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With this change runlevel 2, 3, 4 are mapped to multi-user.target for
good, and 5 to graphical.target. This was already the previous mapping
but is now no longer reconfigurable, but hard-coded into the core.
This should generally simplify things, but also fix one bug: the
sysv-generator previously generated symlinks to runlevel[2-5].target
units, which possibly weren't picked up if these aliases were otherwise
only referenced by the real names "multi-user.target" and
"graphical.target".
We keep compat aliases "runlevel[2345].target" arround for cases where
this target name is explicitly requested.
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systemd-fsckd can be socket-activated by systemd-fsck process. Reflect that
in the different unit files.
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Add systemd-fsckd multiplexer which accepts multiple systemd-fsck
instances to connect to it and sends progress report. systemd-fsckd then
computes and writes to /dev/console the number of devices currently being
checked and the minimum fsck progress. This will be used for interactive
progress report and cancelling in plymouth.
systemd-fsckd stops on idle when no systemd-fsck is connected.
Make the necessary changes to systemd-fsck to connect to the systemd-fsckd
socket.
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What used to be gummiboot, was renamed sd-boot when it was merged into
systemd. Let's try to be a bit more consistent with the rest of systemd
and rename it again as follows:
The EFI bootloader is now called 'systemd-bootx64.efi', and its sources are in
'src/boot/efi/'. The drop-in directory where bootctl will find EFI loaders
is now /usr/lib/systemd/boot/efi/.
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Set -std=gnu90 to let efibind.h define the standard types.
[tomegun: retyped the patch as the originl would not apply]
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For the entries listed in the first column of language-fallback-map,
the entry from the second column will be used for LANGUAGE=, if
LANGUAGE= is not explicitly specified.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=624158
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Interesting that automake doesn't complain about this at all.
That file was removed in 3fb97a58fa3f233.
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Only the very basics, more to come.
For now:
$ busctl tree org.freedesktop.network1
└─/org/freedesktop/network1
└─/org/freedesktop/network1/link
├─/org/freedesktop/network1/link/1
├─/org/freedesktop/network1/link/2
├─/org/freedesktop/network1/link/3
├─/org/freedesktop/network1/link/4
├─/org/freedesktop/network1/link/5
├─/org/freedesktop/network1/link/6
├─/org/freedesktop/network1/link/7
├─/org/freedesktop/network1/link/8
└─/org/freedesktop/network1/link/9
$ busctl introspect org.freedesktop.network1 /org/freedesktop/network1
NAME TYPE SIGNATURE RESULT/VALUE FLAGS
org.freedesktop.network1.Manager interface - - -
.OperationalState property s "carrier" emits-change
$ busctl introspect org.freedesktop.network1 /org/freedesktop/network1/link/1
NAME TYPE SIGNATURE RESULT/VALUE FLAGS
org.freedesktop.network1.Link interface - - -
.AdministrativeState property s "unmanaged" emits-change
.OperationalState property s "carrier" emits-change
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Get it from type -P instead, to support --enable-split-usr.
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Still keep the non-socket activation code around for starting from the commandline, but
will likely drop that too in the future.
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Currently used to tag devices in the new Lenovo *50 series and the X1 Carbon
3rd. These laptops re-introduced the physical trackpoint buttons that were
missing from the *40 series but those buttons are now wired up to the
touchpad.
The touchpad now sends BTN_0, BTN_1 and BTN_2 for the trackpoint. The same
button codes were used in older touchpads that had dedicated scroll up/down
buttons. Input drivers need to work around this and thus know what they're
dealing with.
For the previous gen we introduced INPUT_PROP_TOPBUTTONPAD in the kernel, but
the resulting mess showed that these per-device quirks should really live in
userspace.
The list currently includes the X1 Carbon 3rd PNPID, others will be added as
get to know which PNPID they have.
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We should prefer the unifont.hex file from the system, instead of our
own. Upstream has made a few releases since our version was included,
and we should follow upstream changes. But adding 2.6MB to our source
repo every time upstream releases is not nice.
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With this change the pull protocol implementation processes will pass
progress data to importd which then passes this information on via the
bus. We use sd_notify() as generic transport for this communication,
making importd listen to them, while matching the incoming messages to
the right transfer.
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"systemd-pull"
This way "systemd-importd" is the daemon that uses "systemd-pull" as
backend worker.
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client to it
The old "systemd-import" binary is now an internal tool. We still use it
as asynchronous backend for systemd-importd. Since the import tool might
require some IO and CPU resources (due to qcow2 explosion, and
decompression), and because we might want to run it with more minimal
priviliges we still keep it around as the worker binary to execute as
child process of importd.
machinectl now has verbs for pulling down images, cancelling them and
listing them.
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This will also be used in dhcp4-client.
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This way, we can import CoreOS images unmodified.
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This covers the general functionality as well as regression tests for recent
fixes like commits b7e718 and 1ed0c19.
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This also adds an initial keyring for the verification, that contains
Ubuntu's and Fedora's key. We should probably add more entries sooner or
later.
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Use the parallel test runner's TEST_EXTENSIONS/*_LOG_COMPILER feature
(https://www.gnu.org/software/automake/manual/html_node/Parallel-Test-Harness.html)
to run *.py tests through $(PYTHON), and only if we have python
available/enabled.
This eliminates the need of having shell wrappers, thus drop
test/rules-test.sh.
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files
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Ubuntu provides their cloud images optionally as tarball, hence also
support downloading those.
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Don't hardcode "python" or /usr/bin/python, but use the configured $(PYTHON).
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to target
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This implements a shared policy cache with read-write locks. We no longer
parse the XML policy in each thread.
This will allow us to easily implement ReloadConfig().
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Make sure stdio-bridge can be found in $PATH. Otherwise, "xyzctl -H"
fails.
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Instead of using Accept=true and running one proxy for each connection, we
now run one proxy-daemon with a thread per connection. This will enable us
to share resources like policies in the future.
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Now that we want to make bus-proxy multi-threaded, we have to bring back
the systemd-stdio-bridge for our TCP use-cases.
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Move all the proxy code into a "struct Proxy" object that can be used
from multiple binaries.
We now dropped SMACK as we have to refactor it to work properly. We can
introduce it later on.
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With this change the import tool will now unpack qcow2 images into
normal raw disk images, suitable for usage with nspawn.
This allows has the benefit of also allowing importing Ubuntu Cloud
images for usage with nspawn.
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That way we can download fedora cloud raw images as-is and decompress
them on-the-fly.
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There is no reason to keep both separated. We want to avoid API specific
tools and instead keep generic terms like 'input'.
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Move synthesize_*() into synthesize.c and bus_proxy_process_driver() into
driver.c for better code separation.
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After all, nspawn can now dissect MBR partition levels, too, hence
".gpt" appears a misnomer. Moreover, the the .raw suffix for these files
is already pretty popular (the Fedora disk images use it for example),
hence sounds like an OK scheme to adopt.
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This exposes an IP port on the container as local port using DNAT.
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