Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Also fix an infinite loop on E2BIG.
Remember what range we already scanned for '\n', to avoid
quadratic behaviour on long "text" fields.
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Directory src/journal has become one of the largest directories,
and since systemd-journal-gatewayd, systemd-journal-remote, and
forthcoming systemd-journal-upload are all closely related, create
a separate directory for them.
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If a file was opened for writing, and then closed immediately without
actually writing any entries, on subsequent opening, it would be
considered "corrupted". This should be totally fine, and even in
read mode, an empty file can become non-empty later on.
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records
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Let's turn resolved into a something truly useful: a fully asynchronous
DNS stub resolver that subscribes to network changes.
(More to come: caching, LLMNR, mDNS/DNS-SD, DNSSEC, IDN, NSS module)
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Suggested by poma.
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It appears there is no good way to decide whether or not broadcasts should be enabled,
there is hardware that must have broadcast, and there are networks that only allow
unicast. So we give up and make this configurable.
By default, unicast is used, but if the kernel were to inform us abotu certain
interfaces requiring broadcast, we could change this to opt-in by default in
those cases.
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On Tue, Jul 15, 2014 at 1:52 PM, Alick Zhao <alick9188@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> So maybe ID_SOFTWARE_RADIO ?
>>
>> Hmm, SDR is more a term for a generic technology than for a device
>> class. To me it does not really sound like an administrator would know
>> what this is.
>>
>> What exactly is the device or subsystem you want to make accessible to
>> locally logged-in users only?
>
> Initially it is bladeRF, but many more are of interest: USRP, rtl-sdr,
> HackRF, ... [1]
>
> I agree an administrator might not know what SDR is, since it is
> currently still not widely known, and makes sense only for amateurs
> and researchers. But as a SDR fan, I see many new SDR peripherals
> are created recently, and expect to see more. So a generic ID seems
> reasonable to me.
>
> [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_software-defined_radios
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Oneshot services's cgroup is removed when the service
exits. An assert is hit otherwise.
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It was broken since systemd was moved out of /bin.
For zsh it was never there.
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This reverts previous commit and applies a different fix.
manager_clock_watch() callback calls manager_send_request() to kick
off a resync. We can only do that when we're actually connected to
something. It is not useful to setup the callback from manager_new().
Now the callback will be dropped in manager_connect() and requested
in manager_begin().
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=80932
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Jul 04 17:46:03 orchid systemd[1]: Starting Network Time Synchronization...
Jul 04 17:46:03 orchid systemd[1]: Started Network Time Synchronization.
Jul 04 17:46:22 orchid systemd-timesyncd[301]: System time changed. Resyncing.
Jul 04 17:46:22 orchid systemd-timesyncd[301]: Assertion 'm->current_server_name'
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=80932
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Make link_initialized() idempotent to avoid taking refs on several udev_device
objects.
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It complains about optoffset possibly being uninitialized. It is wrong,
but let's just initialize it.
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It complains about {max,init}_retransmit_time possibly being
uninitialized. It is wrong, but let's just initialize it.
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Split each netdev kind into its own .h/.c.
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We now:
- parse config
- match on environment
- verify and complement config
- create netdev
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Enslave only really makes sense when referring to bridges and bonds, so try to be
a bit more neutral.
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We will happily use bridges/bonds as master devices, but we will not change their settings if they were created by
someone else.
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This was accidentally dropped when adding metric support.
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Vendor Class Identifier be used by DHCP clients to identify
their vendor type and configuration. When using this option,
vendors can define their own specific identifier values, such
as to convey a particular hardware or operating system
configuration or other identifying information.
Vendor-specified DHCP options—features that let administrators assign
separate options to clients with similar configuration requirements.
For example, if DHCP-aware clients for example we want to separate
different gateway and option for different set of people
(dev/test/hr/finance) in a org or devices for example web/database
servers or let's say in a embedded device etc and require a different
default gateway or DNS server than the rest of clients.
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Now route metric can be configuted via conf file:
example conf:
[Match]
Name=em1
[Route]
Gateway=192.168.1.12
Metric=10
Test:
ip route output
default via 192.168.1.12 dev em1 metric 10
[tomegun: squash TODO update and reword man page a bit]
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Turns out, making strings shell-proof is harder than expected:
# machinectl set-hostname "foo|poweroff" && . /etc/machine-info
(This could be simplified by quoting *and* escaping all characters,
which is harmless in shell but unnecessary.)
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