Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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core: drop check for /etc/mtab
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man: Drop "internally," which is misleading
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A grab bag of stuff
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The existing text misleads readers into thinking how the notify socket protocol is "internals" and that they can only use the functions. However, the socket is part of the Interface Stability Promise. So, we should drop "internally" from the description so the man page both indicates both how the functions work and how one would talk to the socket directly.
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This is useful to check that compression actually works, and how
compression influences file size in the best-case-scenario for
compression. (The answer is that not as much as one would hope:
there's still a big overhead of the indexing and since every field
is compressed separately, even fields that compress very well
contribute to the file size. This overhead becomes negligible only
for very big fields.)
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We have enough places where we parse an ifindex, hence introduce a
proper parsing function for it, that verifies all parameters.
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don't try again
If we failed to extract a word, then that's how it is, we shouldn't try
to extract it again and again, it's unlikely to work, and we just
deadlock.
This is a fix-up for 52278ad31d92dffa9029c8a171b9e9348f5dcc8f.
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When we enumerate journal files and encounter an invalid one, remember
which this, and show it to the user.
Note the possibly slightly surprising logic here: we store only one path
per error code. This means we show all error kinds but not every actual
error we encounter. This has the benefit of not requiring us to keep a
potentially unbounded list of errors with their sources around, but can
still provide a pretty complete overview on the errors we encountered.
Fixes #1669.
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- Always print a debug log message about files and directories we cannot
open right when it happens instead of the caller, thus reducing the
number of places where we need to generate the debug message.
- Always push the errors we encounter immediately into the error set,
when we run into them, instead of in the caller. Thus, we never forget
to push them in.
- Use stack instead of heap memory where we can.
- Make remove_file() void, since it cannot fail anyway and always
returned 0.
- Make local machine check of journal directories explicit in a
function, to make things more readable.
- Port to all directory listing loops FOREACH_DIRENT_ALL()
- sd-daemon is library code, hence never log at higher log levels than
LOG_DEBUG.
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When reading stuff, we should only return EIO when an actual read error
occured, not when we don't like the data for whatever reason.
We already return ENODATA for all other kinds of file truncation, hence
do the same for the most obvious kind, so that callers know what ENODATA
means.
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For each service expose how many file descriptors there are currently in
the fd store.
(Also, fix the exporting of the fdstore limit, given that the field is
just an "unsigned" but we exported it as "uint32_t". Not that there way
any effective difference, but let's make this clean...)
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Let's not eat up errors in shall_restore_state(), but in the consumers
instead, just for the sake of keeping the library calls generic.
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Only that way it actually has an effect on all our sockets, including
$NOTIFY_SOCKET.
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Minor fixes
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I assume this was a typo in c279613f861636c816f2f7df051b02c2f55a5134
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memory_erase() so far just called memset(), which the compiler might
optimize away under certain conditions if it feels there's benefit in
it. C11 knows a new memset_s() call that is like memset(), but may not
be optimized away. Ideally, we'd just use that call, but glibc currently
does not support it. Hence, implement our own simplistic version of it.
We use a GCC pragma to turn off optimization for this call, and also use
the "volatile" keyword on the pointers to ensure that gcc will use the
pointers as-is. According to a variety of internet sources, either one
does the trick. However, there are also reports that at least the
volatile thing isn't fully correct, hence let's add some snake oil and
employ both techniques.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4711346
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systemd-run can launch units with RuntimeDirectory
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test-execute: add more tests
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Teach bus_append_unit_property_assignment() about 'Delegate' property
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systemctl: port to extract_first_word
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util-linux 2.27.1 now entirely stops looking at /etc/mtab, so we don't need to
verify /etc/mtab during early boot any more. Later on, tmpfiles.d/etc.conf will
fix /etc/mtab anyway, so there's not even a point in warning about it.
Drop test_mtab() and bump the util-linux dependency to >= 2.17.1.
Fixes #1495
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machine: fix #1739
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Port capabiliy bounding set parsing to extract_first_word
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Revert "utf8.[ch]: use char32_t and char16_t instead of int, int32_t,…
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sd-journal.c: port to extract_first_word
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machine: : port to extract_first_word
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utf8.[ch]: use char32_t and char16_t instead of int, int32_t, int16_t
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tests: lookup_paths_init depends on SYSTEMD_UNIT_PATH. Test it
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core: two trivial debug/error message improvements
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network: fix use-after-free in link_free
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update TODO
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The directive is called FileDescriptorStoreMax=, not FDStoreMax=.
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Make sure journald never blocks on sd_notify() to PID 1
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- inotify utab has been removed and we use libmount now
- x-systemd.requires= fstab option has been implemented to specify
dependencies in fstab
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Otherwise we might run into deadlocks, when journald blocks on the
notify socket on PID 1, and PID 1 blocks on IPC to dbus-daemon and
dbus-daemon blocks on logging to journald. Break this cycle by making
sure that journald never ever blocks on PID 1.
Note that this change disables support for event loop watchdog support,
as these messages are sent in blocking style by sd-event. That should
not be a big loss though, as people reported frequent problems with the
watchdog hitting journald on excessively slow IO.
Fixes: #1505.
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Better generate a real error then simply connect to the wrong socket.
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rework C11 utf8.[ch] to use char32_t instead of uint32_t when referring
to unicode chars, to make things more expressive.
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