Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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The way the kernel namespaces have been implemented breaks assumptions
udev made regarding uevent sequence numbers. Creating devices in a
namespace "steals" uevents and its sequence numbers from the host. It
confuses the "udevadmin settle" logic, which might block until util a
timeout is reached, even when no uevent is pending.
Remove any assumptions about sequence numbers and deprecate libudev's
API exposing these numbers; none of that can reliably be used anymore
when namespaces are involved.
Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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modified: man/Makefile.am
Added checking for DocBook in configure
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Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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When manpages are displayed on a terminal, <literal>s are indistinguishable
from surrounding text. Add quotes everywhere, remove duplicate quotes,
and tweak a few lists for consistent formatting.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=874631
Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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Added upstream systemd-udevd.service(8) as udevd(8)
Authors include
Tom Gundersen
Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
Thomas Hindoe Paaboel Andersen
Kay Sievers
Lennart Poettering
See http://cgit.freedesktop.org/systemd/systemd/log/man/udev.xml
and http://cgit.freedesktop.org/systemd/systemd/log/man/systemd-udevd.service.xml
and http://cgit.freedesktop.org/systemd/systemd/log/man/udevadm.xml
Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
Signed-off-by: Ian Stakenvicius <axs@gentoo.org>
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Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <ryao@gentoo.org>
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Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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The original Makefile.am was drawn to the top level. This commit
breaks it out into the various directories with SUBDIRS connecting
them. This makes each directory easier to maintain.
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This commit is a first attempt to isolate the udev code from the
remaining code base. It intentionally does not modify any files
but purely delete files which, on a first examination, appear to
not be needed. This is a sweeping commit which may easily have
missed needed code. Files can be retrieved by doing a checkout
from the previous commit:
git checkout 2944f347d0 -- <filename>
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timedatectl is too cool not to advertise it a bit.
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This was never intended to be pushed.
This reverts commit aea54018a5e66a41318afb6c6be745b6aef48d9e.
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Since we already allow defining the mode of AF_UNIX sockets and FIFO, it
makes sense to also allow specific user/group ownership of the socket
file for restricting access.
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Fixes a few more typos. Also changes a "Accept=no" to
"Accept=false" to be consistent with the previous examples
in the same man page.
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specific
This was premarily intended to support the LSB facility $httpd which is
only known by Fedora, and a bad idea since it lacks any real-life
usecase.
Similar, drop support for some other old Fedora-specific facilities.
Also, document the rules for introduction of new facilities, to clarify
the situation for the future.
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Useful for completion generation.
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Useful for completion generation.
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This adds SMACK label configuration options to socket units.
SMACK labels should be applied to most objects on disk well before
execution time, but two items remain that are generated dynamically
at run time that require SMACK labels to be set in order to enforce
MAC on all objects.
Files on disk can be labelled using package management.
For device nodes, simple udev rules are sufficient to add SMACK labels
at boot/insertion time.
Sockets can be created at run time and systemd does just that for
several services. In order to protect FIFO's and UNIX domain sockets,
we must instruct systemd to apply SMACK labels at runtime.
This patch adds the following options:
Smack - applicable to FIFO's.
SmackIpIn/SmackIpOut - applicable to sockets.
No external dependencies are required to support SMACK, as setting
the labels is done using fsetxattr(). The labels can be set on a
kernel that does not have SMACK enabled either, so there is no need
to #ifdef any of this code out.
For more information about SMACK, please see Documentation/Smack.txt
in the kernel source code.
v3 of this patch changes the config options to be CamelCased.
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to recheck the journal manually for changes in regular intervals
Network file systems generally do not offer inotify() that would work
across the network. We hence cannot rely on inotify() exclusiely in
those case. Provide an API to determine these cases, and suggest doing
manual regular rechecks.
Note that this is not complete yet, as we need to rescan journal dirs on
network file systems explicitly to find new/removed files
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55890
Fixed typos, serial comma, and removed "either" as there were more
than two options. Also did an extra rename of "system-shutdown"
to "systemd-shutdown" that was forgotten in commit
8bd3b8620c80d0f2383f2fb04315411fc8077ca1
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This now matches the JSON serialization spec from:
http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/json
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Reported-by: Jason St. John <jstjohn@purdue.edu>
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Mostly useful for testing purposes. Setting Age to 1s works just as
well, but it is surprising that using 0s (or just 0) does not work.
Also clarify this in the documentation.
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'systemd-coredumpctl' will list available coredumps:
PID UID GID sig exe
32452 500 500 11 /home/zbyszek/systemd/build/journalctl
32666 500 500 11 /usr/lib64/valgrind/memcheck-amd64-linux
...
'systemd-coredumpctl dump PID' will write the coredump
to specified file or stdout.
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There's no point in making this configurable, so let's drop it in order
to simplify configuration a bit.
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Given that "journalctl -u" exists now there's no need to duplicate this
functionality in systemctl, so let's drop this, especially given that it
always felt a bit awkward to overload "-f" to both --force and --follow,
and to have continues output with a status header for this.
systemctl status -f avahi-daemon
now becomes:
journalctl -fu avahi-daemon
Which is shorter and a lot less redundant.
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Example:
journalctl -F _SYSTEMD_UNIT
will list all units that ever logged to the journal.
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