Re: [Tails-dev] overlay support in bilibop

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Autor: quidame
Data:  
Dla: The Tails public development discussion list
Temat: Re: [Tails-dev] overlay support in bilibop
(please cc me, I'm not subscribed)

Hi,

On 07/05/2015 13:44, intrigeri wrote:
>
> May you please also provide a patch that applies on top of bilibop
> 0.4.23? I need to build a Tails/Jessie ISO with a newer kernel (that
> only supports overlayfs).


'git diff debian/0.4.23..451b58ad17c4ea4a lib/bilibop/common.sh' builds
the attached patch.

>> Unfortunately, bilibop-lockfs needs more work and tests, and is not
>> ready for a new release. This means that there will not be a new bilibop
>> package in debian repositories in the next (two) weeks.
>
> Any news on this front?


Things work pretty good, and will probably be packaged next week.

Cheers,
quidame
diff --git a/lib/bilibop/common.sh b/lib/bilibop/common.sh
index 1fbf549..18c1156 100644
--- a/lib/bilibop/common.sh
+++ b/lib/bilibop/common.sh
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# /lib/bilibop/common.sh
#
-# Copyright (C) 2011-2014, Yann Amar <quidame@???>
+# Copyright (C) 2011-2015, Yann Amar <quidame@???>
# License GPL-3.0+
#
# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
@@ -31,8 +31,9 @@
# and others), and then are replaced by grep and sed heuristics.
#> We assume, even if it is not often, that /etc/udev/udev.conf can have been
# modified and that 'udev_root' can be something else than '/dev'.
-#> dm-crypt/LUKS, LVM, loopback and aufs root filesystems (and combinations
-# of them) are now fully supported.
+#> dm-crypt/LUKS, LVM, loopback, and aufs root filesystems (and combinations
+# of them) are now fully supported. Btrfs and overlay filesystems are also
+# partially supported (not fully tested).
#> Functions that just output informations about devices/filesystems can be
# called by any unprivileged user.

@@ -211,56 +212,62 @@ EOF
 ### Here is the main function's dependency tree {{{
 #
 # physical_hard_disk
-# |
 # |__underlying_partition
-#    |
 #    |__underlying_device
-#    |  |
 #    |  |__underlying_device_from_device
-#    |  |  |
 #    |  |  |__underlying_device_from_dm
 #    |  |  |__underlying_device_from_loop
-#    |  |     |
 #    |  |     |__backing_file_from_loop
 #    |  |     |__device_id_of_file
-#    |  |     |__device_node_from_major_minor
+#    |  |     |__underlying_device_from_file __ see below
+#    |  |     |__device_node_from_major_minor   vvvvvvvvv
 #    |  |
-#    |  |__underlying_device_from_file
+#    |  |__underlying_device_from_file _<<_<<_<<_  possible loop entry point
+#    |     |__device_id_of_file                  |
+#    |     |__find_mountpoint                    |
+#    |     |__is_aufs_mountpoint                 |
+#    |     |  |__canonical                       |
+#    |     |                                     |
+#    |     |__underlying_device_from_aufs        |
+#    |     |  |__aufs_readonly_branch            |
+#    |     |  |  |__aufs_dirs_if_brs0            |
+#    |     |  |  |  |__is_aufs_mountpoint        |
+#    |     |  |  |     |__canonical              |
+#    |     |  |  |                               |
+#    |     |  |  |__aufs_si_directory            |
+#    |     |  |     |__is_aufs_mountpoint        |
+#    |     |  |        |__canonical              |
+#    |     |  |                                  |
+#    |     |  |__device_id_of_file               |
+#    |     |  |__underlying_device_from_file _>>_| possible loop entry point
+#    |     |  |__device_node_from_major_minor    |
+#    |     |                                     |
+#    |     |__is_overlay_mountpoint              |
+#    |     |  |__canonical                       |
+#    |     |                                     |
+#    |     |__underlying_device_from_overlayfs   |
+#    |     |  |__overlay_lowerdir                |
+#    |     |  |  |__is_overlay_mountpoint        |
+#    |     |  |  |  |__canonical                 |
+#    |     |  |  |                               |
+#    |     |  |  |__canonpath                    |
+#    |     |  |                                  |
+#    |     |  |__device_id_of_file               |
+#    |     |  |__underlying_device_from_file _>>_| possible loop entry point
+#    |     |  |__device_node_from_major_minor
 #    |     |
-#    |     |__device_node_from_major_minor
-#    |     |__device_id_of_file
-#    |     |__find_mountpoint
-#    |     |  |
-#    |     |  |__is_aufs_mountpoint
-#    |     |     |
-#    |     |     |__canonical
+#    |     |__is_btrfs_mountpoint
+#    |     |  |__canonical
 #    |     |
-#    |     |__underlying_device_from_aufs
-#    |        |
-#    |        |__aufs_dirs
-#    |        |  |
-#    |        |  |__aufs_dirs_if_brs0
-#    |        |  |  |
-#    |        |  |  |__is_aufs_mountpoint
-#    |        |  |     |
-#    |        |  |     |_canonical
-#    |        |  |
-#    |        |  |__aufs_si_directory
-#    |        |     |
-#    |        |     |__is_aufs_mountpoint
-#    |        |        |
-#    |        |        |__canonical
-#    |        |
-#    |        |__device_id_of_file
-#    |        |__device_node_from_major_minor
+#    |     |__underlying_device_from_btrfs
+#    |     |__device_node_from_major_minor
 #    |
 #    |__underlying_device_from_device
-#       |
 #       |__underlying_device_from_dm
 #       |__underlying_device_from_loop
-#          |
 #          |__backing_file_from_loop
-#          |__device_id_of_file
+#          |__device_id_of_file              ^^^^^^^^^
+#          |__underlying_device_from_file __ see above
 #          |__device_node_from_major_minor
 #
 # }}}
@@ -279,14 +286,54 @@ canonical() {
     esac
 }
 # ===========================================================================}}}
+# canonpath() ==============================================================={{{
+# What we want is: canonicalize a pathname even if the file (and even its
+# parent directories) does not exist. Just do not try to resolve any part of
+# the path; instead, rely only on path separators and specific patterns that
+# allow us to logically shorten the path.
+canonpath() {
+    ${DEBUG} && echo "> canonpath $@" >&2
+    local pathname
+    case "${1}" in
+        "") return 0;;
+        /*) pathname="${1}";;
+        *)  pathname="${PWD}/${1}";;
+    esac
+    while true; do
+        case "${pathname}" in
+            *//*|*/./*|*/../*|*/|*/.|*/..)
+                pathname="$(echo "${pathname}" | sed -re 's,(/+\.?)+/+,/,g; s,^(/+\.\.)+(/+|$),/,; s,[^/]+/+\.\.(/+|$),/,; s,/+,/,g; s,(/+\.?)+$,,')"
+                ;;
+            "")
+                echo "/"
+                break
+                ;;
+            *)
+                echo "${pathname}"
+                break
+                ;;
+        esac
+    done
+}
+# ===========================================================================}}}
 # find_mountpoint() ========================================================={{{
 # What we want is: output the mountpoint of the filesystem the file or directory
 # given as argument depends is onto. Because it outputs the last field of the
 # last line of the 'df' output, df don't need the '-P' (POSIX format) option,
 # and so we are sure it works with all df commands or builtins (busybox).
+# The use of directories is to work around overlayfs design (files and dirs are
+# not treated the same way, see "stat inconsistency with overlayfs" thread in
+# http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-unionfs/index.html#00197). In my tests,
+# the only one case where replacing a file path by its dirname may affect the
+# result of df, stat... is for bind-mounted files (and when the two files are
+# not on the same fs).
 find_mountpoint() {
     ${DEBUG} && echo "> find_mountpoint $@" >&2
-    df "${1}" | sed -ne '$s,.* \([^[:blank:]]\+\)$,\1,p'
+    if      [ -d "${1}" ]
+    then    df "${1}"
+    else    df "${1%/*}"
+    fi |
+    sed -ne '$s,.* \([^[:blank:]]\+\)$,\1,p'
 }
 # ===========================================================================}}}
 # device_node_from_major_minor() ============================================{{{
@@ -300,10 +347,30 @@ device_node_from_major_minor() {
 # ===========================================================================}}}
 # device_id_of_file() ======================================================={{{
 # What we want is: output the major:minor of the filesystem containing the
-# file or directory given as argument.
+# file or directory given as argument. See the 'find_mountpoint()' function
+# above, and its comments about "stat inconsistency with overlayfs".
 device_id_of_file() {
     ${DEBUG} && echo "> device_id_of_file $@" >&2
-    udevadm info --device-id-of-file "${1}"
+    if      [ -d "${1}" ]
+    then    udevadm info --device-id-of-file "${1}"
+    else    udevadm info --device-id-of-file "${1%/*}"
+    fi
+}
+# ===========================================================================}}}
+# is_btrfs_mountpoint() ====================================================={{{
+# What we want is: check if a directory given as argument is a btrfs mountpoint
+# and print the corresponding line from /proc/mounts. Accepts the '-q' (quiet)
+# option: print nothing, but return a 0/1 exit value. This is due to the fact
+# that btrfs mountpoints get 0 as their major device ID.
+is_btrfs_mountpoint() {
+    ${DEBUG} && echo "> is_btrfs_mountpoint $@" >&2
+    local   opt=
+    case    "${1}" in
+        -*)
+            opt="${1}"
+            shift ;;
+    esac
+    grep ${opt} "^[^ ]\+ $(canonical ${1}) btrfs " /proc/mounts
 }
 # ===========================================================================}}}
 # is_aufs_mountpoint() ======================================================{{{
@@ -338,28 +405,52 @@ aufs_dirs_if_brs0() {
     is_aufs_mountpoint "${1}" | sed -e 's@.*[ ,]br:\([^ ,]\+\).*@\1@ ; s@:@ @g'
 }
 # ===========================================================================}}}
-# aufs_dirs() ==============================================================={{{
-# What we want is: output all the underlying mountpoints (called branches) an
-# aufs filesystem given as argument is made of.
-aufs_dirs() {
-    ${DEBUG} && echo "> aufs_dirs $@" >&2
+# aufs_readonly_branch() ===================================================={{{
+# What we want is: output the lower (readonly) branch of an aufs mount point
+# given as argument.
+aufs_readonly_branch() {
+    ${DEBUG} && echo "> aufs_readonly_branch $@" >&2
     local   br
     case  "$(cat /sys/module/aufs/parameters/brs)" in
         0)
             for br in $(aufs_dirs_if_brs0 "${1}")
             do
-                echo ${br}
+                echo ${br} | grep -q '=r[or]\(+wh\)\?$' &&
+                echo ${br%\=r*}
             done
             ;;
         *)
-            for br in $(aufs_si_directory "${1}")/br*
+            for br in $(aufs_si_directory "${1}")/br?
             do
-                cat ${br}
+                grep '=r[or]\(+wh\)\?$' ${br} | sed -e 's,=r[or].*,,'
             done
             ;;
     esac
 }
 # ===========================================================================}}}
+# is_overlay_mountpoint() ==================================================={{{
+# What we want is: check if a directory given as argument is an overlayfs
+# mountpoint and print the corresponding line from /proc/mounts. Accepts the
+# '-q' (quiet) option: print nothing, but return a 0/1 exit value.
+is_overlay_mountpoint() {
+    ${DEBUG} && echo "> is_overlay_mountpoint $@" >&2
+    local   opt=
+    case    "${1}" in
+        -*)
+            opt="${1}"
+            shift ;;
+    esac
+    grep ${opt} "^[^ ]\+ $(canonical ${1}) overlay " /proc/mounts
+}
+# ===========================================================================}}}
+# overlay_lowerdir() ========================================================{{{
+# What we want is: output the lowerdir (readonly branch) of an overlayfs mount
+# point given as argument.
+overlay_lowerdir() {
+    ${DEBUG} && echo "> overlay_lowerdir $@" >&2
+    canonpath $(is_overlay_mountpoint "${1}" | sed -e 's@.*[ ,]lowerdir=\([^ ,]\+\).*@\1@ ; s@/\+@/@g')
+}
+# ===========================================================================}}}
 # backing_file_from_loop() =================================================={{{
 # What we want is: output the backing file of a loopback device given as
 # argument. This requires kernel >= 2.6.37. Great thing! Before that, it was
@@ -387,16 +478,29 @@ underlying_device_from_loop() {
     local   lofile="$(backing_file_from_loop ${1})" || return 1
     if      [ -b "${lofile}" ]
     then    readlink -f "${lofile}"
-    elif    [ -e "${lofile}" ]
-    then    device_node_from_major_minor $(device_id_of_file "${lofile}")
-    elif    [ -r "${1}" ]
-    then
-            # For some cases, when the loop device is set from inside the
-            # initramfs (Live Systems)
-            local dev="$(/sbin/losetup ${1} | sed "s;^${1}: \[\([0-9a-f]\{4\}\)\].*;\1;")"
-            device_node_from_major_minor "$((0x${dev}/256)):$((0x${dev}%256))"
     else
-            return 1
+            local   id
+            if      [ -e "${lofile}" ]
+            then    id=$(device_id_of_file "${lofile}")
+            elif    [ -r "${1}" ]
+            then    # For some cases, when the loop device is set from inside
+                    # the initramfs (Live Systems) and /sys/*/loop/backing_file
+                    # is out of sync
+                    local   dev="$(/sbin/losetup ${1} | sed "s;^${1}: \[\([0-9a-f]\{4\}\)\].*;\1;")"
+                    id="$((0x${dev}/256)):$((0x${dev}%256))"
+            else    return 1
+            fi
+            case    "${id}" in
+                "")
+                    return 1
+                    ;;
+                0:*)
+                    underlying_device_from_file "${lofile}"
+                    ;;
+                *)
+                    device_node_from_major_minor "${id}"
+                    ;;
+            esac
     fi
 }
 # ===========================================================================}}}
@@ -408,24 +512,76 @@ underlying_device_from_loop() {
 # virtual fs.
 underlying_device_from_aufs() {
     ${DEBUG} && echo "> underlying_device_from_aufs $@" >&2
-    local   dir dev
-    for dir in $(aufs_dirs "${1}")
-    do
-        dev="$(device_id_of_file ${dir%\=r?*})"
-        case "${dev}" in
-            0:*)
-                continue
-                ;;
-            *)
-                dev="$(device_node_from_major_minor "${dev}")"
-                ;;
-        esac
-        if      [ -b "${dev}" ]
-        then    readlink -f "${dev}"
-                return 0
+    local   dir="$(aufs_readonly_branch "${1}")"
+    local   dev="$(device_id_of_file "${dir}")"
+    case "${dev}" in
+        "")
+            ;;
+        0:*)
+            # aufs mounts can't be nested; but this may be btrfs
+            dev="$(underlying_device_from_file "${dir}")"
+            ;;
+        *)
+            dev="$(device_node_from_major_minor "${dev}")"
+            ;;
+    esac
+
+    [ -b "${dev}" ] && readlink -f "${dev}"
+}
+# ===========================================================================}}}
+# underlying_device_from_overlayfs() ========================================{{{
+# What we want is: output the underlying device of the (generally) readonly
+# branch of an overlayfs mountpoint given as argument. We assume that there is
+# only and at least one physical device used to build the overlayfs (but the
+# directory is not necessarly the mountpoint of this device), other branch(es)
+# being virtual fs.
+underlying_device_from_overlayfs() {
+    ${DEBUG} && echo "> underlying_device_from_overlayfs $@" >&2
+    local   dev dir="$(overlay_lowerdir "${1}")"
+
+    # First case: overlayfs mountpoint is set at runtime, so the lowerdir
+    # value is up-to-date. Think that when setting up overlayfs mountpoint
+    # from the initramdisk environment, using same pathnames than what they
+    # will be at runtime may ease the task.
+    if [ -d "${dir}" ] && grep -q "^/[^ ]\+ ${dir} " /proc/mounts; then
+        dev="$(device_id_of_file ${dir})"
+    else
+        # overlayfs mountpoint has been set at boottime (within the initrd env)
+        # and the value of 'lowerdir' found in /proc/mounts is obsolete. There
+        # is no safe way to know the current and actual lowerdir mountpoint. We
+        # have to assume some arbitrary conditions to take a chance to find the
+        # underlying device. This depends on arbtrary paths used in initrd
+        # scripts (tested with live-boot 5.0~a1-1 - experimental)
+        # First fallback: rely on the lowerdir's basename
+        dir="$(grep '^/' /proc/mounts | sed -e 's|^[^ ]\+ \([^ ]\+\) .*|\1|' | grep "/${dir##*/}$")"
+        if [ -d "${dir}" ]; then
+            dev="$(device_id_of_file ${dir})"
         fi
-    done
-    return 1
+    fi
+    case "${dev}" in
+        "")
+            ;;
+        0:*)
+            dev="$(underlying_device_from_file "${dir}")"
+            ;;
+        *)
+            dev="$(device_node_from_major_minor "${dev}")"
+            ;;
+    esac
+
+    [ -b "${dev}" ] && readlink -f "${dev}"
+}
+# ===========================================================================}}}
+# underlying_device_from_btrfs() ============================================{{{
+# What we want is: output the underlying device of a btrfs mountpoint given as
+# argument. Such filesystems are not directly mapped to the block device they
+# are written on: the device ID (major:minor) of a file on btrfs is not the
+# same than the block device itself (say 8:1 for /dev/sda1), but a virtual one
+# (with 0 as the major number).
+underlying_device_from_btrfs() {
+    ${DEBUG} && echo "> underlying_device_from_btrfs $@" >&2
+    local dev="$(grep "^/[^[:blank:]]\+\s${1}\sbtrfs\s" /proc/mounts | sed -e 's|^\([^ ]\+\)\s.*|\1|')"
+    [ -b "${dev}" ] && readlink -f "${dev}"
 }
 # ===========================================================================}}}
 # underlying_device_from_dm() ==============================================={{{
@@ -491,13 +647,16 @@ underlying_device_from_file() {
     then
             # 0 is the major number of all ramfs (tmpfs, devtmpfs, sysfs, proc
             # and others). If the file is hosted on a such virtual filesystem,
-            # we encounter an alternative: the file is on aufs and we continue
-            # after a jump on the real block device under the aufs, or we stop
-            # here.
+            # we encounter an alternative: the file is on aufs/overlay/btrfs
+            # and we continue after a jump on the real block device under the
+            # aufs/overlay/btrfs, or we stop there.
             mntpnt="$(find_mountpoint "${1}")"
             if      is_aufs_mountpoint -q "${mntpnt}"
             then    dev="$(underlying_device_from_aufs "${mntpnt}")"
-            else    return 1
+            elif    is_overlay_mountpoint -q "${mntpnt}"
+            then    dev="$(underlying_device_from_overlayfs "${mntpnt}")"
+            elif    is_btrfs_mountpoint -q "${mntpnt}"
+            then    dev="$(underlying_device_from_btrfs "${mntpnt}")"
             fi
     else
             dev="$(device_node_from_major_minor "${id}")"
@@ -541,8 +700,7 @@ underlying_device() {
 # of mapped devices (LVM, dm-crypt), loopback devices and aufs filesystems.
 underlying_partition() {
     ${DEBUG} && echo "> underlying_partition $@" >&2
-    local   dev="$(underlying_device "${1}")"
-    local   old new="${dev}"
+    local   old new="$(underlying_device "${1}")"


     while   true
     do
@@ -680,37 +838,36 @@ get_aufs_variables() {
 }
 # ===========================================================================}}}


-# aufs_mountpoints() ========================================================{{{
-# What we want is: output the mountpoints of all aufs filesystems.
-aufs_mountpoints() {
-    ${DEBUG} && echo "> aufs_mountpoints $@" >&2
-    grep '^[^ ]\+ /[^ ]* aufs .*[, ]si=[0-9a-f]\+[, ].*' /proc/mounts |
-    sed -e 's,^[^ ]\+ \(/[^ ]*\) aufs .*,\1,'
-}
-# ===========================================================================}}}
-# aufs_readonly_branch() ===================================================={{{
-# What we want is: output the lower (readonly) branch of an aufs mount point
-# given as argument.
-aufs_readonly_branch() {
-    ${DEBUG} && echo "> aufs_readonly_branch $@" >&2
+# aufs_dirs() ==============================================================={{{
+# What we want is: output all the underlying mountpoints (called branches) an
+# aufs filesystem given as argument is made of.
+aufs_dirs() {
+    ${DEBUG} && echo "> aufs_dirs $@" >&2
     local   br
     case  "$(cat /sys/module/aufs/parameters/brs)" in
         0)
             for br in $(aufs_dirs_if_brs0 "${1}")
             do
-                echo ${br} | grep -q '=r[or]\(+wh\)\?$' &&
-                echo ${br%\=r*}
+                echo ${br}
             done
             ;;
         *)
-            for br in $(aufs_si_directory "${1}")/br*
+            for br in $(aufs_si_directory "${1}")/br?
             do
-                grep '=r[or]\(+wh\)\?$' ${br} | sed -e 's,=r[or].*,,'
+                cat ${br}
             done
             ;;
     esac
 }
 # ===========================================================================}}}
+# aufs_mountpoints() ========================================================{{{
+# What we want is: output the mountpoints of all aufs filesystems.
+aufs_mountpoints() {
+    ${DEBUG} && echo "> aufs_mountpoints $@" >&2
+    grep '^[^ ]\+ /[^ ]* aufs .*[, ]si=[0-9a-f]\+[, ].*' /proc/mounts |
+    sed -e 's,^[^ ]\+ \(/[^ ]*\) aufs .*,\1,'
+}
+# ===========================================================================}}}
 # aufs_writable_branch() ===================================================={{{
 # What we want is: output the upper (read-write) branch of an aufs mount point
 # given as argument.
@@ -726,7 +883,7 @@ aufs_writable_branch() {
             done
             ;;
         *)
-            for br in $(aufs_si_directory "${1}")/br*
+            for br in $(aufs_si_directory "${1}")/br?
             do
                 grep '=rw\(+nolwh\)\?$' ${br} | sed -e 's,=rw.*,,'
             done
@@ -735,6 +892,23 @@ aufs_writable_branch() {
 }
 # ===========================================================================}}}


+# overlay_upperdir() ========================================================{{{
+# What we want is: output the upperdir (writable branch) of an overlayfs mount
+# point given as argument.
+overlay_upperdir() {
+    ${DEBUG} && echo "> overlay_upperdir $@" >&2
+    canonpath $(is_overlay_mountpoint "${1}" | sed -e 's@.*[ ,]upperdir=\([^ ,]\+\).*@\1@ ; s@/\+@/@g')
+}
+# ===========================================================================}}}
+# overlay_workdir() ========================================================={{{
+# What we want is: output the upperdir (writable branch) of an overlayfs mount
+# point given as argument.
+overlay_workdir() {
+    ${DEBUG} && echo "> overlay_workdir $@" >&2
+    canonpath $(is_overlay_mountpoint "${1}" | sed -e 's@.*[ ,]workdir=\([^ ,]\+\).*@\1@ ; s@/\+@/@g')
+}
+# ===========================================================================}}}
+
 # is_removable() ============================================================{{{
 # What we want is: check if a whole disk node given as argument is seen as
 # removable from its sysfs attribute. If yes, this means the disk given as