Instead of
Please enter passphrase for disk <disk-name>!
use
Please enter passphrase for disk <disk-name>:
which is more polite and matches Plymouth convention.
This is a bit like the info link in most of GNU's --help texts, but we
don't do info but man pages, and we make them properly clickable on
terminal supporting that, because awesome.
I think it's generally advisable to link up our (brief) --help texts and
our (more comprehensive) man pages a bit, so this should be an easy and
straight-forward way to do it.
These lines are generally out-of-date, incomplete and unnecessary. With
SPDX and git repository much more accurate and fine grained information
about licensing and authorship is available, hence let's drop the
per-file copyright notice. Of course, removing copyright lines of others
is problematic, hence this commit only removes my own lines and leaves
all others untouched. It might be nicer if sooner or later those could
go away too, making git the only and accurate source of authorship
information.
This part of the copyright blurb stems from the GPL use recommendations:
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.en.html
The concept appears to originate in times where version control was per
file, instead of per tree, and was a way to glue the files together.
Ultimately, we nowadays don't live in that world anymore, and this
information is entirely useless anyway, as people are very welcome to
copy these files into any projects they like, and they shouldn't have to
change bits that are part of our copyright header for that.
hence, let's just get rid of this old cruft, and shorten our codebase a
bit.
Files which are installed as-is (any .service and other unit files, .conf
files, .policy files, etc), are left as is. My assumption is that SPDX
identifiers are not yet that well known, so it's better to retain the
extended header to avoid any doubt.
I also kept any copyright lines. We can probably remove them, but it'd nice to
obtain explicit acks from all involved authors before doing that.
We already have the terminal open, hence pass the fd we got to
ask_password_tty(), so that it doesn't have to reopen it a second time.
This is mostly an optimization, but it has the nice benefit of making us
independent from RLIMIT_NOFILE issues and so on, as we don't need to
allocate another fd needlessly.
We should be careful with these types, and if we do convert between
"int" and "ssize_t" we should do so explicitly rather than implicitly.
Otherwise this just looks like a bug.
This modernizes acquire_terminal() in a couple of ways:
1. The three boolean arguments are replaced by a flags parameter, that
should be more descriptive in what it does.
2. We now properly handle inotify queue overruns
3. We use _cleanup_ for closing the fds now, to shorten the code quite a
bit.
Behaviour should not be altered by this.
This is useful so that callers know whether anything at all and how much
was flushed.
This patches through users of this functions to ensure that the return
values > 0 which may be returned now are not propagated in public APIs.
Also, users that ignore the return value are changed to do so explicitly
now.
This adds a new safe_fork() wrapper around fork() and makes use of it
everywhere. The new wrapper does a couple of things we previously did
manually and separately in a safer, more correct and automatic way:
1. Optionally resets signal handlers/mask in the child
2. Sets a name on all processes we fork off right after forking off (and
the patch assigns useful names for all processes we fork off now,
following a systematic naming scheme: always enclosed in () – in order
to indicate that these are not proper, exec()ed processes, but only
forked off children, and if the process is long-running with only our
own code, without execve()'ing something else, it gets am "sd-" prefix.)
3. Optionally closes all file descriptors in the child
4. Optionally sets a PR_SET_DEATHSIG to SIGTERM in the child, in a safe
way so that the parent dying before this happens being handled
safely.
5. Optionally reopens the logs
6. Optionally connects stdin/stdout/stderr to /dev/null
7. Debug logs about the forked off processes.
explicit_bzero was added in glibc 2.25. Make use of it.
explicit_bzero is hardcoded to zero the memory, so string erase now
truncates the string, instead of overwriting it with 'x'. This causes
a visible difference only in the journalctl case.
SIGTERM should be considered a clean exit code for daemons (i.e. long-running
processes, as a daemon without SIGTERM handler may be shut down without issues
via SIGTERM still) while it should not be considered a clean exit code for
commands (i.e. short-running processes).
Let's add two different clean checking modes for this, and use the right one at
the appropriate places.
Fixes: #4275
but also on all other consoles. This does help on e.g. mainframes
where often a serial console together with other consoles are
used. Even rack based servers attachted to both a serial console
as well as having a virtual console do sometimes miss a connected
monitor.
To be able to ask on all terminal devices of /dev/console the devices
are collected. If more than one device are found, then on each of the
terminals a inquiring task for passphrase is forked and do not return
to the caller.
Every task has its own session and its own controlling terminal.
If one of the tasks does handle a password, the remaining tasks
will be terminated.
Also let contradictory options on the command of
systemd-tty-ask-password-agent fail.
Spwan for each device of the system console /dev/console a own process.
Replace the system call wait() with with system call waitid().
Use SIGTERM instead of SIGHUP to get unresponsive childs down.
Port the collect_consoles() function forward to a pulbic and strv
based function "get_kernel_consoles()" in terminal-util.c and use this
in tty-ask-password-agent.c.
The macro determines the right length of a AF_UNIX "struct sockaddr_un" to pass to
connect() or bind(). It automatically figures out if the socket refers to an
abstract namespace socket, or a socket in the file system, and properly handles
the full length of the path field.
This macro is not only safer, but also simpler to use, than the usual
offsetof() + strlen() logic.
In standard linux parlance, "hidden" usually means that the file name starts
with ".", and nothing else. Rename the function to convey what the function does
better to casual readers.
Stop exposing hidden_file_allow_backup which is rather ugly and rewrite
hidden_file to extract the suffix first. Note that hidden_file_allow_backup
excluded files with "~" at the end, which is quite confusing. Let's get
rid of it before it gets used in the wrong place.
This is a piece of refactoring I've done while looking for a solution to bug #2378.
It separates the password sending from `parse_password`, which only needs to know
about the socket path and the list of passwords to send.
As a caveat, the `ask_password_tty` path needs to construct a one-password strv, too.
There are more than enough calls doing string manipulations to deserve
its own files, hence do something about it.
This patch also sorts the #include blocks of all files that needed to be
updated, according to the sorting suggestions from CODING_STYLE. Since
pretty much every file needs our string manipulation functions this
effectively means that most files have sorted #include blocks now.
Also touches a few unrelated include files.
Before, we'd always reset acquired terminals, which is not really
desired, as we expose a setting TTYReset= which is supposed to control
whether the TTY is reset or not. Previously that setting would only
enable a second resetting of the TTY, which is of course pointless...
Hence, move the implicit resetting out of acquire_terminal() and make
the callers do it if they need it.
This adds support for caching harddisk passwords in the kernel keyring
if it is available, thus supporting caching without Plymouth being
around.
This is also useful for hooking up "gdm-auto-login" with the collected
boot-time harddisk password, in order to support gnome keyring
passphrase unlocking via the HDD password, if it is the same.
Any passwords added to the kernel keyring this way have a timeout of
2.5min at which time they are purged from the kernel.
Primarily clean-up error logging: log either all or no error messages in
the various functions. Mostly this means the actual password querying
calls no longer will log on their own, but the callers have to do so.
Contains various other fixes too, for example ports some code over to
use the clean-up macro.
Should contain no functional changes.
This also allows us to drop build.h from a ton of files, hence do so.
Since we touched the #includes of those files, let's order them properly
according to CODING_STYLE.
This ports a lot of manual code over to sigprocmask_many() and friends.
Also, we now consistly check for sigprocmask() failures with
assert_se(), since the call cannot realistically fail unless there's a
programming error.
Also encloses a few sd_event_add_signal() calls with (void) when we
ignore the return values for it knowingly.
Instead of looking up the tty from STDIN, let utmp_wall() take an argument
to specify an origin tty for the wall message. Only if that argument is
NULL do the STDIN lookup.
Also add an void *userdata argument that is handed back to the callback
function.