Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
...and IDLock to HeaderLock. This matches what the locks actually
protect.
|
|
Now that we embed nodefs.NewDefaultFile(), we can drop our own
no-ops.
|
|
We do not have to track the writeOnly status because the kernel
will not forward read requests on a write-only FD to us anyway.
I have verified this behavoir manually on a 4.10.8 kernel and also
added a testcase.
|
|
The open file table code needs some room to grow for the upcoming
FD multiplexing implementation.
|
|
The data structure was originally called write lock table, but
is now simply called the open file table. Rename the file to
reflect that.
|
|
This is a very old leftover.
|
|
|
|
...and fix a few golint issues and print a scary warning message on mount.
Also, force the fs to ro,noexec.
|
|
Force decode of encrypted files even if the integrity check fails, instead of
failing with an IO error. Warning messages are still printed to syslog if corrupted
files are encountered.
It can be useful to recover files from disks with bad sectors or other corrupted
media.
Closes https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/pull/102 .
|
|
go-fuse has added a new method to the nodefs.File interface that
caused this build error:
internal/fusefrontend/file.go:75: cannot use file literal (type *file) as type nodefs.File in return argument:
*file does not implement nodefs.File (missing Flock method)
Fixes https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/104 and
prevents the problem from happening again.
|
|
The volatile inode numbers that we used before cause "find" to complain and error out.
Virtual inode numbers are derived from their parent file inode number by adding 10^19,
which is hopefully large enough no never cause problems in practice.
If the backing directory contains inode numbers higher than that, stat() on these files
will return EOVERFLOW.
Example directory lising after this change:
$ ls -i
926473 gocryptfs.conf
1000000000000926466 gocryptfs.diriv
944878 gocryptfs.longname.hmZojMqC6ns47eyVxLlH2ailKjN9bxfosi3C-FR8mjA
1000000000000944878 gocryptfs.longname.hmZojMqC6ns47eyVxLlH2ailKjN9bxfosi3C-FR8mjA.name
934408 Tdfbf02CKsTaGVYnAsSypA
|
|
|
|
Due to kernel readahead, we usually get multiple read requests
at the same time. These get submitted to the backing storage in
random order, which is a problem if seeking is very expensive.
Details: https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/92
|
|
A header-only file will be considered empty (this is not supposed to happen).
This makes File ID poisoning more difficult.
|
|
...if doWrite() can do it for us. This avoids the situation
that the file only consists of a file header when calling
doWrite.
A later patch will check for this condition and warn about it,
as with this change it should no longer occour in normal operation.
|
|
The symlink functions incorrectly hardcoded the padded
base64 variant.
|
|
...but keep it disabled by default for new filesystems.
We are still missing an example filesystem and CLI arguments
to explicitely enable and disable it.
|
|
There are two independent backends, one for name encryption,
the other one, AEAD, for file content.
"BackendTypeEnum" only applies to AEAD (file content), so make that
clear in the name.
|
|
Version 1.1 of the EME package (github.com/rfjakob/eme) added
a more convenient interface. Use it.
Note that you have to upgrade your EME package (go get -u)!
|
|
When filename encryption is active, every directory contains
a "gocryptfs.diriv" file. This file should also change the owner.
Fixes https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/86
|
|
|
|
This used to incorrectly try to link twice and return EEXIST.
|
|
https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/64
|
|
https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/64
|
|
This prevents (unlikely) symlink race attacks
|
|
Preallocation is very slow on hdds that run btrfs. Give the
user the option to disable it. This greatly speeds up small file
operations but reduces the robustness against out-of-space errors.
Also add the option to the man page.
More info: https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/63
|
|
This improves performance on hdds running ext4, and improves
streaming write performance on hdds running btrfs. Tar extract
slows down on btrfs for some reason.
See https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/63
Benchmarks:
encfs v1.9.1
============
$ ./benchmark.bash -encfs /mnt/hdd-ext4
Testing EncFS at /mnt/hdd-ext4/benchmark.bash.u0g
WRITE: 131072000 bytes (131 MB, 125 MiB) copied, 1,48354 s, 88,4 MB/s
UNTAR: 20.79
LS: 3.04
RM: 6.62
$ ./benchmark.bash -encfs /mnt/hdd-btrfs
Testing EncFS at /mnt/hdd-btrfs/benchmark.bash.h40
WRITE: 131072000 bytes (131 MB, 125 MiB) copied, 1,52552 s, 85,9 MB/s
UNTAR: 24.51
LS: 2.73
RM: 5.32
gocryptfs v1.1.1-26-g4a7f8ef
============================
$ ./benchmark.bash /mnt/hdd-ext4
Testing gocryptfs at /mnt/hdd-ext4/benchmark.bash.1KG
WRITE: 131072000 bytes (131 MB, 125 MiB) copied, 1,55782 s, 84,1 MB/s
UNTAR: 22.23
LS: 1.47
RM: 4.17
$ ./benchmark.bash /mnt/hdd-btrfs
Testing gocryptfs at /mnt/hdd-btrfs/benchmark.bash.2t8
WRITE: 131072000 bytes (131 MB, 125 MiB) copied, 6,87206 s, 19,1 MB/s
UNTAR: 69.87
LS: 1.52
RM: 5.33
gocryptfs v1.1.1-32
===================
$ ./benchmark.bash /mnt/hdd-ext4
Testing gocryptfs at /mnt/hdd-ext4/benchmark.bash.Qt3
WRITE: 131072000 bytes (131 MB, 125 MiB) copied, 1,22577 s, 107 MB/s
UNTAR: 23.46
LS: 1.46
RM: 4.67
$ ./benchmark.bash /mnt/hdd-btrfs/
Testing gocryptfs at /mnt/hdd-btrfs//benchmark.bash.XVk
WRITE: 131072000 bytes (131 MB, 125 MiB) copied, 3,68735 s, 35,5 MB/s
UNTAR: 116.87
LS: 1.84
RM: 6.34
|
|
|
|
This fixes the problem that a truncate can reset the file
ID without the other open FDs noticing it.
|
|
If there are multiple filesystems backing the gocryptfs filesystems
inode numbers are not guaranteed to be unique.
|
|
|
|
At the moment, in forward mode you can only encrypt paths
and in reverse mode you can only decrypt paths.
|
|
Through base64.RawURLEncoding.
New command-line parameter "-raw64".
|
|
The fix at https://github.com/hanwen/go-fuse/pull/131 has been merged.
Drop the workarounds and re-enable the tests.
|
|
Calculating the block offset is easy enough, even more now
that gocryptfs-xray exists.
|
|
Stat() calls are expensive on NFS as they need a full network
round-trip. We detect when a write immediately follows the
last one and skip the Stat in this case because the write
cannot create a file hole.
On my (slow) NAS, this takes the write speed from 24MB/s to
41MB/s.
|
|
The details of the hole handling don't have to be in
Write, so move it away.
|
|
...and add comments for what is happening.
|
|
Close https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/54
|
|
Test that we get the right timestamp when extracting a tarball.
Also simplify the workaround in doTestUtimesNano() and fix the
fact that it was running no test at all.
|
|
|
|
Revert once https://github.com/hanwen/go-fuse/pull/131 is merged.
|
|
Crash is described at https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/48 .
Revert this once https://github.com/hanwen/go-fuse/pull/131 is merged.
|
|
This can happen during normal operation when the directory has
been deleted concurrently. But it can also mean that the
gocryptfs.diriv is missing due to an error, so log the event
at "info" level.
|
|
This already worked for files but was missing for dirs.
|
|
Only in plaintextnames-mode AND with the config file at the
default location it will be mapped into the mountpoint.
Also adds a test for that.
|
|
|
|
Also pull all the deterministic nonce code into fusefrontend_reverse
to greatly simplify the normal code path.
|
|
Also delete the unused "dirIVNameStruct", found by deadcode.
|
|
|