Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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EPOLLET enables edge-triggered mode (see epoll(7) for more). For most
use-cases, level-triggered is just fine, but for master-TTYs we need
edge-triggered to catch EPOLLHUP. master-TTYs signal EPOLLHUP if no client
is connected, but a client may connect some time later (same happens
during vhangup(2)).
However, epoll doesn't allow masking EPOLLHUP so it's signaled constantly.
To avoid this, edge-triggered mode is needed.
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If a session process calls TakeControl(), we now put the VT into
KD_GRAPHICS+K_OFF mode. This way, the new session controller can solely
rely on the logind-dbus API to manage the session.
Once the controller exits or calls ReleaseControl(), we restore the VT. We
also restore it, if we lost a controller during crash/restart (but only if
there really *was* a controller previously).
Note that we also must put the VT into VT_PROCESS mode. We want VT_AUTO
semantics, but VT_AUTO+KD_GRAPHICS actually disables *all* VT switches
(who came up with that great idea?). Hence, we set VT_PROCESS for logind
but acknowledge *all* requests immediately.
If a compositor wants custom VT setups, they can still get this by *first*
calling TakeControl() and afterwards setting up the VT. logind doesn't
touch the VT during controller runtime, only during setup/teardown. This
is actually what weston already does.
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We now save the unique bus-name of a session-controller as CONTROLLER=%s
in the session files. This allows us to restore the controller after a
crash or restart.
Note that we test whether the name is still valid (dbus guarantees that
the name is unique as long as the machine is up and running). If it is,
we know that the controller still exists and can safely restore it. Our
dbus-name-tracking guarantees that we're notified once it exits.
Also note that session-devices are *not* restored. We have no way to know
which devices where used before the crash. We could store all these on
disk, too, or mark them via udev. However, this seems to be rather
cumbersome. Instead, we expect controllers to listen for NewSession
signals for their own session. This is sent on session_load() and they can
then re-request all devices.
The only race I could find is if logind crashes, then the session
controller tries calling ReleaseControl() (which will fail as logind is
down) but keeps the bus-connection valid for other independent requests.
If logind is restarted, it will restore the old controller and thus block
the session.
However, this seems unlikely for several reasons:
- The ReleaseControl() call must occur exactly in the timespan where
logind is dead.
- A process which calls ReleaseControl() usually closes the
bus-connection afterwards. Especially if ReleaseControl() fails, the
process should notice that something is wrong and close the bus.
- A process calling ReleaseControl() usually exits afterwards. There may
be any cleanup pending, but other than that, usual compositors exit.
- If a session-controller calls ReleaseControl(), a session is usually
considered closing. There is no known use-case where we hand-over
session-control in a single session. So we don't care whether the
controller is locked afterwards.
So this seems negligible.
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Unfortunately, close() on a revoked/removed character-device fails with
ENODEV. I tried tracking this down in the kernel, but couldn't figure out
were exactly it comes from. However, can be easily reproduced with:
fd = open("/dev/input/event0", O_RDWR);
ioctl(fd, EVIOCREVOKE, 0);
r = close(fd);
A second close on @fd would return EBADF so the close is actually valid.
We simply ignore close() errors for all session-devices as their access
may be revoked asynchronously, or the device might get unplugged.
We use close_nointr() in case anyone ever looks at the return value (or
anyone runs "grep 'close(' -r src/" to find broken close() calls).
Fixes:
systemd-logind[31992]: Assertion 'close_nointr(fd) == 0' failed at src/shared/util.c:185, function close_nointr_nofail(). Aborting.
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Small helper to run a synchronous "NameHasOwner" request on the
dbus-daemon.
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Existing applications like gdm already depend on new sessions to get
immediately activated on seats without VTs. Fixes a bug reported as:
[systemd-devel] systemd 208:trouble with inactive user sessions at non-seat0 seats
This patch restores the original behavior. We either need to add a new
flag for session-creation or some other heuristic to avoid activating new
sessions in the future.
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This reverts commit adcf4c81c58511b67644e17fa743d1729d3c9ccf.
We have a better solution for the problem of making two processes run in
the same namespace, and --listener is not needed hence and should be
dropped.
Conflicts:
man/systemd-socket-proxyd.xml
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PrivateTmp= namespaces
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If any number of arguments are given, _cleanup_manager_free_ is used
with unitialized memory causing a crash.
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* library support for setns() system call was added to glibc
version 2.14 (setns() call is use in src/machine/machinectl.c
and src/libsystemd-bus-container.c)
* utf8 validation call are already exported (via sd-utf8.c file) -
commit - 369c583b3fb3d672ef469d53141e274ec9d2e8a7
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let's just do a single fallocate() as far as possible, and don't
distuingish between allocated space and file size.
This way we can save a syscall for each append, which makes quite some
benefits.
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files into a single new one
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chain element
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This way we can do a quick restart limiting a bit how wildly we need to
jump around during the bisection process.
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Also for log_error() except where a specific error is specified
e.g. errno ? strerror(errno) : "Some user specified message"
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not the same as the newly logged in one
It's better not to set any XDG_RUNTIME_DIR at all rather than one of a
different user. So let's do this.
This changes the bus call parameters of CreateSession(), but that is
explicitly an internal API hence should be fine. Note however, that a
logind restart (the way the RPM postinst scriptlets do it) is necessary
to make things work again.
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the man page, given that it is detail information
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Also, expose the new "flush" job mode this way.
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setting and make use of it where applicable
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A bridge is specified in a .netdev file with a section [Bridge]
and at least the entry Name=.
A link may be joined to a bridge if the .network applied to it has
a Bridge= entry giving the name of the bridge in its [Network] section.
We eagerly create all bridges on startup, and links are added to
bridges as soon as they both appear.
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In particular, store the ifname, though we should only use it carefully, as
it is not guaranteed to be stable. Using it for logging is fine though.
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For now, we only support one container type IFLA_LINKINFO, and we
still lack support for parsing the containers again.
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uint64_t can be formatted correctly with %ju, rather than casting to
unsigned and potentially losing accuracy.
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Otherwise there is some memory corruption and undefined behavior,
e.g., in my case systemd-udev was always aborted at the
_cleanup_freep_ around that code blocks.
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built-in methods
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