Commit Graph

819 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Mike Fleetwood 8ce9074ac6 Remove Attempt Data Rescue and use of gpart (!118)
gpart scans a drive trying to guess the location of partitions when an
MBR partition table is lost [1].  However the tool is unmaintained,
takes hours or days of 100% CPU time to scan a drive and provides no
progress indication [2][3][4].  We keep recommending killing the gpart
process and using TestDisk [5] instead.

Therefore remove Device > Attempt Data Rescue and the use of gpart from
GParted.

[1] Gpart
    https://github.com/baruch/gpart
[2] Have you had a good or bad experience with Dev->Attempt Data Rescue?
    http://gparted-forum.surf4.info/viewtopic.php?id=17992
    No good, only bad experiences using gpart were reported.
[3] Gparted does not say anything
    http://gparted-forum.surf4.info/viewtopic.php?id=17749
    Forum user reported waiting 48 hours with no progress indication.
    We recommended using TestDisk.
[4] How cancel Data Rescue process?
    http://gparted-forum.surf4.info/viewtopic.php?id=18143
    Forum user reported it will take 3 days to scan their external 480GB
    drive.  We recommended using TestDisk instead.
[5] TestDisk, Data Recovery
    https://www.cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk

Closes !118 - Remove Attempt Data Rescue and use of gpart
2023-10-04 16:03:09 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 40665913bf C++11: Convert NULL to nullptr (!117)
In C++11, nullptr [1] is the strongly typed value to use instead of the
macro NULL [2].  Use everywhere [3][4].

[1] nullptr, the pointer literal (since C++11)
    https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/nullptr
[2] NULL
    https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/types/NULL
[3] Bjarne Stroustrup's C++ Style and Technique FAQ, Should I use NULL
    or 0?
    https://www.stroustrup.com/bs_faq2.html#null
        "In C++, the definition of NULL is 0, so there is only an
        aesthetic difference.  I prefer to avoid macros, so I use 0.
        Another problem with NULL is that people sometimes mistakenly
        believe that it is different from 0 and/or not an integer.  In
        pre-standard code, NULL was/is sometimes defined to something
        unsuitable and therefore had/has to be avoided.  That's less
        common these days.

        If you have to name the null pointer, call it nullptr; that's
        what it's called in C++11.  Then, "nullptr" will be a keyword.
        "
[4] What is nullptr in C++? Advantages, Use Cases & Examples
    https://favtutor.com/blogs/nullptr-cpp
        "Advantages of nullptr
        ...
        Compatible: Null pointers are compatible with null pointer
        constants in the C style (such as NULL and 0).  This implies
        that old C code that uses these constants and null pointers can
        communicate with each other in C++.
        "

Closes !117 - Require C++11 compilation
2023-09-23 15:30:15 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood af684ade52 Return constant reference from ProgressBar::get_text()
get_text() only performs const access on the ProgressBar object so
return the member string by constant reference.

Previously done for other string returning getters, even though the
value is assigned to a variable and doesn't save anything:
    1f6e81295b
    Return constant reference from OperationDetail::get_description() (!94)
2023-06-17 16:13:23 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood f5ba53fb3e Return const reference from OperationDetail::get_progressbar()
The only use of the reference returned from
OperationDetail::get_progressbar() is to call const methods
ProgressBar::running(), ::get_fraction() and ::get_text().  Therefore
make OperationDetail::get_progressbar() return a const reference.
2023-06-17 16:13:23 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 3cbedad693 Generate time remaining text for fraction complete progress bars
As described in the previous commit "Clear progress bar text when
starting the bar (#230)" progress bar data is either reporting bytes
copied or fraction complete.  The bytes copied case gets in progress
text like this:
    544.00 MiB of 1.00 GiB copied (00:00:11 remaining)

But the fraction complete gets no text.

Now also generate time remaining text for progress bars only reporting
fraction complete.  As with the bytes copied text only add the time
remaining estimate after 5 seconds have passed.  Looks like:
    (00:01:59 remaining)

This is most useful for NTFS partition copy and resize operations which
can take a while depending on the amount of data involved.
2023-06-17 16:13:23 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood ceaf4c232e Briefly comment STAT_* enumerators 2023-04-27 15:54:01 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood eb6a77c4fd Remove superfluous STAT_FORMATTED
STAT_FORMATTED is only used inside snap_to_mebibyte() to suppress
enforcement that partition boundaries must not overlay the MBR or EBRs
when merely formatting existing partitions.  However since commit [1],
snap_to_mebibyte() is only called inside the dialogs composing Create
New, Copy / Paste into New and Resize / Move operations and never when
composing a Format operation or any other operation which doesn't change
partition boundaries.  Therefore remove STAT_FORMATTED.

[1] 7c94b7d920
    Snap partition boundaries before dialogs update FS usage (#48)
2023-04-27 15:54:01 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood e801689680 Remove now duplicated Win_GParted::display_partitions member (#227)
Now Win_GParted::m_display_device.partitions is an identical copy of
Win_GParted::display_partitions with the same lifetime.  That's wasteful
and pointless.  Therefore remove the later and use the former in it's
place.

Closes #227 - Unable to allocate 1 MiB between partitions when moving to
              the right
2023-04-27 15:54:01 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood e9f3977452 Use current Device object for Create and Paste dialogs too (#227)
The Create New and Paste dialogs also create partitions and have to
honour currently composed partitions while doing so.  Therefore they
must have a Device object containing the currently composed partition
layout for passing into snap_to_alignment() and below.  So copy the
current Device object when refreshing the visual at the same time
visual_partitions is generated and use in all 3 dialogs which compose
new partitions.

Note that Create New and Paste aren't subject to the same bug as Resize/
Move was because the code in snap_to_mebibyte() [1] checked the
partition object being composed has status STAT_REAL.  This is true for
partition objects created by the Resize/Move dialog, but not true for
the Create New and Paste dialogs which set status to STAT_NEW and
STAT_COPY respectively instead.

[1] Dialog_Base_Partition::snap_to_mebibyte() lines 418 to 438
    https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gparted/-/blob/GPARTED_1_5_0/src/Dialog_Base_Partition.cc#L418

Closes #227 - Unable to allocate 1 MiB between partitions when moving to
              the right
2023-04-27 15:54:01 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 230f44a9b4 Use Automake noinst_HEADERS to list GParted header files
Using Automake variable EXTRA_DIST [1] to list the GParted header files
seems overly general.  Instead use noinst_HEADERS [2] as it better
describes GParted header files.  Header files which need to be
distributed in the archive, but not part of an installed library so not
to be installed below /usr/include.

[1] GNU Automake manual, 14.1 Basics of Distribution
    https://www.gnu.org/software/automake/manual/html_node/Basics-of-Distribution.html
        "..., it is still common to have files to be distributed which
        are not found by the automatic rules.  You should listed these
        files in the EXTRA_DIST variable.  You can mention files in
        subdirectories in EXTRA_DIST.
        "

[2] GNU Automake manual, 9.2 Header files
    https://www.gnu.org/software/automake/manual/html_node/Headers.html
        "Usually, only header files that accompany installed libraries
        need to be installed.  Headers used by programs or convenience
        libraries are not installed.  The noinst_HEADERS variable can be
        used for such headers.  However, when the header belongs to a
        single convenience library or program, we recommend listing it
        in the program's or library's _SOURCES variable (see Defining
        program sources) instead of in noinst_HEADERS.  This is clearer
        for the Makefile.am reader.  noinst_HEADERS would be the right
        variable to use in a directory containing only headers and no
        associated library or program.

        All header files must be listed somewhere; in a _SOURCES
        variable or in a _HEADERS variable.  Missing ones will not
        appear in the distribution.
        "
2023-02-13 16:33:57 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 4ce37d4fde Add initial unit test of erase_filesystem_signatures() (#220)
Initially just testing erasing of Intel Software RAID signatures.
Chosen because it was expected to work, but turned out not to be true in
all cases.

The code needs to initialise GParted_Core::mainthread, construct
Gtk::Main() and execute xvfb-run because of this call chain:
    GParted_Core::erase_filesystem_signatures()
      GParted_Core::settle_device()
        Utils::execute_command ("udevadm settle ...")
          status.foreground = (Glib::Thread::self() == GParted_Core::mainthread)
          Gtk::Main::run()
This was also needed when testing file system interface classes as
discussed in commits [1][2].

The test fails like this:
    $ ./test_EraseFileSystemSignatures
    ...
    [ RUN      ] EraseFileSystemSignaturesTest.IntelSoftwareRAIDAligned
    [       OK ] EraseFileSystemSignaturesTest.IntelSoftwareRAIDAligned (155 ms)
    [ RUN      ] EraseFileSystemSignaturesTest.IntelSoftwareRAIDUnaligned
    test_EraseFileSystemSignatures.cc:286: Failure
    Failed
    image_contains_all_zeros(): First non-zero bytes:
    0x00001A00  "Intel Raid ISM C"  49 6E 74 65 6C 20 52 61 69 64 20 49 53 4D 20 43
    test_EraseFileSystemSignatures.cc:320: Failure
    Value of: image_contains_all_zeros()
      Actual: false
    Expected: true
    [  FAILED  ] EraseFileSystemSignaturesTest.IntelSoftwareRAIDUnaligned (92 ms)

Manually write the same test image:
    $ python << 'EOF'
    signature = b'Intel Raid ISM Cfg Sig. '
    import os
    fd = os.open('/tmp/test.img', os.O_CREAT|os.O_WRONLY)
    os.ftruncate(fd, 16*1024*1024 - 512)
    os.lseek(fd, -(2*512), os.SEEK_END)
    os.write(fd, signature)
    os.close(fd)
    EOF

Run gpartedbin /tmp/test.img and Format to > Cleared.  GParted continues
to display the the image file as containing an ataraid signature.
    $ blkid /tmp/test.img
    /tmp/test.img: TYPE="isw_raid_member"
    $ hexdump -C /tmp/test.img
    00000000  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  |................|
    *
    00fffa00  49 6e 74 65 6c 20 52 61  69 64 20 49 53 4d 20 43  |Intel Raid ISM C|
    00fffa10  66 67 20 53 69 67 2e 20  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  |fg Sig. ........|
    00fffa20  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  |................|
    *
    00fffe00

This signature is not being cleared when the device/partition/image size
is 512 bytes smaller than a whole MiB because the last 3.5 KiB is left
unwritten.  This is because the last block of zeros written is 8 KiB
aligned to 4 KiB at the end of the device.

[1] a97c23c57c
    Add initial create ext2 only FileSystem interface class test (!49)
[2] 8db9a83b39
    Run test program under xvfb-run to satisfy need for an X11 display (!49)

Closes #220 - Format to Cleared not clearing "pdc" ataraid signature
2023-02-13 16:33:57 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood db5df60f22 Use btrfs filesystem show --raw to read usage (!105)
'btrfs filesystem show' only used to report rounded human readable size
figures.  Therefore the actual figure could have been anywhere within
the rounding limit.  GParted also applied a heuristic to snap the file
system size figure to the partition size if the partition size was
within the rounding limit of the reported file system size [1].

btrfs-progs v4.1 added the --raw option to print the figures in bytes
[2][3][4].
    # btrfs filesystem show --raw /dev/sdb1
    Label: none  uuid: 003a619e-856f-4b9c-bd29-4d0ae0296d66
            Total devices 2 FS bytes used 178765824
            devid    1 size 2147483648 used 239861760 path /dev/sdb1
            devid    2 size 2147483648 used 436207616 path /dev/sdc1

Since the oldest supported distributions now use btrfs-progs v4.5.3 and
later (see the distribution End-of-Life table in the previous commit
message), unconditionally use this to get accurate figures.

[1] 7fc16a1b69
    Handle btrfs tools rounding of figures (#499202)
[2] btrfs-progs: Allow "filesystem show" command to handle different units
    https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kdave/btrfs-progs.git/commit/?id=15379fa2257bf937cf7830c0b1b79f2daf5df72c
[3] btrfs-progs: docs: new size options for fi show
    https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kdave/btrfs-progs.git/commit/?id=81225f11d9ea58590476612e69211113ddb9b943
[4] Btrfs progs release 4.1
    https://lore.kernel.org/linux-btrfs/20150622150023.GX6761@twin.jikos.cz/

Closes !105 - Update used btrfs file system commands, new minimum is
              btrfs-progs 4.5
2022-08-25 15:41:31 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 1fbc8988ff Extract repeated code into trim_trailing_new_line() (!105)
Create function to replace repeated code which optionally removes
trailing new line character from a string.

Closes !105 - Update used btrfs file system commands, new minimum is
              btrfs-progs 4.5
2022-08-25 15:41:31 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 12e709920b Constify string parameters to add_mountpoint_entry()
add_mountpoint_entry() doesn't modify the passed strings so use
pass-by-constant-reference.  This avoids pass-by-value and having to
construct copies of the strings just to pass them to this method.
2022-05-31 17:04:10 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 59b3fd068f Always use directory mount point when resizing btrfs (#193)
A user received the following error when attempting to resize a mounted
btrfs file system on their NixOS distribution:

    Shrink /dev/nvme0n1p3 from 933.38 GiB to 894.32 GiB        (ERROR)
    + calibrate /dev/nvme0n1p3  00:00:00                       (SUCCESS)
    + btrfs filesystem resize 1:937759744K '/etc/machine-id'   (ERROR)
        ERROR: not a directory: /etc/machine-id
        ERROR: resize works on mounted filesystems and accepts only
        directories as argument. Passing file containing a btrfs image
        would resize the underlying filesystem instead of the image.

In the partition table section of the gparted_details /dev/nvme0n1p3 was
reported with these mount points:
    /etc/machine-id, /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections,
    /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key, /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key.pub,
    /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key, /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key.pub, /home,
    /nix, /nix/store, /state, /var

The user had a common configuration of NixOS which boots with an empty
tmpfs as root with a few bind mounted files and directories to provide
the needed persistent data [1][2].

Re-create an equivalent situation:
1. Create a btrfs file system and mount it:
    # mkfs.btrfs /dev/sdb1
    # mkdir /mnt/store
    # mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/store

2. Bind mount a file from this file system else where in the hierarchy.
   The only criteria is that this mount point sorts before /mnt/store.
    # echo 'Test contents' > /mnt/store/test
    # touch /boot/test
    # mount --bind /mnt/store/test /boot/test

  The kernel reports these mount mounts:
    # grep sdb1 /proc/mounts
    /dev/sdb1 /mnt/store btrfs rw,seclabel,relatime,space_cache=v2,subvolid=5,subvol=/ 0 0
    /dev/sdb1 /boot/test btrfs rw,seclabel,relatime,space_cache=v2,subvolid=5,subvol=/ 0 0

3. Use GParted to resize this mounted btrfs file system.  It fails with
   the above error.

GParted read the mount points from /proc/mounts and sorted them.  (See
the end of Mount_Info::load_cache() for the sorting).  When resizing the
btrfs file system GParted just used the first sorted mount point.  This
was the file /etc/machine-id for the user and file /boot/test in the
re-creation, hence the error.

Fix by selecting the first directory mount point to pass to the btrfs
resize command.

[1] NixOS tmpfs as root
    https://elis.nu/blog/2020/05/nixos-tmpfs-as-root/
[2] Erase your darlings
    https://grahamc.com/blog/erase-your-darlings

Closes #193 - path used to resize btrfs needs to be a directory
2022-05-31 17:04:10 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 1950a7a09d Report busy status of jbds (#89)
Continuing from the state in the previous commit, create an ext4 file
system using the previously created external journal and mount it.
    # mke2fs -t ext4 -J device=/dev/sdb1 -L test-ext4 /dev/sdb2
    # mount /dev/sdb2 /mnt/2

Did some experimenting with trying to create a second file system using
the same external journal which is already in use.
    # mke2fs -t ext4 -J device=/dev/sdb1 -L 2nd-test-ext4 /dev/sdb3
    ...
    /dev/sdb1 is apparently in use by the system; will not make a journal here!
    # exit $?
    1

Examined the source code of mke2fs and found that it performs an
exclusive read-only open of the named journal block device to check if
it is in use by the system or not [1].  Use the same method in GParted.

Not used alternative method would be to mark the jbd active when the
ext3/4 file system using it is active, but that requires working out the
linkage between them.  That can be done using either blkid or dumpe2fs
output but that involves parsing more fields and caching more data so is
much more code than just testing the block device busy status using the
same method which mke2fs uses.

Matching UUIDs via blkid output.
    # blkid /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdb2
    /dev/sdb1: LABEL="test-jbd" UUID="6e52858e-0479-432f-80a1-de42f9a4093e" TYPE="jbd"
    /dev/sdb2: LABEL="test-ext4" UUID="cea5c2cd-b21c-4abf-a497-8c073bb12300" EXT_JOURNAL="6e52858e-0479-432f-80a1-de42f9a4093e" TYPE="ext4"

Matching UUIDs via dumpe2fs output.
    # dumpe2fs -h /dev/sdb1 | egrep 'Filesystem UUID|Journal users'
    dumpe2fs 1.46.3 (27-Jul-2021)
    Filesystem UUID:          6e52858e-0479-432f-80a1-de42f9a4093e
    Journal users:            cea5c2cd-b21c-4abf-a497-8c073bb12300
    # dumpe2fs -h /dev/sdb2 | egrep 'Filesystem UUID|Journal UUID'
    dumpe2fs 1.46.3 (27-Jul-2021)
    Filesystem UUID:          cea5c2cd-b21c-4abf-a497-8c073bb12300
    Journal UUID:             6e52858e-0479-432f-80a1-de42f9a4093e

If GParted was going to show the journal to file system linkage in the
UI then doing this would be needed.  However so far there has only been
a single reported case of a GParted user using an external journal,
therefore adding the code complexity for this feature is not currently
justified.  The simple busy detection method used by mke2fs is all that
is needed.

[1] mke2fs source code
    https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/ext2/e2fsprogs.git/
    misc/mke2fs.c:main()
        check_mount(journal_device, force, _("journal"));
    misc/util.c:check_mount()
        ext2fs_check_if_mounted(device, &mount_flags);
    lib/ext2fs/ismounted.c:ext2fs_check_if_mounted()
        ext2fs_check_mount_point(file, mount_flags, NULL, 0);
    lib/ext2fs/ismounted.c:ext2fs_check_if_mounted()
        if (stat(device, &st_buf) == 0 &&
            ext2fsP_is_disk_device(st_buf.st_mode)) {
                int fd = open(device, O_RDONLY | O_EXCL);
                if (fd >= 0) {
                        /*
                         * The device is not busy so it's
                         * definitelly not mounted. No need to
                         * to perform any more checks.
                         */
                        close(fd);
                        *mount_flags = 0;
                        return 0;
                } else if (errno == EBUSY) {
                        busy = 1;
                }
        }

Closes #89 - GParted doesn't recognise EXT4 fs journal partition
2022-03-06 16:27:20 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 157d4e7470 Recognise jbd (journaling block device) (#89)
A user reported that they were using an external journal with an ext4
file system, but that GParted didn't recognise it.  (They had the jbd
on an Intel Optane drive and the ext4 file system on an SSD).

Create a jbd like this:
    # mke2fs -O journal_dev -L test-jbd /dev/sdb1
    # blkid /dev/sdb1
    /dev/sdb1: LABEL="test-jbd" UUID="6e52858e-0479-432f-80a1-de42f9a4093e" TYPE="jbd"

Add recognition of jbd.  Use Blue Shadow colour, the same as ext4,
because jbd is primarily used by ext3/4 [1][2].  jbd is also used by
ocfs2 [1][3] and lustre [4][5] clustered file systems, but they are very
unlikely to encountered by GParted users.  Also xfs [6] and jfs [7] can
have external journals so if recognition of them is ever added they will
get the same colour as their respective file systems too.

[1] Journaling block device
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journaling_block_device
    "JBD is filesystem-independent. ext3, ext4 and OCFS2 are known to
    use JBD"
[2] https://ext4.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Frequently_Asked_Questions#What_are_the_key_differences_between_jbd_and_jbd2.3F
[3] OCFS2: The Oracle Clustered File System, Version 2
    https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2006/ols2006v1-pages-289-302.pdf
    "Metadata journaling is done on a per node basis with JBD"
[4] Efficient Object Storage Journaling in a Distributed Parallel File
    System
    https://www.usenix.org/legacy/event/fast10/tech/full_papers/oral.pdf
[5] Lustre Software Release 2.x Operations Manual
    https://doc.lustre.org/lustre_manual.pdf
    6.4.2. Choosing Parameters for an External Journal
[6] mkfs.xfs(8) - construct an XFS filesystem
    https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man8/mkfs.xfs.8.html
    "OPTIONS
    ...
    logdev=device
        This is used to specify that the log section should reside on
        the device separate from the data section.  The internal=1 and
        logdev options are mutually exclusive.
    "
[7] jfs_mkfs(8) - create a JFS formatted partition
    https://manpages.debian.org/testing/jfsutils/jfs_mkfs.8.en.html
    "OPTIONS
    ...
    -j journal_device
        Create the external JFS journal on journal_device, ...
    "

Closes #89 - GParted doesn't recognise EXT4 fs journal partition
2022-03-06 16:27:20 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 013c992428 Show bcache device as mount point of registered backing device (#183)
A bcache device provides accelerated access to a backing device in a one
to one relationship.  Multiple bcache backing devices can be attached to
and accelerated by the same cache device.  Extending the setup from the
previous commit, create an additional backing device and attach it to
the same cache.
    # bcache make -B /dev/sdb2
    # bcache attach /dev/sdc1 /dev/sdb2
    # bcache show
    Name        Type        State            Bname     AttachToDev
    /dev/sdb2   1 (data)    clean(running)   bcache1   /dev/sdc1
    /dev/sdb1   1 (data)    clean(running)   bcache0   /dev/sdc1
    /dev/sdc1   3 (cache)   active           N/A       N/A

List a couple of bcache specific sysfs files which identify registered
(active) bcache devices (components).
    # ls -l /sys/block/sd?/sd??/bcache/{dev,set}
    lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 0 Jan  7 10:08 /sys/block/sdb/sdb1/bcache/dev -> ../../../../../../../../../../virtual/block/bcache0
    lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 0 Jan  7 11:53 /sys/block/sdb/sdb2/bcache/dev -> ../../../../../../../../../../virtual/block/bcache1
    lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 0 Jan  7 11:53 /sys/block/sdc/sdc1/bcache/set -> ../../../../../../../../../../../fs/bcache/9945e165-0604-4f29-94bd-b155d01080ad

As was done with previous software block devices [1][2][3][4] show the
bcache (access) device as the mount point of a backing device
(component).  Use the /sys/block/DEV[/PTN]/bcache/dev sysfs symlinks to
provide the bcache device names.  Bcache cache devices (components)
don't get mount points because they aren't accessible.

[1] commit 8083f11d84
    Display LVM2 VGNAME as the PV's mount point (#160787)
[2] commit f6c2f00df7
    Populate member mount point with SWRaid array device (#756829)
[3] commit 538c866d09
    Display array device as mount point of mdadm started ATARAID members
    (#75)
[4] commit 538c866d09
    Display array device as mount point of mdadm started ATARAID members
    (#75)

Closes #183 - Basic support for bcache
2022-03-01 16:58:46 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 5d86c616a8 Report busy status of bcache (#183)
Make (format as) bcache backing device (-B) and cache device (-C) and
implicitly attach the backing device to the cache to enable caching, all
in one.
    # bcache make -B /dev/sdb1 -C /dev/sdc1
    # bcache show
    Name        Type        State            Bname     AttachToDev
    /dev/sdb1   1 (data)    clean(running)   bcache0   /dev/sdc1
    /dev/sdc1   3 (cache)   active           N/A       N/A

After experimenting with 'bcache unregister', 'bcache register' and
stracing 'bcache show' the bcache kernel module creates the sysfs
directory /sys/block/DEV[/PTN]/bcache and it's contents only when the
bcache device is registered with the kernel (bcache component is
active).  Use this to identify whether any bcache device (component)
should be displayed as active or not in GParted.
    # ls -ld /sys/block/sd?/sd?1/bcache
    drwxr-xr-x. 6 root root 0 Jan  7 10:08 /sys/block/sdb/sdb1/bcache
    drwxr-xr-x. 2 root root 0 Jan  7 10:08 /sys/block/sdc/sdc1/bcache

Closes #183 - Basic support for bcache
2022-03-01 16:58:46 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood f1920e306b Also pass device_path into GParted_Core::is_busy() (#183)
Will use this extra parameter when determining if a device or partition
containing bcache is busy or not.

Closes #183 - Basic support for bcache
2022-03-01 16:58:46 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood e5041954cf Add detection of bcache (#183)
Use blkid to detect bcache formatted devices.  Requires blkid from
util-linux >= 2.24 for detection of bcache devices [1].

Use util-linux's FS images when testing GParted detection.
    # wget http://git.kernel.org/cgit/utils/util-linux/util-linux.git/plain/tests/ts/blkid/images-fs/bcache-B.img.xz
    # xzcat bcache-B.img.xz > /dev/sdb1
    # wget http://git.kernel.org/cgit/utils/util-linux/util-linux.git/plain/tests/ts/blkid/images-fs/bcache-C.img.xz
    # xzcat bcache-C.img.xz > /dev/sdc1
    # blkid /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1
    /dev/sdb1: UUID="8fb7f716-4c19-4517-bfbb-6f4a2becad60" TYPE="bcache" PARTUUID="f8f1485e-01"
    /dev/sdc1: UUID="7a343627-ac87-4bf0-b76f-46067cbc9b8c" TYPE="bcache" PARTUUID="f46e8c86-01"

To tidy-up after testing GParted detection, stop the bcache device in
case it was automatically started and wipe the signatures.  This is to
prevent udev rules from automatically starting the bcache device on
every subsequent reboot.
    # echo 1 > /sys/block/sdb/sdb1/bcache/stop
    # wipefs -a /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1

Closes #183 - Basic support for bcache
2022-03-01 16:58:46 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 29a4fb4504 Return and use constant reference from SWRaid_Info::get_label() (!94)
Closes !94 - Make more getter methods use return-by-constant-reference
2021-11-16 16:08:17 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 0eedfa6030 Return constant reference from SWRaid_Info::get_uuid() (!94)
Since the only use of SWRaid_Info::get_uuid() assign the returned value
this doesn't actually save any copy construction.  Do it for consistency
with the other get_*() methods in SWRaid_Info.

Closes !94 - Make more getter methods use return-by-constant-reference
2021-11-16 16:08:17 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood b38ee9c8ac Return and use constant reference from SWRaid::get_array() (!94)
Have to use a second constant reference variable array_path_2 in
GParted_Core::set_mountpoints() because by design C++ does not implement
rebinding of references [1].

[1] why doesn't C++ allow rebinding a reference?
    https://stackoverflow.com/questions/27037744/why-doesnt-c-allow-rebinding-a-reference

Closes !94 - Make more getter methods use return-by-constant-reference
2021-11-16 16:08:17 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 901f03c19d Return constant reference from OperationDetail::get_treepath() (!94)
Closes !94 - Make more getter methods use return-by-constant-reference
2021-11-16 16:08:17 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 1f6e81295b Return constant reference from OperationDetail::get_description() (!94)
All uses of get_description() copy construct to a local variable, not
assign to a reference, so this doesn't save anything.  It is just being
done to be consistent with making other getters return a constant
reference.

Closes !94 - Make more getter methods use return-by-constant-reference
2021-11-16 16:08:17 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood c35422a70c Return and use constant reference from LVM2_PV_Info::get_vg_name() (!94)
Closes !94 - Make more getter methods use return-by-constant-reference
2021-11-16 16:08:17 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood a8e8e9fd97 Return and use constant reference from Partition::get_mountpoints() (!94)
Closes !94 - Make more getter methods use return-by-constant-reference
2021-11-16 16:08:17 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood b3f1c22860 Return and use constant reference from Partition::get_mountpoint() (!94)
Closes !94 - Make more getter methods use return-by-constant-reference
2021-11-16 16:08:17 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood c8f640655c Return and use constant reference from Partition::get_filesystem_label() (!94)
Closes !94 - Make more getter methods use return-by-constant-reference
2021-11-16 16:08:17 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 301690d9ff Return and use constant reference from Partition::get_path() (!94)
Closes !94 - Make more getter methods use return-by-constant-reference
2021-11-16 16:08:17 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 21dd6fe00b Return and use constant reference from Device::get_path() (!94)
A number of GParted methods named get_*() are returning properties and
are return-by-value.  For objects this implies the returned value is
copy constructed and later destroyed when it goes out of scope.  Change
them to use return-by-constant-reference to avoid unnecessary object
duplication.  Just have to make sure the reference goes out of scope
before the referenced object is destroyed to avoid having a reference
(pointer) to freed memory.  Assigning to a local variable instead of
of a local reference still duplicates the object so can be used when the
lifetime of the gotten object needs to be longer that the referenced
object.

Previously done for other getters here:
    d948cbcb91
    Make get_custom_text() and get_generic_text() return by reference

This change just makes Device::get_path() return a constant reference
and updates uses to match to avoid copy constructing the returned value.

Closes !94 - Make more getter methods use return-by-constant-reference
2021-11-16 16:08:17 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood aab269cc53 Make MB_Needed_for_Boot_Record() a static member function
Because it doesn't access any member variables or call any member
methods.
2021-10-27 15:04:20 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood ba1bafc5ac Replace /proc/mounts grep with Mount_Info cache reload and query (!89)
Creating a grep process to check if a particular mount is still mounted
is an unnecessary overhead.  All that is needed is for the Mount_Info
module to refresh it's copy of /proc/mounts and query that.

To keep the code as simple as possible just reload the whole of the
Mount_Info module and query the mount cache to determine if the
particular block device is still mounted at this particular mount point.
This therefore re-reads /proc/mounts (necessary) and /proc/swaps and
/etc/fstab (unnecessary).  This is still much less overhead than
creating a separate grep process.

Closes !89 - Fix unmount error when unmounting below a bind mount point
2021-09-17 15:56:10 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood a7f9ec65cf Reorder parameters to add_mountpoint_entry()
To match the order of the members in struct MountEntry.
2021-08-14 15:57:20 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood f5e6239452 Extract common code into Mount_Info::lookup_uuid_or_label() (#162)
Closes #162 - It is no longer possible to mount a LUKS encrypted file
              system
2021-08-14 15:57:20 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 49747f656d Resolve UUID= and LABEL= refs when searching Mount_Info (#162)
Implemented the second half of the solution described in the previous
commit.  Resolve UUID= and LABEL= references when searching in the
Mount_Info cache so that mount points of encrypted file systems listed
in /etc/fstab can be found using the later added FS_Info details.

Closes #162 - It is no longer possible to mount a LUKS encrypted file
              system
2021-08-14 15:57:20 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood cf5a264b0e White space tidy-up some of DialogFeatures 2021-07-30 16:12:24 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 47960037f7 Show online file system labelling in the Features dialog (#163)
Show support for online labelling using a second tick mark in the
Features dialog.  This matches how online grow and shrink are shown.

Closes #163 - Feature request: set label on a mounted btrfs
2021-07-30 16:12:24 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood eb034b1759 Add labelling of mounted btrfs (#163)
Btrfs supports labelling of the file system while it is mounted.  This
was added into Linux kernel 3.10 [1] and btrfs-progs 3.12 [2].  As the
oldest supported distributions have the needed versions or newer,
unconditionally enable without any checking for availability.

    Distro             EOL        Linux kernel   btrfs-progs
    Debian 9           2022-Jun   4.19           4.7.3
    RHEL / CentOS 7    2024-Jun   3.10.0         4.9.1
    Ubuntu 18.04 LTS   2023-Apr   4.15.0         4.15.1

Unmounted btrfs is labelled via the block device containing it, where as
a mounted btrfs is labelled via it's mount point.

    # mkfs.btrfs -L initial_label /dev/sdb1
    # blkid /dev/sdb1
    /dev/sdb1: LABEL="initial_label" ...

    # btrfs filesystem label /dev/sdb1 unmounted_label_2
    # blkid /dev/sdb1
    /dev/sdb1: LABEL="unmounted_label_2" ...

    # mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/1
    # btrfs filesystem label /dev/sdb1 mounted_label_3
    # blkid /dev/sdb1
    /dev/sdb1: LABEL="mounted_label_3" ...

[1] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=a8bfd4abea3da0e28f215e2a2b8c2f1ca27ebe80
    Btrfs: set/change the label of a mounted file system
[2] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kdave/btrfs-progs.git/commit/?id=619dc61cae1420da2dec48f689d49b9b346abc15
    Btrfs-progs: Change the label of a mounted file system

Closes #163 - Feature request: set label on a mounted btrfs
2021-07-30 16:12:24 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood c4ca7d3e9b Mark remaining get_filesystem_*() methods as returning const strings 2021-04-25 15:49:35 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 5752682c12 Report this LUKS passphrase request reason as resize (#59)
So far when prompting for the LUKS passphrase the dialog always looks
like this:

    +------------------------------------------------+
    |           LUKS Passphrase /dev/sdb1            |
    +------------------------------------------------+
    | Enter LUKS passphrase to open /dev/sdb1        |
    | Passphrase:    [                             ] |
    |                                                |
    |                                                |
    |                          [ Cancel ] [ Unlock ] |
    +------------------------------------------------+

Specifically the first line of the dialog says the reason to provide the
passphrase is to open the encryption mapping.  Now the passphrase may
also be requested when resizing the encryption mapping, as part of a
resize of check operation, show the appropriate reason in the password
dialog.

Closes #59 - Resize of LUKS2 encrypted file system fails with "Nothing
             to read on input"
2021-04-25 15:49:35 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood d7503fd5ed Add ability for small writes to stdin of operation tracked child processes (#59)
This is the equivalent to what was previously done when adding opening
of LUKS mappings.  Namely to add a way to pass the LUKS passphrase to
'cryptsetup luksOpen' via standard input.  Previously the functionality
was added to Utils::execute_command() [1].  Now it is also needed to
pass the LUKS passphrase to 'cryptsetup resize', which is executed as
part of applying resize and check operations to an encrypted file
system.  So add this functionality to FileSystem::execute_command().

For now writing to stdin is only needed for the one variant of
FileSystem::execute_command() which doesn't have progress tracking
callbacks.  Writing to stdin can easily be added to the other progress
tracking callback variants of execute_command() when needed.

[1] 8dff80edc6
    Add ability for small writes to stdin of child processes (#795617)

Closes #59 - Resize of LUKS2 encrypted file system fails with "Nothing
             to read on input"
2021-04-25 15:49:35 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 2ccbc3ec92 Extract common code into generate_encryption_mapping_name() (#59)
Closes #59 - Resize of LUKS2 encrypted file system fails with "Nothing
             to read on input"
2021-04-25 15:49:35 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 83abcd8873 Ask for LUKS passphrase for resize operation as required (#59)
When composing a resize operation on an open encryption mapping, use the
existing LUKS password dialog to prompt for the passphrase, if and only
if 'cryptsetup resize' will prompt and GParted doesn't already have a
password.  'cryptsetup resize' will prompt for a LUKS passphrase when
the passphrase was stored in the kernel keyring service,
key_loc == KEYLOC_KeyRing.  See the previous commit "Capture LUKS
mapping master encryption key location (#59)" for more details.

As commented in the code GParted specifically doesn't support the case
where the LUKS passphrase is changed while GParted is running and it
knew the old passphrase.  When resizing an open encryption mapping
GParted will just pass the old out of date passphrase it knows and the
resize will fail like this:

    # cryptsetup status sdb2_crypt | egrep 'type|key location'
      type:         LUKS2
      key location: keyring
    # dmsetup table --target crypt
    sdb2_crypt: 0 491520 crypt aes-xts-plain64 :64:logon:cryptsetup:3d040240-97ba-4559-af98-72c3be500498-d0 0 8:18 32768

    # echo -n oldpassword | cryptsetup -v --size 491520 resize sdb2_crypt
    No key available with this passphrase.
    Command failed with code -2 (no permission or bad passphrase).
    # echo $?
    2

To work around this either close and restart GParted or close and reopen
the encryption mapping.  The former because GParted doesn't save
passwords across a restart so will prompt and the latter because GParted
will use the wrong old passphrase to try to open the mapping and then
prompt for the correct passphrase until successfully opened.

Closes #59 - Resize of LUKS2 encrypted file system fails with "Nothing
             to read on input"
2021-04-25 15:49:35 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 099b85fe18 Capture LUKS mapping master encryption key location (#59)
ISSUE OVERVIEW

When GParted tries to resize an open LUKS encryption mapping and the
volume (master) key was stored in the kernel keyring service [1] it
fails like this:

    Check and repair file system ([Encrypted] ext4) on /dev/...(ERROR)
    + calibrate /dev/sdd1                                      (SUCCESS)
    + check file system on /dev/mapper/sdd1_crypt for errors...(SUCCESS)
    + grow encryption volume to fill the partition             (ERROR)
      + cryptsetup -v resize 'sdd1_crypt'                      (ERROR)
          Command failed with code -1 (wrong or missing parameters).
          Nothing to read on input.

This error occurs with cryptsetup >= 2.0, kernel >= 4.10 and LUKS2
format because the crypt Device-Mapper target no longer has the volume
key so cryptsetup resize prompts for a passphrase, but GParted doesn't
provide it.

THIS COMMIT

Additionally capture the location of the volume (master) key location
for active encryption mappings.  Do this the using the same method that
cryptsetup uses [2][3].  Namely if the first character of the KEY is a
":" then the key *was* stored in the kernel keyring service, otherwise
it *is* store in the Device-Mapper crypt target as previously.

    # echo -n badpassword | cryptsetup luksFormat --type luks1 /dev/sdb1 -
    # echo -n badpassword | cryptsetup luksOpen /dev/sdb1 sdb1_crypt
    # cryptsetup status sdb1_crypt | egrep 'type|key location'
      type:         LUKS1
      key location: dm-crypt

    # echo -n badpassword | cryptsetup luksFormat --type luks2 /dev/sdb2 -
    # echo -n badpassword | cryptsetup luksOpen /dev/sdb2 sdb2_crypt
    # cryptsetup status sdb2_crypt | egrep 'type|key location'
      type:         LUKS2
      key location: keyring

    # dmsetup table --target crypt
    sdb1_crypt: 0 520192 crypt aes-xts-plain64 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 0 8:17 4096
    sdb2_crypt: 0 491520 crypt aes-xts-plain64 :64:logon:cryptsetup:3d040240-97ba-4559-af98-72c3be500498-d0 0 8:18 32768
                                               ^
First character of the KEY field --------------'

[1] Integration with the kernel keyring service
    https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/blob/v2.0.0/docs/Keyring.txt
    "
    Starting with cryptsetup 2.0 we load [Volume Key] VK in kernel
    keyring by default for LUKSv2 devices ...

    In summary, the key description visible in dm-crypt table line is a
    reference to VK that usually no longer exists in kernel keyring
    service if you used cryptsetup to for device activation.
    "

[2] cryptsetup/v2.3.5/lib/libdevmapper.c:_dm_target_query_crypt()
    https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/-/blob/v2.3.5/lib/libdevmapper.c#L2031
        if (key_[0] == ':')
            *act_flags |= CRYPT_ACTIVATE_KEYRING_KEY;

[3] cryptsetup/v2.3.5/src/cryptsetup.c:action_status()
    https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/-/blob/v2.3.5/src/cryptsetup.c#L839
        log_std("  key location: %s\n", (cad.flags & CRYPT_ACTIVATE_KEYRING_KEY) ? "keyring" : "dm-crypt");

Closes #59 - Resize of LUKS2 encrypted file system fails with "Nothing
             to read on input"
2021-04-25 15:49:35 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood c4ef43aa5d Remove coding landmine in get_disk() (#152)
get_disk() is the wrapper around libparted's ped_disk_new() which reads
a disk label from the specified device and if successful creates the in
memory PedDisk object to represent it.  In the case that libparted
doesn't recognise a disk label or a file system, having get_disk() go
and destroy the passed in PedDevice object via parameter lp_device is
very unexpected behaviour hence describing it as a coding landmine.

BACKGROUND

1. Early on GParted only worked with devices with valid disk labels.
   FileSystem.h:open_device_and_disk() required both ped_device_get()
   and ped_disk_new() to succeed or neither to succeed.
2. Commit [1] added support for devices which didn't yet have a disk
   label.  open_device_and_disk() had default parameter strict=true
   added.  While scanning strict=false was passed which allowed
   open_device_and_disk() to return success if only ped_device_get()
   succeeded and ped_disk_new() failed when the disk was empty.  All
   other times open_device_and_disk() was called with default
   strict=true, still requiring both or neither to succeed.
3. Commit [2] added support for whole disk file systems.  The now named
   get_device_and_disk() had it's functionality split between
   get_device() and get_disk().  This result in the code landmine being
   left behind: get_disk() destroying the passed device object if
   default parameter strict=true and no disk label or file system was
   detected.

ANALYSIS

1. Since support for whole disk file systems [2] all current calls to
   get_device_and_disk() let the strict parameter default to true and
   are only called on known partitions within disk labels when applying
   a change to that partition.  Therefore they don't care about the
   behaviour of get_disk(), just that get_device_and_disk() maintains
   that both ped_device_get() and ped_disk_new() succeed or neither
   succeed.
2. Two direct calls to get_disk() where the strict parameter defaults to
   true, from calibrate_partition() and erase_filesystem_signatures(),
   only do so on known partitions within disk labels as part of applying
   a change to that partition.  Therefore ped_disk_new() will succeed
   and so PedDevice isn't deleted when not wanted.
3. The two remaining direct calls to get_disk() where the strict
   parameter is explicitly set to false, from set_device_from_disk() and
   detect_filesystem_in_encryption_mapping(), are when scanning.  As the
   pass strict=false they don't allow the PedDevice deletion to occur if
   no recognised disk label is found.

FIX

Remove the strict parameter from get_disk() and get_device_and_disk() as
it's no longer needed.  Remove the code landmine by removing the side
affect of destroying the PedDevice object if a disk label isn't found.
Make sure get_device_and_disk() maintains the all or nothing behaviour.

Also don't pass lp_device by reference to a pointer to get_disk() so the
code can't change where lp_device points.

[1] 038c5c5d99
    P (special thanks to mantiena-baltix for bringing this issue to my

[2] 51ac4d5648
    Split get_device_and_disk() into two (#743181)

Closes #152 - GParted crashed when trying to probe an encrypted
              partition containing content that libparted doesn't
              recognise
2021-04-15 16:33:01 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 8280f3eedc Correctly const and assert detect_filesystem() parameters (#152)
As discussed in the previous commit "Don't crash probing libparted
unrecognised encrypted file system (#152)", detect_filesystem() accepted
a NULL lp_device pointer and dereferenced it leading to the crash.
Document the requirement for lp_device parameter to be non-NULL via an
assert and also correctly const the parameters.

This forces needing to const the lp_partition parameter to
get_partition_path() too.  Also assert it's non-NULL requirement.

Closes #152 - GParted crashed when trying to probe an encrypted
              partition containing content that libparted doesn't
              recognise
2021-04-15 16:33:01 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 1e91cb831b Extract some code into detect_filesystem_in_encryption_mapping() (#148)
To avoid making set_luks_partition() more complicated extract the file
system detection portion into a new function.

Closes 148 - Encrypted file systems are no longer recognised
2021-04-03 17:02:04 +00:00
Mike Fleetwood 1e813d83a5 Make FS_Info (blkid) cache incrementally loadable (#148)
Since changes for issue #131 "GParted hangs when non-named device is
hung" FS_Info cache is initialised, cleared and loaded via one call to
load_cache_for_paths().  It runs blkid for named or found disk devices
and associated found partitions from /proc/partitions, rather than
running blkid and letting it report for all block devices.

To avoid the possibility of using blkid on an encryption mapping on a
non-specified and possibly hung block device GParted can't just specify
all encryption mappings.  Instead only encryption mappings which belong
to the above identified block devices should be probed.  That requires
identifying LUKS encryption data in the block devices first so will
require subsequently loading additional data into the FS_Info cache and
running blkid again.

To accommodate this make the FS_Info cache incrementally loadable,
rather than doing everything in a single call to load_cache_for_paths().
Have a separate clear_cache() call which initialises and clears the
cache and make load_cache_for_paths() just run blkid and insert data for
the named paths.

Closes 148 - Encrypted file systems are no longer recognised
2021-04-03 17:02:04 +00:00