Remove starting and stopping the progress bar in xfs::copy(). The
progress bar will be automatically started in xfs::copy_progress()
callback when run_progressbar() is called; and automatically stopped in
FileSystem::execute_command() when it calls stop_progress() at the end.
Note that this will now not initialise the progress bar from zero
immediately that the XFS copy is started, but instead 0.5 seconds into
the copy when xfs::copy_progress() timed callback is called for the
first time.
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
The timed progress tracking callback for execution of xfs copy follows
this pattern:
sigc::connection c;
...
c = Glib::signal_timeout().connect( ... sigc::mem_fun( *this, &xfs::copy_progress ) ..., 500 /*ms*/ );
... execute_command( ... );
c.disconnect();
As with output progress tracking callbacks for ext2/3/4 and ntfs file
system specific commands, pass the callback slot and a flag into
execute_command() and connect the timed callback inside. This
simplified the pattern to:
... execute_command( ...|EXEC_PROGRESS_TIMED,
static_cast<TimedSlot>( sigc::mem_fun( *this, &xfs::copy_progress ) ) );
NOTE:
The type of sigc::mem_fun() doesn't allow the compiler to choose between
the two overloaded variants of execute_command() with the fourth
parameter of either (full types without typedefs of StreamSlot and
TimedSlot respectively):
sigc::slot<void, OperationDetail *> stream_progress_slot
sigc::slot<bool, OperationDetail *> timed_progress_slot
Therefore have to cast the result of all callback slots to the relevant
type. Hence:
static_cast<StreamSlot>( sigc::mem_fun( *this, &{CLASS}::{NAME}_progress ) )
static_cast<TimedSlot>( sigc::mem_fun( *this, &xfs::copy_progress ) )
References:
* [sigc] Functor not resolving between overloaded methods with
different slot types
https://mail.gnome.org/archives/libsigc-list/2016-February/msg00000.html
* Bug 306705 - Can't overload methods based on different slot<>
parameters.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=306705
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
For the relevant stream from a file system specific command being
tracked, there were 2 callbacks attached: update_command_output() and
update_command_progress(). When called, update_command_progress() just
emitted signal_progress to call the file system specific progress
tracker callback. Like this:
signal_update.emit() -> update_command_output()
-> update_command_progress()
signal_progress.emit() -> {CLASS}::{NAME}_progress()
Instead just connect the file system specific progress tracker callback
directly to signal_update and bypass the unnecessary
update_command_progress() method and the signal_progress signal. Like
this:
signal_update.emit() -> update_command_output()
-> {CLASS}::{NAME}_progress()
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
All the output progress tracking callbacks for execution of ext2/3/4 and
ntfs file system specific commands followed this pattern:
sigc::connection c = signal_progress.connect( sigc::mem_fun( *this, &ext2::..._progress ) );
bool success = ! execute_command( ... );
c.disconnect();
return success;
Instead, pass the callback slot and a flag into execute_command() and
connect the callback inside. This simplifies the pattern to:
return ! execute_command( ...|EXEC_PROGRESS_STDOUT,
sigc::mem_fun( *this, &ext2::..._progress ) );
Note that as the progress tracking callbacks are only registered against
updates to the relevant stream from the tracked commands they won't be
called when the other stream is updated any more.
Also note that signal_progress is a member of the FileSystem class and
derived objects so lives as long as GParted is running, therefore the
progress tracking callbacks need explicitly disconnecting at the end of
execute_command(). However signal_update is a member of the PipeCapture
class of which the output and error local variables in execute_command()
are types. Therefore there is no need to explicitly disconnect the
signal_update callbacks as they will be destructed along with the
callback slots when they go out of scope at the end of the
execute_command() method.
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
Remove unused members: fraction and progress_text from the
OperationDetail class now that the ProgressBar class has superseded
their use. This also allows removal of timer_global member from the
copy_blocks class. Timer_global was only used to track the elapsed time
copying blocks and allow the remaining time to be estimated and written
into progress_text. The ProgressBar class also does this itself
internally.
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
Most of the file system specific command progress trackers followed this
pattern:
void {CLASS}::{NAME}_progress( OperationDetail *operationdetail )
{
ProgressBar & progressbar = operationdetail->get_progressbar();
// parse output for progress and target values
if ( // have progress and target values )
{
if ( ! progressbar.running() )
progressbar.start( target );
progressbar.update( progress );
operationdetail->signal_update( *operationdetail );
}
else if ( // found progress finished )
{
if ( progressbar.running() )
progressbar.stop();
operationdetail->signal_update( *operationdetail );
}
}
That is a lot of repetition handling progress bar updates and
OperationDetail object update signalling. Remove the need for direct
access to the single ProgressBar object and provide these two
OperationDetail methods instead:
// Start and update in one
run_progressbar( progress, target, optional text_mode );
stop_progressbar();
Now the file system specific command progress trackers can become:
void {CLASS}::{NAME}_progress( OperationDetail *operationdetail )
{
// parse output for progress and target values
if ( // have progress and target values )
{
operationdetail->run_progressbar( progress, target );
}
else if ( // found progress finished )
{
operationdetail->stop_progressbar();
}
}
Make ProgressBar::get_progressbar() a private method to enforce use of
the new way to access the progress bar via the run_progress() and
stop_progressbar() methods. Then make the Dialog_Progress a friend
class to OperationDetail so that the Apply pending operations dialog can
still access the single ProgressBar object for its querying needs.
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
Using e2image to copy a file system looks like this. (Intermediate
progress lines which are constantly overwritten are indicated with ">").
# e2image -ra -p /dev/sdb4 /dev/sdb5
e2image 1.42.13 (17-May-2015)
Scanning inodes...
> Copying 0 / 276510 blocks (0%)
> Copying 8845 / 276510 blocks (3%)
> Copying 48433 / 276510 blocks (18%)
> Copying 77135 / 276510 blocks (28%)
> Copying 111311 / 276510 blocks (40%)
> Copying 137039 / 276510 blocks (50%)
> Copying 166189 / 276510 blocks (60%) 00:00:03 remaining at 108.20 MB/s
> Copying 190285 / 276510 blocks (69%) 00:00:03 remaining at 106.19 MB/s
> Copying 209675 / 276510 blocks (76%) 00:00:02 remaining at 102.38 MB/s
> Copying 238219 / 276510 blocks (86%) 00:00:01 remaining at 103.39 MB/s
> Copying 256692 / 276510 blocks (93%) 00:00:00 remaining at 100.27 MB/s
Copied 276510 / 276510 blocks (100%) in 00:00:10 at 108.01 MB/s
Note that the copying figures are reported in file system block size
units and the progress information is written to stderr, hence needing
these two previous commits:
Record file system block size where known (#760709)
Call any FS specific progress trackers for stderr updates too (#760709)
Add progress tracking function for e2image command. Also tracks when
the text progress indicator has passed in the output so that the
progress bar can be stopped as well as started when needed.
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
So far the signal_progress callback slot was only emitted when standard
output from the file system specific command was updated. This was okay
as all the commands until now wrote their progress information to
stdout. However e2image writes its progress information to stderr,
therefore also emit signal_progress when stderr is updated too.
This does mean that the file system specific *_progress() tracking
callbacks will be called when either of the OperationDetail objects
containing stdout or stderr are updated. Therefore the trackers may be
called when there is no update to the stream from which it is parsing
the progress information. This is not a problem as the tracker will
just update the progress bar with the same information it already has.
Also it won't happen much as only e2image is known to write to both
streams, and then only one line to stdout and the updated progress
information to stderr. This is just an observation and not an issue
which needs coding around.
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
Record the file system block size in the Partition object. Only
implemented for file systems when set_used_sectors() method has already
parsed the value or can easily parse the value from the existing
executed command(s).
Needed for ext2/3/4 copies and moves performed using e2image so that
they can be tracked in bytes by the ProgressBar class as e2image reports
progress in file system block size units.
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
XFS uses a file system specific method to copy the partition using
"xfsdump | xfsrestore". Monitor progress by periodically querying the
destination file system usage and comparing to the source file system
usage. Use 0.5 seconds as the polling interval to match that used by
the internal block copying algorithm.
NOTE:
The number of used blocks in the source and destination file system will
be very close but may not match exactly. I have seen an XFS copy finish
with the following progress text:
1.54 GiB of 1.50 GiB copied (-00:00:02 remaining)
Allow the progress bar to overrun like this as it is informing the user
that it actually copied a little more data and took a little longer than
expected. Needs these two previous commits to correctly round and
format the negative time remaining:
Fix rounding of negative numbers (#760709)
Fix formatting of negative time values (#760709)
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
... to display a negative sign before the hours, minutes and seconds.
Before:
Utils::format_time(-1) = "00:00:0-1"
Utils::format_time(-119) = "00:0-1:0-59"
After:
Utils::format_time(-1) = "-00:00:01"
Utils::format_time(-119) = "-00:01:59"
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
Utils::round() was doing +0.5 then truncate. Correct for positive
values. Wrong for negative values.
E.G.
Utils::round(-1.4)
= trunc(-1.4 + 0.5)
= trunc(-0.9)
= 0
Round of -1.4 is definitely not 0. Fix this for negative values by
subtracting 0.5 then truncating.
Reference:
How can I convert a floating-point value to an integer in C?
https://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/round.html
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
When the ntfs resize operation had almost completed, percentage complete
was >= 99.9%, the progress tracker was passing 0.04 (4%) to the progress
bar. After reading the next chunk of output from the ntfsresize command
the last line contained this text:
" 4) set the bootable flag for the partit"
End of the ntfsresize command output for context:
Relocating needed data ...
100.00 percent completed
Updating $BadClust file ...
Updating $Bitmap file ...
Updating Boot record ...
Syncing device ...
Successfully resized NTFS on device '/dev/sdd4'.
You can go on to shrink the device for example with Linux fdisk.
IMPORTANT: When recreating the partition, make sure that you
1) create it at the same disk sector (use sector as the unit!)
2) create it with the same partition type (usually 7, HPFS/NTFS)
3) do not make it smaller than the new NTFS filesystem size
4) set the bootable flag for the partition if it existed before
Otherwise you won't be able to access NTFS or can't boot from the disk!
If you make a mistake and don't have a partition table backup then you
can recover the partition table by TestDisk or Parted's rescue mode.
This was occurring because *scanf() can't actually report failure to
match fixed text after conversion of the last variable. See code
comment in ntfs::resize_progress() for more details. Fix by using
.find() instead to match the required "percent completed" explicit text
of the progress information when it appears on the last line.
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
Adapt the ntfs resize progress tracker to use the new ProgressBar class.
Also make it track when the text progress indicator has passed in the
output so that the progress bar can be stopped as well as started when
needed.
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
Adapt the ext2 fsck progress tracker to use the new ProgressBar class.
Also make it track when the text progress bar has completely passed in
the output so that the progress bar can be stopped as well as started
when needed.
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
Adapt the ext2 create file system progress tracker to used the new
ProgressBar class. Also make it track when the text progress indicator
completes so that the progress bar can be stopped as well as started
when needed.
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
Adapt the ext2 resize progress tracker to the new ProgressBar class.
Also update the progress function to track when text progress bars have
completely passed in the output so that the progress bar can be stopped
as well as started when needed.
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
Change the Applying pending operations dialog so that it takes it source
of progress from the single ProgressBar object, rather than the fraction
value in every OperationDetail object. Also remove ProgressBar
debugging now that it is being used to drive the UI.
NOTE:
This temporarily causes the existing file system specific progress bars
to not be shown because they still update via the fraction member in
each OperationDetail object, rather than the new ProgressBar. This will
be corrected in following commits.
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
1) Multiple progress bars
The OperationDetail class contains member fraction which is used to feed
data to the current operation progress bar shown in the Applying pending
operations dialog. Dialog_Progress::on_signal_update() gets called for
every updated OperationDetail object and depending on whether fraction
is > 0.0 or not, switches between showing a growing or pulsing progress
bar. This leads to the conclusion that every OperationDetail object
currently being updated is effectively driving the single on screen
progress bar with different data.
The Copy_Blocks code is careful to update text and faction in a single
OperationDetail object and everything is good. The on screen progress
bar is switched into growing mode and then grows to 100%.
Since external command output is updated in real time [1] there are two
OperationDetail objects, one for stdout and one for stderr, which are
updated whenever data is read from the relevant stream. Also now that
progress is interpreted from some external command output [2][3][4] a
separate OperationDetail object is getting updated with the progress
fraction. (Actually the grandparent OperationDetail of the ones
receiving stdout and stderr updates as used by the file system specific
*_progress() methods). In the normal case of an external command
which is reporting it's progress two OperationDetails are constantly
being updated together, the OperationDetail object tracking stdout and
it's grandparent receiving progress fraction updates. This causes the
the code in Dialog_Progress::on_signal_update() to constantly switch
between growing and pulsing progress bar mode. The only reason this
doesn't flash the progress bar is because the stdout OperationDetail
object is updated first and before the 100 ms timeout fires to pulse the
bar, it's grandparent is updated with the new fraction to keep growing
the bar instead.
2) Common code
The Copy_Blocks code currently tracks the progress of blocks copied
against target amount, which it has to do anyway. That information is
then used to generate the text and fraction to update into the
OperationDetail object and drive the on screen progress bar. This same
level of tracking is wanted for the XFS and ext2/3/4 file system
specific copy methods.
Conclusion and solution
Having multiple sources of progress bar data is a problem and makes it
clear that there must be only one source of progress data. Also some
code can be shared for tracking the amount of blocks copied and
generating the display.
Therefore have a single ProgressBar object which is used everywhere.
This commit
It just creates a single ProgressBar object which is available via all
OperationDetail objects and Copy_Blocks is updated accordingly. Note
that the ProgressBar still contains debugging and that the GUI progress
bar of the current operation is still driven via the fraction member in
any OperationDetail object.
Referenced commits:
[1] 52a2a9b00a
Reduce threading (#685740)
[2] ae434579e1
Display progress for e2fsck (#467925)
[3] baea186138
Display progress for mke2fs (#467925)
[4] 57b028bb8e
Display progress during resize (#467925)
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
Write a generic progress bar class. Has the following features:
* Has separate progress and target numbers, rather than a single
completion fraction, to enable the the next feature.
* Optionally generates text reporting the amount of data copied using
the progress and target numbers like this:
"1.00 MiB of 16.00 MiB copied"
* After running for 5 seconds, also add estimated remaining time.
(Waits to allow the data copying rate to settle down a little before
estimating the remaining time). Looks like this:
"1.00 MiB of 16.00 MiB copied (00:01:59) remaining)"
The ProgressBar class is not driving the visual progress bar yet. It
has just been added into the internal block copy algorithm and generates
debug messages showing the progress bar is operating correctly.
Debugging looks like this:
DEBUG: ProgressBar::start(target=2.0636e+09, text_mode=PROGRESSBAR_TEXT_COPY_BYTES)
DEBUG: ProgressBar::update(progress=1.30023e+08) m_fraction=0.0630081 m_text="124.00 MiB of 1.92 GiB copied"
DEBUG: ProgressBar::update(progress=2.67387e+08) m_fraction=0.129573 m_text="255.00 MiB of 1.92 GiB copied"
DEBUG: ProgressBar::update(progress=4.0475e+08) m_fraction=0.196138 m_text="386.00 MiB of 1.92 GiB copied"
...
DEBUG: ProgressBar::update(progress=1.13351e+09) m_fraction=0.549289 m_text="1.06 GiB of 1.92 GiB copied (00:00:04 remaining)"
DEBUG: ProgressBar::update(progress=1.26249e+09) m_fraction=0.611789 m_text="1.18 GiB of 1.92 GiB copied (00:00:04 remaining)"
DEBUG: ProgressBar::update(progress=1.39041e+09) m_fraction=0.67378 m_text="1.29 GiB of 1.92 GiB copied (00:00:03 remaining)"
...
DEBUG: ProgressBar::update(progress=1.97552e+09) m_fraction=0.957317 m_text="1.84 GiB of 1.92 GiB copied (00:00:00 remaining)"
DEBUG: ProgressBar::update(progress=2.0636e+09) m_fraction=1 m_text="1.92 GiB of 1.92 GiB copied"
DEBUG: ProgressBar::stop()
Bug 760709 - Add progress bars to XFS and EXT2/3/4 file system specific
copy methods
Simplify code in Dialog_Partition_Info::Dialog_Info() which was open
coding concatenating together a vector of strings with a new line
between each. Replace with Glib::build_path(), as used elsewhere in
this method and other code.
Create and open a LUKS mapping but don't create any file system within.
# cryptsetup luksFormat /dev/sdb5
# cryptsetup luksOpen /dev/sdb5 sdb5_crypt
GParted was incorrectly reporting this warning:
Unable to read the contents of this file system!
Because of this some operations may be unavailable.
The cause might be a missing software package.
The following list of software packages is required for luks file
system support: dmsetup.
This is even though the usage figures for the on disk LUKS encryption
are fully known. See luks::set_used_sectors().
This was occurring because derived PartitionLUKS::set_usage_known()
was checking usage figures for the outer LUKS and the inner encrypted
file system, unknown in this case. Correct when displaying figures in
the UI, but not correct in GParted_Core::set_used_sectors() when only
checking the outer LUKS usage figures were set correctly. Fix this.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
At the moment any messages for an encrypted file system aren't shown,
only messages from the outer PartitionLUKS object are shown. Also in
Win_GParted::activate_paste() the selected Partition object, possibly
a derived PartitionLUKS, is cloned and the messages cleared.
Therefore a set of accessor methods must be provided to query and modify
partition messages. Messages will be stored in the Partition object to
which they are added and retrieved from all. So in the case of a
derived PartitionLUKS they will be retrieved from the messages vector of
the PartitionLUKS object itself and the messages vector for the
encrypted file system it contains.
To replace code like this in GParted_Core:
partition_temp->messages = messages;
We might naturally provide a set_messages() method which assigns the
messages vector and is used like this:
partition_temp->set_messages( messages );
However on a PartitionLUKS object what should set_messages() do? By the
name it will replace any existing messages in the PartitionLUKS object
itself, but what should happen to the messages for the contained
encrypted Partition object? Should they be cleared or left alone?
Rather than implement set_messages() with unclear semantics implement
append_messages(), which in the PartitionLUKS object case will clearly
leave any messages for the contained encrypted Partition object alone.
Append_messages() is then used to add messages as the Partition or
PartitionLUKS objects when populating the data in GParted_Core.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
For LUKS formatted partitions add an encryption section into the
Information dialog and display the type of encryption, path, UUID and
status of the encryption.
The file system section continues to display appropriate file system
details, including the partition graphic with the file system specific
border colour and correct usage. The details will either be of a plain
file system, an encrypted file system, or nothing when there is no open
dm-crypt mapping, leaving the encrypted file system inaccessible.
Should there be LUKS encryption directly within LUKS encryption then the
details of the inner encryption will be displayed in the file system
section. However this configuration will not be further supported by
GParted.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
There is already the set of methods in the Partition class to report the
file system usage. Virtualise them and provide PartitionLUKS specific
implementations to calculate the usage of a file system wrapped in LUKS
encryption.
See the ascii art and comment in PartitionLUKS.cc for the details of
those calculations.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
LUKS headers don't provide any concept of label. Also there is already
the method Partition::get_filesystem_label() for getting the *file
system* label, so virtualise it and provide an appropriate
implementation to get the label of an encrypted file system represented
within a derived PartitionLUKS object. This causes the label to be
displayed correctly in the main window.
It also happens to display the encrypted file system label in the
Information dialog for a LUKS formatted partition. However the whole
Information dialog will be addressed differently in a following commit.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
In the main window disk graphic, when there is an open dm-crypt mapping,
display the colour of the encrypted file system.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
In the File System column in the GUI, when there is an open dm-crypt
mapping, display the colour square for the encrypted file system within
and the text as "[Encrypted] FSTYPE". For closed mappings nothing can
be known about the encrypted file system within so continue to display a
purple square and the text "[Encrypted]".
Looks like:
Partition | File System
...
/dev/sdb3 # ext4
v /dev/sdb4 * # extended
/dev/sdb5 # [Encrypted]
/dev/sdb6 * # [Encrypted] unknown
/dev/sdb7 * # [Encrypted] ext4
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
Partition object represents a region of a disk and the file system
within. GParted always displays the colour base of the type of the file
system. Therefore remove the color member and always look it up from
the type of the file system as needed.
This makes one less member that will need virtual accessor methods with
different handling in the derived PartitionLUKS class.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
When there exists an open dm-crypt mapping, populate the encrypted
Partition object representing the encrypted file system.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
Absolute minimum implementation of a PartitionLUKS class which can be
constructed, polymorphically copied and destroyed. Contains an
"encrypted" member of type Partition to represent the encrypted file
system within the LUKS format.
Create PartitionLUKS objects instead of base Partition objects when a
LUKS formatted partition is found. Only the base Partition object
member values have been populated, and the "encrypted" member remains
blank at this point.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
This is the equivalent change as made to set_mountpoints() in an earlier
commit. Change GParted_Core::set_used_sectors() from being called with
a vector of partitions and processing them all to being called per
partition. This is in preparation for calling set_used_sectors() on a
single Partition object inside a PartitionLUKS object.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
Populate the canonical device name, /dev/mapper/NAME, used to access the
encrypted file system into the mount points of the Partition object.
This is the equivalent of what is already done for the Volume Group name
and SWRaid Array device.
This does get displayed in the Mount Point column in the main window,
which isn't wanted. However the data will be needed when displaying
details of the encryption mapping in the Information dialog. Both will
be dealt with in following commits.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
Previously GParted_Core::set_mountpoints() was called with a vector of
partitions and processed them all. Now make set_mountpoints() process a
single partition and push the calls to it down one level from
set_devices_thread() into set_device_partitions() and
set_device_one_partition(). This is in preparation for having an
encrypted file system represented as a Partition object inside a
PartitionLUKS object and needing to call set_mountpoints() for the inner
single Partition object.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
Only load the LUKS_Info cache of active dm-crypt mappings when the first
LUKS partition is encountered. Not needed from a performance point of
view as the longest that I have ever seen "dmsetup table --target crypt"
take to run is 0.05 seconds. Just means that the dmsetup command is
only run when there are LUKS partitions and the information is needed.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
Populate the used, unused and unallocated figures in the Partition
object for a LUKS formatted partition. See comment in
luks::set_used_sectors() for the rational of what is used, unused and
unallocated.
As that rational mentions, a LUKS header does not store the size of the
encrypted data and is assumed to extend to the end of the partition by
the tools which start the mapping.
An underlying block device of 128 MiB (131072 KiB).
# sfdisk -s /dev/sde
131072
An active LUKS mapping at offset 2 MiB (4096 512-byte sectors) and
length 126 MiB (129024 KiB, 258048 512-byte sectors).
# sfdisk -s /dev/mapper/sde_crypt
129024
# cryptsetup status sde_crypt
/dev/mapper/sde_crypt is active.
type: LUKS1
cipher: aes-cbc-essiv:sha256
keysize: 256 bits
device: /dev/sde
offset: 4096 sectors
size: 258048 sectors
mode: read/write
No size/length reported when dumping the LUKS header, just (payload)
offset.
# cryptsetup luksDump /dev/sde
LUKS header information for /dev/sde
Version: 1
Cipher name: aes
Cipher mode: cbc-essiv:sha256
Hash spec: sha1
Payload offset: 4096
MK bits: 256
MK digest: 7f fb ba 40 7e ba e4 3b 2f c6 d0 93 7b f7 05 49 7b 72 d4 ad
MK salt: 4a 5b 54 f9 7b 67 af 6e ef 16 31 0a fe d9 7e 5f
c3 66 dc 8a ed e0 07 f4 45 c3 7c 1a 8d 7d ac f4
MK iterations: 37750
UUID: 0a337705-434a-4994-a842-5b4351cb3778
...
Shrink the LUKS mapping to 64 MiB (65536 KiB, 131072 512-byte sectors).
# cryptsetup resize --size 131072 sde_crypt
# sfdisk -s /dev/mapper/sde_crypt
65536
# cryptsetup status sde_crypt
/dev/mapper/sde_crypt is active.
type: LUKS1
cipher: aes-cbc-essiv:sha256
keysize: 256 bits
device: /dev/sde
offset: 4096 sectors
size: 131072 sectors
mode: read/write
Stop and start the LUKS mapping.
# cryptsetup luksClose sde_crypt
# cryptsetup luksOpen /dev/sde sde_crypt
The size of the LUKS mapping is back to 126 MiB (129024 KiB, 258048
512-byte sectors), extending to the end of the partition.
# sfdisk -s /dev/mapper/sde_crypt
129024
# cryptsetup status sde_crypt
/dev/mapper/sde_crypt is active.
type: LUKS1
cipher: aes-cbc-essiv:sha256
keysize: 256 bits
device: /dev/sde
offset: 4096 sectors
size: 258048 sectors
mode: read/write
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
Also load the starting offset and length of the active dm-crypt mapping
into the LUKS_Info module from the dmsetup output. This provides the
location and size of the encrypted data within the underlying block
device.
Note that dmsetup reports in units of 512 bytes sectors [1], the GParted
LUKS_Info module uses bytes and GParted Partition objects work in device
sector size units. However the actual sector size of a dm-crypt mapping
[2] is the same as that of the underlying block device [3].
# modprobe scsi_debug dev_size_mb=128 sector_size=4096
# fgrep scsi_debug /sys/block/*/device/model
/sys/block/sdd/device/model:scsi_debug
# parted /dev/sde print
Error: /dev/sde: unrecognised disk label
Model: Linux scsi_debug (scsi)
Disk /dev/sde: 134MB
[3] Sector size (logical/physical): 4096B/4096B
Partition Table: unknown
# cryptsetup luksFormat /dev/sde
# cryptsetup luksOpen /dev/sde sde_crypt
# parted /dev/mapper/sde_crypt print
Error: /dev/mapper/sde_crypt: unrecognised disk label
Model: Linux device-mapper (crypt) (dm)
Disk /dev/mapper/sde_crypt: 132MB
[2] Sector size (logical/physical): 4096B/4096B
Partition Table: unknown
# cryptsetup status sde_crypt
/dev/mapper/sde_crypt is active.
type: LUKS1
cipher: aes-cbc-essiv:sha256
keysize: 256 bits
device: /dev/sde
offset: 4096 sectors
size: 258048 sectors
mode: read/write
# dmsetup table --target crypt
...
sde_crypt: 0 258048 crypt aes-cbc-essiv:sha256 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 0 8:64 4096
[1] Both cryptsetup and dmsetup report the offset as 4096 and the size/
length as 258048. 128 MiB / (4096+258048) = 512 byte units, even on a
4096 byte sector size device.
Update debugging of LUKS to this:
# ./gpartedbin
======================
libparted : 2.4
======================
DEBUG: /dev/sdb5: LUKS closed
DEBUG: /dev/sdb6: LUKS open mapping /dev/mapper/sdb6_crypt, offset=2097152, length=534773760
/dev/sde: unrecognised disk label
DEBUG: /dev/sde: LUKS open mapping /dev/mapper/sde_crypt, offset=2097152, length=132120576
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
The code currently allows attempting to mount and unmount a LUKS
partition. It is nonsense to directly try to mount and unmount a LUKS
partition and obviously doesn't work. For read-only LUKS support there
is no need to attempt to apply this to the encrypted file system within.
Therefore prevent these operations for LUKS partitions.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
This patchset is adding read-only LUKS support. Creation of LUKS is
planned to be a tick box adding encryption in the Create New Partition
dialog. Therefore remove the greyed out crypt-luks entry in the Create
New Partition dialog and the Format menu.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
Provide a minimal implementation of a luks file system class which only
does busy detection.
NOTE:
For now, read-only LUKS support, a LUKS partition will be busy when a
dm-crypt mapping exists. Later when read-write LUKS support is added
GParted will need to look at the busy status of the encrypted file
system within the open LUKS partition and map LUKS partition busy status
to encryption being open or closed.
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
Load basic details of active Device-mapper encryption mappings from the
kernel. Use dmsetup active targets.
# cryptsetup luksFormat /dev/sdb5
# cryptsetup luksFormat /dev/sdb6
# cryptsetup luksOpen /dev/sdb6 sdb6_crypt
# ls -l /dev/mapper/sdb6_crypt /dev/dm-0
lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 7 Nov 15 09:03 /dev/mapper/sdb6_crypt -> ../dm-0
brw-rw----. 1 root disk 253, 0 Nov 15 09:03 /dev/dm-0
# ls -l /dev/sdb6
brw-rw----. 1 root disk 8, 22 Nov 15 09:02 /dev/sdb6
# dmsetup table --target crypt
sdb6_crypt: 0 1044480 crypt aes-cbc-essiv:sha256 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 0 8:22 4096
So far just load the mapping name and underlying block device reference
(path or major, minor pair).
Note that all supported kernels appear to report the underlying block
device as major, minor pair in the dmsetup output. Underlying block
device paths are added to the cache when found during a search to avoid
stat(2) call on subsequent searches for the same path.
Prints debugging to show results, like this:
# ./gpartedbin
======================
libparted : 2.4
======================
DEBUG: /dev/sdb5: LUKS closed
DEBUG: /dev/sdb6: LUKS open mapping /dev/mapper/sdb6_crypt
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support
Renamed from DEV_MAP_PATH to DEV_MAPPER_PATH. Moved so that the
constant is logically intended for use outside of the DMRaid class.
Also specifically make the string constant have external linkage, rather
than the default internal (static) linkage for constants, so that there
is only one copy of the variable in the program, rather than one copy in
each compilation unit which included DMRaid.h. Namely DMRaid.cc and
GParted_Core.cc.
References:
[1] Proper way to do const std::string in a header file?
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10201880/proper-way-to-do-const-stdstring-in-a-header-file
[2] What is external linkage and internal linkage in C++
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1358400/what-is-external-linkage-and-internal-linkage-in-c/1358796#1358796
Bug 760080 - Implement read-only LUKS support