Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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add tests for:
- strv_find_startswith
- strv_push_prepend
- strv_consume_prepend
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add tests for the following functions:
- write_string_file_no_create
- load_env_file_pairs
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The raw socket sd_event_source used for DHCP server solicitations
was simply dropped on the floor when creating the new UDP socket
after a lease has been acquired. Clean it up properly so we're
not still listening and responding to events on it.
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I tried to preserve most errno values, but in some cases they were
inconsistent (different errno values for the same error name) or just
mismatched.
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This allows custom "name" ↔ errno mappings to be registered.
Tables from all compilation units are concatenated.
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The option simply enables hashmap debugging by defining
ENABLE_HASHMAP_DEBUG.
I suggest developing new code with it enabled, to have the iterator checks.
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$ sudo gdb -p 1
...
(gdb) source gdb-sd_dump_hashmaps.py
(gdb) sd_dump_hashmaps
... lists allocated hashmaps ...
(gdb) sd_dump_hashmaps 1
... lists allocated hashmaps, their DIB histograms and contiguous
blocks statistics ...
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This is a rewrite of the hashmap implementation. Its advantage is lower
memory usage.
It uses open addressing (entries are stored in an array, as opposed to
linked lists). Hash collisions are resolved with linear probing and
Robin Hood displacement policy. See the references in hashmap.c.
Some fun empirical findings about hashmap usage in systemd on my laptop:
- 98 % of allocated hashmaps are Sets.
- Sets contain 78 % of all entries, plain Hashmaps 17 %, and
OrderedHashmaps 5 %.
- 60 % of allocated hashmaps contain only 1 entry.
- 90 % of allocated hashmaps contain 5 or fewer entries.
- 75 % of all entries are in hashmaps that use trivial_hash_ops.
Clearly it makes sense to:
- store entries in distinct entry types. Especially for Sets - their
entries are the most numerous and they require the least information
to store an entry.
- have a way to store small numbers of entries directly in the hashmap
structs, and only allocate the usual entry arrays when the direct
storage is full.
The implementation has an optional debugging feature (enabled by
defining the ENABLE_HASHMAP_DEBUG macro), where it:
- tracks all allocated hashmaps in a linked list so that one can
easily find them in gdb,
- tracks which function/line allocated a given hashmap, and
- checks for invalid mixing of hashmap iteration and modification.
Since entries are not allocated one-by-one anymore, mempools are not
used for entries. Originally I meant to drop mempools entirely, but it's
still worth it to use them for the hashmap structs. My testing indicates
that it makes loading of units about 5 % faster (a test with 10000 units
where more than 200000 hashmaps are allocated - pure malloc: 449±4 ms,
mempools: 427±7 ms).
Here are some memory usage numbers, taken on my laptop with a more or
less normal Fedora setup after booting with SELinux disabled (SELinux
increases systemd's memory usage significantly):
systemd (PID 1) Original New Change
dirty memory (from pmap -x 1) [KiB] 2152 1264 -41 %
total heap allocations (from gdb-heap) [KiB] 1623 756 -53 %
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A reimplementation of hashmaps will follow and it will use 0.8.
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Add mempool_alloc0_tile(). It's like mempool_alloc_tile(), but it
initializes the allocated tile's memory to zero.
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Two's logarithms for unsigned.
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provided headers
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in /dev/shm
Previously when a log message grew beyond the maximum AF_UNIX/SOCK_DGRAM
datagram limit we'd send an fd to a deleted file in /dev/shm instead.
Because the sender could still modify the file after delivery we had to
immediately copy the data on the receiving side.
With memfds we can optimize this logic, and also remove the dependency
on /dev/shm: simply send a sealed memfd around, and if we detect the
seal memory map the fd and use it directly.
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We really shouldn't create fds ever that have the flag unset.
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When running sysusers we would clobber file ownership and permissions
on the files /etc/passwd, /etc/group and /etc/[g]shadow.
This simply preserves the ownership and mode if existing files are
found.
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On the Dell Inspiron 1520 both the atkbd and acpi-video input devices report
an event for pressing the brightness up / down key-combos, resulting in user
space seeing double events and increasing / decreasing the brightness 2 steps
for each keypress.
This hwdb snippet suppresses the atkbd events, making the Inspiron 1520 work
like most modern laptops which emit brightness up / down events through
acpi-video only.
Reported by Pavel Malyshev <p.malishev@gmail.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1141525
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Now zsh should behave the same for those two subcommands as bash.
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The docs don't clarify what is expected, but I don't see any reason
why --type should be ignored.
Also restucture the compund conditions into separate clauses for
easier reading.
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I tried to use 'systemctl --all list-units' to filter unit files, but
this always filters out unit files which are not loaded. We want to complete
systemctl start with those units too, so this approach is not going to work.
New version is rather slow, but hopefully correct.
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278 is vmsplice on x86_64. 318 is what we want:
http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/x86/syscalls/syscall_64.tbl
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files, for dissection with wireshark
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A combination of commits f3c80515c and 79d80fc14 cause nspawn to
silently fail with a commandline such as:
# systemd-nspawn -D /build/extra-x86_64 --bind=/usr
strace shows the culprit:
[pid 27868] writev(2, [{"Failed to create mount point /build/extra-x86_64/usr: File exists", 82}, {"\n", 1}], 2) = 83
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needing entropy
Doesn't require an fd, and could be a bit faster, so let's make use of
it, if it is available.
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Add bridge port attributes to sd-rtnl to configure
via networkd.
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This patch adds functionality to set family type
in the rtnl message for example PF_BRIDGE.
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The kernel mostly does not check this, but let's be consisntent and allways set it anyway. Based
on patch from Susant Sahani.
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We must filter out the 'network-byteorder' and 'nested' flags.
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Add path of MTU disovery for IPIP and GRE Kind of tunnels
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