For proxmox packages it works the same way as PVE, by retrieving the
changelog URL and issuing a HTTP GET to it, forwarding the output to the
client. As this is only supposed to be a workaround removed in the
future, a simple block_on is used to avoid async.
For debian packages we can simply call 'apt-get changelog' and forward
it's output.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
As always, libapt is mocking us with complexity, but we can get the
approximate result we want by retrieving dependencies of all
to-be-updated packages and then seeing if they are missing.
If they are, we assume they will be installed.
For this, query_detailed_info is extended to allow reading details for
non-installed packages, and this is also exposed in
list_installed_apt_packages via 'all_versions_for'. This is necessary so
we can retrieve changelogs for such packages.
Note that we cannot retrieve all that information all the time, as
querying details for packages that aren't installed takes a rather long
time.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
Avoids custom hardcoded logic, but can only be used for debian packages
as of now. Adds a FIXME to switch over to use --print-uris only once our
package repos support that changelog format.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
To get package details for a specific version instead of only the
candidate.
Also cleanup filter function with extra struct instead of unnamed &str
parameters.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
...to avoid having the tools:: module depend on api2.
The get_string function is based directly on hyper and thus relatively
simple, not supporting redirects for example.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
gets rid of the return value and moving around of the zip
and decoder data
avoids cloning the path prefix on every recursion
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
by using the new ZipEncoder and recursively add files to it
the zip only contains directories, normal files and hardlinks (by simply
copying the content), no symlinks, etc.
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
similar to StdChannelWriter, but implements AsyncWrite and sends
to a tokio::sync::mpsc::Sender
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
This modules contains the 'ZipEncoder' struct, which wraps an async writer,
to create a ZIP archive on the fly
To create a ZIP file, have a target that implements AsyncWrite,
give it to ZipEncoder::new, add entries via 'add_entry' and
at the end, call 'finish'
for now, this does not implement compression (uses ZIPs STORE mode), and
does not support empty directories or hardlinks (or any other special
files)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
Fixes a bug in which the userid of the ticket cache is updated,
when a user connects, but the ticket itself is not.
This means a newly connected user has a previously connected
user's ticket and thus, cannot do anything, as the client will
attempt to use the invalid ticket.
e.g. if john@pbs connected to the server first, followed by
mike@pbs, the following would be stored in the ticket cache.
{
"localhost": {
"mike@pbs": {
"ticket": "PBS:john@pbs:AAAA",
"timestamp": 1601039326,
"token": "BBBB"
}
}
}
Signed-off-by: Dylan Whyte <d.whyte@proxmox.com>
The first rotation is normally the one still opened by one or more
processes for writing, so it must NOT be replaced, removed, ..., as
this then makes the remaining logging, until those processes are
noticed that they should reopen the logfile due to rotation, goes
into nirvana, which is far from ideal for a log.
Only rotating (renaming) is OK for this active file, as this does not
invalidates the file and keeps open FDs intact.
So start compressing with the second rotation, which should be clear
to use, as all writers must have been told to reopen the log during
the last rotation, reopen is a fast operation and normally triggered
at least day ago (at least if one did not dropped the state file
manually), so we are fine to archive that one for real.
If we plan to allow faster rotation the whole rotation+reopen should
be locked, so that we can guarantee that all writers switched over,
but this is unlikely to be needed.
Again, this is was logrotate sanely does by default since forever.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
this is not the job of logrotate, and the real 20+ years battle
tested log rotate binary does not do so either as it's actually
pretty dangerous.
If we "replace" the file we break any logger which already opened a
new one here, e.g., a dameon starting up, and thus that writer would
log to nirvana.
It's the job of a logger to create a file if not existing, it makes
no sense to do it here.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
To cater to the paranoid, a new datastore-wide setting "verify-new" is
introduced. When set, a verify job will be spawned right after a new
backup is added to the store (only verifying the added snapshot).
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
Force consumers to use the lookup_datastore method instead of
potentially opening a datastore twice, and pass the config we have
already loaded into open_with_path, removing the need for open(1).
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
Commit 9070d11f4c introduced this change for other call sites,
assuming it is correct, this one was missed.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
and use that in ApiConfig to avoid that it is owned by root if the
proxmox-backup-api process creates it first.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
for now log auth errors also to the syslog, on a protected (LAN
and/or firewalled) setup this should normally happen due to
missconfiguration, not tries to break in.
This reduces syslog noise *a lot*. A current full journal output from
the current boot here has 72066 lines, of which 71444 (>99% !!) are
"successful auth for user ..." messages
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
reuse the FileLogger module in append mode.
As it implements write, which is not thread safe (mutable self) and
we use it in a async context we need to serialize access using a
mutex.
Try to use the same format we do in pveproxy, namely the one which is
also used in apache or nginx by default.
Use the response extensions to pass up the userid, if we extract it
from a ticket.
The privileged and unprivileged dameons log both to the same file, to
have a unified view, and avoiding the need to handle more log files.
We avoid extra intra-process locking by reusing the fact that a write
smaller than PIPE_BUF (4k on linux) is atomic for files opened with
the 'O_APPEND' flag. For now the logged request path is not yet
guaranteed to be smaller than that, this will be improved in a future
patch.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
Add a generous limit now and return the correct error (414 URI Too
Long). Otherwise we could to pretty larger GET requests, 64 KiB and
possible bigger (at 64 KiB my simple curl test failed due to
shell/curl limitations).
For now allow a 3072 characters as combined length of URI path and
query.
This is conform with the HTTP/1.1 RFCs (e.g., RFC 7231, 6.5.12 and
RFC 2616, 3.2.1) which do not specify any limits, upper or lower, but
require that all server accessible resources mus be reachable without
getting 414, which is normally fulfilled as we have various length
limits for stuff which could be in an URI, in place, e.g.:
* user id: max. 64 chars
* datastore: max. 32 chars
The only known problematic API endpoint is the catalog one, used in
the GUI's pxar file browser:
GET /api2/json/admin/datastore/<id>/catalog?..&filepath=<path>
The <path> is the encoded archive path, and can be arbitrary long.
But, this is a flawed design, as even without this new limit one can
easily generate archives which cannot be browsed anymore, as hyper
only accepts requests with max. 64 KiB in the URI.
So rather, we should move that to a GET-as-POST call, which has no
such limitations (and would not need to base32 encode the path).
Note: This change was inspired by adding a request access log, which
profits from such limits as we can then rely on certain atomicity
guarantees when writing requests to the log.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
needs new proxmox dependency to get the RpcEnvironment changes,
adding client_ip getter and setter.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
Rewrite most of the documentation to be more readable and correct
(according to the current implementations).
Add a table visualizing all different locks used to synchronize
concurrent operations.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
Contains a link to the 'backup' module's doc, as that explains a lot
about the inner workings of PBS and probably marks a good entry point
for new readers.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
Avoid races when updating manifest data by flocking a lock file.
update_manifest is used to ensure updates always happen with the lock
held.
Snapshot deletion also acquires the lock, so it cannot interfere with an
outstanding manifest write.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
The 'Ok::<_, Self::Error>(res)' type annotation was from a time where
we could not use async, and had a combinator here which needed
explicity type information. We switched over to async in commit
91e4587343 and, as the type annotation
is already included in the Future type, we can safely drop it.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
Given the .pxarexclude file
foo
/bar
The following happens:
exclude: /foo
exclude: /bar
exclude: /subdir/foo
include: /subdir/bar
since the `/bar` line is an absolute path
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
Removing a snapshot has some more safety checks which we don't want to
ignore when removing an entire group (i.e. locking the manifest and
notifying GC).
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
There's no point in having that as a seperate method, just parse the
thing into a struct and write it back out correctly.
Also makes further changes to the method simpler.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
If we can't acquire a lock (either because the snapshot disappeared, it
is about to be forgotten/pruned, or it is currently still running) skip
the snapshot. Hold the lock during verification, so that it cannot be
deleted while we are still verifying.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
...to avoid it being forgotten or pruned while in use.
Update lock error message for deletions to be consistent.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
To allow other reading operations on the base snapshot as well. No
semantic changes with this patch alone, as all other locks on snapshots
are exclusive.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
A removal can fail if the snapshot is already gone (this is fine, our
job is done either way) or we couldn't get a lock (also fine, it can't
be removed then, just warn the user so he knows what happened and why it
wasn't removed) - keep going either way.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
A snapshot that's currently being read can still appear in the prune
list, but should not be removed.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
This adds a change-owner command to proxmox-backup-client,
that allows a caller with datastore modify privileges
to change the owner of a backup-group.
Signed-off-by: Dylan Whyte <d.whyte@proxmox.com>
To untangle the server code from the actual backup
implementation.
It would be ideal if the whole backup/ dir could become its
own crate with minimal dependencies, certainly without
depending on the actual api server. That would then also be
used more easily to create forensic tools for all the data
file types we have in the backup repositories.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
Used to not require access to the WorkerTask struct outside
the `server` and `api2` module, so it'll be easier to
separate those backup/server/client parts into separate
crates.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
This is only acquired in those two methods, both as shared. So it has
no use.
It seems, that it was planned in the past that the index deletion
should take the exclusive, while read and write takes the shared
flock on the index, as one can guess from the lock comments in commit
0465218953
But then later, in commit c8ec450e37)
the documented semantics where changed to use a temp file and do an
atomic rename instead for atomicity.
The reader shared flock on the index file was done inbetween,
probably as preparatory step, but was not removed again when strategy
was changed to using the file rename instead.
Do so now, to avoid confusion of readers and a useless flock.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
via HTTP2/backup reader protocol. they already could do so via the plain
HTTP download-file/.. API calls that the GUI uses, but the reader
environment required READ permission on the whole datastore instead of
just BACKUP on the backup group itself.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
a reader connection should not be allowed to read arbitrary chunks in
the datastore, but only those that were previously registered by opening
the corresponding index files.
this mechanism is needed to allow unprivileged users (that don't have
full READ permissions on the whole datastore) access to their own
backups via a reader environment.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
not triggered by any current code, but this would lead to a stack
exhaustion since borrow would call deref which would call borrow again..
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
Previously only Datastore.Modify was required for creating a new
datastore.
But, that endpoint allows one to pass an arbitrary path, of which all
parent directories will be created, this can allow any user with the
"Datastore Admin" role on "/datastores" to do some damage to the
system. Further, it is effectively a side channel for revealing the
systems directory structure through educated guessing and error
handling.
Add a new privilege "Datastore.Allocate" which, for now, is used
specifically for the create datastore API endpoint.
Add it only to the "Admin" role.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
avoiding the need for reshuffling all bits when a new privilege is
added at the start or in the middle of this definition.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
If a fuse_loop instance dies suddenly (e.g. SIGKILL), the FUSE mount and
loop device assignment are left behind. We can determine this scenario
on specific unmap, when the PID file is either missing or contains a PID
of a non-running process, but the backing file and potentially loop
device are still there.
If that's the case, do an "emergency cleanup", by unassigning the
loopdev, calling 'fusermount -u' and then cleaning any leftover files
manually.
With this in place, pretty much any situation is now recoverable via
only the 'proxmox-backup-client' binary, by either calling 'unmap' with
or without parameters.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
On unmap, only report success if the instance we are killing actually
terminates. This is especially important so that cleanup routines can be
assured that /run files are actually cleaned up after calling
cleanup_unused_run_files.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
A 'map' call will only clean up what it needs, that is only leftover
files or dangling instances of it's own name.
For a full cleanup the user can call 'unmap' without any arguments.
The 'cleanup on error' behaviour of map_loop is removed. It is no longer
needed (since the next call will clean up anyway), and in fact fixes a
bug where trying to map an image twice would result in an error, but
also cleanup the .pid file of the running instance, causing 'unmap' to
fail afterwards.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
So user doesn't need to remember which loop devices he has mapped to
what.
systemd unit encoding is used to transform a unique identifier for the
mapped image into a suitable name. The files created in /run/pbs-loopdev
will be named accordingly.
The encoding all happens outside fuse_loop.rs, so the fuse_loop module
does not need to care about encodings - it can always assume a name is a
valid filename.
'unmap' without parameter displays all current mappings. It's
autocompletion handler will list the names of all currently mapped
images for easy selection. Unmap by /dev/loopX or loopdev number is
maintained, as those can be distinguished from mapping names.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
the same as the regular TaskState, but without its fields, so that
we can use the api macro and use it as api call parameter
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
Allows mapping fixed-index .img files (usually from VM backups) to be
mapped to a local loopback device.
The architecture uses a FUSE-backed temp file mapped to a loopdev:
/dev/loopX -> FUSE /run/pbs-loopdev/xxx -> backup client -> PBS
Since unmapping requires some cleanup (unmap the loopdev, stop FUSE,
remove the temp files) a special 'unmap' command is added, which uses a
PID file to send SIGINT to the backup-client instance started with
'map', which will handle the cleanup itself.
The polling with select! in mount.rs needs to be split in two, since we
have a chicken and egg problem between running FUSE and setting up the
loop device - so we need to do them concurrently, until the loopdev is
assigned, at which point we can report success and daemonize, and then
continue polling the FUSE loop future.
A loopdev module is added to tools containing all required functions for
mapping a loop device to the FUSE file, with the ioctls moved into an
inline module to avoid exposing them directly.
The client code is placed in the 'mount' module, which, while
admittedly a loose fit, allows reuse of the daemonizing code.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
if the archive file does not exist yet, we cannot rotate it, but it's not
actually an error, so just return Ok(false) to indicate no rotation took
place
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
while we probably do not add much more to them, it still looks ugly.
If this was made so that adding a World readable API call is "hard"
and not done by accident, it rather should be done as a test on build
time. But, IMO, the API permission schema definitions are easy to
review, and not often changed/added - so any wrong World readable API
call will normally still caught.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
In theory, one can do std::mem::forget, and ignore the drop handler. With
the lifetime hack, this could result in a crash.
So we simply require 'static lifetime now (futures also needs that).
Causes a panic if last_update is smaller than RRD_DATA_ENTRIES*reso,
which (I believe) can happen when inserting the first value for a DB.
Clamp the value to 0 in that case.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
Fix a potential bug where errors that happen after the SendHandle has
been dropped while doing the thread join might have been ignored.
Requires internal check_abort to be moved out of 'impl SendHandle' since
we only have the Mutex left, not the SendHandle.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
This can slow things down by a lot on setups with (relatively) high
seek time, in the order of doubling the backup times if cache isn't
populated with the last backups chunk inode info.
Effectively there's nothing known this protects us from in the
codebase. The only thing which was theorized about was the case
where a really long running backup job (over 24 hours) is still
running and writing new chunks, not indexed yet anywhere, then an
update (or manual action) triggers a reload of the proxy. There was
some theory that then a GC in the new daemon would not know about the
oldest writer in the old one, and thus use a less strict atime limit
for chunk sweeping - opening up a window for deleting chunks from the
long running backup.
But, this simply cannot happen as we have a per datastore process
wide flock, which is acquired shared by backup jobs and exclusive by
GC. In the same process GC and backup can both get it, as it has a
process locking granularity. If there's an old daemon with a writer,
that also has the lock open shared, and so no GC in the new process
can get exclusive access to it.
So, with that confirmed we have no need for a "half-assed"
verification in the backup finish step. Rather, we plan to add an
opt-in "full verify each backup on finish" option (see #2988)
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
We forgot to put braces around the DNS_NAME regex, and in
DNS_NAME_OR_IP_REGEX
this is wrong because the regex
^foo|bar$
matches 'foo' at the beginning and 'bar' at the end, so either
foobaz
bazbar
would match. only
^(foo|bar)$
matches only 'foo' and 'bar'
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
* add square brackets to ipv6 adresses in BackupRepository if they not
already have some (we save them without in the remote config)
* in get_pull_parameters, we now create a BackupRepository first and use
those values (which does the [] mapping), this also has the advantage
that we have one place less were we hardcode 8007 as port
* in the ui, add square brackets for ipv6 adresses for remotes
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
when upgrading from a version where we stored all tasks in the 'active' file,
we did not completly account for finished tasks still there
we should update the file when encountering any finished task in
'active' as well as filter them out on the api call (if they get through)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
this adds the ability to add port numbers in the backup repo spec
as well as remotes, so that user that are behind a
NAT/Firewall/Reverse proxy can still use it
also adds some explanation and examples to the docs to make it clearer
for h2 client i left the localhost:8007 part, since it is not
configurable where we bind to
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
When creating a new zpool for a datastore, also instantiate an
import-unit for it. This helps in cases where '/etc/zfs/zool.cache'
get corrupted and thus the pool is not imported upon boot.
This patch needs the corresponding addition of 'zfs-import@.service' in
the zfsonlinux repository.
Suggested-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Stoiko Ivanov <s.ivanov@proxmox.com>
we need this, because we append the port to this to get a target url
e.g. we print
format!("https://{}:8007/", address)
if address is now an ipv6 (e.g. fe80::1) it would become
https://fe80::1:8007/ which is a valid ipv6 on its own
by using square brackets we get:
https://[fe80::1]:8007/ which now connects to the correct ip/port
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
since len() and MAX_INDEX_TASKS are both usize, they underflow
instead of getting negative values
instead check the sizes and set them accordingly
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
this starts a task once a day at "00:00" that rotates the task log
archive if it is bigger than 500k
if we want, we can make the schedule/size limit/etc. configurable,
but for now it's ok to set fixed values for that
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
since there are no users of this anymore and we now have a nicer
TaskListInfoIterator to use, we can drop this function
this also means that 'update_active_workers' does not need to return
a list anymore since we never used that result besides in
read_task_list
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
this means that limiting with epoch now works correctly
also change the api type to i64, since that is what the starttime is
saved as
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
this makes the filtering/limiting much nicer and readable
since we now have potentially an 'infinite' amount of tasks we iterate over,
and cannot now beforehand how many there are, we return the total count
as always 1 higher then requested iff we are not at the end (this is
the case when the amount of entries is smaller than the requested limit)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
this is an iterator that reads/parses/updates the task list as
necessary and returns the tasks in descending order (newest first)
it does this by using our logrotate iterator and using a vecdeque
we can use this to iterate over all tasks, even if they are in the
archive and even if the archive is logrotated but only read
as much as we need
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
instead of removing tasks beyond the 1000 that are in the index
write them into an archive file by appending them at the end
this way we can later still read them
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
one for only the active tasks and one for up to 1000 finished tasks
factor out the parsing of a task file (we will later need this again)
and use iterator combinators for easier code
we now sort the tasks ascending (this will become important in a later patch)
but reverse (for now) it to keep compatibility
this code also omits the converting into an intermittent hash
since it cannot really happen that we have duplicate tasks in this list
(since the call is locked by an flock, and it is the only place where we
write into the lists)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
this is a helper to rotate and iterate over log files
there is an iterator for open filehandles as well as
only the filename
also it has the possibilty to rotate them
for compression, zstd is used
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
also changes:
* correct comment about reset (replace 'sync' with 'action')
* check schedule change correctly (only when it is actually changed)
with this changes, we can drop the 'lookup_last_worker' method
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
we rely on the jobstate handling to write the error of the worker
into its state file, but we used '?' here in a block which does not
return the error to the block, but to the function/closure instead
so if a prune job failed because of such an '?', we did not write
into the statefile and got a wrong state there
instead use our try_block! macro that wraps the code in a closure
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
like the sync jobs, so that if an admin configures a schedule it
really starts the next time that time is reached not immediately
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
listing, updating or deleting a user is now possible for the user
itself, in addition to higher-privileged users that have appropriate
privileges on '/access/users'.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
filtered by those they are privileged enough to read individually. this
allows such users to configure prune/GC schedules via the GUI (the API
already allowed it previously).
permission-wise, a user with this privilege can already:
- list all stores they have access to (returns just name/comment)
- read the config of each store they have access to individually
(returns full config of that datastore + digest of whole config)
but combines them to
- read configs of all datastores they have access to (returns full
config of those datastores + digest of whole config)
user that have AUDIT on just /datastore without propagate can now no
longer read all configurations (but this could be added it back, it just
seems to make little sense to me).
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
by packing the auth into a RwLock and starting a background
future that renews the ticket every 15 minutes
we still use the BroadcastFuture for the first ticket and only
if that is finished we start the scheduled future
we have to store an abort handle for the renewal future and abort it when
the http client is dropped, so we do not request new tickets forever
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
like we do for PVE. this is visible on the dashboard, and caused 403 on
each update which bothers me when looking at the dev console.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
A client can omit uploading chunks in the "known_chunks" list, those
then also won't be written on the server side. Check all those chunks
mentioned in the index but not uploaded for existance and report an
error if they don't exist instead of marking a potentially broken backup
as "successful".
This is only important if the base snapshot references corrupted chunks,
but has not been negatively verified. Also, it is important to only
verify this at the end, *after* all index writers are closed, since only
then can it be guaranteed that no GC will sweep referenced chunks away.
If a chunk is found missing, also mark the previous backup with a
verification failure, since we know the missing chunk has to referenced
in it (only way it could have been inserted to known_chunks with
checked=false). This has the benefit of automatically doing a
full-upload backup if the user attempts to retry after seeing the new
error, instead of requiring a manual verify or forget.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
Do not allow clients to reuse chunks from the previous backup if it has
a failed validation result. This would result in a new "successful"
backup that potentially references broken chunks.
If the previous backup has not been verified, assume it is fine and
continue on.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
- remove chrono dependency
- depend on proxmox 0.3.8
- remove epoch_now, epoch_now_u64 and epoch_now_f64
- remove tm_editor (moved to proxmox crate)
- use new helpers from proxmox 0.3.8
* epoch_i64 and epoch_f64
* parse_rfc3339
* epoch_to_rfc3339_utc
* strftime_local
- BackupDir changes:
* store epoch and rfc3339 string instead of DateTime
* backup_time_to_string now return a Result
* remove unnecessary TryFrom<(BackupGroup, i64)> for BackupDir
- DynamicIndexHeader: change ctime to i64
- FixedIndexHeader: change ctime to i64
since converting from i64 epoch timestamp to DateTime is not always
possible. previously, passing invalid backup-time from client to server
(or vice-versa) panicked the corresponding tokio task. now we get proper
error messages including the invalid timestamp.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
otherwise operations like catalog shell panic when viewing pxar archives
containing such entries, e.g. with mtime very far ahead into the future.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
by either printing the original, out-of-range timestamp as-is, or
bailing with a proper error message instead of panicking.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
even if it can't be handled by chrono. silently replacing it with epoch
0 is confusing..
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
else we get the default of 16k, which is quite low for our use case.
this improves the TLS upload benchmark speed by about 30-40% for me.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
fixes the error, "manifest does not contain
file 'X.pxar'", that occurs when trying to mount
a pxar archive with 'proxmox-backup-client mount':
Signed-off-by: Dylan Whyte <d.whyte@proxmox.com>
similar to the other fix, if we do not set the buffer size manually,
we get better performance for high latency connections
restore benchmark from f.gruenbicher:
no delay, without patch: ~50MB/s
no delay, with patch: ~50MB/s
25ms delay, without patch: ~11MB/s
25ms delay, with path: ~50MB/s
my own restore benchmark:
no delay, without patch: ~1.5GiB/s
no delay, with patch: ~1.5GiB/s
25ms delay, without patch: 30MiB/s
25ms delay, with patch: ~950MiB/s
for some more details about those benchmarks see
https://lists.proxmox.com/pipermail/pbs-devel/2020-September/000600.html
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
by leaving the buffer sizes on default, we get much better tcp performance
for high latency links
throughput is still impacted by latency, but much less so when
leaving the sizes at default.
the disadvantage is slightly higher memory usage of the server
(details below)
my local benchmarks (proxmox-backup-client benchmark):
pbs client:
PVE Host
Epyc 7351P (16core/32thread)
64GB Memory
pbs server:
VM on Host
1 Socket, 4 Cores (Host CPU type)
4GB Memory
average of 3 runs, rounded to MB/s
| no delay | 1ms | 5ms | 10ms | 25ms |
without this patch | 230MB/s | 55MB/s | 13MB/s | 7MB/s | 3MB/s |
with this patch | 293MB/s | 293MB/s | 249MB/s | 241MB/s | 104MB/s |
memory usage (resident memory) of proxmox-backup-proxy:
| peak during benchmarks | after benchmarks |
without this patch | 144MB | 100MB |
with this patch | 145MB | 130MB |
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
We need to update the atime of chunk files if they already exist,
otherwise a concurrently running GC could sweep them away.
This is protected with ChunkStore.mutex, so the fstat/unlink does not
race with touching.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
The iterator of get_chunk_iterator is extended with a third parameter
indicating whether the current file is a chunk (false) or a .bad file
(true).
Count their sizes to the total of removed bytes, since it also frees
disk space.
.bad files are only deleted if the corresponding chunk exists, i.e. has
been rewritten. Otherwise we might delete data only marked bad because
of transient errors.
While at it, also clean up and use nix::unistd::unlinkat instead of
unsafe libc calls.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
This ensures that following backups will always upload the chunk,
thereby replacing it with a correct version again.
Format for renaming is <digest>.<counter>.bad where <counter> is used if
a chunk is found to be bad again before a GC cleans it up.
Care has been taken to deliberately only rename a chunk in conditions
where it is guaranteed to be an error in the chunk itself. Otherwise a
broken index file could lead to an unwanted mass-rename of chunks.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
a range from high to low in rust results in an empty range
(see std::ops::Range documentation)
so we need to generate the range from 0..data.len() and then reverse it
also, the task log contains a newline at the end, so we have to remove
that (should it exist)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
this implements parsing and calculating calendarevents that have a
basic date component (year-mon-day) with the usual syntax options
(*, ranges, lists)
and some special events:
monthly
yearly/annually (like systemd)
quarterly
semiannually,semi-annually (like systemd)
includes some regression tests
the ~ syntax for days (the last x days of the month) is not yet
implemented
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
instead of using 'as' and silently converting wrong,
use the TryInto trait and raise an error if we cannot convert
this should only happen if we have a negative year,
but this is expected (we do not want schedules from before the year 0)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
add_* are modeled after add_days
subtract one for set_mon to have a consistent interface for all fields
(i.e. getter/setter return/expect the 'real' number, not the ones
in the tm struct)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
the tm struct contains the year - 1900 but we added that
if we want to use the libc normalization correctly, the tm struct
must have the correct year in it, else the computations for timezones,
etc. fail
instead add a getter that adds the years and a setter that subtracts it again
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
if we give multiple options/ranges for a value, e.g.
2,4,8
we always choose the biggest, instead of the smallest that is next
this happens because in DateTimeValue::find_next(value)
'next' can be set multiple times and we set it when the new
value was *bigger* than the last found 'next' value, when in reality
we have to choose the *smallest* next we can find
reverse the comparison operator to fix this
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
we never passed 'false' to it anyway so remove it
(we can add it again if we should ever need it)
also remove the adding of wday (gets normalized anyway)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
we want to use dates for the calendarspec, and with that there are some
impossible combinations that cannot be detected during parsing
(e.g. some datetimes do not exist in some timezones, and the timezone
can change after setting the schedule)
so finding no timestamp is not an error anymore but a valid result
we omit logging in that case (since it is not an error anymore)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
mktime/gmtime can normalize time and even can handle special timezone
cases like the fact that the time 2:30 on specific day/timezone combos
do not exists
we have to convert the signature of all functions that use
normalize_time since mktime/gmtime can return an EOVERFLOW
but if this happens there is no way we can find a good time anyway
since normalize_time will always set wday according to the rest of the
time, remove set_wday
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
while it was correct, there was no measurable speed gain
(a benchmark yielded 2.8 ms for a spec that did not find a timestamp either way)
so remove it for simpler code
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
when trying to parse the task status, we seek 8k from the end
which may be into the middle of a line, so the datetime parsing
can fail (when the log message contains ': ')
This patch does a fast search for the last line, and avoid the
'lines' iterator.
for datastores where the requesting user has read or write permissions,
since the API method itself filters by that already. this is the same
permission setting and filtering that the datastore list API endpoint
does.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
Because if not, the backups it creates have bogus permissions and may
seem like they got broken once the daemon is started again with the
correct user/group.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
Save the state ("ok" or "failed") and the UPID of the respective
verify task. With this we can easily allow to open the relevant task
log and show when the last verify happened.
As we already load the manifest when listing the snapshots, just add
it there directly.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
It's a string-type.
Implement Serialize via Display, Deserialize via FromStr and
add an API_SCHEMA so that it can be used as a type within
the #[api] macro.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
to avoid `map_struct` which is actually unsafe because it
does not verify alignment constraints at all
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
There is no requirement to have at least
a blank line, attribute or comment in between two
interface definitions, e.g.
iface lo inet loopback
iface lo inet6 loopback
Signed-off-by: Fabian Ebner <f.ebner@proxmox.com>
it really is not necessary, since the only time we are interested in
loading the state from the file is when we list it, and there
we use JobState::load directly to avoid the lock
we still need to create the file on syncjob creation though, so
that we have the correct time for the schedule
to do this we add a new create_state_file that overwrites it on creation
of a syncjob
for safety, we subtract 30 seconds from the in-memory state in case
the statefile is missing
since we call create_state_file from proxmox-backup-api,
we have to chown the lock file after creating to the backup user,
else the sync job scheduling cannot aquire the lock
also we remove the lock file on statefile removal
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
so that we can log if triggered by a schedule, and writing to a jobstatefile
also correctly polls now the abort_future of the worker, so that
users can stop a sync
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
and move the pull parameters into the worker, so that the task log
contains the error if there is one
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
this is intended to be a generic helper to (de)serialize job states
(e.g., sync, verify, and so on)
writes a json file into '/var/lib/proxmox-backup/jobstates/TYPE-ID.json'
the api creates the directory with the correct permissions, like
the rrd directory
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
the endtime should be the timestamp of the last log line
or if there is no log at all, the starttime
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
representing a state via an enum makes more sense in this case
we also implement FromStr and Display to make it easy to convet from/to
a string
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
To prevent forgetting the base snapshot of a running backup, and catch
the case when it still happens (e.g. via manual rm) to at least error
out instead of storing a potentially invalid backup.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
This reverts commit d53fbe2474.
The HashSet and "register" function are unnecessary, as we already know
which backup is the one we need to check: the last one, stored as
'last_backup'.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
An flock on the snapshot dir itself is used in addition to the group dir
lock. The lock is used to avoid races with forget and prune, while
having more granularity than the group lock (i.e. the group lock is
necessary to prevent more than one backup per group, but the snapshot
lock still allows backups unrelated to the currently running to be
forgotten/pruned).
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
Attempt to lock the backup directory to be deleted, if it works keep the
lock until the deletion is complete. This way we ensure that no other
locking operation (e.g. using a snapshot as base for another backup) can
happen concurrently.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
an encrypted Index should never reference a plain-text chunk, and an
unencrypted Index should never reference an encrypted chunk.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
these checks were already in place for regular downloading of backed up
files, also do them when attempting to decode a catalog, or when
downloading decoded files referenced by a pxar index.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
If the datastore holds broken backups for some reason, do not attempt to
base following snapshots on those. This would lead to an error on
/previous, leaving the client no choice but to upload all chunks, even
though there might be potential for incremental savings.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
When uploading an RSA encoded key alongside the backup,
the backup would fail with the error message: "wrong blob
file extension".
Adding the '.blob' extension to rsa-encrypted.key before the
the call to upload_blob_from_data(), rather than after, fixes
the issue.
Signed-off-by: Dylan Whyte <d.whyte@proxmox.com>
Commit 9fa55e09 "finish_backup: test/verify manifest at server side"
moved the finished-marking above some checks, which means if those fail
the backup would still be marked as successful on the server.
Revert that part and comment the line for the future.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
instead of bailing and stopping the entire GC process, warn about the
missing chunks and continue.
this results in "TASK WARNINGS: X" as the status.
Signed-off-by: Oguz Bektas <o.bektas@proxmox.com>
Used chunks are marked in phase1 of the garbage collection process by
using the atime property. Each used chunk gets touched so that the atime
gets updated (if older than 24h, see relatime).
Should there ever be a situation in which the phase1 in the GC run needs
a very long time to finish, it could happen that the grace period
calculated in phase2 is not long enough and thus the marking of the
chunks (atime) becomes invalid. This would result in the removal of
needed chunks.
Even though the likelyhood of this happening is very low, using the
timestamp from right before phase1 is started, to calculate the grace
period in phase2 should avoid this situation.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lauterer <a.lauterer@proxmox.com>
and not just of previously synced ones.
we can't use BackupManifest::verify_file as the archive is still stored
under the tmp path at this point.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
for encrypted chunks this is currently not possible, as we need the key
to decode the chunk.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
regular chunks are only decoded when their contents are accessed, in
which case we need to have the key anyway and want to verify the digest.
for blobs we need to verify beforehand, since their checksums are always
calculated based on their raw content, and stored in the manifest.
manifests are also stored as blobs, but don't have a digest in the
traditional sense (they might have a signature covering parts of their
contents, but that is verified already when loading the manifest).
this commit does not cover pull/sync code which copies blobs and chunks
as-is without decoding them.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
Errors while applying metadata will not be considered fatal
by default using `pxar extract` unless `--strict` was passed
in which case it'll bail out immediately.
It'll still return an error exit status if something had
failed along the way.
Note that most other errors will still cause it to bail out
(eg. errors creating files, or I/O errors while writing
the contents).
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
'username' here is without realm, but we really want to use user@realm
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
tokios kill_on_drop sometimes leaves zombies around, especially
when there is not another tokio::process::Command spawned after
so instead of relying on the 'kill_on_drop' feature, we explicitly
kill the child on a worker abort. to be able to do this
we have to use 'tokio::select' instead of 'futures::select' since
the latter requires the future to be fused, which consumes the
child handle, leaving us no possibility to kill it after fusing.
(tokio::select does not need the futures to be fused, so we
can reuse the child future after the select again)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
so that we can print a list at the end of the worker which backups
are corrupt.
this is useful if there are many snapshots and some in between had an
error. Before this patch, the task log simply says to 'look in the logs'
but if the log is very long it makes it hard to see what exactly failed.
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
this makes it easier to see which chunks are corrupt
(and enables us in the future to build a 'complete' list of
corrupt chunks)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
The extraction algorithm has a state (bool) indicating
whether we're currently in a positive or negative match
which has always been initialized to true at the beginning,
but when the user provides a `--pattern` argument we need to
start out with a negative match.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
This should never trigger if everything else works correctly, but it is
still a very cheap check to avoid wrongly marking a backup as "OK" when
in fact some chunks might be missing.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
Multiple backups within one backup group don't really make sense, but
break all sorts of guarantees (e.g. a second backup started after a
first would use a "known-chunks" list from the previous unfinished one,
which would be empty - but using the list from the last finished one is
not a fix either, as that one could be deleted or pruned once the first
simultaneous backup is finished).
Fix it by only allowing one backup per backup group at one time. This is
done via a flock on the backup group directory, thus remaining intact
even after a reload.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
To prevent a race with a background GC operation, do not allow deletion
of backups who's index might currently be referenced as the "known chunk
list" for successive backups. Otherwise the GC could delete chunks it
thinks are no longer referenced, while at the same time telling the
client that it doesn't need to upload said chunks because they already
exist.
Additionally, prevent deletion of whole backup groups, if there are
snapshots contained that appear to be currently in-progress. This is
currently unlikely to trigger, as that function is only used for sync
jobs, but it's a useful safeguard either way.
Deleting a single snapshot has a 'force' parameter, which is necessary
to allow deleting incomplete snapshots on an aborted backup. Pruning
also sets force=true to avoid the check, since it calculates which
snapshots to keep on its own.
To avoid code duplication, the is_finished method is factored out.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
Also swap the order of a couple of `.map_err().await` to
`.await.map_err()` since that's generally more efficient.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
a blob can be empty (e.g. an empty pct fw conf), so we
have to set the minimum size to the header size
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
And make verify_crc private for now. We always call load_from_reader() to
verify the CRC.
Also add load_chunk() to datastore.rs (from chunk_store::read_chunk())
is a helper to spawn an internal tokio task without it showing up
in the task list
it is still tracked for reload and notifies the last_worker_listeners
this enables the console to survive a reload of proxmox-backup-proxy
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
using micros vs. as_secs_f64 allows to have it calculated as usize
bytes, easier to handle - this was also used when it still lived in
upload_chunk_info_stream
Co-authored-by: Stoiko Ivanov <s.ivanov@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
Even though it has nothing to do with vnc, we keep the name of the api
call for compatibility with our xtermjs client.
termproxy:
verifies that the user is allowed to open a console and starts
termproxy with the correct parameters
starts a TcpListener on "localhost:0" so that the kernel decides the
port (instead of trying to rerserving like in pve). Then it
leaves the fd open for termproxy and gives the number as port
and tells it via '--port-as-fd' that it should interpret this
as an open fd
the vncwebsocket api call checks the 'vncticket' (name for compatibility)
and connects the remote side (after an Upgrade) with a local TcpStream
connecting to the port given via WebSocket from the proxmox crate
to make sure that only the client can connect that called termproxy and
no one can connect to an arbitrary port on the host we have to include
the port in the ticket data
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
modeled after pves/pmgs vncticket (i substituted the vnc with term)
by putting the path and username as secret data in the ticket
when sending the ticket to /access/ticket it only verifies it,
checks the privs on the path and does not generate a new ticket
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
instead of exposing handlebars itself, offer a register_template and
a render_template ourselves.
render_template checks if the template file was modified since
the last render and reloads it when necessary
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
Depends on patched apt-pkg-native-rs. Changelog-URL detection is
inspired by PVE perl code for now, though marked with fixme to use 'apt
changelog' later on, if/when our repos have APT-compatible changelogs
set up.
list_installed_apt_packages iterates all packages and creates an
APTUpdateInfo with detailed information for every package matched by the
given filter Fn.
Sadly, libapt-pkg has some questionable design choices regarding their
use of 'iterators', which means quite a bit of nesting...
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
useful to get info like, was the previous snapshot encrypted in
libproxmox-backup-qemu
Requested-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
I mean the user expects that we know what archives, fidx or didx, are
in a backup, so this is internal info and should not be logged by
default
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
Verbosity needs to be a non binary level, as this now is just
debug/development info, for endusers normally to much.
We want to have it available, but with a much higher verbosity level.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
Track reused size and chunk counts.
Log reused size and use pretty print for all sizes and bandwidth
metrics.
Calculate speed over the actually uploaded size, as else it can be
skewed really bad (showing like terabytes per second)
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
Requires updating the AsyncRead implementation to cope with byte-wise
seeks to intra-chunk positions.
Uses chunk_from_offset to get locations within chunks, but tries to
avoid it for sequential read to not reduce performance from before.
AsyncSeek needs to use the temporary seek_to_pos to avoid changing the
position in case an invalid seek is given and it needs to error in
poll_complete.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
We support using an ext4 mountpoint directly as datastore and even do
so ourself when creating one through the disk manage code.
Such ext4 ountpoints have a lost+found directory which only root can
traverse into. As the GC list images is done as backup:backup user
walkdir gets an error.
We cannot ignore just all permission errors, as they could lead to
missing some backup indexes and thus possibly sweeping more chunks
than desired. While *normally* that should not happen through our
stack, we had already user report that they do rsyncs to move a
datastore from old to new server and got the permission wrong.
So for now be still very strict, only allow a "lost+found" directory
as immediate child of the datastore base directory, nothing else.
If deemed safe, this can always be made less strict. Possibly by
filtering the known backup-types on the highest level first.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
otherwise we leak those descriptors and run into EMFILE when a backup
group contains many snapshots.
fcntl::openat and Dir::openat are not the same ;)
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
also when they have been removed/forgotten since we retrieved the
snapshot list for the currently syncing backup group.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
This aligns it with PVE and allows the widget toolkit's update window
"refresh" to work without modifications once POST /apt/update is
implemented.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
While we do not yet support the date specs for CalendarEvent the left
out "weekly" special expression[0] dies not requires that support.
It is specified to be equivalent with `Mon *-*-* 00:00:00` [0] and
this can be implemented with the weekday and time support we already
have.
[0]: https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.time.html#Calendar%20Events
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
when a datastore has enough data to calculate the estimated full date,
but always has exactly the same usage, the factor b of the regression
is '0'
return 0 for that case so that the gui can show 'never' instead of
'not enough data'
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
JSON keys MUST be quoted. this is a one-time break in signature
validation for backups created with the broken canonicalization code.
QEMU backups are not affected, as libproxmox-backup-qemu never linked
the broken versions.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
Make it actually do the correct cast by using `libc::c_char`.
Fixes issues when building on other platforms, e.g., the aarch64
client only build on Arch Linux ARM I tested in my free time.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
Especially helpful for requests not coming from browsers (where the
URL is normally easy to find out).
Makes it easier to detect if one triggered a request with an old
client, or so..
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
it is nice to have a command to exit from the shell instead of
only allowing ctrl+d or ctrl+c
the api method is just for documentation/help purposes and does nothing
by itself, the real logic is directly in the read loop
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
Change the .pxarexclude parser to byte based parsing with
`.split(b'\n')` instead of `.lines()`, to not panic on
non-utf8 paths.
Specially deal with absolute paths by prefixing them with
the current directory.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
As else this is really user unfriendly, and it not printing it has no
advantage. If one doesn't wants to leak resource existence they just
need to *always* check permissions before checking if the requested
resource exists, if that's not done one can leak information also
without getting the path returned (as the system will either print
"resource doesn't exists" or "no permissions" respectively)
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
When creating a new datastore the basedir is only owned by the backup
user if it did not exist beforehand (create_path chowns only if it
creates the directory), and returns false if it did not create the
directory).
This improves the experience when adding a new datastore on a fresh
disk or existing directory (not owned by backup) - backups/pulls can
be run instead of terminating with EPERM.
Tested on my local testinstall with a new disk, and a existing directory:
Signed-off-by: Stoiko Ivanov <s.ivanov@proxmox.com>
it does not make sense to check if the worker is running if we already
have an endtime and state
our 'worker_is_active_local' heuristic returns true for non
process-local tasks, so we got 'running' for all tasks that were not
started by 'our' pid and were still running
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
the **/ is not required and currently also mistakenly
doesn't match /lost+found which is probably buggy on the
pathpatterns crate side and needs fixing there
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
zfs does not have to be installed, so simply log an error and
continue, users still get an error when clicking directly on
ZFS
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
not exhaustive of what zfs allows (space is missing), but this
can be done easily without problems
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
those names are allowed for zpools
these will fail for now, but it will be fixed in the next commit
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
* don't clone hash keys, just use references
* we don't need a String, stick to Vec<u8> and use
serde_json::to_writer to avoid a temporary strings
altogether
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
This is a more convenient way to pass along the key when
creating encrypted backups of unprivileged containers in PVE
where the unprivileged user namespace cannot access
`/etc/pve/priv`.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
Have a single common function to get the BaseDirectories
instance and a wrapper for `find()` and `place()` which
wrap the error with some context.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
place() is used when creating a file, as it will create
intermediate directories, only use it when actually placing
a new file.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
This also replaces the recently introduced --encryption
parameter on the client with a --crypt-mode parameter.
This can be "none", "encrypt" or "sign-only".
Note that this introduces various changes in the API types
which previously did not take the above distinction into
account properly:
Both `BackupContent` and the manifest's `FileInfo`:
lose `encryption: Option<bool>`
gain `crypt_mode: Option<CryptMode>`
Within the backup manifest itself, the "crypt-mode" property
will always be set.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
This can be used to explicitly disable encryption even if a
default key file exists in ~/.config.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
instead of checking on '1' or 'true', check that it is there and not
'0' and 'false'. this allows using simply
https://foo:8007/?debug
instead of
https://foo:8007/?debug=1
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
And use it for fixed and dynamic index. Please note that this
changes checksums for fixed indexes, so restore older backups
will fails now (not backward compatible).
To support incremental backups (where not all chunks are sent to the
server), a new parameter "reuse-csum" is introduced on the
"create_fixed_index" API call. When set and equal to last backups'
checksum, the backup writer clones the data from the last index of this
archive file, and only updates chunks it actually receives.
In incremental mode some checks usually done on closing an index cannot
be made, since they would be inaccurate.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
if *only* data chunks are registered (high chance during incremental
backup), then chunk_count might be one lower then upload_stat.count
because of the zero chunk being unconditionally uploaded but not used.
Thus when subtracting the two, an overflow would occur.
In general, don't let the client make the server panic, instead just set
duplicates to 0.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
and if it does bail, because otherwise we would get an
error on mounting and have a zpool that is not imported
and disks that are used
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
returns the dir listing of the given filepath of the backup snapshot
the filepath has to be base64 encoded or 'root'
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
we want to get a string representation of the DirEntryAttribute
like 'f' for file, etc. and since we have such a mapping already
in the CatalogEntryType, use that
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
mostly copied from BufferedDynamicReadAt from proxmox-backup-client
but the reader is wrapped in an Arc in addition to the Mutex
we will use this for local access to a pxar behind a didx file
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
We get the path to our executable via a readlink() on
"/proc/self/exe", which appends a " (deleted)" during
package reloads.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
implements AsyncRead as well as Stream for an IndexFile and a store
that implements AsyncReadChunk
we can use this to asyncread or stream the content of a FixedIndex or
DynamicIndex
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
we want to save if a file of a backup is encrypted, so that we can
* show that info on the gui
* can later decide if we need to decrypt the backup
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
does the same, except the manual drop, but thats handled there by
letting the value go out of scope
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
copy_nonoverlapping is basically a memcpy which can also be done
via copy_from_slice which is not unsafe
(copy_from_slice uses copy_nonoverlapping internally)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
These aren't installed and are only used for manual testing,
so there's no reason to force them to be built all the time.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
for now mostly copy/paste from nodes/nodename/tasks
(without the parameters)
but we should replace the 'read_task_list' with a method
that gives us the tasks since some timestamp
so that we can get a longer list of tasks than for the node
(we could of course embed this then in the nodes/node/task api call and
remove this again as long as the api is not stable)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
The download methods used to take the destination by value
and return them again, since this was required when using
combinators before we had `async fn`.
But this is just an ugly left-over now.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
else we start a dynamic writer and never close it, leading to a backup error
this fixes an issue with backing up vm templates
(and possibly vms without disks)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
we check if all dynamic_writers are closed and if the backup contains
any valid files, we can only mark the backup finished after those
checks, else the backup task gets marked as OK, even though it
is not finished and no cleanups run
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
and drop the now unused extract_lists function
this also fixes a bug, where we did not add the datastore to the list at
all when there was no rrd data
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
there is now a 'extract_cached_data' which just returns
the data of the specified field, and an api function that converts
a list of fields to the correct serde value
this way we do not have to create a serde value in rrd/cache.rs
(makes for a better interface)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
Report vanished files (instead of erroring out on them),
also only warn about files inaccessible due to permissions
instead of bailing out.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
This used to be default-off and was accidentally set to
on-by-default with the pxar crate update.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
returns a list of the datastores and their usages, a list of usages of
the past month (for the gui) and an estimation of when its full
(using the linear regression)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
provides some basic statistics functions (sum, mean, etc.)
and a function to return the parameters of the linear regression of
two variables
implemented using num_traits to be more flexible for the types
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
this is an interface to simply get the Vec<Option<f64>> out of rrd
without going through serde values
we return a list of timestamps and a HashMap with the lists we could find
(otherwise it is not in the map)
if no lists could be extracted, the time list is also empty
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
disk_usage returned the same values as defined in StorageStatus,
so simply use that
with that we can replace the logic of the datastore status with that
function and also use it for root disk usage of the nodes
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
the last chunk does not have to be as big as the chunk_size,
just use the already available 'chunk_end' function which does the
correct thing
this fixes restoration of images whose sizes are not a multiple of
'chunk_size' as well
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
if the last sync job is too far in the past (or there was none at all
for now) we run it at the next iteration, so we want to show that
we now calculate the next_run by using either the real last endtime
as time or 0
then in the frontend, we check if the next_run is < now and show 'pending'
(we do it this way also for replication on pve)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
two things were wrong here:
* the range (x..y) does not include y, so the range
(day_num+1..6) goes from (day_num+1) to 5 (but sunday is 6)
* WeekDays.bits() does not return the 'day_num' of that day, but
the bit value (e.g. 64 for SUNDAY) but was treated as the index of
the day of the week
to fix this, we drop the map to WeekDays and use the 'indices'
directly
this patch makes the test work again
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
If one executes a client command like
# proxmox-backup-client files <snapshot> --repository ...
the files shown have already the '.fidx' or '.blob' file ending, so
if a user would just copy paste that one the client would always add
.blob, and the server would not find that file.
So avoid adding file endings if it is already a known OK one.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
will be extended in a next patch.
Also drop a dead else branch, can never get hit as we always add
.blob as fallback
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
while touching it, make columns and tbar in DataStoreContent.js
declarative members and remove the (now) unnecessary initComponent
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
this returns the list of syncjobs with status, as opposed to
config/sync (which is just the config)
also adds an api call where users can run the job manually under
/admin/sync/$ID/run
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
'sync' is used for manually pulling a remote datastore
changing it for a scheduled sync to 'syncjob' so that we can
differentiate between both types of syncs
this also adds a seperate task description for it
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
The repo URL consists of
* optional userid
* optional host
* datastore name
All three have defined regex or format, but none of that is used, so
for example not all valid datastore names are accepted.
Move definition of the regex over to api2::types where we can access
all required regexes easily.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
since the target side wants this to be a boolean and
serde interprets a None Value as 'null' we have to only
add this when it is really set via cli
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
when starting a new task, we do two things to keep track of tasks
(in that order):
* updating the 'active' file with a list of tasks with
'update_active_workers'
* updating the WORKER_TASK_LIST
the second also updates the status of running tasks in the file by
checking if it is still running by checking the WORKER_TASK_LIST
since those two things are not locked, it can happend that
we update the file, and before updating the WORKER_TASK_LIST,
another thread calls update_active_workers and tries to
get the status from the task log, which won't have any data yet
so the status is 'unknown'
(we do not update that status ever, likely for performance reasons,
so we have to fix this here)
by switching the order of the two operations, we make sure that only
tasks reach the 'active' file which are inserted in the WORKER_TASK_LIST
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
to avoid having arbitrary characters in the config (e.g. newlines)
note that this breaks existings configs
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
with a catch: password is in the struct but we do not want it to return
via the api, so we only 'serialize' it when the string is not empty
(this can only happen when the format is not checked by us, iow.
when its returned from the api) and setting it manually to ""
when we return remotes from the api
this way we can still use the type but do not return the password
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
since we want to set the owner of the acl config to 'root'
which is only possible when using a protected api call
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
we added a userid attribute to the User struct, but missed that we
created the default user without that attribuet via the json! macro
which lead to a runtime panic on the deserialization
by using the struct directly, such errors will be caught by the compiler
in the future
with this change, we can remove the serde_json import here
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
using a handlebars instance in ApiConfig, to cache the templates
as long as possible, this is currently ok, as the index template
can only change when the whole package changes
if we split this in the future, we have to trigger a reload of
the daemon on gui package upgrade (so that the template gets reloaded)
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
We dont want to leak the full configuration to users with limited access permission.
Please use the api2::config::datastore api to get the full configuration.
Make `flistxattr()` return a `ListXAttr` helper which
provides an iterator over `&CStr`.
This exposes the property that xattr names are a
zero-terminated string without simply being an opaque
"byte vector". Using &[u8] as a type here is too lax.
Also let `fgetxattr` take a `CStr`. While this may be a
burden on the caller, we usually already have
zero-terminated strings on the call site. Currently we only
use this method coming from `flistxattr` after all.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
This is basically a rewrite of the current logic for navigating the catalog,
but in addition allows to follow symlinks.
Following symlinks introduces the issue that generation of canonical paths
(needed in the actual pxar archive) is more complex, as symlinks have to be
resolved and loops avoided.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
'clear-selected' allows to clear all the match patterns from the list of
patterns for a subsequent restore.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
'list-selected' now shows the filenames matching the patterns for a restore
instead of the patterns themselfs.
The patterns can be displayed by passing the '--pattern' flag.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
This eliminates also repeated calls to readlink in fuse, which occur when the
preallocated buffer to store the symlink target path is to small.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
entry() allows to lookup the position where and entry belongs and update/insert
it in the HashMap more efficiently than get_mut() and insert().
Details: https://gankra.github.io/blah/hashbrown-insert/
In addition, use the struct LinkedList and remove the outdated code.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
In addition to the .pxarexclude files, glob match patterns can be passed to pxar
also via cli parameters.
Therefore the warning is rephrased to be more ambiguous.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
- do not "double"-block_in_place() (it may not be nested)
- do not call block_in_place() in non-worker threads
is_in_tokio() isn't sufficient, we need to actually know
that we're in a worker-thread, so we do this by remembering
that we're blocking.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
tokio now has Handle::try_current() allowing us to
generally check for a tokio runtime even if spawned by
someone else
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
We want to avoid pbs if possible and also avoid placing internal
binaries, not intended for human direct use, in /bin or /sbin paths.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
Modeled after the one from PVE, but using rust instead of perl for
resolving the nodename and writing to /etc/issue
Behavior differs a bit. We write all non-loopback addresses to this
file, as the gui accepts connections from them all, so limiting it to
the first one is not really sensible.
Further an error to resolve, or only getting loopback addresses won't
write out an empty /etc/issue file, but a note about the error at the
place where the address would be displayed.
Named it "pbsbanner", not "proxmox-backup-banner" as it's rather an
internal tool anyway and mirrors pvebanner, pmgbanner
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
Two or more successive slashes should be allowed and treated as a single slash.
We also do not treat two successive slashes at the beginning of a path any
different.
Details are found here:
https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/000095399/basedefs/xbd_chap04.html#tag_04_11
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
Context::find_goodbye_entry() is removed and incorporated into the lookup
callback in order to take advantage of the entry_cache and since it is only used
inside this callback.
All entries read on lookup are cached.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
By storing the payload start offset in the `DirectoryEntry` and passing this
information to `Decoder::read()`, the payload can be read directly and a repeated
re-reading of the entry information is avoided.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
listxattr must only return the name list, no extended attribute values.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
ACLs are stored separately in the pxar archive. This implements the functionality
needed to read the ACLs and return them as extended attributes in the getxattr
callback.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
This helpers are used to construct the extended attributes values from
the ACLs stored in the pxar archive.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
They are not only needed by the pxar::sequential_decoder but also for the fuse
xattr impl, so it makes more sense to have them there.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
The goodbye table of directory entries is cached in a LRU cache to speed up
subsequent accesses.
This is especially important for directories with many entries, as then the
readdirplus callback is called repeatedly because of the limited reply buffer
size.
`DirectoryEntry`s are cached for subsequent access in their own LRU cache,
independent of the goodbye tables.
In order to avoid borrow conflicts, the `Context` provides a fn as_mut_refs
as well as a fn run_with_context_refs.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
By passing `&DirectoryEntry` to stat, the function interface is simplified.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
This will return a mutable reference just like get_mut, but on a cache miss
it will get and insert the missing value via the fetch method provided via the
Cacher trait.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
last_successful_backup: Returns the time of the last successful backup
group_path: Returns the absolute path for a backup_group
snapshot_path: Returns the absolute path for a backup_dir
It's a bit dangerous as it points to all the saved backups, so they
would be seemingly lost after updating the path.
Follow our logic from other products, e.g. in PVE we do not allow to
update the backing path/location of a storage either for similar
reasons.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
Implements a cache with least recently used cache replacement policy.
Internally the state is tracked by a HashMap (for fast access) and a doubly
linked list (for the access order).
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
The -sys, -tools and -api crate have now been merged into
the proxmx crate directly. Only macro crates are separate
(but still reexported by the proxmox crate in their
designated locations).
When we need to depend on "parts" of the crate later on
we'll just have to use features.
The reason is mostly that these modules had
inter-dependencies which really make them not independent
enough to be their own crates.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
This allows to read the target path of a symbolic link in the
Decoder::read_directory_entry() function and stores it in the DirectoryEntry.
By this the Decoder::read_link() function becomes obsolete and is therefore
removed.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
By ambiguously using the Decoder::read_directory_entry() the code is simplified
and reading of the DirectoryEntry is concentrated into Context::run_in_context().
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Previously it was disciminated based on the entry mode.
For directories, the inode was the offset of the corresponding
goodbye tail mark while for all others it was the offset of the filename.
By simply using the start offset as calculated from the corresponding
goodbye table entry (which yields the archive offset of the filename),
the code is simplified and the more ambiguous read_directory_entry()
function can be used.
The disatvantage of this approach is the need to keep track of the
start and end offsets for each entry, as the end offset is needed in
order to access the goodbye table of directory entries.
The root node still has to be treated special, as it's inode is 1 as per fuse
definition and it has no filename as per the pxar file format definition.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Use Decoder::read_directory_entry() instead of Decoder::attributes() as this
already returns the needed DirectoryEntry.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
By not implementing readdir but only readdirplus, the FUSE_CAP_READDIRPLUS flag
is set while the FUSE_CAP_READDIRPLUS_AUTO flag is not set.
Thereby the kernel will issue only readdirplus calls.
Documentation at:
https://libfuse.github.io/doxygen/fuse-3_88_80_2include_2fuse__common_8h.html#a9b90333ad08d0e1c2ed0134d9305ee87
As the expensive part for accessing and reading the attributes is seeking and
decoding each directory entry, it is usefull to force readdirplus calls.
By this a struct `EntryParam` is returned for each entry, therebye avoiding a
subsequent lookup call.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
add a helper to perform some basic checks on password prompts.
- verification (asks for a 2nd time)
- check length
also use the new helper where password input in tty is taken to reduce
duplicate code.
this helper should be used when creating keys, changing passphrases etc.
note: this helper can be extended later on to provide better checks for
password strength.
Signed-off-by: Oguz Bektas <o.bektas@proxmox.com>
readdirplus returns the entries together with their `EntryParam`, so subsequent
lookups for each of the entries are avoided.
In order to reduce code duplication, the code for filling the reply buffer is
moved into a macro.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Remove the current caching of attrs and goodbye tables as it is broken anyway.
This will be replaced with a LRU cache.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
By moving the HashMap into `Context`, the use of lazy_static as well as the
additional Mutex can be avoided (`Context` is already guarded by a Mutex).
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
By reading and including xattrs and payload size in struct `DirectoryEntry`,
the tuple of return types is avoided and the code is simpler.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Limit the total number of entries and therefore the approximate memory
consumption instead of doing this on a per directory basis as it was previously.
This makes more sense as it limits not only the width but also the depth of the
directory tree.
Further, instead of hardcoding this value, allow to pass this information as
additional optional parameter 'entires-max'.
By this, creation of the archive with directories containing a large number of
entries is possible.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
If during creation of the archive, files/dirs with lacking read permissions are
encountered, the user is displayed a warning and the archive is created without
including the file/dir.
Previously this resulted in an error and the archive creation failed.
In order to implement this also for the .pxarexclude files, the Error type of
MatchPattern::from_file() and MatchPattern::from_line() was adopted accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
If nodes are excluded by feature flags, they must not appear in the goodbye table.
This is fixed by continuing with the next entry in the for loop.
Further the relative path buffer is now poped in order to correctly display the path.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
for now forbid all control characters[0] in the comment value, the
section config writer cannot cope with newlines in the value, it
writes them out literally, allowing "injection" or breaking the whole
config.
In the webinterface use also a textfield, not a textarea.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
The find matching was incorrectly performed starting from the parent directroy
and not as intended from the entries of the parent directory.
Further, the match pattern passed from the catalog shell contains the absolute
path of the search entry point as prefix, so find() must always start from the
archive root. This is because the match pattern has to be stored in the selected
list for a subsequent restore-selected command in the shell.
All matching paths are shown as absolute paths with all contents in the subdir,
equal to what would be restored by the given pattern.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Similar to PVE and PMG, for quick access when one has the basic
webinterface open anyway. Should move to the "proxmoxHelpButton" once
we have an onlineHelp mapping to the docs.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
some fitting rules copied over from PVE's ext6-pve.css file.
simply place it in the css subfolder where the proxmox-backup-gui.js
file is hosted and add a "css/" alias for that directory, the
formatter gets use the right content type with that.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
Implements the find command which allows to find and select files for subsequent
restore.
Files selected for restore are now stored in a Vec instead of a HashSet.
This is needed, since instead of the full paths for each file, selected files are
now identified by a list of match pattern, where ordering matters.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
find() iterates over the file tree and matches each node against a list of match
patterns provided at function call.
For each matching node, a callback function with the current directroy stack is
called.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
The MatchPattern impl heavily used copies and therefore was inefficient regarding
memory management.
This patch intoduces MatchPatternSlice as struct to avoid copies and perform the
same pattern matching functionality.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
futures-0.3 has a futures::future::abortable() function
which does the exact same, returns an Abortable future with
an AbortHandle providing an abort() method.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
We used to await all the futures via the runtime's shutdown
method, which doesn't exist anymore, so await all the join
handles instead.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
else we get an error from this call, using a 16 byte (128 bit) nonce
is currently only supported by the still in draft
XChaCha20-Poly1305, not the current default specified by RFC 7539[0],
which uses a 12 byte (96 bit) nonce.
Fixes the following error:
> thread 'main' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err`
> value: ErrorStack([])', src/libcore/result.rs:1165:5
[0]: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7539
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
The match_filename() in sequentail_decoder and encoder are moved to be static
functions of MatchPattern.
This allows to reuse the code also in the catalog find implementation.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Cache not only the goodbye table for the last directory but for each opened
directory.
The opendir fuse callback will fill the cache with the goodbye table and
releasedir will remove it from the cache.
This should reduce the number of chuncks fetched from the server in some cases.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
The goodbye table is layed out as binary search tree based on the hash, so use
this to be more efficient when looking up a hash in the table for directories
with a large number of entries.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
This major refactoring of the catalog based shell utilizes the new API macro and
the API Schema as well as rustyline instead of the old GNU readline C API.
The code now has these 3 main components:
* The `Shell` which handles the readline loop via rustyline.
* The shell functions defined via the API macro.
* The `Context` which holds catalog and decoder instances.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
This reverts commit a9aa52e6a8.
Because we do not want to use macros for the backup protocol for now.
And because it crashes backup tasks for some unknown reason.
The api macro now supports hyphens in parameter names and
referencing externally defined `Schema`s, so here's an
example.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
Decoders read must check if the file is a hardlink and read data from the
corresponding offset if so.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
The returned filename should be the one of the file given at the offset, not of
the one the hardlink points to.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
`match` is a bit more readable than the if-else chains,
also replace
space_chars.iter().any(|s| c == *s)
with
space_chars.contains(&c)
which is also more readable.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
By changing the way shell commands are defined and parsed, this makes it more
straight forward to extend the current functionality.
The readline input is parsed based on the provided command definition and the
given parameters and options are passed to a command specific callback function.
In addition, the provided command definition including its description is used
to generate a help string to display.
The help command shows a list of all supported commands or the help string for
the provided command.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
And use an extra functzion set_callback() to configure that.
Also rewrite pxar/fuse.rs and implement a generic Session (will get
further cleanups with next patches).
In order to provide the context needed for tab completion via the readline
callback, the needed mut ref is passed via a thread local storage key.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
This is needed in order to explicitly clone the values when needed in the
catalog shell implementation.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
Create the full target path and not fail if an intermediate directory does not
exist.
This is needed in order to restore multiple archives via the catalog, where the
target should further contain each archive name as subdir.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
proxmox::tools now has a Uuid module using the native
libuuid.
Adds build dependency: libuuid1 (which is a Pre-Depends of
util-linux, so always installed anyway).
Drops uuid + 16 more crate dependencies.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
Allows to lookup an entry in a directory based on the provided `DirectoryEntry`.
This is needed to navigate the filesystem based on `DirectoryEntry`s and similar
to the find_goodbye_entry() function in src/pxar/fuse.rs
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
As it turns out the original implementation was correct and the start in
`DirectoryEntry` points to the `PxarEntry` and not as wrongly stated to the
filename.
This reverts the incorrect code and adds comments to the fields clarifying this.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>
`Decoder::restore()` calls the `SequentialDecoder::restore()` which expects to
encounter a `PxarEntry` at first. But the start of `DirectoryEntry` points to the
filename (except for the root dir), so skip over it.
Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com>