Previously to this commit, we used a string for srcFD as /proc/self/fd/NN.
This commit modified to this behavior, so srcFD is only an *int and the full path
is constructed in mountViaFDs() if srcFD is different than nil.
Signed-off-by: Francis Laniel <flaniel@linux.microsoft.com>
1. Simplify mount call by removing the procfd argument, and use the new
mount() where procfd is not used. Now, the mount() arguments are the
same as for unix.Mount.
2. Introduce a new mountViaFDs function, which is similar to the old
mount(), except it can take procfd for both source and target.
The new arguments are called srcFD and dstFD.
3. Modify the mount error to show both srcFD and dstFD so it's clear
which one is used for which purpose. This fixes the issue of having
a somewhat cryptic errors like this:
> mount /proc/self/fd/11:/sys/fs/cgroup/systemd (via /proc/self/fd/12), flags: 0x20502f: operation not permitted
(in which fd 11 is actually the source, and fd 12 is the target).
After this change, it looks like
> mount src=/proc/self/fd/11, dst=/sys/fs/cgroup/systemd, dstFD=/proc/self/fd/12, flags=0x20502f: operation not permitted
so it's clear that 12 is a destination fd.
4. Fix the mountViaFDs callers to use dstFD (rather than procfd) for the
variable name.
5. Use srcFD where mountFd is set.
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
Errors returned by unix are bare. In some cases it's impossible to find
out what went wrong because there's is not enough context.
Add a mountError type (mostly copy-pasted from github.com/moby/sys/mount),
and mount/unmount helpers. Use these where appropriate, and convert error
checks to use errors.Is.
Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>