/* libguestfs - the guestfsd daemon * Copyright (C) 2009 Red Hat Inc. * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or * (at your option) any later version. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the * GNU General Public License for more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include "daemon.h" #include "actions.h" /* You must mount something on "/" first before many operations. * Hence we have an internal function which can test if something is * mounted on *or under* the sysroot directory. (It has to be *or * under* because of mkmountpoint and friends). */ int is_root_mounted (void) { FILE *fp; struct mntent *m; /* NB: Eventually we should aim to parse /proc/self/mountinfo, but * that requires custom parsing code. */ fp = setmntent ("/proc/mounts", "r"); if (fp == NULL) { perror ("/proc/mounts"); exit (EXIT_FAILURE); } while ((m = getmntent (fp)) != NULL) { /* Allow a mount directory like "/sysroot". */ if (sysroot_len > 0 && STREQ (m->mnt_dir, sysroot)) { gotit: endmntent (fp); return 1; } /* Or allow a mount directory like "/sysroot/...". */ if (STRPREFIX (m->mnt_dir, sysroot) && m->mnt_dir[sysroot_len] == '/') goto gotit; } endmntent (fp); return 0; } /* The "simple mount" call offers no complex options, you can just * mount a device on a mountpoint. The variations like mount_ro, * mount_options and mount_vfs let you set progressively more things. * * It's tempting to try a direct mount(2) syscall, but that doesn't * do any autodetection, so we are better off calling out to * /bin/mount. */ int do_mount_vfs (const char *options, const char *vfstype, const char *device, const char *mountpoint) { int r; char *mp; char *error; struct stat statbuf; ABS_PATH (mountpoint, , return -1); mp = sysroot_path (mountpoint); if (!mp) { reply_with_perror ("malloc"); return -1; } /* Check the mountpoint exists and is a directory. */ if (stat (mp, &statbuf) == -1) { reply_with_perror ("mount: %s", mountpoint); free (mp); return -1; } if (!S_ISDIR (statbuf.st_mode)) { reply_with_perror ("mount: %s: mount point is not a directory", mountpoint); free (mp); return -1; } if (vfstype) r = command (NULL, &error, "mount", "-o", options, "-t", vfstype, device, mp, NULL); else r = command (NULL, &error, "mount", "-o", options, device, mp, NULL); free (mp); if (r == -1) { reply_with_error ("%s on %s: %s", device, mountpoint, error); free (error); return -1; } free (error); return 0; } int do_mount (const char *device, const char *mountpoint) { return do_mount_vfs ("", NULL, device, mountpoint); } int do_mount_ro (const char *device, const char *mountpoint) { return do_mount_vfs ("ro", NULL, device, mountpoint); } int do_mount_options (const char *options, const char *device, const char *mountpoint) { return do_mount_vfs (options, NULL, device, mountpoint); } /* Again, use the external /bin/umount program, so that /etc/mtab * is kept updated. */ int do_umount (const char *pathordevice) { int r; char *err; char *buf; int is_dev; is_dev = STREQLEN (pathordevice, "/dev/", 5); buf = is_dev ? strdup (pathordevice) : sysroot_path (pathordevice); if (buf == NULL) { reply_with_perror ("malloc"); return -1; } if (is_dev) RESOLVE_DEVICE (buf, , { free (buf); return -1; }); r = command (NULL, &err, "umount", buf, NULL); free (buf); if (r == -1) { reply_with_error ("%s: %s", pathordevice, err); free (err); return -1; } free (err); return 0; } /* Implement 'mounts' (mp==0) and 'mountpoints' (mp==1) calls. */ static char ** mounts_or_mountpoints (int mp) { FILE *fp; struct mntent *m; char **ret = NULL; int size = 0, alloc = 0; size_t i; int r; /* NB: Eventually we should aim to parse /proc/self/mountinfo, but * that requires custom parsing code. */ fp = setmntent ("/proc/mounts", "r"); if (fp == NULL) { perror ("/proc/mounts"); exit (EXIT_FAILURE); } while ((m = getmntent (fp)) != NULL) { /* Allow a mount directory like "/sysroot". */ if (sysroot_len > 0 && STREQ (m->mnt_dir, sysroot)) { if (add_string (&ret, &size, &alloc, m->mnt_fsname) == -1) { error: endmntent (fp); return NULL; } if (mp && add_string (&ret, &size, &alloc, "/") == -1) goto error; } /* Or allow a mount directory like "/sysroot/...". */ if (STRPREFIX (m->mnt_dir, sysroot) && m->mnt_dir[sysroot_len] == '/') { if (add_string (&ret, &size, &alloc, m->mnt_fsname) == -1) goto error; if (mp && add_string (&ret, &size, &alloc, &m->mnt_dir[sysroot_len]) == -1) goto error; } } endmntent (fp); if (add_string (&ret, &size, &alloc, NULL) == -1) return NULL; /* Convert /dev/mapper LV paths into canonical paths (RHBZ#646432). */ for (i = 0; ret[i] != NULL; i += mp ? 2 : 1) { if (STRPREFIX (ret[i], "/dev/mapper/") || STRPREFIX (ret[i], "/dev/dm-")) { char *canonical; r = lv_canonical (ret[i], &canonical); if (r == -1) { free_strings (ret); return NULL; } if (r == 1) { free (ret[i]); ret[i] = canonical; } /* Ignore the case where r == 0. This might happen where * eg. a LUKS /dev/mapper device is mounted, but that won't * correspond to any LV. */ } } return ret; } char ** do_mounts (void) { return mounts_or_mountpoints (0); } char ** do_mountpoints (void) { return mounts_or_mountpoints (1); } /* Unmount everything mounted under /sysroot. * * We have to unmount in the correct order, so we sort the paths by * longest first to ensure that child paths are unmounted by parent * paths. * * This call is more important than it appears at first, because it * is widely used by both test and production code in order to * get back to a known state (nothing mounted, everything synchronized). */ static int compare_longest_first (const void *vp1, const void *vp2) { char * const *p1 = (char * const *) vp1; char * const *p2 = (char * const *) vp2; int n1 = strlen (*p1); int n2 = strlen (*p2); return n2 - n1; } int do_umount_all (void) { FILE *fp; struct mntent *m; char **mounts = NULL; int size = 0, alloc = 0; char *err; int i, r; /* NB: Eventually we should aim to parse /proc/self/mountinfo, but * that requires custom parsing code. */ fp = setmntent ("/proc/mounts", "r"); if (fp == NULL) { perror ("/proc/mounts"); exit (EXIT_FAILURE); } while ((m = getmntent (fp)) != NULL) { /* Allow a mount directory like "/sysroot". */ if (sysroot_len > 0 && STREQ (m->mnt_dir, sysroot)) { if (add_string (&mounts, &size, &alloc, m->mnt_dir) == -1) { endmntent (fp); return -1; } } /* Or allow a mount directory like "/sysroot/...". */ if (STRPREFIX (m->mnt_dir, sysroot) && m->mnt_dir[sysroot_len] == '/') { if (add_string (&mounts, &size, &alloc, m->mnt_dir) == -1) { endmntent (fp); return -1; } } } endmntent (fp); qsort (mounts, size, sizeof (char *), compare_longest_first); /* Unmount them. */ for (i = 0; i < size; ++i) { r = command (NULL, &err, "umount", mounts[i], NULL); if (r == -1) { reply_with_error ("umount: %s: %s", mounts[i], err); free (err); free_stringslen (mounts, size); return -1; } free (err); } free_stringslen (mounts, size); return 0; } /* Mount using the loopback device. You can't use the generic * do_mount call for this because the first parameter isn't a * device. */ int do_mount_loop (const char *file, const char *mountpoint) { int r; char *buf, *mp; char *error; /* We have to prefix /sysroot on both the filename and the mountpoint. */ mp = sysroot_path (mountpoint); if (!mp) { reply_with_perror ("malloc"); return -1; } buf = sysroot_path (file); if (!buf) { reply_with_perror ("malloc"); free (mp); return -1; } r = command (NULL, &error, "mount", "-o", "loop", buf, mp, NULL); free (mp); free (buf); if (r == -1) { reply_with_error ("%s on %s: %s", file, mountpoint, error); free (error); return -1; } free (error); return 0; } /* Specialized calls mkmountpoint and rmmountpoint are really * variations on mkdir and rmdir which do no checking of the * is_root_mounted() flag. */ int do_mkmountpoint (const char *path) { int r; /* NEED_ROOT (return -1); - we don't want this test for this call. */ ABS_PATH (path, , return -1); CHROOT_IN; r = mkdir (path, 0777); CHROOT_OUT; if (r == -1) { reply_with_perror ("%s", path); return -1; } return 0; } int do_rmmountpoint (const char *path) { int r; /* NEED_ROOT (return -1); - we don't want this test for this call. */ ABS_PATH (path, , return -1); CHROOT_IN; r = rmdir (path); CHROOT_OUT; if (r == -1) { reply_with_perror ("%s", path); return -1; } return 0; }