Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Lennart Poettering e0f9e7bd03 dissect: make using a generic partition as root partition optional
In preparation for reusing the image dissector in the GPT auto-discovery
logic, only optionally fail the dissection when we can't identify a root
partition.

In the GPT auto-discovery we are completely fine with any kind of root,
given that we run when it is already mounted and all we do is find some
additional auxiliary partitions on the same disk.
2016-12-21 19:09:30 +01:00
Lennart Poettering be30ad41ff dissect: return the GPT partition UUID, too
This is useful as we can match up the EFI UUID with the one the firmware
supposedly used.
2016-12-21 19:09:30 +01:00
Lennart Poettering 9b6deb03fc dissect: optionally, only look for GPT partition tables, nothing else
This is useful for reusing the dissector logic in the gpt-auto-discovery logic:
there we really don't want to use MBR or naked file systems as root device.
2016-12-20 20:00:09 +01:00
Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek 971e2ef0cb dissect: add DISSECT_IMAGE_DISCARD_ANY mask
This makes the code to set arg_flags much more readable.
2016-12-07 15:26:11 -05:00
Lennart Poettering 4623e8e6ac nspawn/dissect: automatically discover dm-verity verity partitions
This adds support for discovering and making use of properly tagged dm-verity
data integrity partitions. This extends both systemd-nspawn and systemd-dissect
with a new --root-hash= switch that takes the root hash to use for the root
partition, and is otherwise fully automatic.

Verity partitions are discovered automatically by GPT table type UUIDs, as
listed in
https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/DiscoverablePartitionsSpec/
(which I updated prior to this change, to include new UUIDs for this purpose.

mkosi with https://github.com/systemd/mkosi/pull/39 applied may generate images
that carry the necessary integrity data. With that PR and this commit, the
following simply lines suffice to boot up an integrity-protected container image:

```
 # mkdir test
 # cd test
 # mkosi --verity
 # systemd-nspawn -i ./image.raw -bn
```

Note that mkosi writes the image file to "image.raw" next to a a file
"image.roothash" that contains the root hash. systemd-nspawn will look for that
file and use it if it exists, in case --root-hash= is not specified explicitly.
2016-12-07 18:38:41 +01:00
Lennart Poettering 18b5886e56 dissect: add support for encrypted images
This adds support to the image dissector to deal with encrypted images (only
LUKS). Given that we now have a neatly isolated image dissector codebase, let's
add a new feature to it: support for automatically dealing with encrypted
images. This is then exposed in systemd-dissect and nspawn.

It's pretty basic: only support for passphrase-based encryption.

In order to ensure that "systemd-dissect --mount" results in mount points whose
backing LUKS DM devices are cleaned up automatically we use the DM_DEV_REMOVE
ioctl() directly on the device (in DM_DEFERRED_REMOVE mode). libgcryptsetup at
the moment doesn't provide a proper API for this. Thankfully, the ioctl() API
is pretty easy to use.
2016-12-07 18:38:41 +01:00
Lennart Poettering 8c1be37e5b util-lib: split out image dissecting code and loopback code from nspawn
This adds two new APIs to systemd:

- loop-util.h is a simple internal API for allocating, setting up and releasing
  loopback block devices.

- dissect-image.h is an internal API for taking apart disk images and figuring
  out what the purpose of each partition is.

Both APIs are basically refactored versions of similar code in nspawn.  This
rework should permit us to reuse this in other places than just nspawn in the
future. Specifically: to implement RootImage= in the service image, similar to
RootDirectory=, but operating on a disk image; to unify the gpt-auto-discovery
generator code with the discovery logic in nspawn; to add new API to machined
for determining the OS version of a disk image (i.e. not just running
containers). This PR does not make any such changes however, it just provides
the new reworked API.

The reworked code is also slightly more powerful than the nspawn original one.
When pointing it to an image or block device with a naked file system (i.e. no
partition table) it will simply make it the root device.
2016-12-07 18:38:40 +01:00