Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This will be used by fsckd. This reverts part of
031886edfc6e96ab778c241035a8d00fb0de99d3.
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Even if plymouth is running, it might have not displayed the splash yet,
so we'll see a few lines on fbcon when we should have otherwise had
nothing.
Plymouth integration was added to systemd in commit
6faa11140bf776cdaeb8d22d01816e6e48296971. That same day, Plymouth got
systemd integration [0]. As such, the Plymouth integration has always
been obsolete, and was probably only for older Plymouth's. But I can't
imagine anybody running a Plymouth from 2011 with a systemd from 2015.
Remove the Plymouth/systemd integration, and let Plymouth's code tell
systemd to print the details.
[0] http://cgit.freedesktop.org/plymouth/commit/?id=537c16422cd49f1beeaab1ad39846a00018faec1
Signed-off-by: Jasper St. Pierre <jstpierre@mecheye.net>
Cc: Daniel Drake <dsd@endlessm.com>
Cc: Ray Strode <rstrode@redhat.com>
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This reverts commit ba76ee29bc02879fb42c048132af8889b00220d5. As it turns
out, we need to match on driver=atkbd to not load the fixups on any
plugged USB devices.
That is, whenever you use "name:<name>:dmi:<dmi>" style matches, you
better provide a name or you're screwing things up.
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Commit 628c89c introduced the "tentative" device state, which caused
devices to go from "plugged" to "tentative" on a remove uevent. This
breaks the cleanup of stale mounts (see commit 3b48ce4), as that only
applies to "dead" devices.
The "tentative" state only really makes sense on adding a device when
we don't know where it was coming from (i. e. not from udev). But when
we get a device removal from udev we definitively know that it's gone,
so change the device state back to "dead" as before 628c89c.
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Currently, we always run
hwdb 'keyboard:name:$attr{name}:$attr{[dmi/id]modalias}'
as last step to match keyboards. Therefore, if nothing else matched so
far, we still try the device-name+dmi combination.
However, we have a special atkbd rule which is only run for atkbd as:
hwdb 'keyboard:$attr{[dmi/id]modalias}'
This is redundant, as we already pass the same information to hwdb in the
last fallback step.
This patch converts the hwdb "keyboard:dmi:*" matches to
"keyboard:name:*:dmi:*" matches and drops the redundant rule.
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The 60-keyboard rules are already guared by KERNEL!="event*" bail-outs,
therefore, KERNELS="input*" is always true. Drop it!
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Drop the restriction not to match on bluetooth devices. They are supported
just fine!
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There is no reason to match on usb-modaliases, if we can use the
input-modalias to achieve the same. This commit changes the
keyboard-lookups to not be restricted to USB, but pass all modaliases to
the hwdb. Furthermore, we convert all usb:* matches to input:* matches,
thus getting rid of any ambiguity if multiple usb devices are chained (or
a bluetooth device / etc. is on top).
Note that legacy keyboard:usb:* matches are still supported, but
deprecated. If possible, please use keyboard:input:* matches instead.
This is a required step to make other input devices work with
60-keyboard.hwdb. Other bus-types are often chained on usb and we want to
avoid any ambiguity here if we incorrectly match on a USB hub.
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=89582
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If we don't check the error of the child process, systemd-vconsole-setup
would exit with 0 even if it could not really setup the console.
For a simple test, move loadkeys elsewhere and execute
systemd-vconsole-setup:
[root@localhost ~]# strace -f -e execve /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-vconsole-setup
execve("/usr/lib/systemd/systemd-vconsole-setup", ["/usr/lib/systemd/systemd-vconsol"...], [/* 15 vars */]) = 0
Process 171 attached
[pid 171] execve("/usr/bin/loadkeys", ["/usr/bin/loadkeys", "-q", "-C", "/dev/tty0", "br-abnt2"], [/* 15 vars */]) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
[pid 171] +++ exited with 1 +++
--- SIGCHLD {si_signo=SIGCHLD, si_code=CLD_EXITED, si_pid=171, si_uid=0, si_status=1, si_utime=0, si_stime=0} ---
+++ exited with 0 +++
Note that loadkeys returned 1 while systemd-vconsole-setup return 0.
Since the font and keyboard setup are already serialized, refactor the
code a little bit so the functions do the wait by themselves. One change
in behavior in this patch is that we don't return early, but we do try
to setup the keyboard even if the font load failed.
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Despite having the internal logic in place to enable/disable using NTP
servers provided by DHCP the network config didn't expose the option.
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Also use our own mkostemp wrapper, which tries to use O_TMPFILE.
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It allocates memory, so it can fail.
CID #1237527.
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CID #1237546.
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Mar 13 19:48:28 adam.happyassassin.net systemd[1]: Collecting (null)
Mar 13 19:48:28 adam.happyassassin.net systemd[1]: Collecting (null)
Mar 13 19:48:28 adam.happyassassin.net systemd[1]: Collecting (null)
Mar 13 19:48:28 adam.happyassassin.net systemd[1]: Collecting (null)
Mar 13 19:48:28 adam.happyassassin.net systemd[1]: Collecting (null)
Mar 13 19:48:28 adam.happyassassin.net systemd[1]: Collecting (null)
Mar 13 19:48:28 adam.happyassassin.net systemd[1]: Collecting (null)
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On Fri, Mar 13, 2015 at 8:25 PM, Michael Marineau <michael.marineau@coreos.com> wrote:
> Currently systemd-timesyncd.service includes
> ConditionVirtualization=no, disabling it in both containers and
> virtual machines. Each VM platform tends to deal with or ignore the
> time problem in their own special ways, KVM/QEMU has the kernel time
> source kvm-clock, Xen has had different schemes over the years, VMware
> expects a userspace daemon sync the clock, and other platforms are
> content to drift with the wind as far as I can tell.
>
> I don't know of a robust way to know if a platform needs a little
> extra help from userspace to keep the clock sane or not but it seems
> generally safer to try than to risk drifting. Does anyone know of a
> reason to leave timesyncd off by default? Otherwise switching to
> ConditionVirtualization=!container should be reasonable.
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Audit messages would be displayed as "unknown[1]".
Also specify AUTH as facility... This seems to be the closest match
(/* security/authorization messages */).
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This file contains no privileged data — just names of devices to decrypt
and files containing keys. On a running system most of this can be inferred from
the device tree anyway.
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Udev debug messages have to be significantly overhauled... For now
just downgrade those two. They are responsible for approximately 25%
of debug output during boot and are rather useless.
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Quotes are useful when the string can contain spaces or be otherwise
confusing. Not possible with those two.
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With debugging on, sysv-generator would print the full set of
lookup paths for *every* sysv script.
While at it, pass LookupPaths as a pointer in sysv-generator,
and constify it everywhere.
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Mar 13 19:48:30 adam.happyassassin.net systemd-tmpfiles[970]: "/var/lib/machines" has right mode 40700
Mar 13 19:48:30 adam.happyassassin.net systemd-tmpfiles[970]: /var/lib/machines created successfully.
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mar 14 20:05:34 fedora22 systemd[4058]: /usr/lib/systemd/system-generators/kdump-dep-generator.sh will be executed.
mar 14 20:05:34 fedora22 systemd[4058]: Spawned /usr/lib/systemd/system-generators/kdump-dep-generator.sh as 4059.
The second line already says everything.
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disabled
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it is ironic that
"The only purpose of this structure is to cast the structure pointer
passed in addr in order to avoid compiler warnings. See EXAMPLE below."
from bind(2)
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sd_event_dispatch() returns 0 on FINISH, so let's eat that up.
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If you've got SELinux policy loaded, label_hnd is your labeling handle.
When systemd is shutting down, we free that handle via mac_selinux_finish().
But: switch_root() calls mkdir_p_label(), which tries to look up a label
using that freed handle, and so we get a bunch of garbage and eventually
SEGV in libselinux.
(This doesn't happen in the switch-root from initramfs to real root because
there's no SELinux policy loaded in initramfs, so label_hnd is NULL and we
never attempt any lookups.)
So: make sure that mac_selinux_finish() actually sets label_hnd to NULL, so
nobody tries to use it after it becomes invalid.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1185604
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