Windows places filenames with a trailing dot or space in the Win32
namespace and allows setting DOS names on such files. This is true even
though on Windows such filenames can only be created and accessed using
WinNT-style paths and will confuse most Windows software. Regardless,
because libntfs-3g did not allow setting DOS names on such files, in
some cases it was impossible to correctly restore, using libntfs-3g, a
directory structure that was created under Windows.
Update ntfs_set_ntfs_dos_name() to permit operating on a file that has a
long name with a trailing dot or space. But continue to forbid creating
such names on a filesystem FUSE-mounted with the windows_name option.
Additionally, continue to forbid a trailing a dot or space in DOS names;
this matches the Windows behavior.
(contributed by Eric Biggers)
Following a recent patch to the fuse kernel, the Posix ACL checks can
be done within the kernel instead of having to be done in the file
system, provided lowntfs-3g is used.
This mode is still not used by default until the fuse patch is
released by distributions.
Now that the size of the reparse point attribute is no longer used by
the FUSE drivers to populate st_size for symlinks and junctions, it no
longer needs to be returned by ntfs_make_symlink().
(contributed by Eric Biggers)
The validation contained an off-by-one error. The
expression '(u32)(usa_ofs + (usa_count * 2)) > size' used 'usa_count'
after it had been decremented to skip the update sequence number entry.
Consequently, the code could read out of bounds, up to two bytes past the
end of the MST-protected record.
Furthermore, as documented in the comment in layout.h for "NTFS_RECORD"
and also on MSDN for "MULTI_SECTOR_HEADER", the update sequence array
must end before the last le16 in the first logical sector --- not merely
before the end of the record.
Fix the validation and move it into a helper function, as it was done
identically in the read and write paths.
Signed-off-by: Eric Biggers <ebiggers3@gmail.com>
Currently, applications that wish to access security descriptors have to
explicitly open the volume's security descriptor index ("$Secure") using
ntfs_open_secure(). Applications are also responsible for closing the
index when done with it. However, the cleanup function for doing,
ntfs_close_secure(), cannot be called easily by all applications because
it requires a SECURITY_CONTEXT argument, not simply the ntfs_volume.
Some applications therefore have to close the inode and index contexts
manually in order to clean up properly.
This proposal updates libntfs-3g to open $Secure unconditonally as part
of ntfs_mount(), so that applications do not have to worry about it.
This proposal updates libntfs-3g to open $Secure unconditonally as part
of ntfs_mount(), so that applications do not have to worry about it.
ntfs_close_secure() is updated to take in a ntfs_volume for internal use,
and ntfs_destroy_security_context() is now the function to call to free
memory associated with a SECURITY_CONTEXT rather than a ntfs_volume.
Some memory leaks in error paths of ntfs_open_secure() are also fixed.
Signed-off-by: Eric Biggers <ebiggers3@gmail.com>
A number of functions in libntfs-3g are generally useful, but are tied to
extended attributes support and are not included when the library is
built on platforms without extended attributes support.
This proposal updates libntfs-3g to always include these functions.
The only tricky part is dealing with the XATTR_CREATE and XATTR_REPLACE
flags. These flags are defined in <sys/xattr.h>, so they must be
redefined on platforms without extended attributes support.
Signed-off-by: Eric Biggers <ebiggers3@gmail.com>
- Update documentation for COLLATION_RULES
- Document how ntfs_names_full_collate() compares names
- Update comments and DEBUG code to reflect that ntfs_names_full_collate()
always access 'upcase', even in CASE_SENSITIVE mode
- Remove unneeded assignments to 'c1' and 'c2' in IGNORE_CASE mode
Signed-off-by: Eric Biggers <ebiggers3@gmail.com>
When a plugin cannot be initialized a ELIBBAD error is returned on Linux
and OpenIndiana. As this is not a Posix error code, use ENOEXEC on
systems which do not define ELIBBAD.
Prepare merging ntfsrecover.h into logfile.h by adding a usn field to
RESTART_PAGE_HEADER. As this changes the record size, ignore the new
field in existing code.
User extended attributes should only be set on files and directories,
not on symlinks, sockets, devices, etc. For safety they are also
forbidden on metadata files, but should be allowed on the root
directory. For files based on reparse points, requests are made
to the plugin to determine the type.
Kernel cacheing of file attributes is usually not used by ntfs-3g,
because it has defects when dealing with hard linked files and directory
permission checks. Kernel cacheing is however possible when using
lowntfs-3g and not using Posix ACLs.
The new "system compression" files used by Windows 10 make use of reparse
points to record the compression parameters, and a specific named data
stream is used to store the compressed data. With this patch, processing
of reparse points can be done by an external plugin only loaded as needed.
Junctions and symlinks, which are also based on reparse points, are now
processed by "internal plugins".
On the OpenIndiana Hipster distribution, compiling with GCC 4.9 would
fail because __BYTE_ORDER__ was defined but not to any of the values
assumed to be associated with this define (__LITTLE_ENDIAN__ or
__BIG_ENDIAN__). Instead it was defined to either
__ORDER_LITTLE_ENDIAN__ or __ORDER_BIG_ENDIAN__. This caused
compilation to fail.
Fixed by checking that all referenced defines are in fact defined
before using them and adding an additional #elif clause for this newly
discovered condition.
This fixes compiler warnings emitted when you compare an le32 value with
e.g. 'const_cpu_to_le32(-1)' on a little-endian system, because
previously the expansion of the macro expression 'const_cpu_to_le32(-1)'
would be '(-1)' on a little-endian system but '(u32)((((u32)(-1) &
0xff000000u) >> 24) | (((u32)(-1) & 0x00ff0000u) >> 8) | (((u32)(-1) &
0x0000ff00u) << 8) | (((u32)(-1) & 0x000000ffu) << 24))' on a
big-endian system, i.e. the type of the expanded expression would be
'int' (signed) in the little-endian case but 'u32' (unsigned) in the
big-endian case.
With this commit the type of the expanded expression will be 'le32' in
both the little-endian and the big-endian case.
Strict checking of endian-specific types mean that types that have a
fixed endianness in the data representation of the value are now defined
as complex types, enabling the compiler to catch mixed usage of these
types with native-endian types. This allows us to catch most issues
relating to usage on big-endian systems since we cannot anymore assign a
fixed-endian value to a native-endian variable and vice-versa without a
compiler error.
The downside is that we aren't able to apply simple binary operators to
the fixed-endian types anymore since they are complex... so all
combining fixed-endian constants and values with |, &, etc. and
comparison with ==, !=, <=, etc. must be replaced with a macro which
unpacks the wrapped value and performs the operation. Lots of changes,
lots of work but in the interest of good code quality it's justified.