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2016-07-22logind: change TasksMax= value for user logins to 33%Lennart Poettering
Let's change from a fixed value of 12288 tasks per user to a relative value of 33%, which with the kernel's default of 32768 translates to 10813. This is a slight decrease of the limit, for no other reason than "33%" sounding like a nice round number that is close enough to 12288 (which would translate to 37.5%). (Well, it also has the nice effect of still leaving a bit of room in the PID space if there are 3 cooperating evil users that try to consume all PIDs... Also, I like my bikesheds blue). Since the new value is taken relative, and machined's TasksMax= setting defaults to 16384, 33% inside of containers is usually equivalent to 5406, which should still be ample space. To summarize: | on the host | in the container old default | 12288 | 12288 new default | 10813 | 5406
2016-07-22main: simplify things a bit by moving container check into fixup_environment()Lennart Poettering
2016-07-22core: rename MemoryLimitByPhysicalMemory transient property to MemoryLimitScaleLennart Poettering
That way, we can neatly keep this in line with the new TasksMaxScale= option. Note that we didn't release a version with MemoryLimitByPhysicalMemory= yet, hence this change should be unproblematic without breaking API.
2016-07-22core: support percentage specifications on TasksMax=Lennart Poettering
This adds support for a TasksMax=40% syntax for specifying values relative to the system's configured maximum number of processes. This is useful in order to neatly subdivide the available room for tasks within containers.
2016-07-22Merge pull request #3762 from poettering/sigkill-logMartin Pitt
log about all processes we forcibly kill
2016-07-22Merge pull request #3764 from poettering/assorted-stuff-2Martin Pitt
Assorted fixes
2016-07-21nspawn: enable major=0/minor=0 devices inside the container (#3773)Alessandro Puccetti
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/3685 introduced /run/systemd/inaccessible/{chr,blk} to map inacessible devices, this patch allows systemd running inside a nspawn container to create /run/systemd/inaccessible/{chr,blk}.
2016-07-21missing_syscall: add __NR_copy_file_range for powerpc architecture (#3772)Alessio Igor Bogani
2016-07-21update TODOLennart Poettering
2016-07-21hwdb: axis resolution override for the Lenovo Y700 (#3769)Peter Hutterer
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=97011
2016-07-21Merge pull request #3770 from AlexanderKurtz/masterLennart Poettering
bootctl: Always use upper case for "/EFI/BOOT" and "/EFI/BOOT/BOOT*.EFI".
2016-07-21core: remove duplicate includes (#3771)Thomas H. P. Andersen
2016-07-20Merge pull request #3760 from poettering/rfkill-fixZbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
rfkill dead-lock fix
2016-07-20documentation: add a short document describing how to test your systemd ↵Lennart Poettering
build tree (#3763)
2016-07-21bootctl: Always use upper case for "/EFI/BOOT" and "/EFI/BOOT/BOOT*.EFI".Alexander Kurtz
If the ESP is not mounted with "iocharset=ascii", but with "iocharset=utf8" (which is for example the default in Debian), the file system becomes case sensitive. This means that a file created as "FooBarBaz" cannot be accessed as "foobarbaz" since those are then considered different files. Moreover, a file created as "FooBar" can then also not be accessed as "foobar", and it also prevents such a file from being created, as both would use the same 8.3 short name "FOOBAR". Even though the UEFI specification [0] does give the canonical spelling for the files mentioned above, not all implementations completely conform to that, so it's possible that those files would already exist, but with a different spelling, causing subtle bugs when scanning or modifying the ESP. While the proper fix would of course be that everybody conformed to the standard, we can work around this problem by just referencing the files by their 8.3 short names, i.e. using upper case. Fixes: #3740 [0] <http://www.uefi.org/specifications>, version 2.6, section 3.5.1.1
2016-07-21bootctl: Use lower case string constants in case-insensitive comparisons.Alexander Kurtz
2016-07-20namespace: fix wrong return value from mount(2) (#3758)Topi Miettinen
Fix bug introduced by #3263: mount(2) return value is 0 or -1, not errno. Thanks to Evgeny Vereshchagin (@evverx) for reporting.
2016-07-20basic: fix macro definition in nss-util.hLennart Poettering
Fix a copy/paste mistake.
2016-07-20execute: make sure JoinsNamespaceOf= doesn't leak ns fds to executed processesLennart Poettering
2016-07-20namespace: add a (void) castLennart Poettering
2016-07-20nspawn: when netns is on, mount /proc/sys/net writableLennart Poettering
Normally we make all of /proc/sys read-only in a container, but if we do have netns enabled we can make /proc/sys/net writable, as things are virtualized then.
2016-07-20nspawn: document why the uid shift range is the way it isLennart Poettering
2016-07-20conf-parser: minor coding style improvementsLennart Poettering
2016-07-20units: fix TasksMax=16384 for systemd-nspawn@.serviceLennart Poettering
When a container scope is allocated via machined it gets 16K set already since cf7d1a30e44bf380027a2e73f9bf13f423a33cc1. Make sure when a container is run as system service it gets the same values.
2016-07-20core: normalize header inclusion in execute.h a bitLennart Poettering
We don't actually need any functionality from cgroup.h in execute.h, hence don't include that. However, we do need the Unit structure from unit.h, hence include that, and move it as late as possible, since it needs the definitions from execute.h.
2016-07-20execute: normalize connect_logger_as() parameters slightlyLennart Poettering
All other functions in execute.c that need the unit id take a Unit* parameter as first argument. Let's change connect_logger_as() to follow a similar logic.
2016-07-20logind: always abandon session scopes before killing themLennart Poettering
This way systemd is informed that we consider everything inside the scope as "left-over", and systemd can log about killing it. With this change systemd will log about all processes killed due to the session clean-up on KillUserProcesses=yes.
2016-07-20core: when a scope was abandoned, always log about processes we killLennart Poettering
After all, if a unit is abandoned, all processes inside of it may be considered "left over" and are something we should better log about.
2016-07-20core: make sure RequestStop signal is send directedLennart Poettering
This was accidentally left commented out for debugging purposes, let's fix that and make the signal directed again.
2016-07-20cgroup: suppress sending follow-up SIGCONT after sending SIGCONT/SIGKILL anywayLennart Poettering
2016-07-20core: when forcibly killing/aborting left-over unit processes log about itLennart Poettering
Let's lot at LOG_NOTICE about any processes that we are going to SIGKILL/SIGABRT because clean termination of them didn't work. This turns the various boolean flag parameters to cg_kill(), cg_migrate() and related calls into a single binary flags parameter, simply because the function now gained even more parameters and the parameter listed shouldn't get too long. Logging for killing processes is done either when the kill signal is SIGABRT or SIGKILL, or on explicit request if KILL_TERMINATE_AND_LOG instead of LOG_TERMINATE is passed. This isn't used yet in this patch, but is made use of in a later patch.
2016-07-20PO: italian updates (#3761)Daniele Medri
2016-07-20util: don't send SIGCONT following a SIGCONT or SIGKILL in kill_and_sigcont()Lennart Poettering
2016-07-20logind: minor coding style improvementsLennart Poettering
2016-07-20Merge pull request #3759 from poettering/namespace-fixupLennart Poettering
minor follow-up fixes for #3685
2016-07-20rules: make sure always set at least one property on rfkill devicesLennart Poettering
The rfkill service waits for rfkill device initialization as reported by udev_device_is_initialized(), and if that is never reported it might dead-lock. However, udev never reports completed initialization for devices that have no properties or tags set. For some rfkill devices this might be the case, in particular those which are connected to exotic busses, where path_id returns nothing. This patch simply sets the SYSTEM_RFKILL property on all rfkill devices, to ensure that udev_device_is_initialized() always reports something useful and we don't dead-lock. Fixes: #2745
2016-07-20man: document a tiny bit better what udev_device_get_is_initialized() ↵Lennart Poettering
actually returns
2016-07-20namespace: minor improvementsLennart Poettering
We generally try to avoid strerror(), due to its threads-unsafety, let's do this here, too. Also, let's be tiny bit more explanatory with the log messages, and let's shorten a few things.
2016-07-20core: hide legacy bus propertiesLennart Poettering
We usually hide legacy bus properties from introspection. Let's do that for the InaccessibleDirectories= properties too. The properties stay accessible if requested, but they won't be listed anymore if people introspect the unit.
2016-07-19man: revise entry about specifying a file path (#3739)mulkieran
* Specifying a device node has an effect much larger than a simple shortcut for a field/value match, so the original sentence is no longer a good way to start the paragraph. * Specifying a device node causes matches to be generated for all ancestor devices of the device specified, not just its parents. * Indicates that the path must be absolute, but that it may be a link. * Eliminates a few typos.
2016-07-19man: mention that locale changes might require initramfs to be rebuilt (#3754)Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1151651 Also explain what localectl does a bit better: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1357861
2016-07-19Merge pull request #3685 from kinvolk/alessandro/inaccessible-pathsLennart Poettering
namespace: unify limit behavior on non-directory paths
2016-07-19Merge pull request #3636 from poettering/logs-show-utf8Evgeny Vereshchagin
improve handling of trailing newline in journal logging
2016-07-19sd-journal: suppress empty linesLennart Poettering
Let's make sure our logging APIs is in sync with how stdout/stderr logging works.
2016-07-19doc,core: Read{Write,Only}Paths= and InaccessiblePaths=Alessandro Puccetti
This patch renames Read{Write,Only}Directories= and InaccessibleDirectories= to Read{Write,Only}Paths= and InaccessiblePaths=, previous names are kept as aliases but they are not advertised in the documentation. Renamed variables: `read_write_dirs` --> `read_write_paths` `read_only_dirs` --> `read_only_paths` `inaccessible_dirs` --> `inaccessible_paths`
2016-07-19namespace: unify limit behavior on non-directory pathsAlessandro Puccetti
Despite the name, `Read{Write,Only}Directories=` already allows for regular file paths to be masked. This commit adds the same behavior to `InaccessibleDirectories=` and makes it explicit in the doc. This patch introduces `/run/systemd/inaccessible/{reg,dir,chr,blk,fifo,sock}` {dile,device}nodes and mounts on the appropriate one the paths specified in `InacessibleDirectories=`. Based on Luca's patch from https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/3327
2016-07-19man: document that sd_journal_print() strips trailing whitespaceLennart Poettering
2016-07-19journalctl: make sure that journalctl's --all switch also has an effect on ↵Lennart Poettering
json output With this change, binary record data is formatted as string if --all is specified when using json output. This is inline with the effect of --all on the other available output modes. Fixes: #3416
2016-07-19sd-journal: when formatting log messages, implicitly strip trailing whitespaceLennart Poettering
When converting log messages from human readable text into binary records to send off to journald in sd_journal_print(), strip trailing whitespace in the log message. This way, handling of logs made via syslog(), stdout/stderr and sd_journal_print() are treated the same way: trailing (but not leading) whitespace is automatically removed, in particular \n and \r. Note that in case of syslog() and stdout/stderr based logging the stripping takes place server-side though, while for the native protocol based transport this takes place client-side. This is because in the former cases conversion from free-form human-readable strings into structured, binary log records takes place on the server-side while for journal-native logging it happens on the client side, and after conversion into binary records we probably shouldn't alter the data anymore. See: #3416
2016-07-19mkosi: make sure we fail on errorLennart Poettering