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5 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jeff Sharkey
66270a21df Let's reinvent storage, yet again!
Now that we're treating storage as a runtime permission, we need to
grant read/write access without killing the app.  This is really
tricky, since we had been using GIDs for access control, and they're
set in stone once Zygote drops privileges.

The only thing left that can change dynamically is the filesystem
itself, so let's do that.  This means changing the FUSE daemon to
present itself as three different views:

/mnt/runtime_default/foo - view for apps with no access
/mnt/runtime_read/foo - view for apps with read access
/mnt/runtime_write/foo - view for apps with write access

There is still a single location for all the backing files, and
filesystem permissions are derived the same way for each view, but
the file modes are masked off differently for each mountpoint.

During Zygote fork, it wires up the appropriate storage access into
an isolated mount namespace based on the current app permissions.  When
the app is granted permissions dynamically at runtime, the system
asks vold to jump into the existing mount namespace and bind mount
the newly granted access model into place.

Bug: 21858077
Change-Id: Iade538e4bc7af979fe20095f74416e8a0f165a4a
2015-06-25 22:40:08 -07:00
Jeff Sharkey
d0640f6358 Add f2fs support for private volumes.
When formatting volumes, pass along fsType string which can be "auto"
to let the volume select the best choice.  For now, private volumes
assume that MMC devices (like SD cards) are best off using f2fs when
both kernel support and tools are present, otherwise fall back to
ext4.  Use blkid when mounting to pick the right set of tools.

Move filesystem utility methods into namespaces and place in separate
directory to be more organized.

Bug: 20275581
Change-Id: Id5f82d8672dda2e9f68c35b075f28232b0b55ed4
2015-06-08 20:21:25 -07:00
Jeff Sharkey
9c48498f45 Support for private (adopted) volumes.
This adds support for private volumes which is just a filesystem
wrapped in a dm-crypt layer.  For now we're using the exact same
configuration as internal encryption (aes-cbc-essiv:sha256), but we
don't store any key material on the removable media.  Instead, we
store the key on internal storage, and use the GPT partition GUID
to identify which key should be used.

This means that private external storage is effectively as secure as
the internal storage of the device.  That is, if the internal storage
is encrypted, then our external storage key is also encrypted.

When partitioning disks, we now support a "private" mode which has
a PrivateVolume partition, and a currently unused 16MB metadata
partition reserved for future use.  It also supports a "mixed" mode
which creates both a PublicVolume and PrivateVolume on the same
disk.  Mixed mode is currently experimental.

For now, just add ext4 support to PrivateVolume; we'll look at f2fs
in a future change.  Add VolumeBase lifecycle for setting up crypto
mappings, and extract blkid logic into shared method.  Sprinkle some
more "static" around the cryptfs code to improve invariants.

Bug: 19993667
Change-Id: Ibd1df6250735b706959a1eb9d9f7219ea85912a0
2015-04-01 10:45:05 -07:00
Jeff Sharkey
36801cccf2 Progress towards dynamic storage support.
Wire up new Disk and VolumeBase objects and events to start replacing
older DirectVolume code.  Use filesystem UUID as visible PublicVolume
name to be more deterministic.

When starting, create DiskSource instances based on fstab, and watch
for kernel devices to appear.  Turn matching devices into Disk
objects, scan for partitions, and create any relevant VolumeBase
objects.  Broadcast all of these events towards userspace so the
framework can decide what to mount.

Keep track of the primary VolumeBase, and update the new per-user
/storage/self/primary symlink for all started users.

Provide a reset command that framework uses to start from a known
state when runtime is restarted.  When vold is unexpectedly killed,
try recovering by unmounting everything under /mnt and /storage
before moving forward.

Remove UMS sharing support for now, since no current devices support
it; MTP is the recommended solution going forward because it offers
better multi-user support.

Switch killProcessesWithOpenFiles() to directly take signal.  Fix
one SOCK_CLOEXEC bug, but SELinux says there are more lurking.

Bug: 19993667
Change-Id: I2dad1303aa4667ec14c52f774e2a28b3c1c1ff6d
2015-03-30 19:46:31 -07:00
Jeff Sharkey
deb2405737 Checkpoint of better dynamic device support.
This is the first in a series of changes that are designed to
introduce better support for dynamic block devices.

It starts by defining a new Volume object which represents a storage
endpoint that knows how to mount, unmount, and format itself.  This
could be a filesystem directly on a partition, or it could be an
emulated FUSE filesystem, an ASEC, or an OBB.

These new volumes can be "stacked" so that unmounting a volume will
also unmount any volumes stacked above it.  Volumes that provide
shared storage can also be asked to present themselves (through bind
mounts) into user-specific mount areas.

This change also adds a Disk class which is created based on block
kernel netlink events.  Instead of waiting for partition events from
the kernel, it uses gptfdisk to read partition details and creates
the relevant Volume objects.

Change-Id: I0e8bc1f8f9dcb24405f5e795c0658998e22ae2f7
2015-03-13 10:12:57 -07:00