summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/src/udev/sd-daemon.h
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorAnthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>2012-11-17 00:12:08 -0500
committerAnthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>2012-11-17 00:12:08 -0500
commit8b9605d16a070dcfb4fdf2c88d2f361c9db48d18 (patch)
tree33a649fafe87342594f41631c5fbef650c0c64e1 /src/udev/sd-daemon.h
parentdbc4814264667d2ebf2f7300a4028461fdf532bd (diff)
src/udev: continue restoring needed deps
Diffstat (limited to 'src/udev/sd-daemon.h')
-rw-r--r--src/udev/sd-daemon.h282
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 282 deletions
diff --git a/src/udev/sd-daemon.h b/src/udev/sd-daemon.h
deleted file mode 100644
index fb7456d50f..0000000000
--- a/src/udev/sd-daemon.h
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,282 +0,0 @@
-/*-*- Mode: C; c-basic-offset: 8; indent-tabs-mode: nil -*-*/
-
-#ifndef foosddaemonhfoo
-#define foosddaemonhfoo
-
-/***
- Copyright 2010 Lennart Poettering
-
- Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person
- obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files
- (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction,
- including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge,
- publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software,
- and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so,
- subject to the following conditions:
-
- The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
- included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
-
- THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
- EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
- MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
- NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS
- BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN
- ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
- CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
- SOFTWARE.
-***/
-
-#include <sys/types.h>
-#include <inttypes.h>
-
-#ifdef __cplusplus
-extern "C" {
-#endif
-
-/*
- Reference implementation of a few systemd related interfaces for
- writing daemons. These interfaces are trivial to implement. To
- simplify porting we provide this reference implementation.
- Applications are welcome to reimplement the algorithms described
- here if they do not want to include these two source files.
-
- The following functionality is provided:
-
- - Support for logging with log levels on stderr
- - File descriptor passing for socket-based activation
- - Daemon startup and status notification
- - Detection of systemd boots
-
- You may compile this with -DDISABLE_SYSTEMD to disable systemd
- support. This makes all those calls NOPs that are directly related to
- systemd (i.e. only sd_is_xxx() will stay useful).
-
- Since this is drop-in code we don't want any of our symbols to be
- exported in any case. Hence we declare hidden visibility for all of
- them.
-
- You may find an up-to-date version of these source files online:
-
- http://cgit.freedesktop.org/systemd/systemd/plain/src/systemd/sd-daemon.h
- http://cgit.freedesktop.org/systemd/systemd/plain/src/libsystemd-daemon/sd-daemon.c
-
- This should compile on non-Linux systems, too, but with the
- exception of the sd_is_xxx() calls all functions will become NOPs.
-
- See sd-daemon(3) for more information.
-*/
-
-#ifndef _sd_printf_attr_
-#if __GNUC__ >= 4
-#define _sd_printf_attr_(a,b) __attribute__ ((format (printf, a, b)))
-#else
-#define _sd_printf_attr_(a,b)
-#endif
-#endif
-
-/*
- Log levels for usage on stderr:
-
- fprintf(stderr, SD_NOTICE "Hello World!\n");
-
- This is similar to printk() usage in the kernel.
-*/
-#define SD_EMERG "<0>" /* system is unusable */
-#define SD_ALERT "<1>" /* action must be taken immediately */
-#define SD_CRIT "<2>" /* critical conditions */
-#define SD_ERR "<3>" /* error conditions */
-#define SD_WARNING "<4>" /* warning conditions */
-#define SD_NOTICE "<5>" /* normal but significant condition */
-#define SD_INFO "<6>" /* informational */
-#define SD_DEBUG "<7>" /* debug-level messages */
-
-/* The first passed file descriptor is fd 3 */
-#define SD_LISTEN_FDS_START 3
-
-/*
- Returns how many file descriptors have been passed, or a negative
- errno code on failure. Optionally, removes the $LISTEN_FDS and
- $LISTEN_PID file descriptors from the environment (recommended, but
- problematic in threaded environments). If r is the return value of
- this function you'll find the file descriptors passed as fds
- SD_LISTEN_FDS_START to SD_LISTEN_FDS_START+r-1. Returns a negative
- errno style error code on failure. This function call ensures that
- the FD_CLOEXEC flag is set for the passed file descriptors, to make
- sure they are not passed on to child processes. If FD_CLOEXEC shall
- not be set, the caller needs to unset it after this call for all file
- descriptors that are used.
-
- See sd_listen_fds(3) for more information.
-*/
-int sd_listen_fds(int unset_environment);
-
-/*
- Helper call for identifying a passed file descriptor. Returns 1 if
- the file descriptor is a FIFO in the file system stored under the
- specified path, 0 otherwise. If path is NULL a path name check will
- not be done and the call only verifies if the file descriptor
- refers to a FIFO. Returns a negative errno style error code on
- failure.
-
- See sd_is_fifo(3) for more information.
-*/
-int sd_is_fifo(int fd, const char *path);
-
-/*
- Helper call for identifying a passed file descriptor. Returns 1 if
- the file descriptor is a special character device on the file
- system stored under the specified path, 0 otherwise.
- If path is NULL a path name check will not be done and the call
- only verifies if the file descriptor refers to a special character.
- Returns a negative errno style error code on failure.
-
- See sd_is_special(3) for more information.
-*/
-int sd_is_special(int fd, const char *path);
-
-/*
- Helper call for identifying a passed file descriptor. Returns 1 if
- the file descriptor is a socket of the specified family (AF_INET,
- ...) and type (SOCK_DGRAM, SOCK_STREAM, ...), 0 otherwise. If
- family is 0 a socket family check will not be done. If type is 0 a
- socket type check will not be done and the call only verifies if
- the file descriptor refers to a socket. If listening is > 0 it is
- verified that the socket is in listening mode. (i.e. listen() has
- been called) If listening is == 0 it is verified that the socket is
- not in listening mode. If listening is < 0 no listening mode check
- is done. Returns a negative errno style error code on failure.
-
- See sd_is_socket(3) for more information.
-*/
-int sd_is_socket(int fd, int family, int type, int listening);
-
-/*
- Helper call for identifying a passed file descriptor. Returns 1 if
- the file descriptor is an Internet socket, of the specified family
- (either AF_INET or AF_INET6) and the specified type (SOCK_DGRAM,
- SOCK_STREAM, ...), 0 otherwise. If version is 0 a protocol version
- check is not done. If type is 0 a socket type check will not be
- done. If port is 0 a socket port check will not be done. The
- listening flag is used the same way as in sd_is_socket(). Returns a
- negative errno style error code on failure.
-
- See sd_is_socket_inet(3) for more information.
-*/
-int sd_is_socket_inet(int fd, int family, int type, int listening, uint16_t port);
-
-/*
- Helper call for identifying a passed file descriptor. Returns 1 if
- the file descriptor is an AF_UNIX socket of the specified type
- (SOCK_DGRAM, SOCK_STREAM, ...) and path, 0 otherwise. If type is 0
- a socket type check will not be done. If path is NULL a socket path
- check will not be done. For normal AF_UNIX sockets set length to
- 0. For abstract namespace sockets set length to the length of the
- socket name (including the initial 0 byte), and pass the full
- socket path in path (including the initial 0 byte). The listening
- flag is used the same way as in sd_is_socket(). Returns a negative
- errno style error code on failure.
-
- See sd_is_socket_unix(3) for more information.
-*/
-int sd_is_socket_unix(int fd, int type, int listening, const char *path, size_t length);
-
-/*
- Helper call for identifying a passed file descriptor. Returns 1 if
- the file descriptor is a POSIX Message Queue of the specified name,
- 0 otherwise. If path is NULL a message queue name check is not
- done. Returns a negative errno style error code on failure.
-*/
-int sd_is_mq(int fd, const char *path);
-
-/*
- Informs systemd about changed daemon state. This takes a number of
- newline separated environment-style variable assignments in a
- string. The following variables are known:
-
- READY=1 Tells systemd that daemon startup is finished (only
- relevant for services of Type=notify). The passed
- argument is a boolean "1" or "0". Since there is
- little value in signaling non-readiness the only
- value daemons should send is "READY=1".
-
- STATUS=... Passes a single-line status string back to systemd
- that describes the daemon state. This is free-from
- and can be used for various purposes: general state
- feedback, fsck-like programs could pass completion
- percentages and failing programs could pass a human
- readable error message. Example: "STATUS=Completed
- 66% of file system check..."
-
- ERRNO=... If a daemon fails, the errno-style error code,
- formatted as string. Example: "ERRNO=2" for ENOENT.
-
- BUSERROR=... If a daemon fails, the D-Bus error-style error
- code. Example: "BUSERROR=org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.TimedOut"
-
- MAINPID=... The main pid of a daemon, in case systemd did not
- fork off the process itself. Example: "MAINPID=4711"
-
- WATCHDOG=1 Tells systemd to update the watchdog timestamp.
- Services using this feature should do this in
- regular intervals. A watchdog framework can use the
- timestamps to detect failed services.
-
- Daemons can choose to send additional variables. However, it is
- recommended to prefix variable names not listed above with X_.
-
- Returns a negative errno-style error code on failure. Returns > 0
- if systemd could be notified, 0 if it couldn't possibly because
- systemd is not running.
-
- Example: When a daemon finished starting up, it could issue this
- call to notify systemd about it:
-
- sd_notify(0, "READY=1");
-
- See sd_notifyf() for more complete examples.
-
- See sd_notify(3) for more information.
-*/
-int sd_notify(int unset_environment, const char *state);
-
-/*
- Similar to sd_notify() but takes a format string.
-
- Example 1: A daemon could send the following after initialization:
-
- sd_notifyf(0, "READY=1\n"
- "STATUS=Processing requests...\n"
- "MAINPID=%lu",
- (unsigned long) getpid());
-
- Example 2: A daemon could send the following shortly before
- exiting, on failure:
-
- sd_notifyf(0, "STATUS=Failed to start up: %s\n"
- "ERRNO=%i",
- strerror(errno),
- errno);
-
- See sd_notifyf(3) for more information.
-*/
-int sd_notifyf(int unset_environment, const char *format, ...) _sd_printf_attr_(2,3);
-
-/*
- Returns > 0 if the system was booted with systemd. Returns < 0 on
- error. Returns 0 if the system was not booted with systemd. Note
- that all of the functions above handle non-systemd boots just
- fine. You should NOT protect them with a call to this function. Also
- note that this function checks whether the system, not the user
- session is controlled by systemd. However the functions above work
- for both user and system services.
-
- See sd_booted(3) for more information.
-*/
-int sd_booted(void);
-
-#ifdef __cplusplus
-}
-#endif
-
-#endif