is emitted.
Other cases with arbitrary layers of indirection could be constructed
as well (e.g. dir 'a' contains hard link to 'b' and 'b' one back to 'a'),
but the sub hierarchies are always expanded, this check should catch that
too.
Reported-by: Zachary Dremann <dremann@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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An inode can be of extended type for reasons other than having extended
attributes and simply set the xattr ID to 0xFFFFFFFF to indicate that
it doesn't have extended attributes.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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If the linked list pointer was already used before, break up the
connection so we don't risk running into a loop or something when
regenerating the list.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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- Fewer lock aquires in worker function
- There is no point in locking/unlocking for inserting the completed
block if we are going to lock again immediately in the next iteration
-> Merge those two critical sections into one
- Constant time queue insertion
- Bypass queue entirely if there is nothing to do for a block
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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It is optimized to the maximum and if we already use zlib anyway,
why not use zlib crc32? This also makes zlib a hard dependency which
also means the whole "do we have a compressor" sanity check in the
build system can be removed.
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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This change removes the need for passing a list of files around for
deduplication. Also the deduplication code no longer needs to worry
about order, since the file being deduplicated is only added after
deduplication is done.
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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The interface is designed for parallel, asynchronuous processing of data
blocks with an I/O callback that handles the serialized result.
The underlying implementation is currently still synchronuous.
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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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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Only padd it if the *extracted* size is less then block size. Doing it
with the compressed size results in garbled blocks. Especially because
most of them are less than block size when compressed.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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- Split block reading code out from "dump_blocks" into precache_data_block,
similar to precache_fragment_block
- Merge the code paths for fragment/data block reading and uncompression
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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This commit creates a new data structure called 'sqfs_reader_t' that
takes care of all the repetetive tasks like opening the file, reading
the super block, creating the compressor, deserializing an fstree and
creating a data reader.
This in turn makes it possible to remove all the duplicate code from
rdsquashfs and sqfs2tar.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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This commit moves the file unpacking order & job scheduling to a libfstree
function. The ordering is improved by making sure fragment blocks are not
extracted more than once and files with data blocks are extracted in order.
This way, serial unpacking of a 2GiB Debian live image could be reduced
from ~5' on my test machine to ~3.5', whereas parallel unpacking stays
roughly the same (~3' for -j 4).
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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If -DNDEBUG is set, the entire thing is omitted from the output.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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If an extension header is rejected because its too big, the error path
would print the size as size_t, altough it is an uint64_t. On 64 bit
systems, this works because size_t is a 64 bit unsigned integer, on
32 bit systems, not so much.
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 we failed to create the root node, we don't need to cleanup the
fstree_t which would attempt to recursively cleanup the root node.
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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