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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Rename bond confs and man as well.
[tomegun: dropped a stray comma]
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This patch adds configurational support for bond option.
Test conf:
bond.netdev
---
[NetDev]
Name=bond1
Kind=bond
[Bond]
ArpAllTargets=all
PrimaryReselect=better
ArpIntervalSec=10s
ArpIpTargets= 192.168.8.102 192.168.8.101 192.168.8.102
---
$cat /proc/net/bonding/bond1
Ethernet Channel Bonding Driver: v3.7.1 (April 27, 2011)
Bonding Mode: load balancing (round-robin)
MII Status: up
MII Polling Interval (ms): 0
Up Delay (ms): 0
Down Delay (ms): 0
ARP Polling Interval (ms): 10000
ARP IP target/s (n.n.n.n form): 192.168.8.100, 192.168.8.101, 192.168.8.102
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Add UDPCheckSum option to enable transmitting UDP checksums when doing
VXLAN/IPv4. Add UDP6ZeroChecksumRx, and UDP6ZeroChecksumTx
options to enable sending zero checksums and receiving zero
checksums in VXLAN/IPv6
[tomegun: rebase manpage due to whitespace changes]
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These are useful for plain devices as they don't have any metadata by
themselves. Instead of using an unreliable hardcoded device name in crypttab
you can then put static metadata at the start of the partition for a stable
UUID or label.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=87717
https://bugs.debian.org/751707
https://launchpad.net/bugs/953875
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Generally, we will not follow symlinks, except for "w".
Avoid documentation for now for fifo, device node, directory lines,
which currently follow symlinks but better shouldn't.
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Also, update example in the timedatectl man page to match the actual
timedatectl output.
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rootfsflags does not appear anywhere else.
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The s/now/not/ unfortunately inverted the meaning.
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"the name it is" is clumsy english, and since the most recently referred
to thing was a name anyway we can just leave the "it is".
This matches later uses in the same document.
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systemd-timesyncd not only does NTP, but also manages clock monotonicity
using a flags file. In future, it might learn PTP support. Hence don't
expose its enablement state as "NTP" but use the more generic term
"network time synchronization". After all, for similar reasons
systemd-timesyncd is not called systemd-ntpd.
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The output didn't match what we output these days. Also, "set-ntp"
cannot be used to control chronyd anymore.
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timesyncd is enabled
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It never worked, and nobody ever worked on it, hence don't mention it.
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Despite having the internal logic in place to enable/disable using NTP
servers provided by DHCP the network config didn't expose the option.
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All hail linkchecker!
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Replace ENOTSUP by EOPNOTSUPP as this is what linux actually uses.
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none/both/v4/v6 are deprecated in favour of no/yes/ipv4/ipv6.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=89221
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Explicitly put the "multiple EnvironmentFile=" description into its own
paragraph to make it much easier to find.
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processes
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This introduces 'HoldoffTimeoutSec' to logind.conf to make
IGNORE_LID_SWITCH_{SUSPEND,STARTUP}_USEC configurable.
Background: If an external monitor is connected, or if the system is
docked, we want to ignore LID events. This is required to support setups
where a laptop is used with external peripherals while the LID is closed.
However, this requires us to probe all hot-plugged devices before reacting
to LID events. But with modern buses like USB, the standards do not impose
any timeout on the slots, so we have no chance to know whether a given
slot is used or not. Hence, after resume and startup, we have to wait a
fixed timeout to give the kernel a chance to probe devices. Our timeout
has always been generous enough to support even the slowest devices.
However, a lot of people didn't use these features and wanted to disable
the hold-off timer. Now we provide a knob to do that.
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