On systems with the option `use-keyboxd` enabled in config, option
`--no-keyring` in gpg command line doesn't work. The result of the
pubkey_id function will be the first key in the keybox keyring instead
of the id of pubkey from the depot user.
Fixesgenodelabs/genode#5235genodelabs/goa#92
separately. The "iommu" option is now split up into "iommu_intel" and
"iommu_amd" and thereby can be disabled easily if required for one of the CPU
vendors.
Fixes#5206
- no need to explicitly switch off vga anymore
- use vPID for VMs which improves TLB usage if multiple vCPUs on same
pCPU is used, which happens to happen on Sculpt.
- support for mwait by nova kernel, which is off by default
Issue #5206
The run tool overrides the 'exit'-procedure to make sure that a loaded
run_power_off procedure is always executed. However, a failing
run_power_off lead to false-positives: 'make run/...' exited with 0 even
tough the run script was not even executed because of a failed
power-on/off cycle. In this case, if the run_power_off is the exit code
producer, the new exit definition does not finish as intended. As a
result, the first exit code is re-written, and errors are not propagated
accordingly.
The solution is to catch possible errors from power-off within the exit
procedure.
Fixes genodelabs#5102
This disambiguates the boot images installed for base-hw from those
installed for base-nova.
Note that the image.elf file for other kernels (i.e., NOVA) is not
named image-<kernel>.elf at this point because this would prevent the
update from a pre-24.04 Sculpt system to a later one as the grub.cfg
is not touched by the old update mechanism. So after a system update,
grub would keep loading the last installed image.elf.
Issue #5182
* differentiates request types that where merged formerly per module;
e.g. instead of type Superblock_control::Request, there are now types
* Superblock_control::Read_vbas
* Superblock_control::Write_vbas
* Superblock_control::Rekey
* Superblock_control::Initialize
* ...
each holding only the state and functionality that is required for exactly
that request
* removes all classes of the Tresor module framework and adapts all
Tresor- and File-Vault- related libs, apps, and tests accordingly
* the former "channel" state is merged into the new request types, meaning, a
request manages no longer only the "call" to a functionality but
also the execution of that functionality; every request has a lifetime
equal to the "call" and an execute method to be driven forward
* state that is used by a request but has a longer lifetime (e.g. VFS file
handles in Tresor::Crypto) is managed by the top level
of the user and handed over via the execute arguments; however, the
synchronization of multiple requests on this state is done by the module
(e.g. Tresor::Crypto)
* requests are now driven explicitly as first argument of the (overloaded)
execute method of their module; the module can, however, stall a request
by returning false without doing anything (used for synchronization on
resources)
* introduces Request_helper, Generated_request and Generatable_request in the
Tresor namespace in order to avoid the redundancy of sub-request generation
and execution
* moves access to Client-Data pointers up to Tresor::Virtual_block_device in
order to simplify Tresor::Block_io and Tresor::Crypto
* removes Tresor::Client_data and introduces pure interface
Client_data_interface in order to remove Tresor::Client_data and
move management of Client Data to the top level of a Tresor user
* introduces pure interface Crypto_files_interface in order to move management
of Crypto files to the top level of a Tresor user
* moves management of Block-IO and Trust-Anchor files to the top level of a
Tresor user
* adapts all execute methods, so, that they return the progress state
instead of modifying a reference argument
* removes Tresor::Request_and Tresor:Request and instead implements
scheduling at the top level of the Tresor user
* the Tresor Tester uses a list as schedule that holds Command objects; this
list ensures, that commands are started in the order of configuration
the Command type is a merge of the state of all possible commands that can
be configured at the Tresor Tester; the actual Tresor requests (if any) are
then allocated on-demand only
* the Tresor VFS plugin does not use a dynamic data structure for scheduling;
the plugin has 5 members that each reflect a distinct type of operation:
* initialize operation
* deinitialize operation
* data operation
* extend operation
* rekey operation
consequently, of each type, there can be only one operation in-flight at a
time; at the user front-end each operation (except "initialize") can be
controlled through a dedicated VFS file; for each of these files, the VFS
expects only one handle to be open at a time and only one file operation
(read, write, sync) active at a time; once an operation gets started it is
finished without preemtion (except of the interleaving at rekey and
extend); when multiple operations are waiting to be started the plugin
follows a static priority scheme:
init op > deinit op > data op > extend op > rekey op
there are some operation-specific details
* the initialize operation is started only by the plugin itself on startup
and will be driven as side effect by subsequent user calls to file
operations
* the data file is the only contiguous file in the front end and the file
operations work as on usual data files
* the other 3 files are transactional files and the user is expected to
follow this scheme when operating on them
1) stat (to determine file size)
2) seek to offset 0
3) read entire file once (this will be queued until there is no operation
of this type pending anymore and return the last result:
"none" | "failed" | "succeeded"; used primarily for synchronization)
4) write operation parameters (this returns immediately and marks the
operation as "requested")
5) read entire file once (the same as above but this time in order to
determine the operation result)
* the rekey op and deinitialize op are requested by writing "true"
* the extend op is requested by writing "tree=[TREE], blocks=[BLOCKS]"
where TREE is either "vbd" or "ft" and BLOCKS is the number of physical
4K blocks by which the physical range of the tresor container expands
(the physical range always starts at block address 0 and is always
expanded upwards)
* replaces the former <trust-anchor op="initialize"> command at the Tresor
Tester with <initialize-trust-achor> as there are no other trust anchor
operations that can be requested through the Tester config anyway
* removes the "sync" attribute from all commands at the Tresor Tester except
from <request op="rekey">, <request "extend_ft">, <request op="extend_vbd">;
as the Tester controls scheduling now, requests are generally synchronous;
at the rekeying and extension commands, the "sync" attribute determines
wether subsequent commands are interleaved with the execution of these
commands (if possible)
* removes "debug" config attribute from Tresor VFS plugin and reworks "verbose"
attribute to generate more sensible output
* removes NONCOPYABLE macro and instead uses Genode::Noncopyable and in-place
Constructors deletion
* introduces types Attr and Execute_attr where a constructor or execute method
have many arguments in order to raise readability
* renames the "hashsum" file that is provided by the Tresor Trust-Anchor VFS
plugin to "hash" in order to become conformant with the wording in the Tresor
lib
* makes the VFS Tresor test an automated test by merging in the functionality
of vfs_tresor_init.run and removing the interactive front end; removes
vfs_tresor_init.run as it is not needed anymore; adds consideration for
autopilot file structure in the Test and adds it to autopilot.list
* removes all snapshot controls and the progress files for rekeying and
extending from the Tresor VFS plugin; both functionalities were tested
only rudimentary by the VFS Tresor test and are not supported with the only
real user, the File Vault
* use /* .. */ instead of // ..
* use (..) instead of { .. } in init lists
Ref #5148
The script tests the use of an encrypted file system that is created and
provided via the File Vault.
Furthermore the script can be used for test-driving existing File-Vault
containers (created with potentially older File-Vault versions) under the
current File-Vault version. This is done via the "LX_FS_DIR_TEMPLATE"
env variable.
Ref #5062
The tresor_check tool became outdated back when the Tresor project was created
by re-writing its predecessor, the CBE, in C++. At this time, the check tool
was merely renamed but not updated. As there was also no autopilot test for the
tool, the tool remained outdated.
This commit rewrites the tool for the most recent Tresor version and adds an
autopilot test.
Ref #5062
With the following changes, the hypervisor binary from bin/ as well as
from depot archives is taken as is and not unnecessarily turned inside
out.
- Remove objcopy -O elf32-i386 as our grub boots 64-bit binaries
very well
- Remove strip as bin/hypervisor is already stripped
Following Github support removal for svn [1], dde_rump port fails to
prepare. This commit introduces a new install rule for ports,
'.sparse-git'. It performs a sparse-checkout on the port repository, only
fetching required files.
[1] https://github.blog/2023-01-20-sunsetting-subversion-support/
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Lamowski <benjamin.lamowski@genode-labs.com>
Issue genodelabs#5072
Issue genodelabs/goa#28
This patch removes the implicit build of all shared libraries a target
depends on. Targets only depend on the respective ABIs instead. This
alleviates the need to locally build complex shared libraries (think of
Qt) when developing applications. Instead, application developers can
use binary depot archives.
The implementation splits the mk/lib.mk file into three files:
- mk/a.mk for building one static library (.lib.a)
- mk/so.mk for building one shared object (.lib.so)
- mk/abi.mk for building one ABI stub (.abi.so)
Furthermore, the commit moves messages and the collection of build
artifacts to var/libdeps, triggers the build of kernel-specific
ld-<kernel>.lib.so, and prunes the lib-dependency tree at ABIs.
Fixes#5061
Changes needed after merging `uboot` and `uboot_fit` modules into a
single module.
Additionally `image.elf` file is removed when either `image.itb` or
`uImage` is created, so it cannot be processed when `image/uboot` module
is loaded. Therefore `image.elf` processing is done conditionally now.
Fixes#5037
Without this change gpg aborted with
gpg: Sorry, no terminal at all requested - can't get input
and after adding --batch onlye with
gpg: signing failed: File exists
GNU Make 4.4 will pass TARGET to the sub-make of UNDEF_REFS where it can
be later used as link TARGET by Genode's build system. Before 4.4 TARGET
was undefined in the sub-make leading to the correct result.
* Adds a new component server/nic_uplink that forwards packets unmodified
between one Uplink session at one side and potentially multiple Nic sessions
at the other side.
* Adds a new run script nic_uplink.run that does a basic test with multiple
Nic clients on this component and adds it to the autopilot list.
* Adds a new depot recipe src/nic_uplink for this component.
* Adds a new depot recipe pkg/pc_nic for deploying the pc_nic_driver together
with a nic_uplink server. This allows for raw access to the network connected
to the Nic of the system in contrast to the commonly used routed and NAT'd
access via NIC router. That said, it enables the use of network protocols
not yet supported by the NIC router at the cost of less protection.
Ref #4966
The depot_remove component can delete PKG archives with
automatically resolving dependencies and deleting archives that are not
required on the system anymore.
Issue genodelabs#4866
If this file is called from a Makefile via
! $(shell <path>/tool/ports/current qt5-host)
'shell' will return
"Entering directory '' <path-to-libc> Leaving directory '' Stop.",
and thus, producing multiple targets in the 'tool_chain_qt5' case.
issue #4725
The new monitor component at os/src/monitor is the designated successor
of the gdb_monitor. This initial version, however, implements only the
subset needed to inspect the memory of the monitored component(s).
In contrast to the gdb_monitor, the new component supports the monitoring
of multiple components, leveraging the sandbox API. It can therefore be
used as a drop-in replacement for the init component. Like the gdb_monitor,
the new monitor speaks the GDB protocol over Genode's terminal session.
But the protocol implementation does not re-use any gdbserver code,
sidestepping the complexities of POSIX.
There exist two run scripts illustrating the new component. The
os/run/monitor.run script exercises memory inspection via the 'm' command
by letting a test program monitor itself. The os/run/monitor_gdb.run
script allows for the interactive use of GDB to interact with monitored
components.
Issue #4917
With the update to sel4 and the gcc 12, assembly instructions are generated
and used, like POPCNT. The instruction is available on our native hardware,
but not emulated by the default cpu model necessarily, which leads to
undefined opcode exceptions (Qemu 4.2.1 && seL4). Additionally, the features
of the default Qemu cpu model may vary between Qemu releases and makes it
harder to correlate effects.
"-cpu phenom" does not support all CPU instructions necessary with
gcc 12 toolchain update issuing more SSSE3, e.g. pshufb.
Additionally, remove good/bad Qemu version check of outdated versions.
Issue genodelabs/genode-world#329
Downloading non-existent archives from 'depot.genode.org' leads to
files in the 'public' directory containing the 404 error website
delivered by the HTTP server. Specifying the '--fail' option results
in curl generating an exit-code that leads to the appropriate action
by the tool, e.g.:
Error: failed to download 'https://depot.genode.org/user/pkg/x/version.tar.xz'
Issue #4865.