Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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The original idea of systemd.pc was to contain arch-independent system
and systemd information. By exposing libdir as part of the fields (added
in eb39a6239c631873db62f6a942e6cb3dab0a2db4), it started to carry
arch-dependent data, thus breaking multilib systems. It was then moved
to pkgconfiglibdir to deal with this (in
aec432c6134146e138124c4130be2ee89dca07fa), but actually the right
approach is to simply not include libdir in the .pc file at all.
THis patch hence more or less reverts both commits again, and moves the
.pc file back into pkgconfigdatadir.
As alternative for querying the systems primary libdir there's now
"systemd-path system-library-arch", hence a more correct alternative
exists for querying this variable from the .pc file.
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with them missing
This way the root subvolume can be left read-only easily, and variable
and user data writable with explicit quota set.
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Aarch64 and ARM32 lack an EFI capable objcopy, so use the ldflags + -O
binary trick gnu-efi and the Red Hat shimloader are using.
(David: rebase to systemd-git and added EFI_ prefixes)
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Move the no-mmx/no-sse CFLAGS to X86-64 and IA32 defines in preparation
for ARM32 and Aarch64 support.
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Parse properties in the form
EVDEV_ABS_00="<min>:<max>:<res>:<fuzz>:<flat>"
and apply them to the kernel device. Future processes that open that device
will see the updated EV_ABS range.
This is particularly useful for touchpads that don't provide a resolution in
the kernel driver but can be fixed up through hwdb entries (e.g. bcm5974).
All values in the property are optional, e.g. a string of "::45" is valid to
set the resolution to 45.
The order intentionally orders resolution before fuzz and flat despite it
being the last element in the absinfo struct. The use-case for setting
fuzz/flat is almost non-existent, resolution is probably the most common case
we'll need.
To avoid multiple hwdb invocations for the same device, replace the
hwdb "keyboard:" prefix with "evdev:" and drop the separate 60-keyboard.rules
file. The new 60-evdev.rules is called for all event nodes
anyway, we don't need a separate rules file and second callout to the hwdb
builtin.
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OrderedSet implements a Set-like structure, but maintains insertion
ordered. It is hence to Set what OrderedHashmap is for Hashmap.
Internally, this is only a wrapper around OrderedHashmap for now, but
this could one day be improved and be added to hashmap.c natively.
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- Move to its own file rm-rf.c
- Change parameters into a single flags parameter
- Remove "honour sticky" logic, it's unused these days
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This provides equivalent functionality to libudev-device, but in the
systemd style. The public API only caters to creating sd_device objects
from for devices that already exist in /sys, there is no support for
listening for monitoring events or creating devices received over
the udev netlink protocol.
The private API contains the necessary functionality to make sd-device
a drop-in replacement for libudev-device, but which we would not
otherwise want to export.
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We planned to support (the conceptually broken) daylight saving
time/local time features in the kernel, SCSI, networking, FAT
filesystem, but it turned out to be a race we cannot win and do
not want to get involved. Systemd should not fiddle with daylight
saving time or parse timezone information itself.
Leave everything to glibc or tools like date(1) and do not make any
promises or raise expectations that systemd should handle anything
like this.
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This makes it easier to apply stable branch patches on top of the
release tarball.
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Also, expose it in machinectl.
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Everything that is generated can be assumed to belong to CLEANFILES,
which means that the original file has to be in EXTRA_DIST. Simplify
the rules by generating as in $subject.
We have less lists to adjust manually, and 'make clean' actually
removes more stuff that before.
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This also adds "machinectl import-raw" and "machinectl import-tar" to
wrap these new bus calls.
THe commands basically do for local files that "machinectl pull-raw" and
friends do for remote files.
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import and pull calls
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That way we can call the code for local container/VM imports "import"
without confusion.
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Otherwise distribution tarfiles are not generated properly.
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This undoes a part of previous commit: s-u-s is dependent on HAVE_PAM
again, but not on HAVE_LOGIND.
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Suggested by Zbyszek on IRC.
[zj: /run/nologin is used with PAM. systemd-user-session is independent
of logind.]
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When manipulating container and VM images we need efficient and atomic
directory snapshots and file copies, as well as disk quota. btrfs
provides this, legacy file systems do not. Hence, implicitly create a
loopback file system in /var/lib/machines.raw and mount it to
/var/lib/machines, if that directory is not on btrfs anyway.
This is done implicitly and transparently the first time the user
invokes "machinectl import-xyz".
This allows us to take benefit of btrfs features for container
management without actually having the rest of the system use btrfs.
The loopback is sized 500M initially. Patches to grow it dynamically are
to follow.
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Commit 6e1bf7ab99 used the wrong directory; we need rootlibexecdir, not
rootlibdir, as the latter is something like /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ on
multi-arch systems.
https://launchpad.net/bugs/1423867
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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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