* Fix printf format strings on 32-bit OSes
* Fix -Wclass-memaccess violation on GCC-8 caused by using memset on an object
of non-trivial type.
* Fix memory leak in MockFS::init
* Fix -Wcast-align error on i386 in expect_readdir
* Fix some heterogenous comparison errors on 32-bit OSes.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
* Only build the tests on platforms with C++14 support
* Fix an undefined symbol error on lint builds
* Remove an unused function: fiov_clear
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
If a daemon sets the FUSE_ASYNC_READ flag during initialization, then the
client is allowed to issue multiple concurrent reads for the same file
handle. Otherwise concurrent reads are not allowed. This commit implements
it. Previously we unconditionally disallowed concurrent reads.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This commit adds the VOPs needed by userspace NFS servers (tested with
net/unfs3). More work is needed to make the in-kernel nfsd work, because of
its stateless nature. It doesn't open files prior to doing I/O. Also, the
NFS-related VOPs currently ignore the entry cache.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
When mounted with -o default_permissions and when
vfs.fusefs.data_cache_mode=2, fuse_io_strategy would try to clear the suid
bit after a successful write by a non-owner. When combined with a
not-yet-committed attribute-caching patch I'm working on, and if the
FUSE_SETATTR response indicates an unexpected filesize (legal, if the file
system has other clients), this would end up calling vtruncbuf. That would
panic, because the buffer lock was already held by bufwrite or bufstrategy
or something else upstack from fuse_vnop_strategy.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
If a user sets both atime and mtime to UTIME_NOW when calling a syscall like
utimensat(2), allow the server to choose what "now" means. Due to the
design of FreeBSD's VFS, it's not possible to do this for just one of atime
or mtime; it's all or none.
PR: 237181
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
If the server sets fuse_attr.blksize to a nonzero value in the response to
FUSE_GETATTR, then the client should use that as the value for
stat.st_blksize .
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This commit upgrades the FUSE API to protocol 7.9 and adds unit tests for
backwards compatibility with servers built for version 7.8. It doesn't
implement any of 7.9's new features yet.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
When using poll, kevent, or select there was a race window during which it
would be impossible to shut down the daemon. The problem was that poll,
kevent, and select don't return when the file descriptor gets closed (or
maybe it was that the file descriptor got closed before those syscalls were
entered?). The solution is to impose a timeout on those syscalls, and check
m_quit after they time out.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Just like /dev/devctl, /dev/fuse will now report the number of operations
available for immediate read in the kevent.data field during kevent(2).
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
/dev/fuse was already pollable with poll and select. Add support for
kqueue, too. And add tests for polling with poll, select, and kqueue.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
* In the fatal_signal test, wait for the daemon to receive FUSE_INTERRUPT
before exiting.
* Explicitly disable restarting syscalls after SIGUSR2. This fixes
intermittency in the priority test. I don't know why, but sometimes that
test's mkdir would be restarted, and sometimes it would return EINTR.
ERESTART should be the default.
* Remove a useless copy/pasted sleep in the priority test.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
If the daemon dies, return ENOTCONN for all operations that have already
been sent to the daemon, as well as any new ones.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
When a FUSE daemon dies or closes /dev/fuse, all of that daemon's pending
requests must be terminated. Previously that was done in /dev/fuse's
.d_close method. However, d_close only gets called on the *last* close of
the device. That means that if multiple daemons were running concurrently,
all but the last daemon to close would leave their I/O hanging around. The
problem was easily visible just by running "kyua -v parallelism=2 test" in
fusefs's test directory.
Fix this bug by terminating a daemon's pending I/O during /dev/fuse's
cdvpriv dtor method instead. That method runs on every close of a file.
Also, fix some potential races in the tests:
* Clear SA_RESTART when registering the daemon's signal handler so read(2)
will return EINTR.
* Wait for the daemon to die before unmounting the mountpoint, so we won't
see an unwanted FUSE_DESTROY operation in the mock file system.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
* Convert from plain to TAP for slightly improved introspection when skipping
the tests due to requirements not being met.
* Test for the net/py-dpkt (origin) package being required when running the
tests, instead of relying on a copy of the dpkt.py module from 2014. This
enables the tests to work with py3. Subsequently, remove
`tests/sys/opencrypto/dpkt.py(c)?` via `make delete-old`.
* Parameterize out `python2` as `$PYTHON`.
PR: 237403
MFC after: 1 week
Some fusefs tests must sleep because they deliberately trigger a race, or
because they're testing the cache timeout functionality. Consolidate the
sleep interval in a single place so it will be easy to adjust. Shorten it
from either 500ms or 250ms to 100ms. From experiment I find that 10ms works
every time, so 100ms should be fairly safe.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Replace some sleeps with semaphore operations. Not all sleeps can be
replaced, though. Some are trying to lose a race.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
libfuse expects sockets to be created with FUSE_MKNOD, not FUSE_CREATE,
because that's how Linux does it. My first attempt at creating sockets
(r346894) used FUSE_CREATE because FreeBSD uses VOP_CREATE for this purpose.
There are no backwards-compatibility concerns with this change, because
socket support hasn't yet been merged to head.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Any change to a directory's contents should cause its mtime and ctime to be
updated by the FUSE daemon. Clear its attribute cache so we'll get the new
attributs the next time that they're needed. This affects the following
VOPs: VOP_CREATE, VOP_LINK, VOP_MKDIR, VOP_MKNOD, VOP_REMOVE, VOP_RMDIR, and
VOP_SYMLINK
Reported by: pjdfstest
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
If the file to be renamed is a directory and it's going to get a new parent,
then the user must have write permissions to that directory, because the
".." dirent must be changed.
Reported by: pjdfstest
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
FUSE_LINK returns a new set of attributes. fusefs should cache them just
like it does during other VOPs. This is not only a matter of performance
but of correctness too; without caching the new attributes the vnode's nlink
value would be out-of-date.
Reported by: pjdfstest
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Even an unprivileged user should be able to chown a file to its current
owner, or chgrp it to its current group. Those are no-ops.
Reported by: pjdfstest
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
ftruncate should succeed as long as the file descriptor is writable, even if
the file doesn't have write permission. This is important when combined
with O_CREAT.
Reported by: pjdfstest
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Don't allow unprivileged users to set SGID on files to whose group they
don't belong. This is slightly different than what POSIX says we should do
(clear sgid on return from a successful chmod), but it matches what UFS
currently does.
Reported by: pjdfstest
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
When mounted with -o default_permissions fusefs is supposed to validate all
permissions in the kernel, not the file system. This commit fixes two
permissions that I had previously overlooked.
* Only root may chown a file
* Non-root users may only chgrp a file to a group to which they belong
PR: 216391
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This test had been disabled because it was designed to check protocol
7.9-specific functionality. Enable it without the 7.9-specific bit.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
An off-by-one error led to the last page of a write not being removed from
its object, even though that page's buffer was marked as invalid.
PR: 235774
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Though it's not documented, Linux will interpret a FUSE_INTERRUPT response
of ENOSYS as "the file system does not support FUSE_INTERRUPT".
Subsequently it will never send FUSE_INTERRUPT again to the same mount
point. This change matches Linux's behavior.
PR: 346357
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
`xrange` is a pre-python 2.x compatible idiom. Use `range` instead. The values
being iterated over are sufficiently small that using range on python 2.x won't
be a noticeable issue.
MFC after: 2 months