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#!/bin/sh
# enforce limits on partition start sector and length
# Copyright (C) 2008-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
. "${srcdir=.}/init.sh"; path_prepend_ ../parted
require_root_
require_xfs_
ss=$sector_size_
# On a 32-bit system, we must skip this test when $ss >= 4096.
# Otherwise, due to an inherent 32-bit-XFS limit, dd would fail to
# create the file of size > 16TiB
if test $(uname -m) != x86_64; then
test $ss -le 2048 || skip_ 'this test works only on a 64-bit system'
fi
####################################################
# Create and mount a file system capable of dealing with >=2TB files.
# We must be able to create a file with an apparent length of 2TB or larger.
# It needn't be a large file system.
fs=fs_file
mp=`pwd`/mount-point
n=4096
# create an XFS file system
mkfs.xfs -dfile,name=$fs,size=100m || fail=1
mkdir "$mp" || fail=1
# Unmount upon interrupt, failure, etc., as well as upon normal completion.
cleanup_fn_() { cd "$test_dir_" && umount "$mp" > /dev/null 2>&1; }
# mount it
mount -o loop $fs "$mp" || fail=1
cd "$mp" || fail=1
dev=loop-file
do_mkpart()
{
set +x # Turn off tracing; otherwise, we pollute stderr.
start_sector=$1
end_sector=$2
# echo '********' $(echo $end_sector - $start_sector + 1 |bc)
dd if=/dev/zero of=$dev bs=$ss count=2k seek=$end_sector 2> /dev/null &&
parted -s $dev mklabel $table_type &&
parted -s $dev mkpart p xfs ${start_sector}s ${end_sector}s
}
# Specify the starting sector number and length in sectors,
# rather than start and end.
do_mkpart_start_and_len()
{
set +x # Turn off tracing; otherwise, we pollute stderr.
start_sector=$1
len=$2
end_sector=$(echo $start_sector + $len - 1|bc)
do_mkpart $start_sector $end_sector
}
for table_type in dvh; do
# a partition length of 2^32-1 works.
end=$(echo $n+2^32-2|bc) || fail=1
do_mkpart $n $end || fail=1
# print the result
parted -s $dev unit s p > out 2>&1 || fail=1
sed -n "/^ *1 *$n/s/ */ /gp" out|sed "s/ *\$//" > k && mv k out || fail=1
echo " 1 ${n}s ${end}s 4294967295s primary" > exp || fail=1
compare exp out || fail=1
# a partition length of exactly 2^32 sectors provokes failure.
do_mkpart $n $(echo $n+2^32-1|bc) > err 2>&1
test $? = 1 || fail=1
bad_part_length()
{ echo "Error: partition length of $1 sectors exceeds the"\
"$table_type-partition-table-imposed maximum of 4294967295"; }
# check for new diagnostic
bad_part_length 4294967296 > exp || fail=1
compare exp err || fail=1
# FIXME: investigate this.
# Unexpectedly to me, both of these failed with this same diagnostic:
#
# Error: partition length of 4294967296 sectors exceeds the \
# DOS-partition-table-imposed maximum of 2^32-1" > exp &&
#
# I expected the one below to fail with a length of _4294967297_.
# Debugging, I see that _check_partition *does* detect this,
# but the diagnostic doesn't get displayed because of the wonders
# of parted's exception mechanism.
# a partition length of 2^32+1 sectors must provoke failure.
do_mkpart $n $(echo $n+2^32|bc) > err 2>&1
test $? = 1 || fail=1
# check for new diagnostic
bad_part_length 4294967297 > exp || fail=1
compare exp err || fail=1
# =========================================================
# Now consider partition starting sector numbers.
bad_start_sector()
{ echo "Error: starting sector number, $1 exceeds the"\
"$table_type-partition-table-imposed maximum of 4294967295"; }
# a partition start sector number of 2^32-1 works.
do_mkpart_start_and_len $(echo 2^32-1|bc) 1000 || fail=1
# FIXME: this partition number 9 (not requested!) looks totally bogus
# FIXME: For now, we just expect what the code produces.
# FIXME: In the long run, figure out if it's sensible.
cat > exp <<EOF
Model: (file)
Disk $dev: 4294970342s
Sector size (logical/physical): ${ss}B/${ss}B
Partition Table: $table_type
Disk Flags:
Number Start End Size Type File system Name Flags
9 0s 4095s 4096s extended
1 4294967295s 4294968294s 1000s primary
EOF
# print the result
parted -s $dev unit s p > out 2>&1 || fail=1
sed "s/^Disk .*\($dev: [0-9][0-9]*s\)$/Disk \1/;s/ *$//" out > k \
&& mv k out || fail=1
compare exp out || fail=1
# a partition start sector number of 2^32 must fail
do_mkpart_start_and_len $(echo 2^32|bc) 1000 > err 2>&1
test $? = 1 || fail=1
# check for new diagnostic
bad_start_sector 4294967296 > exp || fail=1
compare exp err || fail=1
# a partition start sector number of 2^32+1 must fail, too.
do_mkpart_start_and_len $(echo 2^32+1|bc) 1000 > err 2>&1
test $? = 1 || fail=1
# check for new diagnostic
bad_start_sector 4294967297 > exp || fail=1
compare exp err || fail=1
done
Exit $fail
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