Hi, SUSP 1.12 says:
The "CE" System Use Entry indicates a Continuation Area that shall be processed after the current System Use field or Continuation Area is processed. But GRUB rather takes an encountered CE entry as reason to immediately switch reading to the location that is given by the CE entry. This can skip over important information. The usual ISO 9660 producers on GNU/Linux write the CE entry as last entry of System Use field or Continuation Area. So the problem does not show up with their output. Nevertheless, Linux and libisofs obey the specs whereas GRUB does not. As demonstration i crafted a small ISO, where the CE entry comes before the NM entry which tells the Rock Ridge file name "RockRidgeName:x". Linux shows the NM name, nevertheless: $ sudo mount iso9660_early_ce.iso /mnt/iso mount: /mnt/iso: WARNING: source write-protected, mounted read-only. $ ls /mnt/iso RockRidgeName:x $ GRUB does not see the NM entry and thus shows the dull ISO 9660 name (which is actually "ROCKRIDG.;1"): $ ./grub-fstest iso9660_early_ce.iso ls / rockridg $ After the code change of my patch, i get: $ ./grub-fstest iso9660_early_ce.iso ls / RockRidgeName:x $ A new code block in tests/iso9660_test.in verifies that the patched code is in effect: make check TESTS=iso9660_test detects the old code state and shows that the new code still has the capability to cope with endless CE loops. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- How to create an ISO 9660 filesystem where CE is not the last SUSP entry of a file's directory record: # Deliberately chosen names iso=iso9660_early_ce.iso # rr_path is longer than 8, mixed-case, with non-ISO-9660 character rr_path=/RockRidgeName:x # A dummy file as payload echo x >x # 250 fattr characters to surely exceed the size of a directory record long_string=0123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789 # Create ISO with the payload file and attached fattr named user.dummy . # Make it small with the most restrictive ISO 9660 file name rules. test -e "$iso" && rm "$iso" xorriso -compliance no_emul_toc:iso_9660_level=1 \ -padding 0 \ -outdev "$iso" \ -xattr on \ -map x "$rr_path" \ -setfattr user.dummy "$long_string" "$rr_path" -- # Cut out the NM field and the CE field from the directory record # of $rr_path. The numbers were determined by looking at a hex dump. dd if="$iso" bs=1 skip=37198 count=20 of=nm_field dd if="$iso" bs=1 skip=37218 count=28 of=ce_field # Put them back in reverse sequence dd conv=notrunc if=ce_field bs=1 seek=37198 of="$iso" dd conv=notrunc if=nm_field bs=1 seek=37226 of="$iso" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Have a nice day :) Thomas Thomas Schmitt (2): fs/iso9660: Delay CE hop until end of current SUSP area tests: Add test for iso9660 delayed CE hop grub-core/fs/iso9660.c | 84 ++++++++++++++++++---------------- tests/iso9660_early_ce.iso.gz | Bin 0 -> 709 bytes tests/iso9660_test.in | 24 ++++++++++ 3 files changed, 68 insertions(+), 40 deletions(-) create mode 100644 tests/iso9660_early_ce.iso.gz -- 2.30.2 _______________________________________________ Grub-devel mailing list Grub-devel@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/grub-devel