Commit Graph

25 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tim Kientzle
0d5a38b993 Rewrite the code that hacks a short names to use in
the regular ustar entry.  The old code sometimes created
a too-long name that overflowed the ustar fields and triggered
an internal assertion failure.  This version should be more
robust.

Thanks to: Michal Listos
Fixes: bin/74385
MFC after: 15 days
2004-12-29 23:26:18 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
b8b499afc7 Don't truncate major/minor numbers written to the legacy
ustar fields.  Later, we're going to permit numeric extensions
for these fields, so we can support large values here.  In particular,
this allows GNU tar to correctly extract such entries even
though it doesn't support the pax extended attributes.

Note: r1.18 and r1.17.2.1 of this file allowed similar treatment
of the uid/gid fields.

Thanks to: Ben Mesander
2004-12-22 02:35:37 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
7e07597cfc When determining whether filename is too long for a
regular 'ustar' entry, use narrow-character version,
not wide-character version, as the ustar entry always
uses the narrow-character filename.

Thanks to: Michal Listos
Inspired by, but doesn't fix: bin/74385
2004-11-28 17:57:11 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
00fc1d5801 Correct the spelling of "archive_write_pax_header"
in an error message.

Thanks to: Michal Listos
Inspired by, but doesn't fix: bin/74385
2004-11-28 17:49:39 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
890e938dc3 Since I'm not using the public API for writing
the the pax attributes, I shouldn't try using the public
API for finishing out the attribute entry, either.

This also removes some old dubious state manipulations.
2004-11-15 01:46:33 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
5c79ebdbd7 Pax extended headers were always failing
because the code was using the external API
(archive_write_data) and assuming internal
error-return conventions.  Use the internal
API for writing data.

Thanks to: Joe Marcus Clarke
2004-11-15 01:24:39 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
3ede53f3e1 Clean up the error handling in the
write path.  In particular, this should
solve some problems people have seen with
bsdtar not exiting on various write errors.
2004-11-05 05:26:30 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
d6970563b6 Fix two ugly errors:
1. The correct cutoff for large uid/gid handling is 1<<18, not 1<<20.
2. Limit the uid/gid in the 'x' extension header (where numeric extensions
are not permitted) to 1<<18, but use the correct value in the regular
header (where numeric extensions are permitted).
Thanks to: Dan Nelson
MFC after: 3 days
2004-09-17 04:39:07 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
0a36c0e86b Oops. Use "unsigned long" instead of "int" for the intermediate variables
in wide-character conversions, since it's guaranteed to be large enough.
Thanks to: Andrey Chernov
2004-08-08 02:22:48 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
61913b5f21 Use 'int' for certain wide-character conversions instead of wchar_t.
That quiets some compiler warnings on platforms with 16-bit wchar_t.
With this change, libarchive now compiles cleanly on Win32/cygwin.
2004-08-08 01:21:10 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
af062c24e6 Beef up the "cannot archive this" error message with the
actual mode that failed, to help track down a bug.
2004-08-07 02:24:20 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
e791a7a913 When writing "pax" format, readers are supposed to ignore fields
in the regular ustar header that are overridden by the pax
extended attributes.  As a result, it makes perfect sense to
use numeric extensions in the regular ustar header so that readers
that don't understand pax extensions but do understand some other
extensions can still get useful information out of it.

This is especially important for filesizes, as the failure to
read a file size correctly can get the reader out of sync.

This commit introduces a "non-strict" option into the internal
function to format a ustar header.  In non-strict mode, the formatter
will use longer octal values (overwriting terminators) or binary
("base-256") values as needed to ensure that large file sizes,
negative mtimes, etc, have the correct values stored in the regular
ustar header.
2004-07-26 02:54:42 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
3dd77a04e5 We were forcing a pax extension header for files >= 1G. Set that
cutoff to >= 8G, as it should be.
2004-07-25 18:50:24 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
527b6597a0 Clean up some consistent confusion between "dev" and "rdev."
Mostly, these were being used correctly even though a lot of
variables and function names were mis-named.

In the process, I found and fixed a couple of latent bugs and
added a guard against adding an archive to itself.
2004-06-27 18:38:13 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
61fac2242c Update file flag handling.
The new fflags support in archive_entry supports Linux and FreeBSD
file flags and is a bit more gracious about unrecognized flag names
than strtofflags(3).  This involves some minor API breakage.

The default tar format ("restricted pax") now enables pax extensions
when archiving files that have flags.  In particular, copying dir
heirarchies with 'bsdtar cf - -C src . | bsdtar xpf - -C dest' now
preserves file flags.  (Note the "p" on extract!)

While I'm here, fill in some additional explanation in the
archive_entry.3 manpage, fill in some missing MLINKS, mark some
overlooked internal functions 'static', and make a few minor style
fixes.
2004-04-26 23:37:54 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
0f7d2bd380 More portability improvements, thanks to Juergen Lock.
High-resolution mtime/ctime/atime is not POSIX-standard, so hide
set/get of high-resolution time fields behind easily-mutable macros.
That makes it easier to change how those fields are accessed.
2004-04-21 05:13:42 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
9b26f9ec8e Eliminate some redundant calls to archive_entry_hardlink. 2004-04-20 20:07:30 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
d911e48507 * Plug a buffer overrun in ACL parsing. (archive_entry.c)
* Re-use a single buffer for shar output formatting rather
   than hammering the heap. (archive_write_set_format_shar.c)
 * Fix a handful of minor memory leaks and clean up some of the
   memory-management code.
2004-04-13 23:45:37 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
aee47dd7c8 More work on ACLs: fix error in archive_entry's ACL parsing code,
try to set ACLs even if fflag restore fails, first cut at reading
  Solaris tar ACLs

Code improvement: merge gnu tar read support into main tar reader;
  this eliminates a lot of duplicate code and generalizes the tar
  reader to handle formats with GNU-like extensions.

Style: Makefile cleanup, eliminate 'dmalloc' references, remove 'tartype'
  from archive_entry (this makes archive_entry more format-agnostic)

Thanks to: David Magda for providing Solaris tar test files
2004-04-12 01:16:16 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
08766bdf18 Fix some issues with ACL handling:
* ACL storage is no longer erased before a group of entries are added.
  * ACL text creation no longer tries to skip over non-existent text.
  * UTF8 encoder no longer blows up on invalid wide characters.
  * Fixed ACL state management for default ACLs.
Also, publicize function for obtaining text-format ACL in various
formats.  The interface is now extensible through a "flags" argument
that allows you to select a variant format.
2004-04-06 23:16:50 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
71b44796d9 Overhauled ACL support. This makes us compatible
with 'star' ACL handling, though there's still a
bit more work needed in this area.

Added 'write_open_fd' and 'read_open_fd' to simplify, e.g.,
tar's u and r modes.  Eliminated old 'write_open_file_position'
as a bad idea.  (It required closing/reopening files to
do updates, which led to unpleasant implications.)

Various other minor fixes, API tweaks, etc.
2004-04-05 21:12:29 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
44a3d34206 Many fixes:
* Disabled shared-library building, as some API breakage is
  still likely.  (I didn't realize it was turned on by default.)  If
  you have an existing /usr/lib/libarchive.so.2, I recommend deleting it.
* Pax interchange format now correctly stores and reads UTF8
  for extended attributes.  In particular, pax format can portably
  handle arbitrarily long pathnames containing arbitrary characters.
* Library compiles cleanly at -O2, -O3, and WARNS=6 on all
  FreeBSD-CURRENT platforms.
* Minor portability improvements inspired by Juergen Lock
  and Greg Lewis.  (Less reliance on stdint.h, isolating of
  various portability-challenged constructs.)
* archive_entry transparently converts multi-byte <-> wide character
  strings, allowing clients and format handlers to deal with either
  one, as appropriate.
* Support for reading 'L' and 'K' entries in standard tar archives
  for star compatibility.
* Recognize (but don't yet handle) ACL entries from Solaris tar.
* Pushed format-specific data for format readers down into
  format-specific storage and out of library-global storage.  This
  should make it easier to maintain individual formats without mucking
  with the core library management.
* Documentation updates to track the above changes.
* Updates to tar.5 to correct a few mistakes and add some additional
  information about GNU tar and Solaris tar formats.

Notes:
* The basic 'tar' reader is getting more general; there's not much
  point in keeping the 'gnutar' reader separate.  Merging the two
  would lose a bunch of duplicate code.
* The libc ACL support is looking increasingly inadequate for my needs
  here.  I might need to assemble some fairly significant code for
  parsing and building ACLs. <sigh>
2004-03-19 22:37:06 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
df3c1316b0 Many fixes.
Portability: Thanks to Juergen Lock, libarchive now compiles cleanly
on Linux.  Along the way, I cleaned up a lot of error return codes and
reorganized some code to simplify conditional compilation of certain
sections.

Bug fixes:
  * pax format now actually stores filenames that are 101-154
    characters long.
  * pax format now allows newline characters in extended attributes
    (this fixes a long-standing bug in ACL handling)
  * mtime/atime are now restored for directories
  * directory list is now sorted prior to fix-up to permit
    correct restore of non-writable dir heirarchies
2004-03-09 19:50:41 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
a1f17de172 Minor API tweak: The format-specific write_header function now sets
the size in the archive_entry object to zero if that format doesn't
store a body for that file type.  This allows the client to determine
whether or not it should feed the file body to the archive.  In
particular, cpio stores the file body for hardlinks, tar and shar
don't.  With this change, bsdtar now correctly archives hardlinks in all
supported formats.

While I'm here, make shar output be more aggressive about creating directories.
Before this, commands such as:
    bsdtar -cv -F shar  some/explicit/path/to/a/file
wouldn't create the directory.  Some simple logic to remember the last
directory creation helps reduce unnecessary mkdirs here.

At this point, I think the only flaw in libarchive's cpio support is
the failure to recognize hardlinks when reading.
2004-03-06 05:44:13 +00:00
Tim Kientzle
2710e4d1ef Initial import of libarchive.
What it is:
   A library for reading and writing various streaming archive
   formats, especially tar and cpio.  Being a library, it should
   be easy to incorporate into pkg_* tools, sysinstall, and any
   other place that needs to read or write such archives.

Features:
  * Full automatic detection of both compression and archive format.
  * Extensible internal architecture to make it easy to add new formats.
  * Support for "pax interchange format," a new POSIX-standard tar format
    that eliminates essentially all of the restrictions of historic formats.
  * BSD license

Thanks to: jkh for pushing me to start this work, gordon for
  encouraging me to commit it, bde for answering endless style
  questions, and many others for feedback and encouragement.

Status: Pretty good overall, though there are still a few rough edges and
  the library could always use more testing.  Feedback eagerly solicited.
2004-02-09 23:22:54 +00:00