Upstream changelog:
- SECURITY UPDATE: In previous versions of libfuse it was possible to
for unprivileged users to specify the allow_other option even when
this was forbidden in /etc/fuse.conf. The vulnerability is present
only on systems where SELinux is active (including in permissive
mode).
- libfuse no longer segfaults when fuse_interrupted() is called outside
the event loop.
- The fusermount binary has been hardened in several ways to reduce
potential attack surface. Most importantly, mountpoints and mount
options must now match a hard-coded whitelist. It is expected that
this whitelist covers all regular use-cases.
- Fixed rename deadlock on FreeBSD.
Upstream changelog:
- SECURITY UPDATE: In previous versions of libfuse it was possible to
for unprivileged users to specify the allow_other option even when
this was forbidden in /etc/fuse.conf. The vulnerability is present
only on systems where SELinux is active (including in permissive
mode).
- The fusermount binary has been hardened in several ways to reduce
potential attack surface. Most importantly, mountpoints and mount
options must now match a hard-coded whitelist. It is expected that
this whitelist covers all regular use-cases.
- Added a test of seekdir to test_syscalls.
- Fixed readdir bug when non-zero offsets are given to filler and the
filesystem client, after reading a whole directory, re-reads it from a
non-zero offset e. g. by calling seekdir followed by readdir.
This includes fuse-common (fusePackages.fuse_3.common) as recommended by
upstream. But while fuse(2) and fuse3 would normally depend on
fuse-common we can't do that in nixpkgs while fuse-common is just
another output from the fuse3 multiple-output derivation (i.e. this
would result in a circular dependency). To avoid building fuse3 twice I
decided it would be best to copy the shared files (i.e. the ones
provided by fuse(2) and fuse3) from fuse-common to fuse (version 2) and
avoid collision warnings by defining priorities. Now it should be
possible to install an arbitrary combination of "fuse", "fuse3", and
"fuse-common" without getting any collision warnings. The end result
should be the same and all changes should be backwards compatible
(assuming that mount.fuse from fuse3 is backwards compatible as stated
by upstream [0] - if not this might break some /etc/fstab definitions
but that should be very unlikely).
My tests with sshfs (version 2 and 3) didn't show any problems.
See #28409 for some additional information.
[0]: https://github.com/libfuse/libfuse/releases/tag/fuse-3.0.0