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|
/* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later */
#include <errno.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <sys/mount.h>
#include "alloc-util.h"
#include "chase-symlinks.h"
#include "fd-util.h"
#include "fileio.h"
#include "filesystems.h"
#include "fs-util.h"
#include "missing_stat.h"
#include "missing_syscall.h"
#include "mkdir.h"
#include "mountpoint-util.h"
#include "nulstr-util.h"
#include "parse-util.h"
#include "path-util.h"
#include "stat-util.h"
#include "stdio-util.h"
#include "strv.h"
#include "user-util.h"
/* This is the original MAX_HANDLE_SZ definition from the kernel, when the API was introduced. We use that in place of
* any more currently defined value to future-proof things: if the size is increased in the API headers, and our code
* is recompiled then it would cease working on old kernels, as those refuse any sizes larger than this value with
* EINVAL right-away. Hence, let's disconnect ourselves from any such API changes, and stick to the original definition
* from when it was introduced. We use it as a start value only anyway (see below), and hence should be able to deal
* with large file handles anyway. */
#define ORIGINAL_MAX_HANDLE_SZ 128
int name_to_handle_at_loop(
int fd,
const char *path,
struct file_handle **ret_handle,
int *ret_mnt_id,
int flags) {
size_t n = ORIGINAL_MAX_HANDLE_SZ;
assert((flags & ~(AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW|AT_EMPTY_PATH)) == 0);
/* We need to invoke name_to_handle_at() in a loop, given that it might return EOVERFLOW when the specified
* buffer is too small. Note that in contrast to what the docs might suggest, MAX_HANDLE_SZ is only good as a
* start value, it is not an upper bound on the buffer size required.
*
* This improves on raw name_to_handle_at() also in one other regard: ret_handle and ret_mnt_id can be passed
* as NULL if there's no interest in either. */
for (;;) {
_cleanup_free_ struct file_handle *h = NULL;
int mnt_id = -1;
h = malloc0(offsetof(struct file_handle, f_handle) + n);
if (!h)
return -ENOMEM;
h->handle_bytes = n;
if (name_to_handle_at(fd, path, h, &mnt_id, flags) >= 0) {
if (ret_handle)
*ret_handle = TAKE_PTR(h);
if (ret_mnt_id)
*ret_mnt_id = mnt_id;
return 0;
}
if (errno != EOVERFLOW)
return -errno;
if (!ret_handle && ret_mnt_id && mnt_id >= 0) {
/* As it appears, name_to_handle_at() fills in mnt_id even when it returns EOVERFLOW when the
* buffer is too small, but that's undocumented. Hence, let's make use of this if it appears to
* be filled in, and the caller was interested in only the mount ID an nothing else. */
*ret_mnt_id = mnt_id;
return 0;
}
/* If name_to_handle_at() didn't increase the byte size, then this EOVERFLOW is caused by something
* else (apparently EOVERFLOW is returned for untriggered nfs4 mounts sometimes), not by the too small
* buffer. In that case propagate EOVERFLOW */
if (h->handle_bytes <= n)
return -EOVERFLOW;
/* The buffer was too small. Size the new buffer by what name_to_handle_at() returned. */
n = h->handle_bytes;
if (offsetof(struct file_handle, f_handle) + n < n) /* check for addition overflow */
return -EOVERFLOW;
}
}
static int fd_fdinfo_mnt_id(int fd, const char *filename, int flags, int *ret_mnt_id) {
char path[STRLEN("/proc/self/fdinfo/") + DECIMAL_STR_MAX(int)];
_cleanup_free_ char *fdinfo = NULL;
_cleanup_close_ int subfd = -1;
char *p;
int r;
assert(ret_mnt_id);
assert((flags & ~(AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW|AT_EMPTY_PATH)) == 0);
if ((flags & AT_EMPTY_PATH) && isempty(filename))
xsprintf(path, "/proc/self/fdinfo/%i", fd);
else {
subfd = openat(fd, filename, O_CLOEXEC|O_PATH|(flags & AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW ? 0 : O_NOFOLLOW));
if (subfd < 0)
return -errno;
xsprintf(path, "/proc/self/fdinfo/%i", subfd);
}
r = read_full_virtual_file(path, &fdinfo, NULL);
if (r == -ENOENT) /* The fdinfo directory is a relatively new addition */
return -EOPNOTSUPP;
if (r < 0)
return r;
p = startswith(fdinfo, "mnt_id:");
if (!p) {
p = strstr(fdinfo, "\nmnt_id:");
if (!p) /* The mnt_id field is a relatively new addition */
return -EOPNOTSUPP;
p += 8;
}
p += strspn(p, WHITESPACE);
p[strcspn(p, WHITESPACE)] = 0;
return safe_atoi(p, ret_mnt_id);
}
static bool filename_possibly_with_slash_suffix(const char *s) {
const char *slash, *copied;
/* Checks whether the specified string is either file name, or a filename with a suffix of
* slashes. But nothing else.
*
* this is OK: foo, bar, foo/, bar/, foo//, bar///
* this is not OK: "", "/", "/foo", "foo/bar", ".", ".." … */
slash = strchr(s, '/');
if (!slash)
return filename_is_valid(s);
if (slash - s > PATH_MAX) /* We want to allocate on the stack below, hence do a size check first */
return false;
if (slash[strspn(slash, "/")] != 0) /* Check that the suffix consist only of one or more slashes */
return false;
copied = strndupa_safe(s, slash - s);
return filename_is_valid(copied);
}
static bool is_name_to_handle_at_fatal_error(int err) {
/* name_to_handle_at() can return "acceptable" errors that are due to the context. For
* example the kernel does not support name_to_handle_at() at all (ENOSYS), or the syscall
* was blocked (EACCES/EPERM; maybe through seccomp, because we are running inside of a
* container), or the mount point is not triggered yet (EOVERFLOW, think nfs4), or some
* general name_to_handle_at() flakiness (EINVAL). However other errors are not supposed to
* happen and therefore are considered fatal ones. */
assert(err < 0);
return !IN_SET(err, -EOPNOTSUPP, -ENOSYS, -EACCES, -EPERM, -EOVERFLOW, -EINVAL);
}
int fd_is_mount_point(int fd, const char *filename, int flags) {
_cleanup_free_ struct file_handle *h = NULL, *h_parent = NULL;
int mount_id = -1, mount_id_parent = -1;
bool nosupp = false, check_st_dev = true;
STRUCT_STATX_DEFINE(sx);
struct stat a, b;
int r;
assert(fd >= 0);
assert((flags & ~AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW) == 0);
if (!filename) {
/* If the file name is specified as NULL we'll see if the specified 'fd' is a mount
* point. That's only supported if the kernel supports statx(), or if the inode specified via
* 'fd' refers to a directory. Otherwise, we'll have to fail (ENOTDIR), because we have no
* kernel API to query the information we need. */
flags |= AT_EMPTY_PATH;
filename = "";
} else if (!filename_possibly_with_slash_suffix(filename))
/* Insist that the specified filename is actually a filename, and not a path, i.e. some inode further
* up or down the tree then immediately below the specified directory fd. */
return -EINVAL;
/* First we will try statx()' STATX_ATTR_MOUNT_ROOT attribute, which is our ideal API, available
* since kernel 5.8.
*
* If that fails, our second try is the name_to_handle_at() syscall, which tells us the mount id and
* an opaque file "handle". It is not supported everywhere though (kernel compile-time option, not
* all file systems are hooked up). If it works the mount id is usually good enough to tell us
* whether something is a mount point.
*
* If that didn't work we will try to read the mount id from /proc/self/fdinfo/<fd>. This is almost
* as good as name_to_handle_at(), however, does not return the opaque file handle. The opaque file
* handle is pretty useful to detect the root directory, which we should always consider a mount
* point. Hence we use this only as fallback. Exporting the mnt_id in fdinfo is a pretty recent
* kernel addition.
*
* As last fallback we do traditional fstat() based st_dev comparisons. This is how things were
* traditionally done, but unionfs breaks this since it exposes file systems with a variety of st_dev
* reported. Also, btrfs subvolumes have different st_dev, even though they aren't real mounts of
* their own. */
if (statx(fd, filename, (FLAGS_SET(flags, AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW) ? 0 : AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW) |
(flags & AT_EMPTY_PATH) |
AT_NO_AUTOMOUNT, STATX_TYPE, &sx) < 0) {
if (!ERRNO_IS_NOT_SUPPORTED(errno) && !ERRNO_IS_PRIVILEGE(errno))
return -errno;
/* If statx() is not available or forbidden, fall back to name_to_handle_at() below */
} else if (FLAGS_SET(sx.stx_attributes_mask, STATX_ATTR_MOUNT_ROOT)) /* yay! */
return FLAGS_SET(sx.stx_attributes, STATX_ATTR_MOUNT_ROOT);
else if (FLAGS_SET(sx.stx_mask, STATX_TYPE) && S_ISLNK(sx.stx_mode))
return false; /* symlinks are never mount points */
r = name_to_handle_at_loop(fd, filename, &h, &mount_id, flags);
if (r < 0) {
if (is_name_to_handle_at_fatal_error(r))
return r;
if (r != -EOPNOTSUPP)
goto fallback_fdinfo;
/* This kernel or file system does not support name_to_handle_at(), hence let's see
* if the upper fs supports it (in which case it is a mount point), otherwise fall
* back to the traditional stat() logic */
nosupp = true;
}
if (isempty(filename))
r = name_to_handle_at_loop(fd, "..", &h_parent, &mount_id_parent, 0); /* can't work for non-directories 😢 */
else
r = name_to_handle_at_loop(fd, "", &h_parent, &mount_id_parent, AT_EMPTY_PATH);
if (r < 0) {
if (is_name_to_handle_at_fatal_error(r))
return r;
if (r != -EOPNOTSUPP)
goto fallback_fdinfo;
if (nosupp)
/* Both the parent and the directory can't do name_to_handle_at() */
goto fallback_fdinfo;
/* The parent can't do name_to_handle_at() but the directory we are
* interested in can? If so, it must be a mount point. */
return 1;
}
/* The parent can do name_to_handle_at() but the directory we are interested in can't? If
* so, it must be a mount point. */
if (nosupp)
return 1;
/* If the file handle for the directory we are interested in and its parent are identical,
* we assume this is the root directory, which is a mount point. */
if (h->handle_bytes == h_parent->handle_bytes &&
h->handle_type == h_parent->handle_type &&
memcmp(h->f_handle, h_parent->f_handle, h->handle_bytes) == 0)
return 1;
return mount_id != mount_id_parent;
fallback_fdinfo:
r = fd_fdinfo_mnt_id(fd, filename, flags, &mount_id);
if (IN_SET(r, -EOPNOTSUPP, -EACCES, -EPERM))
goto fallback_fstat;
if (r < 0)
return r;
if (isempty(filename))
r = fd_fdinfo_mnt_id(fd, "..", 0, &mount_id_parent); /* can't work for non-directories 😢 */
else
r = fd_fdinfo_mnt_id(fd, "", AT_EMPTY_PATH, &mount_id_parent);
if (r < 0)
return r;
if (mount_id != mount_id_parent)
return 1;
/* Hmm, so, the mount ids are the same. This leaves one special case though for the root file
* system. For that, let's see if the parent directory has the same inode as we are interested
* in. Hence, let's also do fstat() checks now, too, but avoid the st_dev comparisons, since they
* aren't that useful on unionfs mounts. */
check_st_dev = false;
fallback_fstat:
/* yay for fstatat() taking a different set of flags than the other _at() above */
if (flags & AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW)
flags &= ~AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW;
else
flags |= AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW;
if (fstatat(fd, filename, &a, flags) < 0)
return -errno;
if (S_ISLNK(a.st_mode)) /* Symlinks are never mount points */
return false;
if (isempty(filename))
r = fstatat(fd, "..", &b, 0);
else
r = fstatat(fd, "", &b, AT_EMPTY_PATH);
if (r < 0)
return -errno;
/* A directory with same device and inode as its parent? Must be the root directory */
if (stat_inode_same(&a, &b))
return 1;
return check_st_dev && (a.st_dev != b.st_dev);
}
/* flags can be AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW or 0 */
int path_is_mount_point(const char *t, const char *root, int flags) {
_cleanup_free_ char *canonical = NULL;
_cleanup_close_ int fd = -1;
int r;
assert(t);
assert((flags & ~AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW) == 0);
if (path_equal(t, "/"))
return 1;
/* we need to resolve symlinks manually, we can't just rely on
* fd_is_mount_point() to do that for us; if we have a structure like
* /bin -> /usr/bin/ and /usr is a mount point, then the parent that we
* look at needs to be /usr, not /. */
if (flags & AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW) {
r = chase_symlinks(t, root, CHASE_TRAIL_SLASH, &canonical, NULL);
if (r < 0)
return r;
t = canonical;
}
fd = open_parent(t, O_PATH|O_CLOEXEC, 0);
if (fd < 0)
return fd;
return fd_is_mount_point(fd, last_path_component(t), flags);
}
int path_get_mnt_id(const char *path, int *ret) {
STRUCT_NEW_STATX_DEFINE(buf);
int r;
if (statx(AT_FDCWD, path, AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW|AT_NO_AUTOMOUNT, STATX_MNT_ID, &buf.sx) < 0) {
if (!ERRNO_IS_NOT_SUPPORTED(errno) && !ERRNO_IS_PRIVILEGE(errno))
return -errno;
/* Fall back to name_to_handle_at() and then fdinfo if statx is not supported or we lack
* privileges */
} else if (FLAGS_SET(buf.nsx.stx_mask, STATX_MNT_ID)) {
*ret = buf.nsx.stx_mnt_id;
return 0;
}
r = name_to_handle_at_loop(AT_FDCWD, path, NULL, ret, 0);
if (r == 0 || is_name_to_handle_at_fatal_error(r))
return r;
return fd_fdinfo_mnt_id(AT_FDCWD, path, 0, ret);
}
bool fstype_is_network(const char *fstype) {
const char *x;
x = startswith(fstype, "fuse.");
if (x)
fstype = x;
if (nulstr_contains(filesystem_sets[FILESYSTEM_SET_NETWORK].value, fstype))
return true;
/* Filesystems not present in the internal database */
return STR_IN_SET(fstype,
"davfs",
"glusterfs",
"lustre",
"sshfs");
}
bool fstype_needs_quota(const char *fstype) {
/* 1. quotacheck needs to be run for some filesystems after they are mounted
* if the filesystem was not unmounted cleanly.
* 2. You may need to run quotaon to enable quota usage tracking and/or
* enforcement.
* ext2 - needs 1) and 2)
* ext3 - needs 2) if configured using usrjquota/grpjquota mount options
* ext4 - needs 1) if created without journal, needs 2) if created without QUOTA
* filesystem feature
* reiserfs - needs 2).
* jfs - needs 2)
* f2fs - needs 2) if configured using usrjquota/grpjquota/prjjquota mount options
* xfs - nothing needed
* gfs2 - nothing needed
* ocfs2 - nothing needed
* btrfs - nothing needed
* for reference see filesystem and quota manpages */
return STR_IN_SET(fstype,
"ext2",
"ext3",
"ext4",
"reiserfs",
"jfs",
"f2fs");
}
bool fstype_is_api_vfs(const char *fstype) {
const FilesystemSet *fs;
FOREACH_POINTER(fs,
filesystem_sets + FILESYSTEM_SET_BASIC_API,
filesystem_sets + FILESYSTEM_SET_AUXILIARY_API,
filesystem_sets + FILESYSTEM_SET_PRIVILEGED_API,
filesystem_sets + FILESYSTEM_SET_TEMPORARY)
if (nulstr_contains(fs->value, fstype))
return true;
/* Filesystems not present in the internal database */
return STR_IN_SET(fstype,
"autofs",
"cpuset",
"devtmpfs");
}
bool fstype_is_blockdev_backed(const char *fstype) {
const char *x;
x = startswith(fstype, "fuse.");
if (x)
fstype = x;
return !streq(fstype, "9p") && !fstype_is_network(fstype) && !fstype_is_api_vfs(fstype);
}
bool fstype_is_ro(const char *fstype) {
/* All Linux file systems that are necessarily read-only */
return STR_IN_SET(fstype,
"DM_verity_hash",
"cramfs",
"erofs",
"iso9660",
"squashfs");
}
bool fstype_can_discard(const char *fstype) {
return STR_IN_SET(fstype,
"btrfs",
"f2fs",
"ext4",
"vfat",
"xfs");
}
bool fstype_can_uid_gid(const char *fstype) {
/* All file systems that have a uid=/gid= mount option that fixates the owners of all files and directories,
* current and future. */
return STR_IN_SET(fstype,
"adfs",
"exfat",
"fat",
"hfs",
"hpfs",
"iso9660",
"msdos",
"ntfs",
"vfat");
}
int dev_is_devtmpfs(void) {
_cleanup_fclose_ FILE *proc_self_mountinfo = NULL;
int mount_id, r;
char *e;
r = path_get_mnt_id("/dev", &mount_id);
if (r < 0)
return r;
r = fopen_unlocked("/proc/self/mountinfo", "re", &proc_self_mountinfo);
if (r < 0)
return r;
for (;;) {
_cleanup_free_ char *line = NULL;
int mid;
r = read_line(proc_self_mountinfo, LONG_LINE_MAX, &line);
if (r < 0)
return r;
if (r == 0)
break;
if (sscanf(line, "%i", &mid) != 1)
continue;
if (mid != mount_id)
continue;
e = strstr(line, " - ");
if (!e)
continue;
/* accept any name that starts with the currently expected type */
if (startswith(e + 3, "devtmpfs"))
return true;
}
return false;
}
int mount_fd(const char *source,
int target_fd,
const char *filesystemtype,
unsigned long mountflags,
const void *data) {
if (mount(source, FORMAT_PROC_FD_PATH(target_fd), filesystemtype, mountflags, data) < 0) {
if (errno != ENOENT)
return -errno;
/* ENOENT can mean two things: either that the source is missing, or that /proc/ isn't
* mounted. Check for the latter to generate better error messages. */
if (proc_mounted() == 0)
return -ENOSYS;
return -ENOENT;
}
return 0;
}
int mount_nofollow(
const char *source,
const char *target,
const char *filesystemtype,
unsigned long mountflags,
const void *data) {
_cleanup_close_ int fd = -1;
/* In almost all cases we want to manipulate the mount table without following symlinks, hence
* mount_nofollow() is usually the way to go. The only exceptions are environments where /proc/ is
* not available yet, since we need /proc/self/fd/ for this logic to work. i.e. during the early
* initialization of namespacing/container stuff where /proc is not yet mounted (and maybe even the
* fs to mount) we can only use traditional mount() directly.
*
* Note that this disables following only for the final component of the target, i.e symlinks within
* the path of the target are honoured, as are symlinks in the source path everywhere. */
fd = open(target, O_PATH|O_CLOEXEC|O_NOFOLLOW);
if (fd < 0)
return -errno;
return mount_fd(source, fd, filesystemtype, mountflags, data);
}
const char *mount_propagation_flags_to_string(unsigned long flags) {
switch (flags & (MS_SHARED|MS_SLAVE|MS_PRIVATE)) {
case 0:
return "";
case MS_SHARED:
return "shared";
case MS_SLAVE:
return "slave";
case MS_PRIVATE:
return "private";
}
return NULL;
}
int mount_propagation_flags_from_string(const char *name, unsigned long *ret) {
if (isempty(name))
*ret = 0;
else if (streq(name, "shared"))
*ret = MS_SHARED;
else if (streq(name, "slave"))
*ret = MS_SLAVE;
else if (streq(name, "private"))
*ret = MS_PRIVATE;
else
return -EINVAL;
return 0;
}
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