Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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If retries are enabled only transient errors are retried, which are very
few errors. At least for some HTTP codes it could be beneficial to retry
them through so adding them seems like a good idea if only to be more
consistent in what we report.
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The casts are useless, but the reports show some where we can actually
improve the code by replacing them with better alternatives like
converting whatever int type into a string instead of casting to a
specific one which might in the future be too small.
Reported-By: gcc -Wuseless-cast
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We accidentally regressed here in 1.5 when replacing the https
method.
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qemu-user passes prctl()-based seccomp through to the kernel,
umodified. That's bad, as it blocks the wrong syscalls.
We ignored EFAULT which fixed the problem for targets with different
pointer sizes from the host, but was a bad hack. In order to identify
qemu we can rely on the fact that qemu-user prints its version and
exits with 0 if QEMU_VERSION is set to an unsupported value. If we
run a command that should fail in such an environment, and it exits
with 0, then we are running in qemu-user.
apt-helper is an obvious command to run. The tests ensure it exits
with 1, and it only prints usage information. We also could not use
/bin/false because apt might just as well be from a foreign arch
while /bin/false is not.
Closes: #881519
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We sleep in http.cc, so we should allow the sleeping syscalls.
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The store method replaced them all, the symlinks where mostly
for partial upgrades or whatever, they should not be needed
any longer.
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Sorting apparently calls sysconf() which calls sysinfo() to get
free pages or whatever.
Closes: #879814, #879826
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This should help debugging crashes. The signal handler is a C++11
lambda, yay! Special care has been taken to only use signal handler
-safe functions inside there.
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If seccomp is disabled, we fallback to running without it. Qemu fails
in the seccomp() call, returning ENOSYS and libseccomp falls back to
prctl() without adjusting the pointer, causing the EFAULT. I hope
qemu gets fixed at some point to return EINVAL for seccomp via
prctl.
Bug-Qemu: https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1726394
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If FAKED_MODE is set, enable SYSV IPC so we don't crash when
running in fakeroot.
Closes: #879662
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Use OBJECT libraries for http and connect stuff, and move the
seccomp link expression into a global link_libraries() call.
This also fixes a bug where only the http target pulled in
the gnutls header arguments despite gnutls being used in
connect.cc, and thus by mirror and ftp as well.
Adjust translation support to ignore TARGET_OBJECTS sources
and add the OBJECT libraries to the translated files.
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statx was introduced in 4.11, so it fails to build in stretch if
we just unconditionally use it.
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These are a few overlooked syscalls. Also add readv(), writev(),
renameat2(), and statx() in case libc uses them.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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This reduces the number of syscalls to about 140 from about
350 or so, significantly reducing security risks.
Also change prepare-release to ignore the architecture lists
in the build dependencies when generating the build-depends
package for travis.
We might want to clean up things a bit more and/or move it
somewhere else.
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This was a left over from the autodetect move.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Sandboxing was turned off because we called pkgAcqMethod's
Configuration() instead of aptMethod's.
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This avoids running the Proxy-Auto-Detect script inside the
untrusted (well, less trusted for now) sandbox. This will allow
us to restrict the http method from fork()ing or exec()ing via
seccomp.
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APT connects just fine to any .onion address given, only if the connect
fails somehow it will perform checks on the sanity of which in this case
is checking the length as they are well defined and as the strings are
arbitrary a user typing them easily mistypes which apt should can be
slightly more helpful in figuring out by saying the onion hasn't the
required length.
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This automatically removes any old apt-transport-https, as
apt now Breaks it unversioned.
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Opening the file before we drop privileges in the methods allows us to
avoid chowning in the acquire main process which can apply to the wrong
file (imagine Binary scoped settings) and surprises users as their
permission setup is overridden.
There are no security benefits as the file is open, so an evil method
could as before read the contents of the file, but it isn't worse than
before and we avoid permission problems in this setup.
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On HTTP Connect we since recently look into the auth.conf file for login
information, so we should really look for all proxies into the file as
the argument is the same as for sources entries and it is easier to
document (especially as the manpage already mentions it as supported).
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We have support for an netrc-like auth.conf file since 0.7.25 (closing
518473), but it was never documented in apt that it even exists and
netrc seems to have fallen out of usage as a manpage for it no longer
exists making the feature even more arcane.
On top of that the code was a bit of a mess (as it is written in c-style)
and as a result the matching of machine tokens to URIs also a bit
strange by checking for less specific matches (= without path) first.
We now do a single pass over the stanzas.
In practice early adopters of the undocumented implementation will not
really notice the differences and the 'new' behaviour is simpler to
document and more usual for an apt user.
Closes: #811181
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Failing on too much data is good, but we can do better by checking for
exact filesizes as we know with hashsums how large a file should be, so
if we get a file which has a size we do not expect we can drop it
directly, regardless of if the file is larger or smaller than what we
expect which should catch most cases which would end up as hashsum
errors later now a lot sooner.
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We tend to operate on rather large static files, which means we usually
get Content-Length information from the server. If we combine this
information with the filesize we are expecting (factoring in pipelining)
we can avoid reading a bunch of data we are ending up rejecting anyhow
by just closing the connection saving bandwidth and time both for the
server as well as the client.
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It is highly unlikely to encounter fields which start with HTTP in
practice, but we should really be a bit more restrictive here.
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This makes it easier to see which headers includes what.
The changes were done by running
git grep -l '#\s*include' \
| grep -E '.(cc|h)$' \
| xargs sed -i -E 's/(^\s*)#(\s*)include/\1#\2 include/'
To modify all include lines by adding a space, and then running
./git-clang-format.sh.
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That's just ridiculous these days.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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It is kinda unlikely that apt will ever encounter a certificate for an
IP and a user actually using it, but the API documentation for
gnutls_server_name_set explicitly says that "IPv4 or IPv6 addresses are
not permitted to be set by this function.", so we should follow it.
[jak@d.o: Slightly rebased]
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This makes more sense. If the handshake failed midway, we still
should run the gnutls bye stuff. The thinking here is to only
set the fd after the session setup, as we do not modify it
before, so if it fails in session setup, you retain a usable
file descriptor.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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This probably makes more sense if Verify-Peer is set to off.
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This should make it easier to figure out what was
going on.
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APT considered any response with a Content-Length to have a
body, even if the value of the header was 0. A 0 length body
however, is equal to no body.
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We can actually just pass null as a hostname, so let's just
do that when Verify-Host is set to false.
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Silently ignoring the options might be a security issue,
so produce an error instead.
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If gnutls_session_bye() exited with an error, we never closed
the underlying file descriptor, causing the method to think the
connection was still open. This caused problems especially in
test-partial-file-support where we checked that a "complete"
file and an incomplete file work. The first GET returns a 416
with Connection: close, and the next GET request then accidentally
reads the body of the 416 as the header for its own request.
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The old curl based method is still available as 'curl',
'curl+http', and 'curl+https'.
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HTTPS proxies just require unwrapping the TLS layer at the proxy
connection, that's easy, and of course sending proxy-specific
headers that are sent on "http" proxies.
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Proxying HTTPS traffic requires the proxy providing the
CONNECT method. This implements the client side of it,
although it is a bit hacky.
HTTP connect is a normal HTTP CONNECT request, followed
by a normal HTTP response, just that the body of the
response is the TCP stream of the target host.
We use a special wrapper in case there are data bytes
in the header packets - in that case, the bytes are
stored in a buffer and the buffer will be drained first,
afterwards the connection continues directly with the
TCP stream (with one more vcall).
Also: Do not send full URI to https destinations when proxying,
as we are directly interfacing with the destination data stream.
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This is especially needed if we use an HTTPS proxy to CONNECT
to an HTTPS URI, as we run TLS-inside-TLS then.
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When APT was trying multiple addresses, any later error
somewhere else would be reported with ConnectionRefused
or ConnectionTimedOut as the FailReason because that
was set by early connect attempts. This causes APT to
handle the failures differently, leading to some weirdly
breaking test cases (like the changed one).
Add debugging to the previously failing test case so
we can find out when something goes wrong there again.
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This fixes a regression from ~alpha2.
Closes: #866559
Gbp-Dch: Full
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It turns out that curl only sets the system trust store if
the CaInfo option is not set, so let's do the same here.
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Tell the user to install ca-certificates.
Closes: #866377
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An SRV record includes a portnumber to use with the host given, but apt
was ignoring the portnumber and instead used either the port given by
the user for the initial host or the default port for the service.
In practice the service usually runs on another host on the default
port, so it tends to work as intended and even if not and apt can't get
a connection there it will gracefully fallback to contacting the initial
host with the right port, so its a user invisible bug most of the time.
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The apt-transport-tor package operates via simple symlinks which can
result in 'http' being called as 'tor+https', so it must pick up the
right configuration pieces and trigger https support also in plus names.
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As requested by Henrique de Moraes Holschuh, here comes
an option to disable TLS support. If the option is set
to false, the internal TLS layer is disabled.
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Gbp-Dch: ignore
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GnuTLS can already have data pending in its buffers, we need
to to drain that first otherwise select() might block
indefinitely.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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This makes testing easier and prepares us for the
transition.
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