Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
inspired by http://people.redhat.com/~rjones/virt-what/
see:
* http://git.annexia.org/?p=virt-what.git;a=blob;f=virt-what.in;h=a5ed33ef3e4bfa3281c9589eccac4d92dff1babe;hb=HEAD#l200
* http://git.annexia.org/?p=virt-what.git;a=blob;f=virt-what.in;h=a5ed33ef3e4bfa3281c9589eccac4d92dff1babe;hb=HEAD#l253
|
|
man: fix typos in systemd-path.xml
|
|
|
|
|
|
networkd: add support for tunnel encap limit
|
|
The constraints we place on the pool is that it is a contiguous
sequence of addresses in the same subnet as the server address, not
including the subnet nor broadcast addresses, but possibly including
the server address itself. If the server address is included in the
pool it is (obviously) reserved and not handed out to clients.
|
|
|
|
|
|
When showing the number of tasks in a cgroup, recursively count tasks in
child cgroups and include them in the number. This ensures that the
number of tasks is cummulative the same way as memory, cpu and IO
resources are.
Old behaviour can be restored by passing the new --recursive=no switch.
|
|
However, allow them to be counted in by specifying -k
|
|
|
|
--bind and --bind-ro perform the bind mount
non-recursively. It is sometimes (often?) desirable
to do a recursive mount. This patch adds an optional
set of bind mount options in the form of:
--bind=src-path:dst-path:options
options are comma separated and currently only
"rbind" and "norbind" are allowed.
Default value is "rbind".
|
|
|
|
cgls/cgtop: a variety of modernizations
|
|
man: Document that resolved requires nss-resolve to work with libc
|
|
In preparation of the unified cgroup support, let's clean up cgtop:
a) rework time code to be based on "nsec_t" rather than "struct timespec"
b) Introduce long option --order= for selecting ordering
c) count number of processes only in the main hierarchy, don't bother
with the controller hierarchies. We don't allow orthogonal
hierarchies in systemd anymore, hence there's no point to check the
other hierarchies.
d) Deal with non-monotonic cpuacct values (see #749)
e) When sorting groups, don't do prefix compare when ordering by number
of tasks, since this is not accumulative for all children.
f) Actually make --cpu without parameter work
g) Don't output control characters when we get them as input.
Fixes #749.
|
|
Closes #884.
|
|
|
|
s/an/any/, as reported by Vito Caputo.
Also mention explicitly that the security properties (i.e. SELinux) are
also isolated when "machinectl shell" is used.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In the Cockpit integration tests we hang onton the journal files
for a failed test and would like to inspect them using coredumpctl.
This commit adds the ability to specify an alternate directory
for coredumpctl to read the journal from.
|
|
|
|
Add new "machinectl shell" command for su(1)-like behaviour
|
|
Enable unprivileged users to set wall message on a shutdown
operation. When the message is set via the --message option,
it is logged together with the default shutdown message.
$ systemctl reboot --message "Applied kernel updates."
$ journalctl -b -1
...
systemd-logind[27]: System is rebooting. (Applied kernel updates.)
...
|
|
In order to make "machinectl shell" more similar to ssh, allow the
following syntax to connect to a container under a specific username:
machinectl shell lennart@fedora
Also beefs up related man page documentation.
|
|
If no machine name is specified, imply that we connect to ".host", i.e.
the local host.
|
|
This makes use of machined's new OpenShell() command and allows opening
a new interactive shell in any container.
|
|
When generating utmp/wtmp entries, optionally add both LOGIN_PROCESS and
INIT_PROCESS entries or even all three of LOGIN_PROCESS, INIT_PROCESS
and USER_PROCESS entries, instead of just a single INIT_PROCESS entry.
With this change systemd may be used to not only invoke a getty directly
in a SysV-compliant way but alternatively also a login(1) implementation
or even forego getty and login entirely, and invoke arbitrary shells in
a way that they appear in who(1) or w(1).
This is preparation for a later commit that adds a "machinectl shell"
operation to invoke a shell in a container, in a way that is compatible
with who(1) and w(1).
|
|
|
|
man: networkd - adding bonding examples for systemd-networkd
|
|
This commit provides some basic bonding configuration examples for .netdev and .network files.
|
|
|
|
|
|
man: extend documentation for timedatectl's set-ntp command
|
|
Allow arbitrary file paths to be passed to nspawn (v3)
|
|
This extends on the relationship between timedatectl's set-ntp command
and its effect on the systemd-timesyncd.service unit. This also links
that unit back to the timedatectl man page.
Closes #798.
|
|
Previously it was just descibed that ExecStartPost= commands were
started "after" the ExecStart= command(s).
This hasn't specified after which event, which varies from after it has
been started, after it has exited, after it has sent READY=1 or after it
has taken the bus name, depending on Type=.
This now describes that it happens after the *service* has "started",
as defined by the Type=, and provides some clarification about precisely
when this is.
This may be unnecessary duplication, but it removes the ambiguity as to
whether RemainAfterExit=no means that ExecStartPost= shouldn't be
started because it means the service has stopped when the ExecStart=
command terminates, not "started".
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1251334
is about a unit file which has
Environment=TERM=linux PS1=system-upgrade:\w\$\x20
We used to allow that, but after recent tightening of parsing
rules, we barf. Make it clear that this is intentional.
|
|
man: Clarify the difference between sysinit.target and basic.target
|
|
|
|
Also note /var, /tmp or /var/tmp as special cases, should either of
those be a remote filesystem.
|
|
This description should provide the general rule, without
listing all the subcommands, which is bound to get out of date
too often.
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/216
|
|
The --machine option used to describe searching for machines in
/var/lib/machines, which is not the whole story, so let's link to where
it's described in more detail.
|
|
If a line doesn't contain an = separator, it is skipped, rather than
raising an error.
This is potentially useful, so let's document this behaviour.
|
|
|