Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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* Change --no-man to --man (see dad29df)
* --{from,to}-pattern require arg
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sd-event: make sure to create a signal queue for the right signal
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various fixes to the core, logind, machined, nspawn
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We should never access the "signal" part of the event source unless the
event source is actually for a signal. In this case it's a child pid
handler however, hence make sure to use the right signal.
This is a fix for PR #1177, which in turn was a fix for
9da4cb2be260ed123f2676cb85cb350c527b1492.
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README: bump minimal required kernel version
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sd-event: fix call to event_make_signal_data
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This looks like a typo from commit 9da4cb2b where it was added.
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build-sys: remove sphinx binary from configure summary
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Updated Polish translation
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We no longer use sphinx as part of the build process so remove it from
the configure summary as well.
This is a leftover from commit 2799e519cabb6dfa99341b9a56ebd4dc2a4ec22a.
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We generally try to support 2y old kernels, which allows us bump the
minimal required version to 3.11 now.
Also, clarify that support for the unified cgroup hierarchy requires 4.2
or newer.
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analyze: add "alias" handling to dot subcommand
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`systemd-analyze dot default.target` works fine
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Provide unit name and operation in manage-units polkit checks (v2)
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sd-bus: make introspection data non-recursive
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systemd-nspawn@.service
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.nspawn fiels are simple settings files that may accompany container
images and directories and contain settings otherwise passed on the
nspawn command line. This provides an efficient way to attach execution
data directly to containers.
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CODING_STYLE: mandate alphabetical include order (v2)
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sd-bus: derive uid from cgroup if possible
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This fixes breakage for local host pty handling, introduced in
395745ba533ac91fe118f43ec83f13a752c0b473.
Fixes #1139
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This funciton is exposed via CanStart on the bus, and should be as
accurate as possible. Hence: make sure to return false for units of unit
types not supported on the system, and for unit types where
configuration failed to load.
Also see #1105.
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Currently, our introspection data looks like this:
<node>
<interface name="org.freedesktop.DBus.Peer">
...
</interface>
<interface name="org.freedesktop.DBus.Introspectable">
...
</interface>
<interface name="org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties">
...
</interface>
<node name="org"/>
<node name="org/freedesktop"/>
<node name="org/freedesktop/login1"/>
<node name="org/freedesktop/login1/user"/>
<node name="org/freedesktop/login1/user/self"/>
<node name="org/freedesktop/login1/user/_1000"/>
<node name="org/freedesktop/login1/seat"/>
<node name="org/freedesktop/login1/seat/self"/>
<node name="org/freedesktop/login1/seat/seat0"/>
<node name="org/freedesktop/login1/session"/>
<node name="org/freedesktop/login1/session/self"/>
<node name="org/freedesktop/login1/session/c1"/>
</node>
(ordered alphabetically for better visibility)
This is grossly incorrect. The spec says that we're allowed to return
non-directed children, however, it does not allow us to return data
recursively in multiple parents. If we return "org", then we must not
return anything else that starts with "org/".
It is unclear, whether we can include child-nodes as a tree. Moreover, it
is usually not what the caller wants. Hence, this patch changes sd-bus to
never return introspection data recursively. Instead, only a single
child-layer is returned.
This patch relies on enumerators to never return hierarchies. If someone
registers an enumerator via sd_bus_add_enumerator, they better register
sub-enumerators if they support *TRUE* hierarchies. Each enumerator is
treated as a single layer and not filtered.
Enumerators are still allowed to return nested data. However, that data
is still required to be a single hierarchy. For instance, returning
"/org/foo" and "/com/bar" is fine, but including "/com" or "/org" in that
dataset is not.
This should be the default for enumerators and I see no reason to filter
in sd-bus. Moreover, filtering that data-set would require to sort the
strv by path and then do prefix-filtering. This is O(n log n), which
would be fine, but still better to avoid.
Fixes #664.
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Remove two freshly implemented features, and add TSO support as a new
one.
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systemd-internal headers must not rely on include order. That means, they
either must contain forward-declarations of used types/functions, or they
must include all dependencies on their own. Therefore, there is no reason
to mandate an include order on the call-side.
However, global includes should always be ordered first. We don't want
local definitions to leak into global includes, possible changing their
behavior. Apparently, namespacing is a complex problem that people are
incapable of implementing properly..
Apart from "global before local", there is no reason to mandate a random
include order (which we happen to do right now). Instead, mandate
alphabetical ordering. The current rules do not have any benefit at all.
They neither reduce include-complexity, nor allow easy auditing of
include files. But with alphabetical ordering, we get duplicate-detection
for free, it gets *much much* easier to figure out whether a header is
already included, and it is trivial to add new headers.
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Whenever we run in a user context, sd_bus_{default_user,open_user}() and
friends should always connect to the user-bus of the current context,
instead of deriving the uid from getuid(). This allows us running
programs via sudo/su, without the nasty side-effect of accidentally
connecting to the root user-bus.
This patch enforces the idea of making su/sudo *not* opening sessions by
default. That is, all they do is raising privileges, but keeping
everything set as before. You can still use su/sudo to open real sessions
by requesting a login-session (or loading pam_systemd otherwise).
However, in this case XDG_RUNTIME_DIR= will not be set (as usual in these
cases), hence, you will not be able to connect to *any* user-bus.
Long story short: With this patch applied, both:
- ./busctl --user
- sudo ./busctl --user
..will successfully connect to the user-bus of the local user.
Fixes #390.
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The following details are passed:
- unit: the primary name of the unit upon which the action was
invoked (i.e. after resolving any aliases);
- verb: one of 'start', 'stop', 'reload', 'restart', 'try-restart',
'reload-or-restart', 'reload-or-try-restart', 'kill',
'reset-failed', or 'set-property', corresponding to the
systemctl verb used to invoke the action.
Typical use of these details in a polkit policy rule might be:
// Allow alice to manage example.service;
// fall back to implicit authorization otherwise.
polkit.addRule(function(action, subject) {
if (action.id == "org.freedesktop.systemd1.manage-units" &&
action.lookup("unit") == "example.service" &&
subject.user == "alice") {
return polkit.Result.YES;
}
});
We also supply a custom polkit message that includes the unit's name and
the requested operation.
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Extra details for an action can be supplied when calling polkit's
CheckAuthorization method. Details are a list of key/value string pairs.
Custom policy can use these details when making authorization decisions.
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A variety of sd-event, sd-login and cgroup fixes
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This adds a new sd_pid_get_cgroup() call to sd-login which may be used
to query the control path of a process. This is useful for programs when
making use of delegation units, in order to figure out which subtree has
been delegated.
In light of the unified control group hierarchy this is finally safe to
do, hence let's add a proper API for it, to make it easier to use this.
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login: fix NULL-deref on wall_message
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systemd-mailing-devs/1441372815-12195-1-git-send-email-hdegoede@redhat.com
hwdb: Add Thinkpad T550 / W550s to 70-pointingstick.hwdb
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We treat an empty wall-message equal to a NULL wall-message since:
commit 5744f59a3ee883ef3a78214bd5236157acdc35ba
Author: Lennart Poettering <lennart@poettering.net>
Date: Fri Sep 4 10:34:47 2015 +0200
logind: treat an empty wall message like a NULL one
Fix the shutdown scheduler to not deref a NULL pointer, but properly
check for an empty wall-message.
Fixes: #1120
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shell-completion: update systemctl bash completion
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networkd: adjust error codes for nonexisting DHCP data
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tests: Skip tests which need to access /sys/fs/cgroup if that is not …
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Initial set of features for the upcoming v226 release next week. This is
mostly about the unified cgroup hierarchy and DHCP.
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Many new options have been added since the bash completion was last
updated.
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Commit 0339cd770 changed libsystemd-network's error code for missing DHCP lease
data from ENOENT to ENODATA. Adjust networkd accordingly.
This fixes interfaces being stuck in "degraded/configuring" mode forever.
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/1147
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Commit efdb023 ("core: unified cgroup hierarchy support") introduced a new
error ENOEXEC in cg_unified() if /sys/fs/cgroup/ is not available. Adjust the
"skip" checks in various tests accordingly.
Add a corresponding "skip" check to test-bus-creds as well, as
sd_bus_creds_new_from_pid() now calls cg_unified() as well.
This re-fixes "make check" in build chroots without /sys/fs/cgroup.
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/1132
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Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the T550 / W550s models.
BugLink: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1200717
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bus-proxy: increase NOFILE limit
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Various logind fixes
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The bus-proxy manages the kdbus connections of all users on the system
(regarding the system bus), hence, it needs an elevated NOFILE.
Otherwise, a single user can trigger ENFILE by opening NOFILE connections
to the bus-proxy.
Note that the bus-proxy still does per-user accounting, indirectly via
the proxy/fake API of kdbus. Hence, the effective per-user limit is not
raised by this. However, we now prevent one user from consuming the whole
FD limit of the shared proxy.
Also note that there is no *perfect* way to set this. The proxy is a
shared object, so it needs a larger NOFILE limit than the highest limit
of all users. This limit can be changed dynamically, though. Hence, we
cannot protect against it. However, a raised NOFILE limit is a privilege,
so we just treat it as such and basically allow these privileged users to
be able to consume more resources than normal users (and, maybe, cause
some limits to be exceeded by this).
Right now, kdbus hard-codes 1024 max connections per user on each bus.
However, we *must not* rely on this. This limits could be easily dropped
entirely, as the NOFILE limit is a suitable limit on its on.
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And not bool.
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