Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
[/etc/systemd/system/mnt-test.mount:6] DefaultInstance only makes sense for template units, ignoring.
|
|
This way it can be used in install.c in subsequent commit.
|
|
A downside is that a warning about missing [Install] is printed:
$ systemctl --root=/ enable mnt-test.mount
[/etc/systemd/system/mnt-test.mount:5] Aliases are not allowed for mount units, ignoring.
The unit files have no installation config (WantedBy, RequiredBy, Also, Alias
settings in the [Install] section, and DefaultInstance for template units).
This means they are not meant to be enabled using systemctl.
Possible reasons for having this kind of units are:
1) A unit may be statically enabled by being symlinked from another unit's
.wants/ or .requires/ directory.
2) A unit's purpose may be to act as a helper for some other unit which has
a requirement dependency on it.
3) A unit may be started when needed via activation (socket, path, timer,
D-Bus, udev, scripted systemctl call, ...).
4) In case of template units, the unit is meant to be enabled with some
instance name specified.
That's a bit misleading, but I don't see an easy way to fix this. But
the situation is similar for many other parsing errors, so maybe that's
OK.
|
|
This way it can be used in install.c in subsequent commit.
|
|
|
|
If the user defines a symlink alias for a unit whose type does not support
aliasing, detect this early and print a nice warning.
Fixe: #2730
|
|
Hashing should be quicker than allocating, hence let's first check if the
string already exists and only then allocate a new copy for it.
|
|
The concept of merging units exists so that we can create Unit objects for a
number of names early, and then load them only later, possibly merging units
which then turn out to be symlinked to other names. This of course only makes
sense for unit types where multiple names per unit are supported. For all
others, let's refuse the merge operation early.
|
|
This commit improves systemd performance on the systems which have
thousands of units.
|
|
fsync directory when creating or rotating journal files and other small fixes,
most importantly for the DHCP DUID code.
|
|
Add NVMe rules using the "wwid" attribute.
root@target:~# cat /sys/block/nvme0n1/wwid
eui.3825004235000591
root@target:~# ls /dev/disk/by-id/ -l |grep nvme
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 13 Apr 27 16:08 nvme-eui.3825004235000591 -> ../../nvme0n1
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 15 Apr 27 16:08 nvme-eui.3825004235000591-part1 -> ../../nvme0n1p1
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 15 Apr 27 16:08 nvme-eui.3825004235000591-part2 -> ../../nvme0n1p2
|
|
Always create dependencies for bind mounts
|
|
As suggested by:
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/3126#discussion_r61125474
|
|
Let's move DUID configuration into the [DHCP] section, since it only makes
sense in a DHCP context, and should be close to the configuration of
ClientIdentifier= and suchlike.
This really shouldn't be a section of its own, we don't have any for any of our
other per-protocol specific identifiers...
Follow-up for #2890 #2943
|
|
created in too
Fixes: #2831
|
|
|
|
As suggested in:
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/3124#discussion_r61068789
|
|
Make sure TAB results in 2ch indenting as we commonly use for our docbook XML
files.
|
|
On s390 size_t is an unsigned long, nor an unsigned int. They both are
of the same size and can be cast to each other safely, but the compiler
still seems unhappy about incompatible pointers.
Fixes: 7c2da2ca8
|
|
Various small cleanups in shared code
|
|
Fixes:
cp /etc/machine-id /var/tmp/systemd-test.HccKPa/nspawn-root/etc
systemd-nspawn -D /var/tmp/systemd-test.HccKPa/nspawn-root --link-journal host -b
...
Host and machine ids are equal (P�S!V): refusing to link journals
|
|
Now we are not setting static address, start dhcp6 client and
discovering IPv6 routers after link gained carrier.
This fixes #2912.
|
|
Added to kernel 4.6.
|
|
Fixes:
$ systemd-nspawn -h
...
Failed to remove veth interface ����: Operation not permitted
This is a follow-up for d2773e59de3dd970d861
|
|
Running cgtop on a system, which lacks expecting stat file, results in a
segfault. For example, a system with blkio tree but without cfq io scheduler,
lacks "blkio.io_service_bytes".
When the targeting cgroup's file does not exist, process() returns 0 and
also does not modify `*ret' value (which is `*ours'). As a result,
callers of refresh_one() can have bogus pointer, which result in SEGV.
This patch just properly initialize the variable to NULL.
|
|
Just for convenience.
|
|
|
|
In standard linux parlance, "hidden" usually means that the file name starts
with ".", and nothing else. Rename the function to convey what the function does
better to casual readers.
Stop exposing hidden_file_allow_backup which is rather ugly and rewrite
hidden_file to extract the suffix first. Note that hidden_file_allow_backup
excluded files with "~" at the end, which is quite confusing. Let's get
rid of it before it gets used in the wrong place.
|
|
|
|
dirent_is_file_with_suffix
If the file name is supposed to end in a suffix, there's not need to check the
name against a list of "special" file names, which is slow. Instead, just check
that the name doens't start with a period.
|
|
|
|
It's better to avoid having the option string duplicated, lest we forget
to modify them in sync in the future.
|
|
When enabling ForwardToSyslog=yes, the syslog.socket is active when entering
emergency mode. Any log message then triggers the start of rsyslog.service (or
other implementation) along with its dependencies such as local-fs.target and
sysinit.target. As these might fail themselves (e. g. faulty /etc/fstab), this
breaks the emergency mode.
This causes syslog.socket to fail with "Failed to queue service startup job:
Transition is destructive".
Add Conflicts=syslog.socket to emergency.service to make sure the socket is
stopped when emergency.service is started.
Fixes #266
|
|
The parse_pid() function doesn't succeed if we don't zero-terminate after the
last digit in the buffer.
|
|
ucf is a standard Debian helper for managing configuration file upgrades which
need more interaction or elaborate merging than conffiles managed by dpkg.
Ignore its temporary and backup files similarly to the *.dpkg-* ones to avoid
creating units for them in generators.
https://bugs.debian.org/775903
|
|
The only code path which makes a journal durable is via
journal_file_set_offline().
When we perform a rotate the journal's header->state is being set to
STATE_ARCHIVED prior to journal_file_set_offline() being called.
In journal_file_set_offline(), we short-circuit the entire offline when
f->header->state != STATE_ONLINE.
This all results in none of the journal_file_set_offline() fsync() calls
being reached when rotate archives a journal, so archived journals are
never explicitly made durable.
What we do now is instead of setting the f->header->state to
STATE_ARCHIVED directly in journal_file_rotate() prior to
journal_file_close(), we set an archive flag in f->archive for the
journal_file_set_offline() machinery to honor by committing
STATE_ARCHIVED instead of STATE_OFFLINE when set.
Prior to this, rotated journals were never getting fsync() explicitly
performed on them, since journal_file_set_offline() short-circuited.
Obviously this is undesirable, and depends entirely on the underlying
filesystem as to how much durability was achieved when simply closing
the file.
Note that this problem existed prior to the recent asynchronous fsync
changes, but those changes do facilitate our performing this durable
offline on rotate without blocking, regardless of the underlying
filesystem sync-on-close semantics.
|
|
Add the boot parameter: systemd.default_timeout_start_sec to allow modification
of the default start job timeout at boot time.
|
|
|
|
This reverts commit 6e3930c40f3379b7123e505a71ba4cd6db6c372f.
Merge got squashed by mistake.
|
|
nspawn automatic user namespaces
|
|
* sd-journal: detect earlier if we try to read an object from an invalid offset
Specifically, detect early if we try to read from offset 0, i.e. are using
uninitialized offset data.
* journal: when dumping journal contents, react nicer to lines we can't read
If journal files are not cleanly closed it might happen that intermediaery
journal entries cannot be read. Handle this nicely, skip over the unreadable
entries, and log a debug message about it; after all we generally follow the
logic that we try to make the best of corrupted files.
* journal-file: always generate the same error when encountering corrupted files
Let's make sure EBADMSG is the one error we throw when we encounter corrupted
data, so that we can neatly test for it.
* journal-file: when iterating through a partly corruped journal file, treat error like EOF
When we linearly iterate through a corrupted journal file, and we encounter a
read error, don't consider this fatal, but merely as EOF condition (and log
about it).
* journal-file: make seeking in corrupted files work
Previously, when we used a bisection table for seeking through a corrupted
file, and the end of the bisection table was corrupted we'd most likely fail
the entire seek operation. Improve the situation: if we encounter invalid
entries in a bisection table, linearly go backwards until we find a working
entry again.
* man: elaborate on the automatic systemd-journald.socket service dependencies
Fixes: #1603
|
|
Document the necessary dependencies and nspawn/lxd options to run
test/networkd-test.py.
|
|
Fixes: #1603
|
|
Previously, when we used a bisection table for seeking through a corrupted
file, and the end of the bisection table was corrupted we'd most likely fail
the entire seek operation. Improve the situation: if we encounter invalid
entries in a bisection table, linearly go backwards until we find a working
entry again.
|
|
error like EOF
When we linearly iterate through a corrupted journal file, and we encounter a
read error, don't consider this fatal, but merely as EOF condition (and log
about it).
|
|
Let's make sure EBADMSG is the one error we throw when we encounter corrupted
data, so that we can neatly test for it.
|
|
If journal files are not cleanly closed it might happen that intermediaery
journal entries cannot be read. Handle this nicely, skip over the unreadable
entries, and log a debug message about it; after all we generally follow the
logic that we try to make the best of corrupted files.
|
|
Specifically, detect early if we try to read from offset 0, i.e. are using
uninitialized offset data.
|
|
This way the user service will have a loginuid, and it will be inherited by
child services. This shouldn't change anything as far as systemd itself is
concerned, but is nice for various services spawned from by systemd --user
that expect a loginuid.
pam_loginuid(8) says that it should be enabled for "..., crond and atd".
user@.service should behave similarly to those two as far as audit is
concerned.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1328947#c28
|
|
rework "journalctl -M"
|