Starting OpenJDK 10, the 'javah' utility is no more provided [1], and
its functionality is provided by 'javac' itself. Hence, do not error
out on missing 'javah', and store whether it was found; in case it is
not, then:
1) assume 'javac' has the -h parameter to generate the C header, and
make use of it
2) tell the buildsystem that com_redhat_et_libguestfs_GuestFS.h depends
on the JAR, since the the header is generated at the step (1)
[1] https://bugs.java.com/view_bug.do?bug_id=JDK-8182758
The internal_yara_scan runs the Yara engine with the previously loaded
rules against the given file.
For each rule matching against the scanned file, a struct containing
the file name and the rule identifier is returned.
The gathered list of yara_detection structs is serialised into XDR format
and written to a file.
Signed-off-by: Matteo Cafasso <noxdafox@gmail.com>
In case there are no event handlers registered with the handle,
get_all_event_callbacks will count 0 elements, trying to malloc a buffer
of that size. POSIX says that this can result in either a null pointer,
or an unusable pointer.
Short-circuit get_all_event_callbacks to allocate nothing when there are
no events, making sure to use its results only when there were events.
The JNI library uses CLEANUP_FREE macros, whose functions are built in
the internal libutils. Currently, trying to use functions that use
CLEANUP_FREE variables will cause the java execution to stop with a
symbol lookup error (for guestfs_int_cleanup_free).
Just code motion.
This commit makes it clearer what is a utility and what is part of the
library. It also makes it clear that we should rename:
guestfs-internal-frontend.h -> utils.h
guestfs-internal-frontend-cleanups.h -> cleanups.h (?)
but this commit does not make that change.
Run the following command over the source:
perl -pi.bak -e 's/(20[01][0-9])-2016/$1-2017/g' `git ls-files`
(Thanks Rich for the perl snippet, as used in past years.)
By adding common CLEANFILES and DISTCLEANFILES variables to
common-rules.mk, we can remove these from most other Makefiles, and
also clean files more consistently.
Note that bin_PROGRAMS are already cleaned by 'make clean', so I
removed cases where these were unnecessarily added to CLEANFILES.
Add makefile variables to enable silent rules for simple command
invocations, such as ocamlc, ocamlopt, javac, and erlc.
This reduces the log output when building with silent rules, still
showing the full command lines otherwise.
- generator: Added tsk_dirent struct
The tsk_dirent struct contains the information gathered via TSK APIs.
The struct contains the following fields:
* tsk_inode: inode of a file
* tsk_type: type of file such as for dirwalk command
* tsk_size: file size in bytes
* tsk_name: path relative to its disk partition
* tsk_flags: bitfield containing extra information
* tsk_spare[1-5]: extra space for future usage
- configure: Added libtsk compile-time check
Ensure libtsk is available at compile time.
If not, daemon routines depending on it won't be available.
- API: internal_filesystem_walk
The internal_filesystem_walk command walks through the FS structures
of a disk partition and returns all the files or directories
which could be found.
The command is able to retrieve information regarding deleted
or unaccessible files where other commands such as stat or find
would fail.
The gathered list of tsk_dirent structs is serialised into XDR format
and written to a file by the appliance.
Signed-off-by: Matteo Cafasso <noxdafox@gmail.com>
Remove man pages and other pages which 'make clean' did not remove
before.
To evaluate which pages could be removed, I did a full build and
check, and then ran 'make clean' followed by 'git clean -xdf'. By
examining the output of the git clean command I could see which files
were being missed.
Files that are _not_ removed by make clean or make distclean:
- generator-built files
- Makefile, Makefile.in, .deps, .depend
- any ./configure output files (maybe they should be?)
Move the random set of HTML files we build from html/ into
the website/ directory.
Also in the website/ directory, put the index.html file from
http://libguestfs.org, which was previously not under version control.
It is generated from index.html.in so we can automatically add the
current version and release date.
Also in the website/ directory, put various CSS file, images, etc.
which are required by the website and were also previously not under
version control.
Change the 'make website' rule to 'make maintainer-upload-website'.
As the name suggests, it is only useful for the maintainer, and will
fail with an error for anyone else.
Done using a sequence of regular expressions like this:
perl -pi.bak -e 's{C</}{F</}g' `git ls-files \*.pod` generator/actions.ml
perl -pi.bak -e 's{C<C:\\}{F<C:\\}g' `git ls-files \*.pod` generator/actions.ml
[etc]
and then tediously checking every change by hand.
The existing APIs guestfs_stat, guestfs_lstat and guestfs_lstatlist
return a stat structure that contains atime, mtime and ctime fields
that store only the timestamp in seconds.
Modern filesystems can store timestamps down to nanosecond
granularity, and the ordinary glibc stat(2) wrapper will return these
in "hidden" stat fields:
struct timespec st_atim; /* Time of last access. */
struct timespec st_mtim; /* Time of last modification. */
struct timespec st_ctim; /* Time of last status change. */
with the following macros defined for backwards compatibility:
#define st_atime st_atim.tv_sec
#define st_mtime st_mtim.tv_sec
#define st_ctime st_ctim.tv_sec
It is not possible to redefine guestfs_stat to return a longer struct
guestfs_stat with room for the extra nanosecond fields, because that
would break the ABI of guestfs_lstatlist as it returns an array
containing consecutive stat structs (not pointers). Changing the
return type of guestfs_stat would break API. Changing the generator
to support symbol versioning is judged to be too intrusive.
Therefore this adds a new struct (guestfs_statns) and new APIs:
guestfs_statns
guestfs_lstatns
guestfs_lstatnslist
which return the new struct (or array of structs in the last case).
The old APIs may of course still be used, forever, but are deprecated
and shouldn't be used in new programs.
Because virt tools are compiled with -DGUESTFS_WARN_DEPRECATED=1, I
have updated all the places calling the deprecated functions. This
has revealed some areas for improvement: in particular virt-diff and
virt-ls could be changed to print the nanosecond fields.
FUSE now returns nanoseconds in stat calls where available, fixing
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1144891
Notes about the implementation:
- guestfs_internal_lstatlist has been removed and replaced by
guestfs_internal_lstatnslist. As the former was an internal API no
one should have been calling it, or indeed can call it unless they
start defining their own header files.
- guestfs_stat and guestfs_lstat have been changed into library-side
functions. They, along with guestfs_lstatlist, are now implemented
as wrappers around the new functions which just throw away the
nanosecond fields.
This changes podwrapper so that the input (POD) files should not
contain an =encoding directive. However they must be UTF-8.
Podwrapper then adds the '=encoding utf8' directive back during final
generation.
This in particular avoids problems with nested =encoding directives in
fragments. These break POD, and are undesirable anyway.
Replaces code such as:
fd = open "test1.img"
ftruncate fd, size
close fd
g.add_drive "test1.img"
with the shorter and simpler:
g.add_drive_scratch size
This file is mainly a central place to:
- include localenv if it exists, and
- define the RHEL 5 backwards compatibility macros, instead of
spreading them over every other file.