Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
I run this anyway, and given how slow it is now due to -flto, let's make
my workflow a bit faster...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
sd_bus_path_{encode,decode}()
The new calls work similarly, but enforce a that a common, fixed bus
path prefix is used.
This follows discussions with Simon McVittie on IRC that it should be a
good idea to make sure that people don't use the escaping applied here
too wildly as anything other than the last label of a bus path.
|
|
|
|
to device nodes
Since these device nodes will never appear in the container anyway
there's no point in waiting for them.
This makes it easier to boot images generated with general purpose
installers like Anaconda which unconditionally populate /etc/fstab to
boot in containers.
|
|
|
|
|
|
the bus
|
|
Prepare context_write_data_other() and rename it to
context_write_data_machine_info()
|
|
udev_device_get_parent() may return NULL when the device doesn't have a
parent, as is the case with (for example) /sys/devices/virtual/drm/ttm.
Also, log an actual error message instead of "-12 displays connected".
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Before it was placed in /dev/disk/by-id, which makes it a bit too much
API. However, it's mostly an implementation detail for now, hence move
it out of the stable block device dir.
|
|
|
|
|
|
We are already assuming the close() will not fail, so make it explicit.
|
|
Open all listenerns before loading configuration.
|
|
This will be needed for sd-dhcp-server.
|
|
want to use containers
|
|
If the session already exists then the only way to log it is to set the
debug option of pam_systemd. There are no debug messages in the login
service that permits to log if the session already exists.
So just add it, and while we are it add the "uid" field to the debug
message that indicates that the session was created.
|
|
It was backward - --after fetches After property, so units shown really
come *before* unit given as argument. Same for --before.
|
|
As pointed out by Jason A. Donenfeld.
|
|
If "systemctl switch-root" is called with a specific "INIT" or
/proc/cmdline contains "init=", then systemd would not serialize
itsself.
Let systemctl check, if the new init is in the standard systemd
installation path and if so, clear the INIT parameter,
to let systemd serialize itsself.
|
|
files_same() returns
1, if the files are the same
0, if the files have different inode/dev numbers
errno, for any stat error
|
|
|
|
When we try to send a signal on a connection we didn't hae the time to
process the Disconnected message yet, don't generate multiple warning
messages, but only a single debug message.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=75874
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/usr/bin/getent instead of in-process
When the container runs a different native architecture than the host we
shouldn't attempt to load the container's NSS modules with the host's
libc. Instead, resolve UID/GID by invoking /usr/bin/getent in the
container. The tool should be fairly universally available and allows us
to do resolving of the UID/GID with the container's libc in a parsable
format.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=75733
|
|
child after the parent added us to the device cgroup
|
|
|
|
Check existence of loop/backing_file in sysfs and mark loop devices with
SYSTEMD_READY if missing. Such loop files is uninitialized and it's not
ready for use yet (there's no file attached).
|
|
some systems still make the distiction between bin and sbin.
|
|
We overmount /dev/console with an external pty anyway, hence there's no
point in using the real major/minor when we create the node to
overmount. Instead, use the one of /dev/null now.
This fixes a race against the cgroup device controller setup we are
using. In case /dev/console was create before the cgroup policy was
applied all was good, but if created in the opposite order the mknod()
would fail, since creating /dev/console is not allowed by it. Creating
/dev/null instances is however permitted, and hence use it.
|
|
Discoverable Partitions Specification
|
|
|
|
|
|
Input devices like rudders or pedals are joystick-like; they don't have
buttons, but axes like RX, THROTTLE, or RUDDER. These don't interfere with
other device types with absolute axes (touch screens, touchpads, and
accelerometers), so it's fairly safe to mark them as ID_INPUT_JOYSTICK and thus
hand out dynamic ACLs to the user.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70734
|
|
'man/systemd.link.xml' recovery from:
commit eac684ef1c29684b1bcd27a89c38c202e568e469
Author: Tom Gundersen <teg@jklm.no>
Date: Tue Feb 25 19:30:40 2014 +0100
man: split out systemd.net{work,dev}(5) from systemd-networkd(8)
|
|
|
|
Since the index is already post-incremented when the array is appended
to, this assertion can be wrongly reached when the array is at capacity
(with the NULL terminator). The bug is reproducible on shutdown with
the following settings in /etc/systemd/system.conf:
LogTarget=journal-or-kmsg
LogColor=yes
LogLocation=yes
Reported by Thermi on IRC.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fixup for 76800848f281c3 'networkd: link - degrade failed UP to warning'.
|