Add a command to read values from the qemu fwcfg store. This allows data
to be passed from the qemu command line to grub.
Example use:
echo '(hd0,1)' >rootdev
qemu -fw_cfg opt/rootdev,file=rootdev
fwconfig opt/rootdev root
This makes it impossible to read from stdin without controlling tty:
10:/mnt # echo -e passwd\\npasswd | setsid ./grub-mkpasswd-pbkdf2
Enter password:
Reenter password: ./grub-mkpasswd-pbkdf2: error: failure to read password.
10:/mnt
We already check that jump over 300 bytes gap is 3 bytes in code16-mode.
Some clang versions generate 3-byte opcode for short jumps which makes
boot.img blow over 512-byte limit. Enforce -no-integrated-as in such cases
libgcrypt-grub shouldn't be modified directly anyway. With this patch
tarball without contrib can be unpacked on FAT and stay usable for
out-of-tree compile on full POSIX FS (compile on FAT not tested).
It is not possible to configure encrypted containers on multiple partitions of
the same disk; after the first one all subsequent fail with
disk/cryptodisk.c:978: already mounted as crypto0
Store partition offset in cryptomount descriptor to distinguish between them.
This did not cause real problem but is good for reproducible builds. I hit
it with recent bootinfoscript that displays embedded config; I was puzzled
by random garbage at the end.
Prezero memory buffer used to assemble core.img. This makes individual
memset redundant. Also ensure buffer is filled with zeroes in several other
places.
Also remove redundant zeroing code where we fill in the whole memory block
anyway.
GRUB code expects O32 or N32. N32 is less tested than O32, so we prefer to
compile with O32. Some systems (e.g. GNU Guix) default to using newer
n64 or n32 ABI. Try to find suitable options to force o32.
For GCC this is simply -mabi=32. While clang supports this option as well,
o32 ABI is valid for MIPS target and n32/64 ABI are valid for MIPS64 target
only, so use "-target mips/mipsel -mabi=32".
Reported-By: Mark H Weaver <mhw@netris.org>
Also-By: Mark H Weaver <mhw@netris.org>
From original patch by dann frazier <dann.frazier@canonical.com>:
grub_net_fs_open() saves off a copy of the file structure it gets passed and
uses it to create a bufio structure. It then overwrites the passed in file
structure with this new bufio structure. Since file->name doesn't get set
until we return back to grub_file_open(), it means that only the bufio
structure gets a valid file->name. The "real" file's name is left
uninitialized. This leads to a crash when the progress module hook is called
on it.
grub_net_fs_open() already saved copy of file name as ->net->name, so change
progress module to use it.
Also, grub_file_open may leave file->name as NULL if grub_strdup fails. Check
for it.
Also-By: dann frazier <dann.frazier@canonical.com>
It cannot work anyway because host disk cannot be read. This fixes hostfs access
on native Windows build where filenames start with '\' or do not have initial
separator at all (d:\foo).
Issue was observed when running grub-fstest on Windows. On UNIX image name is
canonicalized to always start with `/' so this was not noticed.
This has side effect of allowing relative path names on host, but this already
was the case with `ls' command, so it just extends it to all commands.
Reported-By: Arch Stack <archstacker@gmail.com>
Also-By: Arch Stack <archstacker@gmail.com>