Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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A variety of fixes
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There's no concept of ctrl-alt-del for user systemd instances, hence
don't suggest it woud make sense to symlink the unit to it.
Fixes #1525.
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calling tty
For example, due to perm issues.
THis simply downgrades the message about it, since this is purely
cosmetical anyway.
Fixes #1543.
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Normally this shouldn't happen unless the daemon is reloaded.
A similar check is already in place in socket.c for the socket
activation case.
This hopefully makes #1526 non-fatal, though it will not fix this, and
there's something else to fix.
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networkd/libsystemd-network: collection of trivial patches v2
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core: expose `SyslogFacility` and `SyslogLevel` as properties on dbus
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bus-util: change `Default`-chopping to `Limit`-searching
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Fix keymap aliases and add support for Lenovo Thinkpad Yoga S1
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manager: remove unused function
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We don't use that anywhere any more. With the introduction of alias names it
also is not a proper mapping any more as several keys (e. g. KEY_COFFEE and
KEY_SCREENLOCK) have the same numerical mapping.
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The Yoga's firmware sends key events whenever it's being folded or unfolded.
These are thus *not* a button for requesting a screen orientation change, just
an indication that this already happened. Thus they should not be assigned to
"direction", but be ignored. Assigning them to "reserved" does not silence the
"unknown key pressed" kernel warning, so there's no point in maintaining a
mapping here.
Fixes #1440
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linux/input.h contains alias definitions like
#define KEY_COFFEE 152
#define KEY_SCREENLOCK KEY_COFFEE
#define KEY_ROTATE_DISPLAY 153
#define KEY_DIRECTION KEY_ROTATE_DISPLAY
But we ignored these when building keyboard-keys-list.txt. Also allow the value
to start with "K" now (for KEY_*), and drop the hardcoded COFFEE → SCREENLOCK
aliasing.
This fixes assignments to key "direction".
Fixes #1151
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See https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/1534#commitcomment-13744013
Actually, thinking about this, maybe it would be nicer to actually look
for "Limit" in the string rather than chopping off a "Default"....
Sounds more generic...
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Fixup for #1542.
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Fix journalctl --dump-catalog, journalctl --list-catalog
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Expose `DefaultLimit*` as properties on dbus
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Make journald audit socket maskable
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man: describe IPv6AcceptRouterAdvertisements= better
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build-sys: check for xsltproc when building manpages
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journalctl: introduce short options for --since and --until
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Fixes #1514.
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`journalctl --dump-catalog ID1 ID2 ...` works fine.
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Adding them to the documentation makes it easier to find
the right man page for people who are trying to understand
where some socket in the filesystem is coming from.
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Only check for xsltproc if it will be used.
If not found, complain.
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/1521
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With the previous description it wasn't clear that the
kernel default is being described.
Add link to kernel docs.
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If we were given some sockets through socket activation, and audit
socket is not among them, do not try to open it. This way, if the
socket unit is disabled, we will not receive audit events.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1227379
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po/da: use unix line endings
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sd-daemon: wipe out memory before using CMSG_NXTHDR()
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CMSG_NXTHDR() checks for cmsg->cmsg_len *after* it increased the pointer.
While this makes sense for parsing received messages, that's a pitfall
for code crafting messages with this macro.
Wipe out the allocated memory to fix this.
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Trivial fixes
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Checks that a given address is not tentative nor deprecated.
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No need to expose these functions, but rather call them from address_{add,drop}.
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Don't allocate Address objects only to free them again when processing
rtnl events.
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We need to be able to look these things up quickly as we will be updating them
continuously and there can in principle be many of them.
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Also, explicitly don't support subscribing to GET or SET messages, as these will
never be emitted by the kernel.
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This is useful in case the daemon is restarted and the state of the IPv4LL client should
be serialized/deserialized.
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We don't care about timestamps down to the last usec, round to the closest sec
as that will be plenty for debugging purposes.
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