- it's ok if item one creates directories where item two will write,
so don't check for existence of all directories on start-up.
Reported by ArcoLinux.
- Just use the existing rsync code, which can do both
files and directory trees.
- The existing code assumed we were always copying directories.
Now double-check beforehand.
If we don't have/need an image for the rootfs, we might want to
configure the `/` directory as a source for unpackfs. Unfortunately,
this raises an error:
- unpackfs first creates a temporary directory
- it then creates a subdirectory for each source, using the source
path's basename
- when the source is `/`, the basename is an empty string, therefore
the module tries to create an already existing directory
In order to prevent this error, we use the `os.makedirs` function with
parameter `exist_ok=True` instead of `os.mkdir`.
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Ferraris <arnaud.ferraris@collabora.com>
This variable is declared in `if m:`. Of course if this codepath doesn't
run, the variable is not declared an Python doesn't like this kind of
surprise...
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Rebillout <arnaud.rebillout@collabora.com>
- The mount module must happen before unpackfs because that (mount)
module sets up the root mount point (in /tmp) and some other
variables needed later.
src/modules/unpackfs/main.py (UnpackOperation.mount_image): Check
whether entry.source is a regular file or a device and only use
`-o loop` on regular files, not devices.
At least on Fedora >= 29, `-o loop` fails on the read-only device
`/dev/mapper/live-base` (though `-o loop,ro` would be accepted).
- rsync reports its own progress, and reports on files that
find -type f doesn't. This meant that the numbers didn't
match what was stored in entry.total
- The ir-phase adds files to be handled; to-phase happens once
ir-phase is over and the remaining files are processed.
By adding the to-phase files, percentages over 100% were
reported (in part because the number of files doesn't match).
- Update expected entries total from rsync output.
- Re-jig computation of how done everything is: tally it
up in integers, and do only one global progress percentage.
- The mismatch between "ir-chk" and the comment "to-check" led me
to check (ha!) the output of rsync, and it outputs "to-chk"
during small transfers; make sure the comment reflects what
is actually being used to track progress (which is "ir-chk").
- Add global- and job-configurations for test runs.
- Add a driver script that sets up some assumptions on the host
system so that the tests can complete.
- The idea is that these tests together get a decent code-coverage
for the module.
- Only need to get the list of supported filesystems *once*,
not for each and every filesystem that is going to be unpacked.
- Be more Python-idiomatic.
Unfortunately, rsync returns exit code 23 (Partial transfer due to
error) if it cannot write extended attributes (with -X) because the
target file system does not support it, e.g., the FAT EFI system
partition. We need -X because distributions using file system
capabilities and/or SELinux require the extended attributes. But
distributions using SELinux may also have SELinux labels set on files
under /boot/efi, and rsync complains about those. The only clean way
would be to split the rsync into one with -X and --exclude /boot/efi and
a separate one without -X for /boot/efi, but only if /boot/efi is
actually an EFI system partition. For now, this hack will have to do.
See also:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=868755#c50
for the same issue in Anaconda, which uses a similar workaround.
mount: Remember the extraMounts (and extraMountsEfi, if applicable) in
the global storage (as "extraMounts").
unpackfs: Read the extra mounts from the global storage to generate the
exclude list instead of trying to detect it from the "mount" command's
output, because the latter also includes normally-mounted destination
partitions.
This makes having separate partitions for non-/ mountpoints work again.
Add the following flags to rsync:
* `-H, --hard-links preserve hard links`
* `-A, --acls preserve ACLs (implies --perms)`
* `-X, --xattrs preserve extended attributes`
(i.e., the preservation options not already implied by -a).
Also exclude the special paths that do not make sense to rsync, because
reading the extended attributes from those can cause errors, at least
with SELinux enabled.
This fixes installation of Fedora systems with SELinux enabled.