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2015-04-12tmpfiles: use qsort_safeZbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
2015-04-11sysv-generator: fix mem leaksThomas Hindoe Paaboel Andersen
2015-04-11bus: implement bus_path_{en,de}code_unique()David Herrmann
Whenever we provide a bus API that allows clients to create and manage server-side objects, we need to provide a unique name for these objects. There are two ways to provide them: 1) Let the server choose a name and return it as method reply. 2) Let the client pass its name of choice in the method arguments. The first method is the easiest one to implement. However, it suffers from a race condition: If a client creates an object asynchronously, it cannot destroy that object until it received the method reply. It cannot know the name of the new object, thus, it cannot destroy it. Furthermore, this method enforces a round-trip. If the client _depends_ on the method call to succeed (eg., it would close() the connection if it failed), the client usually has no reason to wait for the method reply. Instead, the client can immediately schedule further method calls on the newly created object (in case the API guarantees in-order method-call handling). The second method fixes both problems: The client passes an object name with the method-call. The server uses it to create the object. Therefore, the client can schedule object destruction even if the object-creation hasn't finished, yet (again, requiring in-order method-call handling). Furthermore, the client can schedule further method calls on the newly created object, before the constructor returned. There're two problems to solve, though: 1) Object names are usually defined via dbus object paths, which are usually globally namespaced. Therefore, multiple clients must be able to choose unique object names without interference. 2) If multiple libraries share the same bus connection, they must be able to choose unique object names without interference. The first problem is solved easily by prefixing a name with the unique-bus-name of a connection. The server side must enforce this and reject any other name. The second problem is solved by providing unique suffixes from within sd-bus. As long as sd-bus always returns a fresh new ID, if requested, multiple libraries will never interfere. This implementation re-uses bus->cookie as ID generator, which already provides unique IDs for each bus connection. This patch introduces two new helpers: bus_path_encode_unique(sd_bus *bus, const char *prefix, const char *sender_id, const char *external_id, char **ret_path); This creates a new object-path via the template '/prefix/sender_id/external_id'. That is, it appends two new labels to the given prefix. If 'sender_id' is NULL, it will use bus->unique_name, if 'external_id' is NULL, it will allocate a fresh, unique cookie from bus->cookie. bus_path_decode_unique(const char *path, const char *prefix, char **ret_sender, char **ret_external); This reverses what bus_path_encode_unique() did. It parses 'path' from the template '/prefix/sender/external' and returns both suffix-labels in 'ret_sender' and 'ret_external'. In case the template does not match, 0 is returned and both output arguments are set to NULL. Otherwise, 1 is returned and the output arguments contain the decoded labels. Note: Client-side allocated IDs are inspired by the Wayland protocol (which itself was inspired by X11). Wayland uses those IDs heavily to avoid round-trips. Clients can create server-side objects and send method calls without any round-trip and waiting for any object IDs to be returned. But unlike Wayland, DBus uses gobally namespaced object names. Therefore, we have to add the extra step by adding the unique-name of the bus connection.
2015-04-11bus: implement bus_label_unescape_n()David Herrmann
This is like bus_label_unescape() but takes a maximum length instead of relying on NULL-terminated strings. This is highly useful to unescape labels that are not at the end of a path.
2015-04-11hashmap: return NULL from destructorDavid Herrmann
We _always_ return NULL from destructors to allow direct assignments to the variable holding the object. Especially on hashmaps, which treat NULL as empty hashmap, this is pretty neat.
2015-04-11udevd: fix synchronization with settle when handling inotify eventsDaniel Drake
udev uses inotify to implement a scheme where when the user closes a writable device node, a change uevent is forcefully generated. In the case of block devices, it actually requests a partition rescan. This currently can't be synchronized with "udevadm settle", i.e. this is not reliable in a script: sfdisk --change-id /dev/sda 1 81 udevadm settle mount /dev/sda1 /foo The settle call doesn't synchronize there, so at the same time we try to mount the device, udevd is busy removing the partition device nodes and readding them again. The mount call often happens in that moment where the partition node has been removed but not readded yet. This exact issue was fixed long ago: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/hotplug/udev.git/commit/?id=bb38678e3ccc02bcd970ccde3d8166a40edf92d3 but that fix is no longer valid now that sequence numbers are no longer used. Fix this by forcing another mainloop iteration after handling inotify events before unblocking settle. If the inotify event caused us to generate a "change" event, we'll pick that up in the following loop iteration, before we reach the end of the loop where we respond to settle's control message, unblocking it.
2015-04-11hwdb: add Samsung ATIV Book 6 / 8Gavin Li
This adds support for the keyboard illumination keys and fixes Fn+F1.
2015-04-11build: allow setting OBJCOPYMarc-Antoine Perennou
2015-04-11configure: allow setting EFI_CCMarc-Antoine Perennou
2015-04-11efi: use EFI_CCMarc-Antoine Perennou
2015-04-11factory: install to datadirMarc-Antoine Perennou
2015-04-11udev: restore udevadm settle timeoutNir Soffer
Commit 9ea28c55a2 (udev: remove seqnum API and all assumptions about seqnums) introduced a regresion, ignoring the timeout option when waiting until the event queue is empty. Previously, if the udev event queue was not empty when the timeout was expired, udevadm settle was returning with exit code 1. To check if the queue is empty, you could invoke udevadm settle with timeout=0. This patch restores the previous behavior. (David: fixed timeout==0 handling and dropped redundant assignment)
2015-04-11rules: fix tests for removable stateMatthew Garrett
We only care about whether our direct parent is removable, not whether any further points up the tree are - the kernel will take care of policy for those itself. This enables autosuspend on devices where the root hub reports that its removable state is unknown.
2015-04-11README: glibc version 2.16 is required for IP_UNICAST_IFŁukasz Stelmach
https://sourceware.org/git/?p=glibc.git;a=commitdiff;h=be08eda5 https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=546194
2015-04-11TODO: add 13790add4 as blocker for v220David Herrmann
2015-04-11build: add support for AARCH64 EFIKoen Kooi
Aarch64 and ARM32 lack an EFI capable objcopy, so use the ldflags + -O binary trick gnu-efi and the Red Hat shimloader are using. (David: rebase to systemd-git and added EFI_ prefixes)
2015-04-11boot/util: add ticks_read() stubKoen Kooi
2015-04-11build: add AARCH64 efi supportKoen Kooi
This is just plumbing to add ARCH_AARCH64 EFI support for makefile tests and defining the machine name.
2015-04-11boot/util: use x86 ASM only on x86 platforms.Koen Kooi
2015-04-11build: support non-x86 EFI buildsKoen Kooi
Move the no-mmx/no-sse CFLAGS to X86-64 and IA32 defines in preparation for ARM32 and Aarch64 support.
2015-04-11hwdb: set the resolution for a couple of bcm5974 touchpadsPeter Hutterer
Verified for the 5,1 Macbook, the others are guesses based on the list of supported devices of the moshi trackpad protector. http://www.moshi.com/trackpad-protector-trackguard-macbook-pro#silver Resolution calculated based on the min/max settings set in the kernel driver, divided by the physical size. This is probably slightly off, but still better than no resolution at all. Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
2015-04-11udev: builtin-keyboard: add support for EVDEV_ABS_*Peter Hutterer
Parse properties in the form EVDEV_ABS_00="<min>:<max>:<res>:<fuzz>:<flat>" and apply them to the kernel device. Future processes that open that device will see the updated EV_ABS range. This is particularly useful for touchpads that don't provide a resolution in the kernel driver but can be fixed up through hwdb entries (e.g. bcm5974). All values in the property are optional, e.g. a string of "::45" is valid to set the resolution to 45. The order intentionally orders resolution before fuzz and flat despite it being the last element in the absinfo struct. The use-case for setting fuzz/flat is almost non-existent, resolution is probably the most common case we'll need. To avoid multiple hwdb invocations for the same device, replace the hwdb "keyboard:" prefix with "evdev:" and drop the separate 60-keyboard.rules file. The new 60-evdev.rules is called for all event nodes anyway, we don't need a separate rules file and second callout to the hwdb builtin.
2015-04-11udev: builtin-keyboard: invert a conditionPeter Hutterer
No functional changes, just to make the next patch easier to review
2015-04-11udev: builtin-keyboard: move actual key mapping to a helper functionPeter Hutterer
No changes in the mapping, but previously we opened the device only on successful parsing. Now we open the mapping as soon as we have a value that looks interesting. Since errors are supposed to be the exception, not the rule, this is probably fine.
2015-04-11udev: builtin-keyboard: immediately EVIOCSKEYCODE when we have a pairPeter Hutterer
Rather than building a map and looping through the map, immediately call the ioctl when we have a successfully parsed property. This has a side-effect: before the maximum number of ioctls was limited to the size of the map (1024), now it is unlimited.
2015-04-11udev: builtin-keyboard: move fetching the device node upPeter Hutterer
No point parsing the properties if we can't get the devnode to apply them later. Plus, this makes future additions easier to slot in.
2015-04-11shared: move replace_env* from util to env-utilRonny Chevalier
2015-04-11shared: add terminal-util.[ch]Ronny Chevalier
2015-04-11shared: add random-util.[ch]Ronny Chevalier
2015-04-10shared: add process-util.[ch]Ronny Chevalier
2015-04-10shared: add formats-util.hRonny Chevalier
2015-04-10dbus: typo fix in logThomas Hindoe Paaboel Andersen
2015-04-10tmpfiles: fix build with clangThomas Hindoe Paaboel Andersen
Clang is not happy about using the cleanup attribute in switches
2015-04-10efivars: fix build for non-efiThomas Hindoe Paaboel Andersen
2015-04-10shared: boot-timestamps - remove ifdefTom Gundersen
No need to ifdef out efi code as the functions are always defined.
2015-04-10shared: efivars - fix compile on non-EFI systemsTom Gundersen
systemctl and logind were unconditionally using functions that were not compiled on non-EFI systems. Add stubs returning -EOPNOTSUPP to fix compile again.
2015-04-10shared: efivars - is_efi_*() returns bool instead of intTom Gundersen
There was a bug where is_efi_*() could return a negative error value, which would be treated as 'true', just make this a bool in the helper library to avoid the problem.
2015-04-10Revert "sd-dhcp-client: fix strict aliasing issue"Lennart Poettering
This reverts commit 6ec8e7c763b7dfa82e25e31f6938122748d1608f. This doesn't fix any issues, just makes the code harder to read.
2015-04-10sd-event: simplify sd_event_run()Lennart Poettering
2015-04-10tmpfiles: add specifier expansion for L and C lines, tooLennart Poettering
2015-04-10update TODOLennart Poettering
2015-04-10bus-util: be more verbose if dbus job failsMichal Sekletar
Users might have hard time figuring out why exactly their systemctl request failed. If dbus job fails try to figure out more details about failure by examining Result property of the service. https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1016680
2015-04-10core: set_put never returns -EEXISTRonny Chevalier
When the value is already there it returns 0. Also add a test to ensure this
2015-04-10tmpfiles: enforce ordering when executing linesLennart Poettering
Always create files first, and then adjust their ACLs, xattrs, file attributes, never the opposite. Previously the order was not deterministic, thus possibly first adjusting ACLs/xattrs/file attributes before actually creating the items.
2015-04-10tmpfiles: eat up empty columnsLennart Poettering
2015-04-10tmpfiles: substitute % specifiers in arguments for writing files and xattrsLennart Poettering
2015-04-10tmpfiles: warn if we get an argument on lines that don't take anyLennart Poettering
2015-04-10tmpfiles: mostly revert 71044f609b829d802e0eb81270e13b4f55d76476Lennart Poettering
Add a comment why returning a positive error is OK and intended in this case. (It's still a nasty hack to do this though!)
2015-04-10device-nodes: minor simplificationsLennart Poettering
2015-04-10util: unify how we parse mode_t stringsLennart Poettering