Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This function always returns the server side ID. The name suggested it
was actually always the peer's ID, but that's not correct if the call is
called on a server bus context. Hence, let's correct the name a bit.
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This includes code to parse and split up match strings which will also
be useful to calculate bloom filter masks when the time comes.
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reply to HELLO
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Here is a patch that fixes documentation with python 3.x in non utf-8
locales. Specifically in my locale latin-1 is the default setting for
output going to stdout, which causes it to fail. By writing directly
to file we are able to set the locale to utf-8.
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This makes it easier to add substitutions to man pages,
avoiding the separate transformation step.
mkdir -p's are removed from the rule, because xsltproc will
will create directories on it's own.
All in all, two or three forks per man page are avoided,
which should make things marginally faster.
Unfortunately python parsers must too be tweaked to handle
entities. This isn't particularly easy: with lxml a custom
Resolver can be used, but the stdlib etree doesn't support
external entities *at all*. So when running without lxml,
the entities are just removed. Right now it doesn't matter,
since the entities are not indexed anyway. But I intend to
add indexing of filenames in the near future, and then the
index generated without lxml might be missing a few lines.
Oh well.
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I want to use the substitutions in different form for
xml entities.
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This reverts commits c78ab91132aab9193f3c17a9a206f8825ff4be84
and 185c3be03cec26023acc11b49553753aa7330a1d.
It is simpler to just use includes...
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It currently says 'time settings', change that to 'boot settings'.
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use default depth from variable for --help
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gcc thinks that errno might be negative, and functions could return
something positive on error (-errno). Should not matter in practice,
but makes an -O4 build much quieter.
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grawity> `journalctl --update-catalog` from latest git prints:
"Recursive mkdir .: Invalid argument" and
"Failed to write : Invalid argument"
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In order to write tests for the catalog functions, they
are made non-static and start taking a 'database' parameter,
which is the name of a file with the preprocessed catalog
entries.
This makes it possible to make test-catalog part of the
normal test suite, since it now only operates on files
in /tmp.
Some more tests are added.
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Coverity complains: systemd-199/src/journal/catalog.c:126:
buffer_size_warning: Calling strncpy with a maximum size argument of
32 bytes on destination array "i->language" of size 32 bytes might
leave the destination string unterminated.
...and unfortunately it was right. The string was defined as a
fixed-size string in some parts of the code, and used a
null-terminated string in others (e.g. in log statements). There's no
point in conserving one byte, so just define the max language tag
length to 31 bytes, and use null terminated strings everywhere.
Also, wrap some lines, zero-fill less bytes, use '\0' instead of just
0 to be more explicit that this is one byte.
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systemd-199/src/bootchart/store.c:289: buffer_size_warning: Calling
strncpy with a maximum size argument of 256 bytes on destination array
"ps->name" of size 256 bytes might leave the destination string
unterminated.
...and indeed, the string was used as NULL-terminated later on.
pid_cmdline_strncpy is renamed to pid_cmdline_strscpy to commemorate
the fact that it *does* properly terminate the string.
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systemd-199/src/shared/utmp-wtmp.c:228: buffer_size_warning: Calling
strncpy with a maximum size argument of 32 bytes on destination array
"store.ut_line" of size 32 bytes might leave the destination string
unterminated.
The destination string is unterminated on purpose, but we must
remember that.
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We don't use it currently for anything (no latex output),
but it was messing up stuff if /etc/papersize had comments.
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https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=787314
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=62864
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BUILD_ID is a fairly generic field used to identify the system image
that was used to install the distribution.
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Previously r was set to zero and so if(r<0) was never true.
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It does not make sense to print error code from previous loop.
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