freebsd-skq/usr.sbin/freebsd-update/freebsd-update.sh
Colin Percival 9546dbd128 Be more selective when filtering for lib*.so.N files. These are deleted
at the end of the upgrade process, after warning users to upgrade any
3rd party software (e.g., from the ports tree) which might link to the
libraries being removed.

Prior to this commit, the line
  /usr/lib/libc.so|...|/lib/libc.so.7
matched the regex, which -- upgrading from 9.x to 10.x, where libc.so is
a regular file and thus was not part of a line which matched the regex --
resulted in freebsd-update thinking that /usr/lib/libc.so was a shared
library which was being removed as part of the upgrade.  This had some
unfortunate consequences.

This will be part of an upcoming Errata Notice.
2013-10-24 03:36:39 +00:00

3251 lines
87 KiB
Bash

#!/bin/sh
#-
# Copyright 2004-2007 Colin Percival
# All rights reserved
#
# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
# modification, are permitted providing that the following conditions
# are met:
# 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
# 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
# documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
#
# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
# IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
# WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
# ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY
# DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
# DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
# OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
# HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
# STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
# IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
# POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
# $FreeBSD$
#### Usage function -- called from command-line handling code.
# Usage instructions. Options not listed:
# --debug -- don't filter output from utilities
# --no-stats -- don't show progress statistics while fetching files
usage () {
cat <<EOF
usage: `basename $0` [options] command ... [path]
Options:
-b basedir -- Operate on a system mounted at basedir
(default: /)
-d workdir -- Store working files in workdir
(default: /var/db/freebsd-update/)
-f conffile -- Read configuration options from conffile
(default: /etc/freebsd-update.conf)
-k KEY -- Trust an RSA key with SHA256 hash of KEY
-r release -- Target for upgrade (e.g., 6.2-RELEASE)
-s server -- Server from which to fetch updates
(default: update.FreeBSD.org)
-t address -- Mail output of cron command, if any, to address
(default: root)
Commands:
fetch -- Fetch updates from server
cron -- Sleep rand(3600) seconds, fetch updates, and send an
email if updates were found
upgrade -- Fetch upgrades to FreeBSD version specified via -r option
install -- Install downloaded updates or upgrades
rollback -- Uninstall most recently installed updates
IDS -- Compare the system against an index of "known good" files.
EOF
exit 0
}
#### Configuration processing functions
#-
# Configuration options are set in the following order of priority:
# 1. Command line options
# 2. Configuration file options
# 3. Default options
# In addition, certain options (e.g., IgnorePaths) can be specified multiple
# times and (as long as these are all in the same place, e.g., inside the
# configuration file) they will accumulate. Finally, because the path to the
# configuration file can be specified at the command line, the entire command
# line must be processed before we start reading the configuration file.
#
# Sound like a mess? It is. Here's how we handle this:
# 1. Initialize CONFFILE and all the options to "".
# 2. Process the command line. Throw an error if a non-accumulating option
# is specified twice.
# 3. If CONFFILE is "", set CONFFILE to /etc/freebsd-update.conf .
# 4. For all the configuration options X, set X_saved to X.
# 5. Initialize all the options to "".
# 6. Read CONFFILE line by line, parsing options.
# 7. For each configuration option X, set X to X_saved iff X_saved is not "".
# 8. Repeat steps 4-7, except setting options to their default values at (6).
CONFIGOPTIONS="KEYPRINT WORKDIR SERVERNAME MAILTO ALLOWADD ALLOWDELETE
KEEPMODIFIEDMETADATA COMPONENTS IGNOREPATHS UPDATEIFUNMODIFIED
BASEDIR VERBOSELEVEL TARGETRELEASE STRICTCOMPONENTS MERGECHANGES
IDSIGNOREPATHS BACKUPKERNEL BACKUPKERNELDIR BACKUPKERNELSYMBOLFILES"
# Set all the configuration options to "".
nullconfig () {
for X in ${CONFIGOPTIONS}; do
eval ${X}=""
done
}
# For each configuration option X, set X_saved to X.
saveconfig () {
for X in ${CONFIGOPTIONS}; do
eval ${X}_saved=\$${X}
done
}
# For each configuration option X, set X to X_saved if X_saved is not "".
mergeconfig () {
for X in ${CONFIGOPTIONS}; do
eval _=\$${X}_saved
if ! [ -z "${_}" ]; then
eval ${X}=\$${X}_saved
fi
done
}
# Set the trusted keyprint.
config_KeyPrint () {
if [ -z ${KEYPRINT} ]; then
KEYPRINT=$1
else
return 1
fi
}
# Set the working directory.
config_WorkDir () {
if [ -z ${WORKDIR} ]; then
WORKDIR=$1
else
return 1
fi
}
# Set the name of the server (pool) from which to fetch updates
config_ServerName () {
if [ -z ${SERVERNAME} ]; then
SERVERNAME=$1
else
return 1
fi
}
# Set the address to which 'cron' output will be mailed.
config_MailTo () {
if [ -z ${MAILTO} ]; then
MAILTO=$1
else
return 1
fi
}
# Set whether FreeBSD Update is allowed to add files (or directories, or
# symlinks) which did not previously exist.
config_AllowAdd () {
if [ -z ${ALLOWADD} ]; then
case $1 in
[Yy][Ee][Ss])
ALLOWADD=yes
;;
[Nn][Oo])
ALLOWADD=no
;;
*)
return 1
;;
esac
else
return 1
fi
}
# Set whether FreeBSD Update is allowed to remove files/directories/symlinks.
config_AllowDelete () {
if [ -z ${ALLOWDELETE} ]; then
case $1 in
[Yy][Ee][Ss])
ALLOWDELETE=yes
;;
[Nn][Oo])
ALLOWDELETE=no
;;
*)
return 1
;;
esac
else
return 1
fi
}
# Set whether FreeBSD Update should keep existing inode ownership,
# permissions, and flags, in the event that they have been modified locally
# after the release.
config_KeepModifiedMetadata () {
if [ -z ${KEEPMODIFIEDMETADATA} ]; then
case $1 in
[Yy][Ee][Ss])
KEEPMODIFIEDMETADATA=yes
;;
[Nn][Oo])
KEEPMODIFIEDMETADATA=no
;;
*)
return 1
;;
esac
else
return 1
fi
}
# Add to the list of components which should be kept updated.
config_Components () {
for C in $@; do
COMPONENTS="${COMPONENTS} ${C}"
done
}
# Add to the list of paths under which updates will be ignored.
config_IgnorePaths () {
for C in $@; do
IGNOREPATHS="${IGNOREPATHS} ${C}"
done
}
# Add to the list of paths which IDS should ignore.
config_IDSIgnorePaths () {
for C in $@; do
IDSIGNOREPATHS="${IDSIGNOREPATHS} ${C}"
done
}
# Add to the list of paths within which updates will be performed only if the
# file on disk has not been modified locally.
config_UpdateIfUnmodified () {
for C in $@; do
UPDATEIFUNMODIFIED="${UPDATEIFUNMODIFIED} ${C}"
done
}
# Add to the list of paths within which updates to text files will be merged
# instead of overwritten.
config_MergeChanges () {
for C in $@; do
MERGECHANGES="${MERGECHANGES} ${C}"
done
}
# Work on a FreeBSD installation mounted under $1
config_BaseDir () {
if [ -z ${BASEDIR} ]; then
BASEDIR=$1
else
return 1
fi
}
# When fetching upgrades, should we assume the user wants exactly the
# components listed in COMPONENTS, rather than trying to guess based on
# what's currently installed?
config_StrictComponents () {
if [ -z ${STRICTCOMPONENTS} ]; then
case $1 in
[Yy][Ee][Ss])
STRICTCOMPONENTS=yes
;;
[Nn][Oo])
STRICTCOMPONENTS=no
;;
*)
return 1
;;
esac
else
return 1
fi
}
# Upgrade to FreeBSD $1
config_TargetRelease () {
if [ -z ${TARGETRELEASE} ]; then
TARGETRELEASE=$1
else
return 1
fi
if echo ${TARGETRELEASE} | grep -qE '^[0-9.]+$'; then
TARGETRELEASE="${TARGETRELEASE}-RELEASE"
fi
}
# Define what happens to output of utilities
config_VerboseLevel () {
if [ -z ${VERBOSELEVEL} ]; then
case $1 in
[Dd][Ee][Bb][Uu][Gg])
VERBOSELEVEL=debug
;;
[Nn][Oo][Ss][Tt][Aa][Tt][Ss])
VERBOSELEVEL=nostats
;;
[Ss][Tt][Aa][Tt][Ss])
VERBOSELEVEL=stats
;;
*)
return 1
;;
esac
else
return 1
fi
}
config_BackupKernel () {
if [ -z ${BACKUPKERNEL} ]; then
case $1 in
[Yy][Ee][Ss])
BACKUPKERNEL=yes
;;
[Nn][Oo])
BACKUPKERNEL=no
;;
*)
return 1
;;
esac
else
return 1
fi
}
config_BackupKernelDir () {
if [ -z ${BACKUPKERNELDIR} ]; then
if [ -z "$1" ]; then
echo "BackupKernelDir set to empty dir"
return 1
fi
# We check for some paths which would be extremely odd
# to use, but which could cause a lot of problems if
# used.
case $1 in
/|/bin|/boot|/etc|/lib|/libexec|/sbin|/usr|/var)
echo "BackupKernelDir set to invalid path $1"
return 1
;;
/*)
BACKUPKERNELDIR=$1
;;
*)
echo "BackupKernelDir ($1) is not an absolute path"
return 1
;;
esac
else
return 1
fi
}
config_BackupKernelSymbolFiles () {
if [ -z ${BACKUPKERNELSYMBOLFILES} ]; then
case $1 in
[Yy][Ee][Ss])
BACKUPKERNELSYMBOLFILES=yes
;;
[Nn][Oo])
BACKUPKERNELSYMBOLFILES=no
;;
*)
return 1
;;
esac
else
return 1
fi
}
# Handle one line of configuration
configline () {
if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then
return
fi
OPT=$1
shift
config_${OPT} $@
}
#### Parameter handling functions.
# Initialize parameters to null, just in case they're
# set in the environment.
init_params () {
# Configration settings
nullconfig
# No configuration file set yet
CONFFILE=""
# No commands specified yet
COMMANDS=""
}
# Parse the command line
parse_cmdline () {
while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do
case "$1" in
# Location of configuration file
-f)
if [ $# -eq 1 ]; then usage; fi
if [ ! -z "${CONFFILE}" ]; then usage; fi
shift; CONFFILE="$1"
;;
# Configuration file equivalents
-b)
if [ $# -eq 1 ]; then usage; fi; shift
config_BaseDir $1 || usage
;;
-d)
if [ $# -eq 1 ]; then usage; fi; shift
config_WorkDir $1 || usage
;;
-k)
if [ $# -eq 1 ]; then usage; fi; shift
config_KeyPrint $1 || usage
;;
-s)
if [ $# -eq 1 ]; then usage; fi; shift
config_ServerName $1 || usage
;;
-r)
if [ $# -eq 1 ]; then usage; fi; shift
config_TargetRelease $1 || usage
;;
-t)
if [ $# -eq 1 ]; then usage; fi; shift
config_MailTo $1 || usage
;;
-v)
if [ $# -eq 1 ]; then usage; fi; shift
config_VerboseLevel $1 || usage
;;
# Aliases for "-v debug" and "-v nostats"
--debug)
config_VerboseLevel debug || usage
;;
--no-stats)
config_VerboseLevel nostats || usage
;;
# Commands
cron | fetch | upgrade | install | rollback | IDS)
COMMANDS="${COMMANDS} $1"
;;
# Anything else is an error
*)
usage
;;
esac
shift
done
# Make sure we have at least one command
if [ -z "${COMMANDS}" ]; then
usage
fi
}
# Parse the configuration file
parse_conffile () {
# If a configuration file was specified on the command line, check
# that it exists and is readable.
if [ ! -z "${CONFFILE}" ] && [ ! -r "${CONFFILE}" ]; then
echo -n "File does not exist "
echo -n "or is not readable: "
echo ${CONFFILE}
exit 1
fi
# If a configuration file was not specified on the command line,
# use the default configuration file path. If that default does
# not exist, give up looking for any configuration.
if [ -z "${CONFFILE}" ]; then
CONFFILE="/etc/freebsd-update.conf"
if [ ! -r "${CONFFILE}" ]; then
return
fi
fi
# Save the configuration options specified on the command line, and
# clear all the options in preparation for reading the config file.
saveconfig
nullconfig
# Read the configuration file. Anything after the first '#' is
# ignored, and any blank lines are ignored.
L=0
while read LINE; do
L=$(($L + 1))
LINEX=`echo "${LINE}" | cut -f 1 -d '#'`
if ! configline ${LINEX}; then
echo "Error processing configuration file, line $L:"
echo "==> ${LINE}"
exit 1
fi
done < ${CONFFILE}
# Merge the settings read from the configuration file with those
# provided at the command line.
mergeconfig
}
# Provide some default parameters
default_params () {
# Save any parameters already configured, and clear the slate
saveconfig
nullconfig
# Default configurations
config_WorkDir /var/db/freebsd-update
config_MailTo root
config_AllowAdd yes
config_AllowDelete yes
config_KeepModifiedMetadata yes
config_BaseDir /
config_VerboseLevel stats
config_StrictComponents no
config_BackupKernel yes
config_BackupKernelDir /boot/kernel.old
config_BackupKernelSymbolFiles no
# Merge these defaults into the earlier-configured settings
mergeconfig
}
# Set utility output filtering options, based on ${VERBOSELEVEL}
fetch_setup_verboselevel () {
case ${VERBOSELEVEL} in
debug)
QUIETREDIR="/dev/stderr"
QUIETFLAG=" "
STATSREDIR="/dev/stderr"
DDSTATS=".."
XARGST="-t"
NDEBUG=" "
;;
nostats)
QUIETREDIR=""
QUIETFLAG=""
STATSREDIR="/dev/null"
DDSTATS=".."
XARGST=""
NDEBUG=""
;;
stats)
QUIETREDIR="/dev/null"
QUIETFLAG="-q"
STATSREDIR="/dev/stdout"
DDSTATS=""
XARGST=""
NDEBUG="-n"
;;
esac
}
# Perform sanity checks and set some final parameters
# in preparation for fetching files. Figure out which
# set of updates should be downloaded: If the user is
# running *-p[0-9]+, strip off the last part; if the
# user is running -SECURITY, call it -RELEASE. Chdir
# into the working directory.
fetchupgrade_check_params () {
export HTTP_USER_AGENT="freebsd-update (${COMMAND}, `uname -r`)"
_SERVERNAME_z=\
"SERVERNAME must be given via command line or configuration file."
_KEYPRINT_z="Key must be given via -k option or configuration file."
_KEYPRINT_bad="Invalid key fingerprint: "
_WORKDIR_bad="Directory does not exist or is not writable: "
if [ -z "${SERVERNAME}" ]; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo "${_SERVERNAME_z}"
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "${KEYPRINT}" ]; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo "${_KEYPRINT_z}"
exit 1
fi
if ! echo "${KEYPRINT}" | grep -qE "^[0-9a-f]{64}$"; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo -n "${_KEYPRINT_bad}"
echo ${KEYPRINT}
exit 1
fi
if ! [ -d "${WORKDIR}" -a -w "${WORKDIR}" ]; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo -n "${_WORKDIR_bad}"
echo ${WORKDIR}
exit 1
fi
chmod 700 ${WORKDIR}
cd ${WORKDIR} || exit 1
# Generate release number. The s/SECURITY/RELEASE/ bit exists
# to provide an upgrade path for FreeBSD Update 1.x users, since
# the kernels provided by FreeBSD Update 1.x are always labelled
# as X.Y-SECURITY.
RELNUM=`uname -r |
sed -E 's,-p[0-9]+,,' |
sed -E 's,-SECURITY,-RELEASE,'`
ARCH=`uname -m`
FETCHDIR=${RELNUM}/${ARCH}
PATCHDIR=${RELNUM}/${ARCH}/bp
# Figure out what directory contains the running kernel
BOOTFILE=`sysctl -n kern.bootfile`
KERNELDIR=${BOOTFILE%/kernel}
if ! [ -d ${KERNELDIR} ]; then
echo "Cannot identify running kernel"
exit 1
fi
# Figure out what kernel configuration is running. We start with
# the output of `uname -i`, and then make the following adjustments:
# 1. Replace "SMP-GENERIC" with "SMP". Why the SMP kernel config
# file says "ident SMP-GENERIC", I don't know...
# 2. If the kernel claims to be GENERIC _and_ ${ARCH} is "amd64"
# _and_ `sysctl kern.version` contains a line which ends "/SMP", then
# we're running an SMP kernel. This mis-identification is a bug
# which was fixed in 6.2-STABLE.
KERNCONF=`uname -i`
if [ ${KERNCONF} = "SMP-GENERIC" ]; then
KERNCONF=SMP
fi
if [ ${KERNCONF} = "GENERIC" ] && [ ${ARCH} = "amd64" ]; then
if sysctl kern.version | grep -qE '/SMP$'; then
KERNCONF=SMP
fi
fi
# Define some paths
BSPATCH=/usr/bin/bspatch
SHA256=/sbin/sha256
PHTTPGET=/usr/libexec/phttpget
# Set up variables relating to VERBOSELEVEL
fetch_setup_verboselevel
# Construct a unique name from ${BASEDIR}
BDHASH=`echo ${BASEDIR} | sha256 -q`
}
# Perform sanity checks etc. before fetching updates.
fetch_check_params () {
fetchupgrade_check_params
if ! [ -z "${TARGETRELEASE}" ]; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo -n "-r option is meaningless with 'fetch' command. "
echo "(Did you mean 'upgrade' instead?)"
exit 1
fi
}
# Perform sanity checks etc. before fetching upgrades.
upgrade_check_params () {
fetchupgrade_check_params
# Unless set otherwise, we're upgrading to the same kernel config.
NKERNCONF=${KERNCONF}
# We need TARGETRELEASE set
_TARGETRELEASE_z="Release target must be specified via -r option."
if [ -z "${TARGETRELEASE}" ]; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo "${_TARGETRELEASE_z}"
exit 1
fi
# The target release should be != the current release.
if [ "${TARGETRELEASE}" = "${RELNUM}" ]; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo "Cannot upgrade from ${RELNUM} to itself"
exit 1
fi
# Turning off AllowAdd or AllowDelete is a bad idea for upgrades.
if [ "${ALLOWADD}" = "no" ]; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo -n "WARNING: \"AllowAdd no\" is a bad idea "
echo "when upgrading between releases."
echo
fi
if [ "${ALLOWDELETE}" = "no" ]; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo -n "WARNING: \"AllowDelete no\" is a bad idea "
echo "when upgrading between releases."
echo
fi
# Set EDITOR to /usr/bin/vi if it isn't already set
: ${EDITOR:='/usr/bin/vi'}
}
# Perform sanity checks and set some final parameters in
# preparation for installing updates.
install_check_params () {
# Check that we are root. All sorts of things won't work otherwise.
if [ `id -u` != 0 ]; then
echo "You must be root to run this."
exit 1
fi
# Check that securelevel <= 0. Otherwise we can't update schg files.
if [ `sysctl -n kern.securelevel` -gt 0 ]; then
echo "Updates cannot be installed when the system securelevel"
echo "is greater than zero."
exit 1
fi
# Check that we have a working directory
_WORKDIR_bad="Directory does not exist or is not writable: "
if ! [ -d "${WORKDIR}" -a -w "${WORKDIR}" ]; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo -n "${_WORKDIR_bad}"
echo ${WORKDIR}
exit 1
fi
cd ${WORKDIR} || exit 1
# Construct a unique name from ${BASEDIR}
BDHASH=`echo ${BASEDIR} | sha256 -q`
# Check that we have updates ready to install
if ! [ -L ${BDHASH}-install ]; then
echo "No updates are available to install."
echo "Run '$0 fetch' first."
exit 1
fi
if ! [ -f ${BDHASH}-install/INDEX-OLD ] ||
! [ -f ${BDHASH}-install/INDEX-NEW ]; then
echo "Update manifest is corrupt -- this should never happen."
echo "Re-run '$0 fetch'."
exit 1
fi
# Figure out what directory contains the running kernel
BOOTFILE=`sysctl -n kern.bootfile`
KERNELDIR=${BOOTFILE%/kernel}
if ! [ -d ${KERNELDIR} ]; then
echo "Cannot identify running kernel"
exit 1
fi
}
# Perform sanity checks and set some final parameters in
# preparation for UNinstalling updates.
rollback_check_params () {
# Check that we are root. All sorts of things won't work otherwise.
if [ `id -u` != 0 ]; then
echo "You must be root to run this."
exit 1
fi
# Check that we have a working directory
_WORKDIR_bad="Directory does not exist or is not writable: "
if ! [ -d "${WORKDIR}" -a -w "${WORKDIR}" ]; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo -n "${_WORKDIR_bad}"
echo ${WORKDIR}
exit 1
fi
cd ${WORKDIR} || exit 1
# Construct a unique name from ${BASEDIR}
BDHASH=`echo ${BASEDIR} | sha256 -q`
# Check that we have updates ready to rollback
if ! [ -L ${BDHASH}-rollback ]; then
echo "No rollback directory found."
exit 1
fi
if ! [ -f ${BDHASH}-rollback/INDEX-OLD ] ||
! [ -f ${BDHASH}-rollback/INDEX-NEW ]; then
echo "Update manifest is corrupt -- this should never happen."
exit 1
fi
}
# Perform sanity checks and set some final parameters
# in preparation for comparing the system against the
# published index. Figure out which index we should
# compare against: If the user is running *-p[0-9]+,
# strip off the last part; if the user is running
# -SECURITY, call it -RELEASE. Chdir into the working
# directory.
IDS_check_params () {
export HTTP_USER_AGENT="freebsd-update (${COMMAND}, `uname -r`)"
_SERVERNAME_z=\
"SERVERNAME must be given via command line or configuration file."
_KEYPRINT_z="Key must be given via -k option or configuration file."
_KEYPRINT_bad="Invalid key fingerprint: "
_WORKDIR_bad="Directory does not exist or is not writable: "
if [ -z "${SERVERNAME}" ]; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo "${_SERVERNAME_z}"
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "${KEYPRINT}" ]; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo "${_KEYPRINT_z}"
exit 1
fi
if ! echo "${KEYPRINT}" | grep -qE "^[0-9a-f]{64}$"; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo -n "${_KEYPRINT_bad}"
echo ${KEYPRINT}
exit 1
fi
if ! [ -d "${WORKDIR}" -a -w "${WORKDIR}" ]; then
echo -n "`basename $0`: "
echo -n "${_WORKDIR_bad}"
echo ${WORKDIR}
exit 1
fi
cd ${WORKDIR} || exit 1
# Generate release number. The s/SECURITY/RELEASE/ bit exists
# to provide an upgrade path for FreeBSD Update 1.x users, since
# the kernels provided by FreeBSD Update 1.x are always labelled
# as X.Y-SECURITY.
RELNUM=`uname -r |
sed -E 's,-p[0-9]+,,' |
sed -E 's,-SECURITY,-RELEASE,'`
ARCH=`uname -m`
FETCHDIR=${RELNUM}/${ARCH}
PATCHDIR=${RELNUM}/${ARCH}/bp
# Figure out what directory contains the running kernel
BOOTFILE=`sysctl -n kern.bootfile`
KERNELDIR=${BOOTFILE%/kernel}
if ! [ -d ${KERNELDIR} ]; then
echo "Cannot identify running kernel"
exit 1
fi
# Figure out what kernel configuration is running. We start with
# the output of `uname -i`, and then make the following adjustments:
# 1. Replace "SMP-GENERIC" with "SMP". Why the SMP kernel config
# file says "ident SMP-GENERIC", I don't know...
# 2. If the kernel claims to be GENERIC _and_ ${ARCH} is "amd64"
# _and_ `sysctl kern.version` contains a line which ends "/SMP", then
# we're running an SMP kernel. This mis-identification is a bug
# which was fixed in 6.2-STABLE.
KERNCONF=`uname -i`
if [ ${KERNCONF} = "SMP-GENERIC" ]; then
KERNCONF=SMP
fi
if [ ${KERNCONF} = "GENERIC" ] && [ ${ARCH} = "amd64" ]; then
if sysctl kern.version | grep -qE '/SMP$'; then
KERNCONF=SMP
fi
fi
# Define some paths
SHA256=/sbin/sha256
PHTTPGET=/usr/libexec/phttpget
# Set up variables relating to VERBOSELEVEL
fetch_setup_verboselevel
}
#### Core functionality -- the actual work gets done here
# Use an SRV query to pick a server. If the SRV query doesn't provide
# a useful answer, use the server name specified by the user.
# Put another way... look up _http._tcp.${SERVERNAME} and pick a server
# from that; or if no servers are returned, use ${SERVERNAME}.
# This allows a user to specify "portsnap.freebsd.org" (in which case
# portsnap will select one of the mirrors) or "portsnap5.tld.freebsd.org"
# (in which case portsnap will use that particular server, since there
# won't be an SRV entry for that name).
#
# We ignore the Port field, since we are always going to use port 80.
# Fetch the mirror list, but do not pick a mirror yet. Returns 1 if
# no mirrors are available for any reason.
fetch_pick_server_init () {
: > serverlist_tried
# Check that host(1) exists (i.e., that the system wasn't built with the
# WITHOUT_BIND set) and don't try to find a mirror if it doesn't exist.
if ! which -s host; then
: > serverlist_full
return 1
fi
echo -n "Looking up ${SERVERNAME} mirrors... "
# Issue the SRV query and pull out the Priority, Weight, and Target fields.
# BIND 9 prints "$name has SRV record ..." while BIND 8 prints
# "$name server selection ..."; we allow either format.
MLIST="_http._tcp.${SERVERNAME}"
host -t srv "${MLIST}" |
sed -nE "s/${MLIST} (has SRV record|server selection) //p" |
cut -f 1,2,4 -d ' ' |
sed -e 's/\.$//' |
sort > serverlist_full
# If no records, give up -- we'll just use the server name we were given.
if [ `wc -l < serverlist_full` -eq 0 ]; then
echo "none found."
return 1
fi
# Report how many mirrors we found.
echo `wc -l < serverlist_full` "mirrors found."
# Generate a random seed for use in picking mirrors. If HTTP_PROXY
# is set, this will be used to generate the seed; otherwise, the seed
# will be random.
if [ -n "${HTTP_PROXY}${http_proxy}" ]; then
RANDVALUE=`sha256 -qs "${HTTP_PROXY}${http_proxy}" |
tr -d 'a-f' |
cut -c 1-9`
else
RANDVALUE=`jot -r 1 0 999999999`
fi
}
# Pick a mirror. Returns 1 if we have run out of mirrors to try.
fetch_pick_server () {
# Generate a list of not-yet-tried mirrors
sort serverlist_tried |
comm -23 serverlist_full - > serverlist
# Have we run out of mirrors?
if [ `wc -l < serverlist` -eq 0 ]; then
echo "No mirrors remaining, giving up."
return 1
fi
# Find the highest priority level (lowest numeric value).
SRV_PRIORITY=`cut -f 1 -d ' ' serverlist | sort -n | head -1`
# Add up the weights of the response lines at that priority level.
SRV_WSUM=0;
while read X; do
case "$X" in
${SRV_PRIORITY}\ *)
SRV_W=`echo $X | cut -f 2 -d ' '`
SRV_WSUM=$(($SRV_WSUM + $SRV_W))
;;
esac
done < serverlist
# If all the weights are 0, pretend that they are all 1 instead.
if [ ${SRV_WSUM} -eq 0 ]; then
SRV_WSUM=`grep -E "^${SRV_PRIORITY} " serverlist | wc -l`
SRV_W_ADD=1
else
SRV_W_ADD=0
fi
# Pick a value between 0 and the sum of the weights - 1
SRV_RND=`expr ${RANDVALUE} % ${SRV_WSUM}`
# Read through the list of mirrors and set SERVERNAME. Write the line
# corresponding to the mirror we selected into serverlist_tried so that
# we won't try it again.
while read X; do
case "$X" in
${SRV_PRIORITY}\ *)
SRV_W=`echo $X | cut -f 2 -d ' '`
SRV_W=$(($SRV_W + $SRV_W_ADD))
if [ $SRV_RND -lt $SRV_W ]; then
SERVERNAME=`echo $X | cut -f 3 -d ' '`
echo "$X" >> serverlist_tried
break
else
SRV_RND=$(($SRV_RND - $SRV_W))
fi
;;
esac
done < serverlist
}
# Take a list of ${oldhash}|${newhash} and output a list of needed patches,
# i.e., those for which we have ${oldhash} and don't have ${newhash}.
fetch_make_patchlist () {
grep -vE "^([0-9a-f]{64})\|\1$" |
tr '|' ' ' |
while read X Y; do
if [ -f "files/${Y}.gz" ] ||
[ ! -f "files/${X}.gz" ]; then
continue
fi
echo "${X}|${Y}"
done | uniq
}
# Print user-friendly progress statistics
fetch_progress () {
LNC=0
while read x; do
LNC=$(($LNC + 1))
if [ $(($LNC % 10)) = 0 ]; then
echo -n $LNC
elif [ $(($LNC % 2)) = 0 ]; then
echo -n .
fi
done
echo -n " "
}
# Function for asking the user if everything is ok
continuep () {
while read -p "Does this look reasonable (y/n)? " CONTINUE; do
case "${CONTINUE}" in
y*)
return 0
;;
n*)
return 1
;;
esac
done
}
# Initialize the working directory
workdir_init () {
mkdir -p files
touch tINDEX.present
}
# Check that we have a public key with an appropriate hash, or
# fetch the key if it doesn't exist. Returns 1 if the key has
# not yet been fetched.
fetch_key () {
if [ -r pub.ssl ] && [ `${SHA256} -q pub.ssl` = ${KEYPRINT} ]; then
return 0
fi
echo -n "Fetching public key from ${SERVERNAME}... "
rm -f pub.ssl
fetch ${QUIETFLAG} http://${SERVERNAME}/${FETCHDIR}/pub.ssl \
2>${QUIETREDIR} || true
if ! [ -r pub.ssl ]; then
echo "failed."
return 1
fi
if ! [ `${SHA256} -q pub.ssl` = ${KEYPRINT} ]; then
echo "key has incorrect hash."
rm -f pub.ssl
return 1
fi
echo "done."
}
# Fetch metadata signature, aka "tag".
fetch_tag () {
echo -n "Fetching metadata signature "
echo ${NDEBUG} "for ${RELNUM} from ${SERVERNAME}... "
rm -f latest.ssl
fetch ${QUIETFLAG} http://${SERVERNAME}/${FETCHDIR}/latest.ssl \
2>${QUIETREDIR} || true
if ! [ -r latest.ssl ]; then
echo "failed."
return 1
fi
openssl rsautl -pubin -inkey pub.ssl -verify \
< latest.ssl > tag.new 2>${QUIETREDIR} || true
rm latest.ssl
if ! [ `wc -l < tag.new` = 1 ] ||
! grep -qE \
"^freebsd-update\|${ARCH}\|${RELNUM}\|[0-9]+\|[0-9a-f]{64}\|[0-9]{10}" \
tag.new; then
echo "invalid signature."
return 1
fi
echo "done."
RELPATCHNUM=`cut -f 4 -d '|' < tag.new`
TINDEXHASH=`cut -f 5 -d '|' < tag.new`
EOLTIME=`cut -f 6 -d '|' < tag.new`
}
# Sanity-check the patch number in a tag, to make sure that we're not
# going to "update" backwards and to prevent replay attacks.
fetch_tagsanity () {
# Check that we're not going to move from -pX to -pY with Y < X.
RELPX=`uname -r | sed -E 's,.*-,,'`
if echo ${RELPX} | grep -qE '^p[0-9]+$'; then
RELPX=`echo ${RELPX} | cut -c 2-`
else
RELPX=0
fi
if [ "${RELPATCHNUM}" -lt "${RELPX}" ]; then
echo
echo -n "Files on mirror (${RELNUM}-p${RELPATCHNUM})"
echo " appear older than what"
echo "we are currently running (`uname -r`)!"
echo "Cowardly refusing to proceed any further."
return 1
fi
# If "tag" exists and corresponds to ${RELNUM}, make sure that
# it contains a patch number <= RELPATCHNUM, in order to protect
# against rollback (replay) attacks.
if [ -f tag ] &&
grep -qE \
"^freebsd-update\|${ARCH}\|${RELNUM}\|[0-9]+\|[0-9a-f]{64}\|[0-9]{10}" \
tag; then
LASTRELPATCHNUM=`cut -f 4 -d '|' < tag`
if [ "${RELPATCHNUM}" -lt "${LASTRELPATCHNUM}" ]; then
echo
echo -n "Files on mirror (${RELNUM}-p${RELPATCHNUM})"
echo " are older than the"
echo -n "most recently seen updates"
echo " (${RELNUM}-p${LASTRELPATCHNUM})."
echo "Cowardly refusing to proceed any further."
return 1
fi
fi
}
# Fetch metadata index file
fetch_metadata_index () {
echo ${NDEBUG} "Fetching metadata index... "
rm -f ${TINDEXHASH}
fetch ${QUIETFLAG} http://${SERVERNAME}/${FETCHDIR}/t/${TINDEXHASH}
2>${QUIETREDIR}
if ! [ -f ${TINDEXHASH} ]; then
echo "failed."
return 1
fi
if [ `${SHA256} -q ${TINDEXHASH}` != ${TINDEXHASH} ]; then
echo "update metadata index corrupt."
return 1
fi
echo "done."
}
# Print an error message about signed metadata being bogus.
fetch_metadata_bogus () {
echo
echo "The update metadata$1 is correctly signed, but"
echo "failed an integrity check."
echo "Cowardly refusing to proceed any further."
return 1
}
# Construct tINDEX.new by merging the lines named in $1 from ${TINDEXHASH}
# with the lines not named in $@ from tINDEX.present (if that file exists).
fetch_metadata_index_merge () {
for METAFILE in $@; do
if [ `grep -E "^${METAFILE}\|" ${TINDEXHASH} | wc -l` \
-ne 1 ]; then
fetch_metadata_bogus " index"
return 1
fi
grep -E "${METAFILE}\|" ${TINDEXHASH}
done |
sort > tINDEX.wanted
if [ -f tINDEX.present ]; then
join -t '|' -v 2 tINDEX.wanted tINDEX.present |
sort -m - tINDEX.wanted > tINDEX.new
rm tINDEX.wanted
else
mv tINDEX.wanted tINDEX.new
fi
}
# Sanity check all the lines of tINDEX.new. Even if more metadata lines
# are added by future versions of the server, this won't cause problems,
# since the only lines which appear in tINDEX.new are the ones which we
# specifically grepped out of ${TINDEXHASH}.
fetch_metadata_index_sanity () {
if grep -qvE '^[0-9A-Z.-]+\|[0-9a-f]{64}$' tINDEX.new; then
fetch_metadata_bogus " index"
return 1
fi
}
# Sanity check the metadata file $1.
fetch_metadata_sanity () {
# Some aliases to save space later: ${P} is a character which can
# appear in a path; ${M} is the four numeric metadata fields; and
# ${H} is a sha256 hash.
P="[-+./:=%@_[~[:alnum:]]"
M="[0-9]+\|[0-9]+\|[0-9]+\|[0-9]+"
H="[0-9a-f]{64}"
# Check that the first four fields make sense.
if gunzip -c < files/$1.gz |
grep -qvE "^[a-z]+\|[0-9a-z]+\|${P}+\|[fdL-]\|"; then
fetch_metadata_bogus ""
return 1
fi
# Remove the first three fields.
gunzip -c < files/$1.gz |
cut -f 4- -d '|' > sanitycheck.tmp
# Sanity check entries with type 'f'
if grep -E '^f' sanitycheck.tmp |
grep -qvE "^f\|${M}\|${H}\|${P}*\$"; then
fetch_metadata_bogus ""
return 1
fi
# Sanity check entries with type 'd'
if grep -E '^d' sanitycheck.tmp |
grep -qvE "^d\|${M}\|\|\$"; then
fetch_metadata_bogus ""
return 1
fi
# Sanity check entries with type 'L'
if grep -E '^L' sanitycheck.tmp |
grep -qvE "^L\|${M}\|${P}*\|\$"; then
fetch_metadata_bogus ""
return 1
fi
# Sanity check entries with type '-'
if grep -E '^-' sanitycheck.tmp |
grep -qvE "^-\|\|\|\|\|\|"; then
fetch_metadata_bogus ""
return 1
fi
# Clean up
rm sanitycheck.tmp
}
# Fetch the metadata index and metadata files listed in $@,
# taking advantage of metadata patches where possible.
fetch_metadata () {
fetch_metadata_index || return 1
fetch_metadata_index_merge $@ || return 1
fetch_metadata_index_sanity || return 1
# Generate a list of wanted metadata patches
join -t '|' -o 1.2,2.2 tINDEX.present tINDEX.new |
fetch_make_patchlist > patchlist
if [ -s patchlist ]; then
# Attempt to fetch metadata patches
echo -n "Fetching `wc -l < patchlist | tr -d ' '` "
echo ${NDEBUG} "metadata patches.${DDSTATS}"
tr '|' '-' < patchlist |
lam -s "${FETCHDIR}/tp/" - -s ".gz" |
xargs ${XARGST} ${PHTTPGET} ${SERVERNAME} \
2>${STATSREDIR} | fetch_progress
echo "done."
# Attempt to apply metadata patches
echo -n "Applying metadata patches... "
tr '|' ' ' < patchlist |
while read X Y; do
if [ ! -f "${X}-${Y}.gz" ]; then continue; fi
gunzip -c < ${X}-${Y}.gz > diff
gunzip -c < files/${X}.gz > diff-OLD
# Figure out which lines are being added and removed
grep -E '^-' diff |
cut -c 2- |
while read PREFIX; do
look "${PREFIX}" diff-OLD
done |
sort > diff-rm
grep -E '^\+' diff |
cut -c 2- > diff-add
# Generate the new file
comm -23 diff-OLD diff-rm |
sort - diff-add > diff-NEW
if [ `${SHA256} -q diff-NEW` = ${Y} ]; then
mv diff-NEW files/${Y}
gzip -n files/${Y}
else
mv diff-NEW ${Y}.bad
fi
rm -f ${X}-${Y}.gz diff
rm -f diff-OLD diff-NEW diff-add diff-rm
done 2>${QUIETREDIR}
echo "done."
fi
# Update metadata without patches
cut -f 2 -d '|' < tINDEX.new |
while read Y; do
if [ ! -f "files/${Y}.gz" ]; then
echo ${Y};
fi
done |
sort -u > filelist
if [ -s filelist ]; then
echo -n "Fetching `wc -l < filelist | tr -d ' '` "
echo ${NDEBUG} "metadata files... "
lam -s "${FETCHDIR}/m/" - -s ".gz" < filelist |
xargs ${XARGST} ${PHTTPGET} ${SERVERNAME} \
2>${QUIETREDIR}
while read Y; do
if ! [ -f ${Y}.gz ]; then
echo "failed."
return 1
fi
if [ `gunzip -c < ${Y}.gz |
${SHA256} -q` = ${Y} ]; then
mv ${Y}.gz files/${Y}.gz
else
echo "metadata is corrupt."
return 1
fi
done < filelist
echo "done."
fi
# Sanity-check the metadata files.
cut -f 2 -d '|' tINDEX.new > filelist
while read X; do
fetch_metadata_sanity ${X} || return 1
done < filelist
# Remove files which are no longer needed
cut -f 2 -d '|' tINDEX.present |
sort > oldfiles
cut -f 2 -d '|' tINDEX.new |
sort |
comm -13 - oldfiles |
lam -s "files/" - -s ".gz" |
xargs rm -f
rm patchlist filelist oldfiles
rm ${TINDEXHASH}
# We're done!
mv tINDEX.new tINDEX.present
mv tag.new tag
return 0
}
# Extract a subset of a downloaded metadata file containing only the parts
# which are listed in COMPONENTS.
fetch_filter_metadata_components () {
METAHASH=`look "$1|" tINDEX.present | cut -f 2 -d '|'`
gunzip -c < files/${METAHASH}.gz > $1.all
# Fish out the lines belonging to components we care about.
for C in ${COMPONENTS}; do
look "`echo ${C} | tr '/' '|'`|" $1.all
done > $1
# Remove temporary file.
rm $1.all
}
# Generate a filtered version of the metadata file $1 from the downloaded
# file, by fishing out the lines corresponding to components we're trying
# to keep updated, and then removing lines corresponding to paths we want
# to ignore.
fetch_filter_metadata () {
# Fish out the lines belonging to components we care about.
fetch_filter_metadata_components $1
# Canonicalize directory names by removing any trailing / in
# order to avoid listing directories multiple times if they
# belong to multiple components. Turning "/" into "" doesn't
# matter, since we add a leading "/" when we use paths later.
cut -f 3- -d '|' $1 |
sed -e 's,/|d|,|d|,' |
sort -u > $1.tmp
# Figure out which lines to ignore and remove them.
for X in ${IGNOREPATHS}; do
grep -E "^${X}" $1.tmp
done |
sort -u |
comm -13 - $1.tmp > $1
# Remove temporary files.
rm $1.tmp
}
# Filter the metadata file $1 by adding lines with "/boot/$2"
# replaced by ${KERNELDIR} (which is `sysctl -n kern.bootfile` minus the
# trailing "/kernel"); and if "/boot/$2" does not exist, remove
# the original lines which start with that.
# Put another way: Deal with the fact that the FOO kernel is sometimes
# installed in /boot/FOO/ and is sometimes installed elsewhere.
fetch_filter_kernel_names () {
grep ^/boot/$2 $1 |
sed -e "s,/boot/$2,${KERNELDIR},g" |
sort - $1 > $1.tmp
mv $1.tmp $1
if ! [ -d /boot/$2 ]; then
grep -v ^/boot/$2 $1 > $1.tmp
mv $1.tmp $1
fi
}
# For all paths appearing in $1 or $3, inspect the system
# and generate $2 describing what is currently installed.
fetch_inspect_system () {
# No errors yet...
rm -f .err
# Tell the user why his disk is suddenly making lots of noise
echo -n "Inspecting system... "
# Generate list of files to inspect
cat $1 $3 |
cut -f 1 -d '|' |
sort -u > filelist
# Examine each file and output lines of the form
# /path/to/file|type|device-inum|user|group|perm|flags|value
# sorted by device and inode number.
while read F; do
# If the symlink/file/directory does not exist, record this.
if ! [ -e ${BASEDIR}/${F} ]; then
echo "${F}|-||||||"
continue
fi
if ! [ -r ${BASEDIR}/${F} ]; then
echo "Cannot read file: ${BASEDIR}/${F}" \
>/dev/stderr
touch .err
return 1
fi
# Otherwise, output an index line.
if [ -L ${BASEDIR}/${F} ]; then
echo -n "${F}|L|"
stat -n -f '%d-%i|%u|%g|%Mp%Lp|%Of|' ${BASEDIR}/${F};
readlink ${BASEDIR}/${F};
elif [ -f ${BASEDIR}/${F} ]; then
echo -n "${F}|f|"
stat -n -f '%d-%i|%u|%g|%Mp%Lp|%Of|' ${BASEDIR}/${F};
sha256 -q ${BASEDIR}/${F};
elif [ -d ${BASEDIR}/${F} ]; then
echo -n "${F}|d|"
stat -f '%d-%i|%u|%g|%Mp%Lp|%Of|' ${BASEDIR}/${F};
else
echo "Unknown file type: ${BASEDIR}/${F}" \
>/dev/stderr
touch .err
return 1
fi
done < filelist |
sort -k 3,3 -t '|' > $2.tmp
rm filelist
# Check if an error occurred during system inspection
if [ -f .err ]; then
return 1
fi
# Convert to the form
# /path/to/file|type|user|group|perm|flags|value|hlink
# by resolving identical device and inode numbers into hard links.
cut -f 1,3 -d '|' $2.tmp |
sort -k 1,1 -t '|' |
sort -s -u -k 2,2 -t '|' |
join -1 2 -2 3 -t '|' - $2.tmp |
awk -F \| -v OFS=\| \
'{
if (($2 == $3) || ($4 == "-"))
print $3,$4,$5,$6,$7,$8,$9,""
else
print $3,$4,$5,$6,$7,$8,$9,$2
}' |
sort > $2
rm $2.tmp
# We're finished looking around
echo "done."
}
# For any paths matching ${MERGECHANGES}, compare $1 and $2 and find any
# files which differ; generate $3 containing these paths and the old hashes.
fetch_filter_mergechanges () {
# Pull out the paths and hashes of the files matching ${MERGECHANGES}.
for F in $1 $2; do
for X in ${MERGECHANGES}; do
grep -E "^${X}" ${F}
done |
cut -f 1,2,7 -d '|' |
sort > ${F}-values
done
# Any line in $2-values which doesn't appear in $1-values and is a
# file means that we should list the path in $3.
comm -13 $1-values $2-values |
fgrep '|f|' |
cut -f 1 -d '|' > $2-paths
# For each path, pull out one (and only one!) entry from $1-values.
# Note that we cannot distinguish which "old" version the user made
# changes to; but hopefully any changes which occur due to security
# updates will exist in both the "new" version and the version which
# the user has installed, so the merging will still work.
while read X; do
look "${X}|" $1-values |
head -1
done < $2-paths > $3
# Clean up
rm $1-values $2-values $2-paths
}
# For any paths matching ${UPDATEIFUNMODIFIED}, remove lines from $[123]
# which correspond to lines in $2 with hashes not matching $1 or $3, unless
# the paths are listed in $4. For entries in $2 marked "not present"
# (aka. type -), remove lines from $[123] unless there is a corresponding
# entry in $1.
fetch_filter_unmodified_notpresent () {
# Figure out which lines of $1 and $3 correspond to bits which
# should only be updated if they haven't changed, and fish out
# the (path, type, value) tuples.
# NOTE: We don't consider a file to be "modified" if it matches
# the hash from $3.
for X in ${UPDATEIFUNMODIFIED}; do
grep -E "^${X}" $1
grep -E "^${X}" $3
done |
cut -f 1,2,7 -d '|' |
sort > $1-values
# Do the same for $2.
for X in ${UPDATEIFUNMODIFIED}; do
grep -E "^${X}" $2
done |
cut -f 1,2,7 -d '|' |
sort > $2-values
# Any entry in $2-values which is not in $1-values corresponds to
# a path which we need to remove from $1, $2, and $3, unless it
# that path appears in $4.
comm -13 $1-values $2-values |
sort -t '|' -k 1,1 > mlines.tmp
cut -f 1 -d '|' $4 |
sort |
join -v 2 -t '|' - mlines.tmp |
sort > mlines
rm $1-values $2-values mlines.tmp
# Any lines in $2 which are not in $1 AND are "not present" lines
# also belong in mlines.
comm -13 $1 $2 |
cut -f 1,2,7 -d '|' |
fgrep '|-|' >> mlines
# Remove lines from $1, $2, and $3
for X in $1 $2 $3; do
sort -t '|' -k 1,1 ${X} > ${X}.tmp
cut -f 1 -d '|' < mlines |
sort |
join -v 2 -t '|' - ${X}.tmp |
sort > ${X}
rm ${X}.tmp
done
# Store a list of the modified files, for future reference
fgrep -v '|-|' mlines |
cut -f 1 -d '|' > modifiedfiles
rm mlines
}
# For each entry in $1 of type -, remove any corresponding
# entry from $2 if ${ALLOWADD} != "yes". Remove all entries
# of type - from $1.
fetch_filter_allowadd () {
cut -f 1,2 -d '|' < $1 |
fgrep '|-' |
cut -f 1 -d '|' > filesnotpresent
if [ ${ALLOWADD} != "yes" ]; then
sort < $2 |
join -v 1 -t '|' - filesnotpresent |
sort > $2.tmp
mv $2.tmp $2
fi
sort < $1 |
join -v 1 -t '|' - filesnotpresent |
sort > $1.tmp
mv $1.tmp $1
rm filesnotpresent
}
# If ${ALLOWDELETE} != "yes", then remove any entries from $1
# which don't correspond to entries in $2.
fetch_filter_allowdelete () {
# Produce a lists ${PATH}|${TYPE}
for X in $1 $2; do
cut -f 1-2 -d '|' < ${X} |
sort -u > ${X}.nodes
done
# Figure out which lines need to be removed from $1.
if [ ${ALLOWDELETE} != "yes" ]; then
comm -23 $1.nodes $2.nodes > $1.badnodes
else
: > $1.badnodes
fi
# Remove the relevant lines from $1
while read X; do
look "${X}|" $1
done < $1.badnodes |
comm -13 - $1 > $1.tmp
mv $1.tmp $1
rm $1.badnodes $1.nodes $2.nodes
}
# If ${KEEPMODIFIEDMETADATA} == "yes", then for each entry in $2
# with metadata not matching any entry in $1, replace the corresponding
# line of $3 with one having the same metadata as the entry in $2.
fetch_filter_modified_metadata () {
# Fish out the metadata from $1 and $2
for X in $1 $2; do
cut -f 1-6 -d '|' < ${X} > ${X}.metadata
done
# Find the metadata we need to keep
if [ ${KEEPMODIFIEDMETADATA} = "yes" ]; then
comm -13 $1.metadata $2.metadata > keepmeta
else
: > keepmeta
fi
# Extract the lines which we need to remove from $3, and
# construct the lines which we need to add to $3.
: > $3.remove
: > $3.add
while read LINE; do
NODE=`echo "${LINE}" | cut -f 1-2 -d '|'`
look "${NODE}|" $3 >> $3.remove
look "${NODE}|" $3 |
cut -f 7- -d '|' |
lam -s "${LINE}|" - >> $3.add
done < keepmeta
# Remove the specified lines and add the new lines.
sort $3.remove |
comm -13 - $3 |
sort -u - $3.add > $3.tmp
mv $3.tmp $3
rm keepmeta $1.metadata $2.metadata $3.add $3.remove
}
# Remove lines from $1 and $2 which are identical;
# no need to update a file if it isn't changing.
fetch_filter_uptodate () {
comm -23 $1 $2 > $1.tmp
comm -13 $1 $2 > $2.tmp
mv $1.tmp $1
mv $2.tmp $2
}
# Fetch any "clean" old versions of files we need for merging changes.
fetch_files_premerge () {
# We only need to do anything if $1 is non-empty.
if [ -s $1 ]; then
# Tell the user what we're doing
echo -n "Fetching files from ${OLDRELNUM} for merging... "
# List of files wanted
fgrep '|f|' < $1 |
cut -f 3 -d '|' |
sort -u > files.wanted
# Only fetch the files we don't already have
while read Y; do
if [ ! -f "files/${Y}.gz" ]; then
echo ${Y};
fi
done < files.wanted > filelist
# Actually fetch them
lam -s "${OLDFETCHDIR}/f/" - -s ".gz" < filelist |
xargs ${XARGST} ${PHTTPGET} ${SERVERNAME} \
2>${QUIETREDIR}
# Make sure we got them all, and move them into /files/
while read Y; do
if ! [ -f ${Y}.gz ]; then
echo "failed."
return 1
fi
if [ `gunzip -c < ${Y}.gz |
${SHA256} -q` = ${Y} ]; then
mv ${Y}.gz files/${Y}.gz
else
echo "${Y} has incorrect hash."
return 1
fi
done < filelist
echo "done."
# Clean up
rm filelist files.wanted
fi
}
# Prepare to fetch files: Generate a list of the files we need,
# copy the unmodified files we have into /files/, and generate
# a list of patches to download.
fetch_files_prepare () {
# Tell the user why his disk is suddenly making lots of noise
echo -n "Preparing to download files... "
# Reduce indices to ${PATH}|${HASH} pairs
for X in $1 $2 $3; do
cut -f 1,2,7 -d '|' < ${X} |
fgrep '|f|' |
cut -f 1,3 -d '|' |
sort > ${X}.hashes
done
# List of files wanted
cut -f 2 -d '|' < $3.hashes |
sort -u |
while read HASH; do
if ! [ -f files/${HASH}.gz ]; then
echo ${HASH}
fi
done > files.wanted
# Generate a list of unmodified files
comm -12 $1.hashes $2.hashes |
sort -k 1,1 -t '|' > unmodified.files
# Copy all files into /files/. We only need the unmodified files
# for use in patching; but we'll want all of them if the user asks
# to rollback the updates later.
while read LINE; do
F=`echo "${LINE}" | cut -f 1 -d '|'`
HASH=`echo "${LINE}" | cut -f 2 -d '|'`
# Skip files we already have.
if [ -f files/${HASH}.gz ]; then
continue
fi
# Make sure the file hasn't changed.
cp "${BASEDIR}/${F}" tmpfile
if [ `sha256 -q tmpfile` != ${HASH} ]; then
echo
echo "File changed while FreeBSD Update running: ${F}"
return 1
fi
# Place the file into storage.
gzip -c < tmpfile > files/${HASH}.gz
rm tmpfile
done < $2.hashes
# Produce a list of patches to download
sort -k 1,1 -t '|' $3.hashes |
join -t '|' -o 2.2,1.2 - unmodified.files |
fetch_make_patchlist > patchlist
# Garbage collect
rm unmodified.files $1.hashes $2.hashes $3.hashes
# We don't need the list of possible old files any more.
rm $1
# We're finished making noise
echo "done."
}
# Fetch files.
fetch_files () {
# Attempt to fetch patches
if [ -s patchlist ]; then
echo -n "Fetching `wc -l < patchlist | tr -d ' '` "
echo ${NDEBUG} "patches.${DDSTATS}"
tr '|' '-' < patchlist |
lam -s "${PATCHDIR}/" - |
xargs ${XARGST} ${PHTTPGET} ${SERVERNAME} \
2>${STATSREDIR} | fetch_progress
echo "done."
# Attempt to apply patches
echo -n "Applying patches... "
tr '|' ' ' < patchlist |
while read X Y; do
if [ ! -f "${X}-${Y}" ]; then continue; fi
gunzip -c < files/${X}.gz > OLD
bspatch OLD NEW ${X}-${Y}
if [ `${SHA256} -q NEW` = ${Y} ]; then
mv NEW files/${Y}
gzip -n files/${Y}
fi
rm -f diff OLD NEW ${X}-${Y}
done 2>${QUIETREDIR}
echo "done."
fi
# Download files which couldn't be generate via patching
while read Y; do
if [ ! -f "files/${Y}.gz" ]; then
echo ${Y};
fi
done < files.wanted > filelist
if [ -s filelist ]; then
echo -n "Fetching `wc -l < filelist | tr -d ' '` "
echo ${NDEBUG} "files... "
lam -s "${FETCHDIR}/f/" - -s ".gz" < filelist |
xargs ${XARGST} ${PHTTPGET} ${SERVERNAME} \
2>${QUIETREDIR}
while read Y; do
if ! [ -f ${Y}.gz ]; then
echo "failed."
return 1
fi
if [ `gunzip -c < ${Y}.gz |
${SHA256} -q` = ${Y} ]; then
mv ${Y}.gz files/${Y}.gz
else
echo "${Y} has incorrect hash."
return 1
fi
done < filelist
echo "done."
fi
# Clean up
rm files.wanted filelist patchlist
}
# Create and populate install manifest directory; and report what updates
# are available.
fetch_create_manifest () {
# If we have an existing install manifest, nuke it.
if [ -L "${BDHASH}-install" ]; then
rm -r ${BDHASH}-install/
rm ${BDHASH}-install
fi
# Report to the user if any updates were avoided due to local changes
if [ -s modifiedfiles ]; then
echo
echo -n "The following files are affected by updates, "
echo "but no changes have"
echo -n "been downloaded because the files have been "
echo "modified locally:"
cat modifiedfiles
fi | $PAGER
rm modifiedfiles
# If no files will be updated, tell the user and exit
if ! [ -s INDEX-PRESENT ] &&
! [ -s INDEX-NEW ]; then
rm INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW
echo
echo -n "No updates needed to update system to "
echo "${RELNUM}-p${RELPATCHNUM}."
return
fi
# Divide files into (a) removed files, (b) added files, and
# (c) updated files.
cut -f 1 -d '|' < INDEX-PRESENT |
sort > INDEX-PRESENT.flist
cut -f 1 -d '|' < INDEX-NEW |
sort > INDEX-NEW.flist
comm -23 INDEX-PRESENT.flist INDEX-NEW.flist > files.removed
comm -13 INDEX-PRESENT.flist INDEX-NEW.flist > files.added
comm -12 INDEX-PRESENT.flist INDEX-NEW.flist > files.updated
rm INDEX-PRESENT.flist INDEX-NEW.flist
# Report removed files, if any
if [ -s files.removed ]; then
echo
echo -n "The following files will be removed "
echo "as part of updating to ${RELNUM}-p${RELPATCHNUM}:"
cat files.removed
fi | $PAGER
rm files.removed
# Report added files, if any
if [ -s files.added ]; then
echo
echo -n "The following files will be added "
echo "as part of updating to ${RELNUM}-p${RELPATCHNUM}:"
cat files.added
fi | $PAGER
rm files.added
# Report updated files, if any
if [ -s files.updated ]; then
echo
echo -n "The following files will be updated "
echo "as part of updating to ${RELNUM}-p${RELPATCHNUM}:"
cat files.updated
fi | $PAGER
rm files.updated
# Create a directory for the install manifest.
MDIR=`mktemp -d install.XXXXXX` || return 1
# Populate it
mv INDEX-PRESENT ${MDIR}/INDEX-OLD
mv INDEX-NEW ${MDIR}/INDEX-NEW
# Link it into place
ln -s ${MDIR} ${BDHASH}-install
}
# Warn about any upcoming EoL
fetch_warn_eol () {
# What's the current time?
NOWTIME=`date "+%s"`
# When did we last warn about the EoL date?
if [ -f lasteolwarn ]; then
LASTWARN=`cat lasteolwarn`
else
LASTWARN=`expr ${NOWTIME} - 63072000`
fi
# If the EoL time is past, warn.
if [ ${EOLTIME} -lt ${NOWTIME} ]; then
echo
cat <<-EOF
WARNING: `uname -sr` HAS PASSED ITS END-OF-LIFE DATE.
Any security issues discovered after `date -r ${EOLTIME}`
will not have been corrected.
EOF
return 1
fi
# Figure out how long it has been since we last warned about the
# upcoming EoL, and how much longer we have left.
SINCEWARN=`expr ${NOWTIME} - ${LASTWARN}`
TIMELEFT=`expr ${EOLTIME} - ${NOWTIME}`
# Don't warn if the EoL is more than 3 months away
if [ ${TIMELEFT} -gt 7884000 ]; then
return 0
fi
# Don't warn if the time remaining is more than 3 times the time
# since the last warning.
if [ ${TIMELEFT} -gt `expr ${SINCEWARN} \* 3` ]; then
return 0
fi
# Figure out what time units to use.
if [ ${TIMELEFT} -lt 604800 ]; then
UNIT="day"
SIZE=86400
elif [ ${TIMELEFT} -lt 2678400 ]; then
UNIT="week"
SIZE=604800
else
UNIT="month"
SIZE=2678400
fi
# Compute the right number of units
NUM=`expr ${TIMELEFT} / ${SIZE}`
if [ ${NUM} != 1 ]; then
UNIT="${UNIT}s"
fi
# Print the warning
echo
cat <<-EOF
WARNING: `uname -sr` is approaching its End-of-Life date.
It is strongly recommended that you upgrade to a newer
release within the next ${NUM} ${UNIT}.
EOF
# Update the stored time of last warning
echo ${NOWTIME} > lasteolwarn
}
# Do the actual work involved in "fetch" / "cron".
fetch_run () {
workdir_init || return 1
# Prepare the mirror list.
fetch_pick_server_init && fetch_pick_server
# Try to fetch the public key until we run out of servers.
while ! fetch_key; do
fetch_pick_server || return 1
done
# Try to fetch the metadata index signature ("tag") until we run
# out of available servers; and sanity check the downloaded tag.
while ! fetch_tag; do
fetch_pick_server || return 1
done
fetch_tagsanity || return 1
# Fetch the latest INDEX-NEW and INDEX-OLD files.
fetch_metadata INDEX-NEW INDEX-OLD || return 1
# Generate filtered INDEX-NEW and INDEX-OLD files containing only
# the lines which (a) belong to components we care about, and (b)
# don't correspond to paths we're explicitly ignoring.
fetch_filter_metadata INDEX-NEW || return 1
fetch_filter_metadata INDEX-OLD || return 1
# Translate /boot/${KERNCONF} into ${KERNELDIR}
fetch_filter_kernel_names INDEX-NEW ${KERNCONF}
fetch_filter_kernel_names INDEX-OLD ${KERNCONF}
# For all paths appearing in INDEX-OLD or INDEX-NEW, inspect the
# system and generate an INDEX-PRESENT file.
fetch_inspect_system INDEX-OLD INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW || return 1
# Based on ${UPDATEIFUNMODIFIED}, remove lines from INDEX-* which
# correspond to lines in INDEX-PRESENT with hashes not appearing
# in INDEX-OLD or INDEX-NEW. Also remove lines where the entry in
# INDEX-PRESENT has type - and there isn't a corresponding entry in
# INDEX-OLD with type -.
fetch_filter_unmodified_notpresent \
INDEX-OLD INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW /dev/null
# For each entry in INDEX-PRESENT of type -, remove any corresponding
# entry from INDEX-NEW if ${ALLOWADD} != "yes". Remove all entries
# of type - from INDEX-PRESENT.
fetch_filter_allowadd INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW
# If ${ALLOWDELETE} != "yes", then remove any entries from
# INDEX-PRESENT which don't correspond to entries in INDEX-NEW.
fetch_filter_allowdelete INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW
# If ${KEEPMODIFIEDMETADATA} == "yes", then for each entry in
# INDEX-PRESENT with metadata not matching any entry in INDEX-OLD,
# replace the corresponding line of INDEX-NEW with one having the
# same metadata as the entry in INDEX-PRESENT.
fetch_filter_modified_metadata INDEX-OLD INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW
# Remove lines from INDEX-PRESENT and INDEX-NEW which are identical;
# no need to update a file if it isn't changing.
fetch_filter_uptodate INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW
# Prepare to fetch files: Generate a list of the files we need,
# copy the unmodified files we have into /files/, and generate
# a list of patches to download.
fetch_files_prepare INDEX-OLD INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW || return 1
# Fetch files.
fetch_files || return 1
# Create and populate install manifest directory; and report what
# updates are available.
fetch_create_manifest || return 1
# Warn about any upcoming EoL
fetch_warn_eol || return 1
}
# If StrictComponents is not "yes", generate a new components list
# with only the components which appear to be installed.
upgrade_guess_components () {
if [ "${STRICTCOMPONENTS}" = "no" ]; then
# Generate filtered INDEX-ALL with only the components listed
# in COMPONENTS.
fetch_filter_metadata_components $1 || return 1
# Tell the user why his disk is suddenly making lots of noise
echo -n "Inspecting system... "
# Look at the files on disk, and assume that a component is
# supposed to be present if it is more than half-present.
cut -f 1-3 -d '|' < INDEX-ALL |
tr '|' ' ' |
while read C S F; do
if [ -e ${BASEDIR}/${F} ]; then
echo "+ ${C}|${S}"
fi
echo "= ${C}|${S}"
done |
sort |
uniq -c |
sed -E 's,^ +,,' > compfreq
grep ' = ' compfreq |
cut -f 1,3 -d ' ' |
sort -k 2,2 -t ' ' > compfreq.total
grep ' + ' compfreq |
cut -f 1,3 -d ' ' |
sort -k 2,2 -t ' ' > compfreq.present
join -t ' ' -1 2 -2 2 compfreq.present compfreq.total |
while read S P T; do
if [ ${P} -gt `expr ${T} / 2` ]; then
echo ${S}
fi
done > comp.present
cut -f 2 -d ' ' < compfreq.total > comp.total
rm INDEX-ALL compfreq compfreq.total compfreq.present
# We're done making noise.
echo "done."
# Sometimes the kernel isn't installed where INDEX-ALL
# thinks that it should be: In particular, it is often in
# /boot/kernel instead of /boot/GENERIC or /boot/SMP. To
# deal with this, if "kernel|X" is listed in comp.total
# (i.e., is a component which would be upgraded if it is
# found to be present) we will add it to comp.present.
# If "kernel|<anything>" is in comp.total but "kernel|X" is
# not, we print a warning -- the user is running a kernel
# which isn't part of the release.
KCOMP=`echo ${KERNCONF} | tr 'A-Z' 'a-z'`
grep -E "^kernel\|${KCOMP}\$" comp.total >> comp.present
if grep -qE "^kernel\|" comp.total &&
! grep -qE "^kernel\|${KCOMP}\$" comp.total; then
cat <<-EOF
WARNING: This system is running a "${KCOMP}" kernel, which is not a
kernel configuration distributed as part of FreeBSD ${RELNUM}.
This kernel will not be updated: you MUST update the kernel manually
before running "$0 install".
EOF
fi
# Re-sort the list of installed components and generate
# the list of non-installed components.
sort -u < comp.present > comp.present.tmp
mv comp.present.tmp comp.present
comm -13 comp.present comp.total > comp.absent
# Ask the user to confirm that what we have is correct. To
# reduce user confusion, translate "X|Y" back to "X/Y" (as
# subcomponents must be listed in the configuration file).
echo
echo -n "The following components of FreeBSD "
echo "seem to be installed:"
tr '|' '/' < comp.present |
fmt -72
echo
echo -n "The following components of FreeBSD "
echo "do not seem to be installed:"
tr '|' '/' < comp.absent |
fmt -72
echo
continuep || return 1
echo
# Suck the generated list of components into ${COMPONENTS}.
# Note that comp.present.tmp is used due to issues with
# pipelines and setting variables.
COMPONENTS=""
tr '|' '/' < comp.present > comp.present.tmp
while read C; do
COMPONENTS="${COMPONENTS} ${C}"
done < comp.present.tmp
# Delete temporary files
rm comp.present comp.present.tmp comp.absent comp.total
fi
}
# If StrictComponents is not "yes", COMPONENTS contains an entry
# corresponding to the currently running kernel, and said kernel
# does not exist in the new release, add "kernel/generic" to the
# list of components.
upgrade_guess_new_kernel () {
if [ "${STRICTCOMPONENTS}" = "no" ]; then
# Grab the unfiltered metadata file.
METAHASH=`look "$1|" tINDEX.present | cut -f 2 -d '|'`
gunzip -c < files/${METAHASH}.gz > $1.all
# If "kernel/${KCOMP}" is in ${COMPONENTS} and that component
# isn't in $1.all, we need to add kernel/generic.
for C in ${COMPONENTS}; do
if [ ${C} = "kernel/${KCOMP}" ] &&
! grep -qE "^kernel\|${KCOMP}\|" $1.all; then
COMPONENTS="${COMPONENTS} kernel/generic"
NKERNCONF="GENERIC"
cat <<-EOF
WARNING: This system is running a "${KCOMP}" kernel, which is not a
kernel configuration distributed as part of FreeBSD ${RELNUM}.
As part of upgrading to FreeBSD ${RELNUM}, this kernel will be
replaced with a "generic" kernel.
EOF
continuep || return 1
fi
done
# Don't need this any more...
rm $1.all
fi
}
# Convert INDEX-OLD (last release) and INDEX-ALL (new release) into
# INDEX-OLD and INDEX-NEW files (in the sense of normal upgrades).
upgrade_oldall_to_oldnew () {
# For each ${F}|... which appears in INDEX-ALL but does not appear
# in INDEX-OLD, add ${F}|-|||||| to INDEX-OLD.
cut -f 1 -d '|' < $1 |
sort -u > $1.paths
cut -f 1 -d '|' < $2 |
sort -u |
comm -13 $1.paths - |
lam - -s "|-||||||" |
sort - $1 > $1.tmp
mv $1.tmp $1
# Remove lines from INDEX-OLD which also appear in INDEX-ALL
comm -23 $1 $2 > $1.tmp
mv $1.tmp $1
# Remove lines from INDEX-ALL which have a file name not appearing
# anywhere in INDEX-OLD (since these must be files which haven't
# changed -- if they were new, there would be an entry of type "-").
cut -f 1 -d '|' < $1 |
sort -u > $1.paths
sort -k 1,1 -t '|' < $2 |
join -t '|' - $1.paths |
sort > $2.tmp
rm $1.paths
mv $2.tmp $2
# Rename INDEX-ALL to INDEX-NEW.
mv $2 $3
}
# Helper for upgrade_merge: Return zero true iff the two files differ only
# in the contents of their $FreeBSD$ tags.
samef () {
X=`sed -E 's/\\$FreeBSD.*\\$/\$FreeBSD\$/' < $1 | ${SHA256}`
Y=`sed -E 's/\\$FreeBSD.*\\$/\$FreeBSD\$/' < $2 | ${SHA256}`
if [ $X = $Y ]; then
return 0;
else
return 1;
fi
}
# From the list of "old" files in $1, merge changes in $2 with those in $3,
# and update $3 to reflect the hashes of merged files.
upgrade_merge () {
# We only need to do anything if $1 is non-empty.
if [ -s $1 ]; then
cut -f 1 -d '|' $1 |
sort > $1-paths
# Create staging area for merging files
rm -rf merge/
while read F; do
D=`dirname ${F}`
mkdir -p merge/old/${D}
mkdir -p merge/${OLDRELNUM}/${D}
mkdir -p merge/${RELNUM}/${D}
mkdir -p merge/new/${D}
done < $1-paths
# Copy in files
while read F; do
# Currently installed file
V=`look "${F}|" $2 | cut -f 7 -d '|'`
gunzip < files/${V}.gz > merge/old/${F}
# Old release
if look "${F}|" $1 | fgrep -q "|f|"; then
V=`look "${F}|" $1 | cut -f 3 -d '|'`
gunzip < files/${V}.gz \
> merge/${OLDRELNUM}/${F}
fi
# New release
if look "${F}|" $3 | cut -f 1,2,7 -d '|' |
fgrep -q "|f|"; then
V=`look "${F}|" $3 | cut -f 7 -d '|'`
gunzip < files/${V}.gz \
> merge/${RELNUM}/${F}
fi
done < $1-paths
# Attempt to automatically merge changes
echo -n "Attempting to automatically merge "
echo -n "changes in files..."
: > failed.merges
while read F; do
# If the file doesn't exist in the new release,
# the result of "merging changes" is having the file
# not exist.
if ! [ -f merge/${RELNUM}/${F} ]; then
continue
fi
# If the file didn't exist in the old release, we're
# going to throw away the existing file and hope that
# the version from the new release is what we want.
if ! [ -f merge/${OLDRELNUM}/${F} ]; then
cp merge/${RELNUM}/${F} merge/new/${F}
continue
fi
# Some files need special treatment.
case ${F} in
/etc/spwd.db | /etc/pwd.db | /etc/login.conf.db)
# Don't merge these -- we're rebuild them
# after updates are installed.
cp merge/old/${F} merge/new/${F}
;;
*)
if ! merge -p -L "current version" \
-L "${OLDRELNUM}" -L "${RELNUM}" \
merge/old/${F} \
merge/${OLDRELNUM}/${F} \
merge/${RELNUM}/${F} \
> merge/new/${F} 2>/dev/null; then
echo ${F} >> failed.merges
fi
;;
esac
done < $1-paths
echo " done."
# Ask the user to handle any files which didn't merge.
while read F; do
# If the installed file differs from the version in
# the old release only due to $FreeBSD$ tag expansion
# then just use the version in the new release.
if samef merge/old/${F} merge/${OLDRELNUM}/${F}; then
cp merge/${RELNUM}/${F} merge/new/${F}
continue
fi
cat <<-EOF
The following file could not be merged automatically: ${F}
Press Enter to edit this file in ${EDITOR} and resolve the conflicts
manually...
EOF
read dummy </dev/tty
${EDITOR} `pwd`/merge/new/${F} < /dev/tty
done < failed.merges
rm failed.merges
# Ask the user to confirm that he likes how the result
# of merging files.
while read F; do
# Skip files which haven't changed except possibly
# in their $FreeBSD$ tags.
if [ -f merge/old/${F} ] && [ -f merge/new/${F} ] &&
samef merge/old/${F} merge/new/${F}; then
continue
fi
# Skip files where the installed file differs from
# the old file only due to $FreeBSD$ tags.
if [ -f merge/old/${F} ] &&
[ -f merge/${OLDRELNUM}/${F} ] &&
samef merge/old/${F} merge/${OLDRELNUM}/${F}; then
continue
fi
# Warn about files which are ceasing to exist.
if ! [ -f merge/new/${F} ]; then
cat <<-EOF
The following file will be removed, as it no longer exists in
FreeBSD ${RELNUM}: ${F}
EOF
continuep < /dev/tty || return 1
continue
fi
# Print changes for the user's approval.
cat <<-EOF
The following changes, which occurred between FreeBSD ${OLDRELNUM} and
FreeBSD ${RELNUM} have been merged into ${F}:
EOF
diff -U 5 -L "current version" -L "new version" \
merge/old/${F} merge/new/${F} || true
continuep < /dev/tty || return 1
done < $1-paths
# Store merged files.
while read F; do
if [ -f merge/new/${F} ]; then
V=`${SHA256} -q merge/new/${F}`
gzip -c < merge/new/${F} > files/${V}.gz
echo "${F}|${V}"
fi
done < $1-paths > newhashes
# Pull lines out from $3 which need to be updated to
# reflect merged files.
while read F; do
look "${F}|" $3
done < $1-paths > $3-oldlines
# Update lines to reflect merged files
join -t '|' -o 1.1,1.2,1.3,1.4,1.5,1.6,2.2,1.8 \
$3-oldlines newhashes > $3-newlines
# Remove old lines from $3 and add new lines.
sort $3-oldlines |
comm -13 - $3 |
sort - $3-newlines > $3.tmp
mv $3.tmp $3
# Clean up
rm $1-paths newhashes $3-oldlines $3-newlines
rm -rf merge/
fi
# We're done with merging files.
rm $1
}
# Do the work involved in fetching upgrades to a new release
upgrade_run () {
workdir_init || return 1
# Prepare the mirror list.
fetch_pick_server_init && fetch_pick_server
# Try to fetch the public key until we run out of servers.
while ! fetch_key; do
fetch_pick_server || return 1
done
# Try to fetch the metadata index signature ("tag") until we run
# out of available servers; and sanity check the downloaded tag.
while ! fetch_tag; do
fetch_pick_server || return 1
done
fetch_tagsanity || return 1
# Fetch the INDEX-OLD and INDEX-ALL.
fetch_metadata INDEX-OLD INDEX-ALL || return 1
# If StrictComponents is not "yes", generate a new components list
# with only the components which appear to be installed.
upgrade_guess_components INDEX-ALL || return 1
# Generate filtered INDEX-OLD and INDEX-ALL files containing only
# the components we want and without anything marked as "Ignore".
fetch_filter_metadata INDEX-OLD || return 1
fetch_filter_metadata INDEX-ALL || return 1
# Merge the INDEX-OLD and INDEX-ALL files into INDEX-OLD.
sort INDEX-OLD INDEX-ALL > INDEX-OLD.tmp
mv INDEX-OLD.tmp INDEX-OLD
rm INDEX-ALL
# Adjust variables for fetching files from the new release.
OLDRELNUM=${RELNUM}
RELNUM=${TARGETRELEASE}
OLDFETCHDIR=${FETCHDIR}
FETCHDIR=${RELNUM}/${ARCH}
# Try to fetch the NEW metadata index signature ("tag") until we run
# out of available servers; and sanity check the downloaded tag.
while ! fetch_tag; do
fetch_pick_server || return 1
done
# Fetch the new INDEX-ALL.
fetch_metadata INDEX-ALL || return 1
# If StrictComponents is not "yes", COMPONENTS contains an entry
# corresponding to the currently running kernel, and said kernel
# does not exist in the new release, add "kernel/generic" to the
# list of components.
upgrade_guess_new_kernel INDEX-ALL || return 1
# Filter INDEX-ALL to contain only the components we want and without
# anything marked as "Ignore".
fetch_filter_metadata INDEX-ALL || return 1
# Convert INDEX-OLD (last release) and INDEX-ALL (new release) into
# INDEX-OLD and INDEX-NEW files (in the sense of normal upgrades).
upgrade_oldall_to_oldnew INDEX-OLD INDEX-ALL INDEX-NEW
# Translate /boot/${KERNCONF} or /boot/${NKERNCONF} into ${KERNELDIR}
fetch_filter_kernel_names INDEX-NEW ${NKERNCONF}
fetch_filter_kernel_names INDEX-OLD ${KERNCONF}
# For all paths appearing in INDEX-OLD or INDEX-NEW, inspect the
# system and generate an INDEX-PRESENT file.
fetch_inspect_system INDEX-OLD INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW || return 1
# Based on ${MERGECHANGES}, generate a file tomerge-old with the
# paths and hashes of old versions of files to merge.
fetch_filter_mergechanges INDEX-OLD INDEX-PRESENT tomerge-old
# Based on ${UPDATEIFUNMODIFIED}, remove lines from INDEX-* which
# correspond to lines in INDEX-PRESENT with hashes not appearing
# in INDEX-OLD or INDEX-NEW. Also remove lines where the entry in
# INDEX-PRESENT has type - and there isn't a corresponding entry in
# INDEX-OLD with type -.
fetch_filter_unmodified_notpresent \
INDEX-OLD INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW tomerge-old
# For each entry in INDEX-PRESENT of type -, remove any corresponding
# entry from INDEX-NEW if ${ALLOWADD} != "yes". Remove all entries
# of type - from INDEX-PRESENT.
fetch_filter_allowadd INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW
# If ${ALLOWDELETE} != "yes", then remove any entries from
# INDEX-PRESENT which don't correspond to entries in INDEX-NEW.
fetch_filter_allowdelete INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW
# If ${KEEPMODIFIEDMETADATA} == "yes", then for each entry in
# INDEX-PRESENT with metadata not matching any entry in INDEX-OLD,
# replace the corresponding line of INDEX-NEW with one having the
# same metadata as the entry in INDEX-PRESENT.
fetch_filter_modified_metadata INDEX-OLD INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW
# Remove lines from INDEX-PRESENT and INDEX-NEW which are identical;
# no need to update a file if it isn't changing.
fetch_filter_uptodate INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW
# Fetch "clean" files from the old release for merging changes.
fetch_files_premerge tomerge-old
# Prepare to fetch files: Generate a list of the files we need,
# copy the unmodified files we have into /files/, and generate
# a list of patches to download.
fetch_files_prepare INDEX-OLD INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW || return 1
# Fetch patches from to-${RELNUM}/${ARCH}/bp/
PATCHDIR=to-${RELNUM}/${ARCH}/bp
fetch_files || return 1
# Merge configuration file changes.
upgrade_merge tomerge-old INDEX-PRESENT INDEX-NEW || return 1
# Create and populate install manifest directory; and report what
# updates are available.
fetch_create_manifest || return 1
# Leave a note behind to tell the "install" command that the kernel
# needs to be installed before the world.
touch ${BDHASH}-install/kernelfirst
# Remind the user that they need to run "freebsd-update install"
# to install the downloaded bits, in case they didn't RTFM.
echo "To install the downloaded upgrades, run \"$0 install\"."
}
# Make sure that all the file hashes mentioned in $@ have corresponding
# gzipped files stored in /files/.
install_verify () {
# Generate a list of hashes
cat $@ |
cut -f 2,7 -d '|' |
grep -E '^f' |
cut -f 2 -d '|' |
sort -u > filelist
# Make sure all the hashes exist
while read HASH; do
if ! [ -f files/${HASH}.gz ]; then
echo -n "Update files missing -- "
echo "this should never happen."
echo "Re-run '$0 fetch'."
return 1
fi
done < filelist
# Clean up
rm filelist
}
# Remove the system immutable flag from files
install_unschg () {
# Generate file list
cat $@ |
cut -f 1 -d '|' > filelist
# Remove flags
while read F; do
if ! [ -e ${BASEDIR}/${F} ]; then
continue
fi
chflags noschg ${BASEDIR}/${F} || return 1
done < filelist
# Clean up
rm filelist
}
# Decide which directory name to use for kernel backups.
backup_kernel_finddir () {
CNT=0
while true ; do
# Pathname does not exist, so it is OK use that name
# for backup directory.
if [ ! -e $BACKUPKERNELDIR ]; then
return 0
fi
# If directory do exist, we only use if it has our
# marker file.
if [ -d $BACKUPKERNELDIR -a \
-e $BACKUPKERNELDIR/.freebsd-update ]; then
return 0
fi
# We could not use current directory name, so add counter to
# the end and try again.
CNT=$((CNT + 1))
if [ $CNT -gt 9 ]; then
echo "Could not find valid backup dir ($BACKUPKERNELDIR)"
exit 1
fi
BACKUPKERNELDIR="`echo $BACKUPKERNELDIR | sed -Ee 's/[0-9]\$//'`"
BACKUPKERNELDIR="${BACKUPKERNELDIR}${CNT}"
done
}
# Backup the current kernel using hardlinks, if not disabled by user.
# Since we delete all files in the directory used for previous backups
# we create a marker file called ".freebsd-update" in the directory so
# we can determine on the next run that the directory was created by
# freebsd-update and we then do not accidentally remove user files in
# the unlikely case that the user has created a directory with a
# conflicting name.
backup_kernel () {
# Only make kernel backup is so configured.
if [ $BACKUPKERNEL != yes ]; then
return 0
fi
# Decide which directory name to use for kernel backups.
backup_kernel_finddir
# Remove old kernel backup files. If $BACKUPKERNELDIR was
# "not ours", backup_kernel_finddir would have exited, so
# deleting the directory content is as safe as we can make it.
if [ -d $BACKUPKERNELDIR ]; then
rm -fr $BACKUPKERNELDIR
fi
# Create directories for backup.
mkdir -p $BACKUPKERNELDIR
mtree -cdn -p "${KERNELDIR}" | \
mtree -Ue -p "${BACKUPKERNELDIR}" > /dev/null
# Mark the directory as having been created by freebsd-update.
touch $BACKUPKERNELDIR/.freebsd-update
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo "Could not create kernel backup directory"
exit 1
fi
# Disable pathname expansion to be sure *.symbols is not
# expanded.
set -f
# Use find to ignore symbol files, unless disabled by user.
if [ $BACKUPKERNELSYMBOLFILES = yes ]; then
FINDFILTER=""
else
FINDFILTER=-"a ! -name *.symbols"
fi
# Backup all the kernel files using hardlinks.
(cd $KERNELDIR && find . -type f $FINDFILTER -exec \
cp -pl '{}' ${BACKUPKERNELDIR}/'{}' \;)
# Re-enable patchname expansion.
set +f
}
# Install new files
install_from_index () {
# First pass: Do everything apart from setting file flags. We
# can't set flags yet, because schg inhibits hard linking.
sort -k 1,1 -t '|' $1 |
tr '|' ' ' |
while read FPATH TYPE OWNER GROUP PERM FLAGS HASH LINK; do
case ${TYPE} in
d)
# Create a directory
install -d -o ${OWNER} -g ${GROUP} \
-m ${PERM} ${BASEDIR}/${FPATH}
;;
f)
if [ -z "${LINK}" ]; then
# Create a file, without setting flags.
gunzip < files/${HASH}.gz > ${HASH}
install -S -o ${OWNER} -g ${GROUP} \
-m ${PERM} ${HASH} ${BASEDIR}/${FPATH}
rm ${HASH}
else
# Create a hard link.
ln -f ${BASEDIR}/${LINK} ${BASEDIR}/${FPATH}
fi
;;
L)
# Create a symlink
ln -sfh ${HASH} ${BASEDIR}/${FPATH}
;;
esac
done
# Perform a second pass, adding file flags.
tr '|' ' ' < $1 |
while read FPATH TYPE OWNER GROUP PERM FLAGS HASH LINK; do
if [ ${TYPE} = "f" ] &&
! [ ${FLAGS} = "0" ]; then
chflags ${FLAGS} ${BASEDIR}/${FPATH}
fi
done
}
# Remove files which we want to delete
install_delete () {
# Generate list of new files
cut -f 1 -d '|' < $2 |
sort > newfiles
# Generate subindex of old files we want to nuke
sort -k 1,1 -t '|' $1 |
join -t '|' -v 1 - newfiles |
sort -r -k 1,1 -t '|' |
cut -f 1,2 -d '|' |
tr '|' ' ' > killfiles
# Remove the offending bits
while read FPATH TYPE; do
case ${TYPE} in
d)
rmdir ${BASEDIR}/${FPATH}
;;
f)
rm ${BASEDIR}/${FPATH}
;;
L)
rm ${BASEDIR}/${FPATH}
;;
esac
done < killfiles
# Clean up
rm newfiles killfiles
}
# Install new files, delete old files, and update linker.hints
install_files () {
# If we haven't already dealt with the kernel, deal with it.
if ! [ -f $1/kerneldone ]; then
grep -E '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-OLD > INDEX-OLD
grep -E '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-NEW > INDEX-NEW
# Backup current kernel before installing a new one
backup_kernel || return 1
# Install new files
install_from_index INDEX-NEW || return 1
# Remove files which need to be deleted
install_delete INDEX-OLD INDEX-NEW || return 1
# Update linker.hints if necessary
if [ -s INDEX-OLD -o -s INDEX-NEW ]; then
kldxref -R /boot/ 2>/dev/null
fi
# We've finished updating the kernel.
touch $1/kerneldone
# Do we need to ask for a reboot now?
if [ -f $1/kernelfirst ] &&
[ -s INDEX-OLD -o -s INDEX-NEW ]; then
cat <<-EOF
Kernel updates have been installed. Please reboot and run
"$0 install" again to finish installing updates.
EOF
exit 0
fi
fi
# If we haven't already dealt with the world, deal with it.
if ! [ -f $1/worlddone ]; then
# Create any necessary directories first
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-NEW |
grep -E '^[^|]+\|d\|' > INDEX-NEW
install_from_index INDEX-NEW || return 1
# Install new shared libraries next
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-NEW |
grep -vE '^[^|]+\|d\|' |
grep -E '^[^|]*/lib/[^|]*\.so\.[0-9]+\|' > INDEX-NEW
install_from_index INDEX-NEW || return 1
# Deal with everything else
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-OLD |
grep -vE '^[^|]+\|d\|' |
grep -vE '^[^|]*/lib/[^|]*\.so\.[0-9]+\|' > INDEX-OLD
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-NEW |
grep -vE '^[^|]+\|d\|' |
grep -vE '^[^|]*/lib/[^|]*\.so\.[0-9]+\|' > INDEX-NEW
install_from_index INDEX-NEW || return 1
install_delete INDEX-OLD INDEX-NEW || return 1
# Rebuild /etc/spwd.db and /etc/pwd.db if necessary.
if [ /etc/master.passwd -nt /etc/spwd.db ] ||
[ /etc/master.passwd -nt /etc/pwd.db ]; then
pwd_mkdb /etc/master.passwd
fi
# Rebuild /etc/login.conf.db if necessary.
if [ /etc/login.conf -nt /etc/login.conf.db ]; then
cap_mkdb /etc/login.conf
fi
# We've finished installing the world and deleting old files
# which are not shared libraries.
touch $1/worlddone
# Do we need to ask the user to portupgrade now?
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-NEW |
grep -E '^[^|]*/lib/[^|]*\.so\.[0-9]+\|' |
cut -f 1 -d '|' |
sort > newfiles
if grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-OLD |
grep -E '^[^|]*/lib/[^|]*\.so\.[0-9]+\|' |
cut -f 1 -d '|' |
sort |
join -v 1 - newfiles |
grep -q .; then
cat <<-EOF
Completing this upgrade requires removing old shared object files.
Please rebuild all installed 3rd party software (e.g., programs
installed from the ports tree) and then run "$0 install"
again to finish installing updates.
EOF
rm newfiles
exit 0
fi
rm newfiles
fi
# Remove old shared libraries
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-NEW |
grep -vE '^[^|]+\|d\|' |
grep -E '^[^|]*/lib/[^|]*\.so\.[0-9]+\|' > INDEX-NEW
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-OLD |
grep -vE '^[^|]+\|d\|' |
grep -E '^[^|]*/lib/[^|]*\.so\.[0-9]+\|' > INDEX-OLD
install_delete INDEX-OLD INDEX-NEW || return 1
# Remove old directories
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-OLD |
grep -E '^[^|]+\|d\|' > INDEX-OLD
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-OLD |
grep -E '^[^|]+\|d\|' > INDEX-OLD
install_delete INDEX-OLD INDEX-NEW || return 1
# Remove temporary files
rm INDEX-OLD INDEX-NEW
}
# Rearrange bits to allow the installed updates to be rolled back
install_setup_rollback () {
# Remove the "reboot after installing kernel", "kernel updated", and
# "finished installing the world" flags if present -- they are
# irrelevant when rolling back updates.
if [ -f ${BDHASH}-install/kernelfirst ]; then
rm ${BDHASH}-install/kernelfirst
rm ${BDHASH}-install/kerneldone
fi
if [ -f ${BDHASH}-install/worlddone ]; then
rm ${BDHASH}-install/worlddone
fi
if [ -L ${BDHASH}-rollback ]; then
mv ${BDHASH}-rollback ${BDHASH}-install/rollback
fi
mv ${BDHASH}-install ${BDHASH}-rollback
}
# Actually install updates
install_run () {
echo -n "Installing updates..."
# Make sure we have all the files we should have
install_verify ${BDHASH}-install/INDEX-OLD \
${BDHASH}-install/INDEX-NEW || return 1
# Remove system immutable flag from files
install_unschg ${BDHASH}-install/INDEX-OLD \
${BDHASH}-install/INDEX-NEW || return 1
# Install new files, delete old files, and update linker.hints
install_files ${BDHASH}-install || return 1
# Rearrange bits to allow the installed updates to be rolled back
install_setup_rollback
echo " done."
}
# Rearrange bits to allow the previous set of updates to be rolled back next.
rollback_setup_rollback () {
if [ -L ${BDHASH}-rollback/rollback ]; then
mv ${BDHASH}-rollback/rollback rollback-tmp
rm -r ${BDHASH}-rollback/
rm ${BDHASH}-rollback
mv rollback-tmp ${BDHASH}-rollback
else
rm -r ${BDHASH}-rollback/
rm ${BDHASH}-rollback
fi
}
# Install old files, delete new files, and update linker.hints
rollback_files () {
# Install old shared library files which don't have the same path as
# a new shared library file.
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-NEW |
grep -E '/lib/.*\.so\.[0-9]+\|' |
cut -f 1 -d '|' |
sort > INDEX-NEW.libs.flist
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-OLD |
grep -E '/lib/.*\.so\.[0-9]+\|' |
sort -k 1,1 -t '|' - |
join -t '|' -v 1 - INDEX-NEW.libs.flist > INDEX-OLD
install_from_index INDEX-OLD || return 1
# Deal with files which are neither kernel nor shared library
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-OLD |
grep -vE '/lib/.*\.so\.[0-9]+\|' > INDEX-OLD
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-NEW |
grep -vE '/lib/.*\.so\.[0-9]+\|' > INDEX-NEW
install_from_index INDEX-OLD || return 1
install_delete INDEX-NEW INDEX-OLD || return 1
# Install any old shared library files which we didn't install above.
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-OLD |
grep -E '/lib/.*\.so\.[0-9]+\|' |
sort -k 1,1 -t '|' - |
join -t '|' - INDEX-NEW.libs.flist > INDEX-OLD
install_from_index INDEX-OLD || return 1
# Delete unneeded shared library files
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-OLD |
grep -E '/lib/.*\.so\.[0-9]+\|' > INDEX-OLD
grep -vE '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-NEW |
grep -E '/lib/.*\.so\.[0-9]+\|' > INDEX-NEW
install_delete INDEX-NEW INDEX-OLD || return 1
# Deal with kernel files
grep -E '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-OLD > INDEX-OLD
grep -E '^/boot/' $1/INDEX-NEW > INDEX-NEW
install_from_index INDEX-OLD || return 1
install_delete INDEX-NEW INDEX-OLD || return 1
if [ -s INDEX-OLD -o -s INDEX-NEW ]; then
kldxref -R /boot/ 2>/dev/null
fi
# Remove temporary files
rm INDEX-OLD INDEX-NEW INDEX-NEW.libs.flist
}
# Actually rollback updates
rollback_run () {
echo -n "Uninstalling updates..."
# If there are updates waiting to be installed, remove them; we
# want the user to re-run 'fetch' after rolling back updates.
if [ -L ${BDHASH}-install ]; then
rm -r ${BDHASH}-install/
rm ${BDHASH}-install
fi
# Make sure we have all the files we should have
install_verify ${BDHASH}-rollback/INDEX-NEW \
${BDHASH}-rollback/INDEX-OLD || return 1
# Remove system immutable flag from files
install_unschg ${BDHASH}-rollback/INDEX-NEW \
${BDHASH}-rollback/INDEX-OLD || return 1
# Install old files, delete new files, and update linker.hints
rollback_files ${BDHASH}-rollback || return 1
# Remove the rollback directory and the symlink pointing to it; and
# rearrange bits to allow the previous set of updates to be rolled
# back next.
rollback_setup_rollback
echo " done."
}
# Compare INDEX-ALL and INDEX-PRESENT and print warnings about differences.
IDS_compare () {
# Get all the lines which mismatch in something other than file
# flags. We ignore file flags because sysinstall doesn't seem to
# set them when it installs FreeBSD; warning about these adds a
# very large amount of noise.
cut -f 1-5,7-8 -d '|' $1 > $1.noflags
sort -k 1,1 -t '|' $1.noflags > $1.sorted
cut -f 1-5,7-8 -d '|' $2 |
comm -13 $1.noflags - |
fgrep -v '|-|||||' |
sort -k 1,1 -t '|' |
join -t '|' $1.sorted - > INDEX-NOTMATCHING
# Ignore files which match IDSIGNOREPATHS.
for X in ${IDSIGNOREPATHS}; do
grep -E "^${X}" INDEX-NOTMATCHING
done |
sort -u |
comm -13 - INDEX-NOTMATCHING > INDEX-NOTMATCHING.tmp
mv INDEX-NOTMATCHING.tmp INDEX-NOTMATCHING
# Go through the lines and print warnings.
local IFS='|'
while read FPATH TYPE OWNER GROUP PERM HASH LINK P_TYPE P_OWNER P_GROUP P_PERM P_HASH P_LINK; do
# Warn about different object types.
if ! [ "${TYPE}" = "${P_TYPE}" ]; then
echo -n "${FPATH} is a "
case "${P_TYPE}" in
f) echo -n "regular file, "
;;
d) echo -n "directory, "
;;
L) echo -n "symlink, "
;;
esac
echo -n "but should be a "
case "${TYPE}" in
f) echo -n "regular file."
;;
d) echo -n "directory."
;;
L) echo -n "symlink."
;;
esac
echo
# Skip other tests, since they don't make sense if
# we're comparing different object types.
continue
fi
# Warn about different owners.
if ! [ "${OWNER}" = "${P_OWNER}" ]; then
echo -n "${FPATH} is owned by user id ${P_OWNER}, "
echo "but should be owned by user id ${OWNER}."
fi
# Warn about different groups.
if ! [ "${GROUP}" = "${P_GROUP}" ]; then
echo -n "${FPATH} is owned by group id ${P_GROUP}, "
echo "but should be owned by group id ${GROUP}."
fi
# Warn about different permissions. We do not warn about
# different permissions on symlinks, since some archivers
# don't extract symlink permissions correctly and they are
# ignored anyway.
if ! [ "${PERM}" = "${P_PERM}" ] &&
! [ "${TYPE}" = "L" ]; then
echo -n "${FPATH} has ${P_PERM} permissions, "
echo "but should have ${PERM} permissions."
fi
# Warn about different file hashes / symlink destinations.
if ! [ "${HASH}" = "${P_HASH}" ]; then
if [ "${TYPE}" = "L" ]; then
echo -n "${FPATH} is a symlink to ${P_HASH}, "
echo "but should be a symlink to ${HASH}."
fi
if [ "${TYPE}" = "f" ]; then
echo -n "${FPATH} has SHA256 hash ${P_HASH}, "
echo "but should have SHA256 hash ${HASH}."
fi
fi
# We don't warn about different hard links, since some
# some archivers break hard links, and as long as the
# underlying data is correct they really don't matter.
done < INDEX-NOTMATCHING
# Clean up
rm $1 $1.noflags $1.sorted $2 INDEX-NOTMATCHING
}
# Do the work involved in comparing the system to a "known good" index
IDS_run () {
workdir_init || return 1
# Prepare the mirror list.
fetch_pick_server_init && fetch_pick_server
# Try to fetch the public key until we run out of servers.
while ! fetch_key; do
fetch_pick_server || return 1
done
# Try to fetch the metadata index signature ("tag") until we run
# out of available servers; and sanity check the downloaded tag.
while ! fetch_tag; do
fetch_pick_server || return 1
done
fetch_tagsanity || return 1
# Fetch INDEX-OLD and INDEX-ALL.
fetch_metadata INDEX-OLD INDEX-ALL || return 1
# Generate filtered INDEX-OLD and INDEX-ALL files containing only
# the components we want and without anything marked as "Ignore".
fetch_filter_metadata INDEX-OLD || return 1
fetch_filter_metadata INDEX-ALL || return 1
# Merge the INDEX-OLD and INDEX-ALL files into INDEX-ALL.
sort INDEX-OLD INDEX-ALL > INDEX-ALL.tmp
mv INDEX-ALL.tmp INDEX-ALL
rm INDEX-OLD
# Translate /boot/${KERNCONF} to ${KERNELDIR}
fetch_filter_kernel_names INDEX-ALL ${KERNCONF}
# Inspect the system and generate an INDEX-PRESENT file.
fetch_inspect_system INDEX-ALL INDEX-PRESENT /dev/null || return 1
# Compare INDEX-ALL and INDEX-PRESENT and print warnings about any
# differences.
IDS_compare INDEX-ALL INDEX-PRESENT
}
#### Main functions -- call parameter-handling and core functions
# Using the command line, configuration file, and defaults,
# set all the parameters which are needed later.
get_params () {
init_params
parse_cmdline $@
parse_conffile
default_params
}
# Fetch command. Make sure that we're being called
# interactively, then run fetch_check_params and fetch_run
cmd_fetch () {
if [ ! -t 0 ]; then
echo -n "`basename $0` fetch should not "
echo "be run non-interactively."
echo "Run `basename $0` cron instead."
exit 1
fi
fetch_check_params
fetch_run || exit 1
}
# Cron command. Make sure the parameters are sensible; wait
# rand(3600) seconds; then fetch updates. While fetching updates,
# send output to a temporary file; only print that file if the
# fetching failed.
cmd_cron () {
fetch_check_params
sleep `jot -r 1 0 3600`
TMPFILE=`mktemp /tmp/freebsd-update.XXXXXX` || exit 1
if ! fetch_run >> ${TMPFILE} ||
! grep -q "No updates needed" ${TMPFILE} ||
[ ${VERBOSELEVEL} = "debug" ]; then
mail -s "`hostname` security updates" ${MAILTO} < ${TMPFILE}
fi
rm ${TMPFILE}
}
# Fetch files for upgrading to a new release.
cmd_upgrade () {
upgrade_check_params
upgrade_run || exit 1
}
# Install downloaded updates.
cmd_install () {
install_check_params
install_run || exit 1
}
# Rollback most recently installed updates.
cmd_rollback () {
rollback_check_params
rollback_run || exit 1
}
# Compare system against a "known good" index.
cmd_IDS () {
IDS_check_params
IDS_run || exit 1
}
#### Entry point
# Make sure we find utilities from the base system
export PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:${PATH}
# Set a pager if the user doesn't
if [ -z "$PAGER" ]; then
PAGER=/usr/bin/more
fi
# Set LC_ALL in order to avoid problems with character ranges like [A-Z].
export LC_ALL=C
get_params $@
for COMMAND in ${COMMANDS}; do
cmd_${COMMAND}
done