From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: hsiangkao@aol.com (Gao Xiang) Date: Mon, 19 Aug 2019 00:03:11 +0800 Subject: [PATCH] erofs: move erofs out of staging In-Reply-To: <20190818151154.GA32157@mit.edu> Message-ID: <20190818160305.GA31588@hsiangkao-HP-ZHAN-66-Pro-G1> Hi Ted, On Sun, Aug 18, 2019@11:11:54AM -0400, Theodore Y. Ts'o wrote: > On Sun, Aug 18, 2019@11:21:13AM +0200, Richard Weinberger wrote: > > > Not to say that erofs shouldn't be worked on to fix these kinds of > > > issues, just that it's not an unheard of thing to trust the disk image. > > > Especially for the normal usage model of erofs, where the whole disk > > > image is verfied before it is allowed to be mounted as part of the boot > > > process. > > > > For normal use I see no problem at all. > > I fear distros that try to mount anything you plug into your USB. > > > > At least SUSE already blacklists erofs: > > https://github.com/openSUSE/suse-module-tools/blob/master/suse-module-tools.spec#L24 > > Note that of the mainstream file systems, ext4 and xfs don't guarantee > that it's safe to blindly take maliciously provided file systems, such > as those provided by a untrusted container, and mount it on a file > system without problems. As I recall, one of the XFS developers > described file system fuzzing reports as a denial of service attack on > the developers. And on the ext4 side, while I try to address them, it > is by no means considered a high priority work item, and I don't > consider fixes of fuzzing reports to be worthy of coordinated > disclosure or a high priority bug to fix. (I have closed more bugs in > this area than XFS has, although that may be that ext4 started with > more file system format bugs than XFS; however given the time to first > bug in 2017 using American Fuzzy Lop[1] being 5 seconds for btrfs, 10 > seconds for f2fs, 25 seconds for reiserfs, 4 minutes for ntfs, 1h45m > for xfs, and 2h for ext4, that seems unlikely.) > > [1] https://events.static.linuxfound.org/sites/events/files/slides/AFL%20filesystem%20fuzzing%2C%20Vault%202016_0.pdf > > So holding a file system like EROFS to a higher standard than say, > ext4, xfs, or btrfs hardly seems fair. There seems to be a very > unfortunate tendancy for us to hold new file systems to impossibly > high standards, when in fact, adding a file system to Linux should > not, in my opinion, be a remarkable event. We have a huge number of > them already, many of which are barely maintained and probably have > far worse issues than file systems trying to get into the clubhouse. > > If a file system is requesting core changes to the VM or block layers, > sure, we should care about the interfaces. But this nitpicking about > whether or not a file system can be trusted in what I consider to be > COMPLETELY INSANE CONTAINER USE CASES is really not fair. Thanks for your kind reply and understanding... Yes, EROFS is now still like a little baby, and what I can do is to write more code to make it grown up... but I personally cannot write bug-free code all the time (because sometimes I could be in a low mood...) In the past year, we already adds many error handling path for corrupted images and handles all BUG_ONs in a more proper way... we are doing our best... Our team will continue focusing on all bug reports from external / internal sources and fix them all in time. and for more wider scenerios, I'd like to build an autofuzzer tools based on erofs-utils to make EROFS more strong as one of the next step. Thanks, Gao Xiang > > Cheers, > > - Ted