Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Add a test for nss modules and some related fixes
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nss-dns is also "tested". It should be almost always available,
and provides a reference for comparison.
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tests: move out unrelated tests from test-util to their own file
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We ignored __pycache__ which works for Python 3, but the rule
for Python 2 got lost somehow.
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The source file name and the binary name were mismatched.
Rename binary to match.
Make the test exit with TEST_SKIP if the data is missing or we
have no permissions. Otherwise, the data will be printed, which
should be safe to enable by default.
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This helps to understand misleading gcc warnings about type mismatches.
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results and timings
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Add path argument to clock_is_localtime() and default to "/etc/adjtime" if it's
NULL. This makes the function testable.
Add test-clock: initial test cases for some scenarios, using a temporary file.
This also checks the behaviour with a NULL (i. e. the system's /etc/adjtime)
file.
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This commit rips out systemd-bootchart. It will be given a new home, outside
of the systemd repository. The code itself isn't actually specific to
systemd and can be used without systemd even, so let's put it somewhere
else.
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remove bus-proxyd
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It has fairly wide functionality now and the interface has been
stable for a while. It it a useful testing tool.
The name is changed to better indicate what it does.
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Some spring cleaning
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Drop some entries of stuff we long removed from the main git repo, either
because it was split out or removed altogether.
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This was used by the dkr logic, which is gone now, hence remove this too.
Should we need it one day again the git history never forgets...
Note that this only covers the JSON parser. The JSON generator used by
"journalctl -o json" remains, as its much much simpler and requires no
infrastructure except printf() and the most basic escaping.
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They have long been obsolete, and upstream distros and packages have mostly
switched over, let's get rid of it for good.
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Packets are stored in a simple format:
<size> <packet-wire-format> <size> <packet-wire-format> ...
Packets for some example domains are dumped, to test rr code for various
record types. Currently:
A
AAAA
CAA
DNSKEY
LOC
MX
NS
NSEC
OPENPGPKEY
SOA
SPF
TXT
The hashing code is executed, but results are not checked.
Also build other tests in src/resolve only with --enable-resolve.
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As kdbus won't land in the anticipated way, the bus-proxy is not needed in
its current form. It can be resurrected at any time thanks to the history,
but for now, let's remove it from the sources. If we'll have a similar tool
in the future, it will look quite differently anyway.
Note that stdio-bridge is still available. It was restored from a version
prior to f252ff17, and refactored to make use of the current APIs.
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Let's make sure our poll() calls don't get interrupted where they shouldn't (SIGALRM, ...), but allow them to be
interrupted where they should (SIGINT, ...).
Fixes #1965
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The tool resolves way more than just hosts, hence give it a more generic name. This should be safe, as the tool is
currently undocumented. Before we add documentation for it, let's get the name right.
This also moves the C source into src/resolve/ (from src/resolve-host/), since the old name is a misnomer now. Also,
since it links directly to many of the C files of resolved it really belongs into resolved's directory anyway.
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This is a follow-up for 412577e
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basic: add RB-Tree implementation
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This adds an self-standing RB-Tree implementation to src/basic/. This
will be needed for NSEC RR lookups, since we need "close lookups", which
hashmaps (not even ordered-hashmaps) can give us in reasonable time.
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This is a follow-up for 2b442ac87838be7c326
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For now, only add_acls_for_user is tested. When run under root, it
actually sets the acls. When run under non-root, it sets the acls for
the user, which does nothing, but at least calls the functions.
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src/journal-remote/browse.html is git-tracked source and should not be ignored.
Avoid accidentally ignoring similar ones in the future.
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It is really unclear if we want to / have the resources to support this fully, so drop it
for now. It can easily be brought back if a killer usecase emerges.
Note that this code was never hooked up, so this does not remove any features.
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memory_erase() so far just called memset(), which the compiler might
optimize away under certain conditions if it feels there's benefit in
it. C11 knows a new memset_s() call that is like memset(), but may not
be optimized away. Ideally, we'd just use that call, but glibc currently
does not support it. Hence, implement our own simplistic version of it.
We use a GCC pragma to turn off optimization for this call, and also use
the "volatile" keyword on the pointers to ensure that gcc will use the
pointers as-is. According to a variety of internet sources, either one
does the trick. However, there are also reports that at least the
volatile thing isn't fully correct, hence let's add some snake oil and
employ both techniques.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4711346
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Tests for the functions defined in src/basic/parse-util.c. Reorder them
to match the order in which the functions are defined in the source
file. Adjusted the list of include files to remove the ones no longer
needed in test-util.c.
Tested that `make check` still passes as expected. Also checked the
number of lines removed from test-util.c matches the expected, as an
additional verification that no tests were dropped or duplicated in the
move.
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Tests for the functions defined in src/basic/extract-word.c.
Tested that `make check` still passes as expected.
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Let's try to keep it that way! :-)
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So far we had two pretty much identical calls in user-util.[ch]:
lookup_uid() and uid_to_name(). Get rid of the former, in favour of the
latter, and while we are at it, rewrite it, to use getpwuid_r()
correctly, inside an allocation loop, as POSIX intended.
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The actual code rename will follow. The reason for the change of name is to make it
simpler and more uniform with how we name other libraries (we don't include the
underlying protocol). The new name also matches the naming in the kernel (which
is particularly relevent here as we expect to let the kernel do some parts of
the protocol and we do others).
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