We will hard fail in case of encountering different architectures in bootspec.
This should still be compatible with cross-compiling systems in the future.
This generates `lzbt-systemd` binary instead of `lzbt`
which is using a special systemd-specific entrypoint.
This is part of the effort to enable multiple backends.
Bootspec has a mechanism called synthesis where you can synthesize
bootspecs if they are not present based on the generation link only.
This is useful for "vanilla bootspec" which does not contain any
extensions, as this is what we do right now.
If we need extensions, we can also implement our synthesis mechanism on
the top of it.
Enabling synthesis gives us the superpower to support non-bootspec
users. :-)
The message about malformed generatiosn should semantically be a
warning. However, since users might have hundres of old and thus
malformed generations and can do little about it, this should remain a
debug message. This way the user is not spammed with no-op warnings
while still enabling debugging.
lzbt currently happily nukes all boot entries, if it can't parse any
bootspecs. With the upcoming incompatible bootspec change, this might
be a problem that's worth avoiding. :)
I changed lzbt to fail hard in case, it can't generate any boot
items.
Due to the use of hash maps, the order of file installation was not
deterministic. I've changed the code the use BTreeMaps instead, which
makes this deterministic. While I was here, I tried to simplify the
code a bit.
To minimize writes to the ESP but still find necessary changes, compare
the hashes of the files on the ESP with the "expected" hashes. Only copy
and overwrite already existing files if the hashes don't match. This
ensures a working-as-expected state on the ESP as opposed to previously
where already existing files were just ignored.
Previously, generations were installed one after another. Now all
artifacts (kernels, initrd etc.) are first collected and then installed.
This way the writes to the ESP are reduced as duplicate paths are
already removed in the collection phase.
Using random names for tempfiles makes handling them easier. It reduces
the amount of noise in the code because no custom name needs to be
provided for each tempfile. The names were not really useful in any
case.
It also does not burden the developer with ensuring uniqueness of names.
This is relevant when files for multiple generations need to be stored
in the same directory (e.g. because they need to be accessed after
handling one generation).
Out of an abundance of caution, 32 random alphanumeric characters are
chosen for each filename. The tempfile crate, in comparison, only
chooses 8. 32 characters should be enough to avoid collisions, even
if the PRNG is not of cryptographic quality.
Leverage the bootspec `label` field in its intended way. The VERSION_ID
of the os-release in the stub now only contains the generation number
and the build time. This makes a correct PRETTY_NAME entirely dependent
on correct information in the bootspec `label` field.
Read the build time from generation symlinks in /nix/var/nix/profiles
instead of from the underlying derivation. The derivation build time
will always be a UNIX epoch of 0 because of the `nix-build` sandbox,
which is useless for identifying when a generation was created.
Malicious boot loader specification entries could be used to make a
signed kernel load arbitrary unprotected initrds. Since we do not want
this, do not sign the kernel. This way, the only things allowed to boot
are our UKI stubs, which do verify the initrd.
To minimize the number of arguments passed to `lzbt`, the loader config
is assembled outside `lzbt` and passed as a single argument.
Instead of reimplementing `consoleMode` under the `lanzaboote`
namespace, `config.loader.systemd-boot.consoleMode` is reused as is.
To minimize the potential for irrecoverable errors, only atomic writes
to the ESP are performed. This is implemented by first copying the file
to the destination with a `.tmp` suffix and then renaming it to the
final desintation. This is atomic because the rename operation is atomic
on POSIX platforms.
Specifically, this means that even if the system crashes during the
operation, the final desintation path will most likely be intact if it
exists at all. There are some nuances to this however. It **cannot** be
actually guaranteed that the operation was performed on the filesystem
level. However, this is the best we can do for now.
For reference:
- POSIX rename(2): https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/
- Rust fs::rename corresponds to rename(2) on Unix: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/fs/fn.rename.html
- Rust fs::rename is implemented using libc's rename: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/library/std/src/sys/unix/fs.rs#L1397
- Renaming in libc is atomic: https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/Renaming-Files.html
To make handling systemd versions more robust, they are parsed into a
u32 tuple instead of an f32. Additionally, some unit tests for correct
parsing and comparing of versions are added.
The process of installing systemd-boot is "smarter" because it now
considers a a few conditions instead of doing nothing if there is a file
at the deistination path. systemd-boot is now forcibly installed (i.e.
overwriting any file at the destination) if (1) there is no file at the
destination, OR (2) a newer version of systemd-boot is available, OR (3)
the signature of the file at the destination could not be verified.
To access paths on the ESP before or after installing generations, split
EspPaths into general EspPaths that only depend on the path to the ESP
and EspGenerationPaths which additionally depend on generation specific
information (e.g. version number and initrd filename).
Add an extension to TempDir that allows to create secure tempfiles. This
way, everything related to creating secure tempfiles is bundled in a
single place and can easily be reused.