Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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them fully log out
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overall system state
Previously "systemctl status" without argument would print the status of
all loaded units. This has now been moved to "systemctl status -a".
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"systemctl list-machines" shows one line per local container which
includes the current system state of the container, the number of failed
units as well as the number of currently queued jobs.
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sd_bus_path_{encode,decode}()
The new calls work similarly, but enforce a that a common, fixed bus
path prefix is used.
This follows discussions with Simon McVittie on IRC that it should be a
good idea to make sure that people don't use the escaping applied here
too wildly as anything other than the last label of a bus path.
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It was backward - --after fetches After property, so units shown really
come *before* unit given as argument. Same for --before.
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As pointed out by Jason A. Donenfeld.
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Discoverable Partitions Specification
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'man/systemd.link.xml' recovery from:
commit eac684ef1c29684b1bcd27a89c38c202e568e469
Author: Tom Gundersen <teg@jklm.no>
Date: Tue Feb 25 19:30:40 2014 +0100
man: split out systemd.net{work,dev}(5) from systemd-networkd(8)
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man page
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marcosf0> missing comma in udevadm "see also" section
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When run in an initrd and no root= argument is set (or is set to
root=gpt-auto) we will automatically look for the root partition on the
same disk the EFI ESP is located on.
Since we look for swap, /home and /srv on the disk the root partition is
located on, we hence have a fully discoverable chain:
Firmware discovers the EFI ESP partition → the initrd discovers the
root partition → the host OS discovers swap, /home, and /srv.
Note that this requires an EFI boot loader that sets the
LoaderDevicePartUUID EFI variable, such as Gummiboot.
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Use the same formatting as the systemd-analyze man page, so that man shows a space.
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https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1073402
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--scope mode
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for the unit that is created
The code for parsing these properties is shared with "systemctl
set-property", which means all the resource control settings are
immediately available.
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This way each user allocates from his own pool, with its own size limit.
This puts the size limit by default to 10% of the physical RAM size but
makes it configurable in logind.conf.
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Previously we expected the desktop environment to take an inhibitor
lock, but this opened a race on boot-up where logind might already be
running but no DE is active.
Hence, let's move checking for additional displays into logind. This
also opens up this logic for other DEs, given that only GNOME
implemented the inhibitor logic so far.
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As discussed on the ML these are useful to manage runtime directories
below /run for services.
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This partially reverts 41a55c46ab8fb4ef6727434227071321fc762cce
Some specifications we want to stay compatibility actually document
/var/run, not /run, and we should stay compatible with that. In order to
make sure our D-Bus implementation works on any system, regardless if
running systemd or not, we should always use /var/run which is the
only path mandated by the D-Bus spec.
Similar, glibc hardcodes the utmp location to /var/run, and this is
exposed in _UTMP_PATH in limits.h, hence let's stay in sync with this
public API, too.
We simply do not support systems where /var/run is not a symlink → /run.
Hence both are equivalent. Staying compatible with upstream
specifications hence weighs more than cleaning up superficial
appearance.
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/run was already used almost everywhere, fix the remaining places
for consistency.
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This new unit settings allows restricting which address families are
available to processes. This is an effective way to minimize the attack
surface of services, by turning off entire network stacks for them.
This is based on seccomp, and does not work on x86-32, since seccomp
cannot filter socketcall() syscalls on that platform.
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container
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BlockIOAccounting= for all units at once
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interfaces show up
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1062955
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for sizes
According to Wikipedia it is customary to specify hardware metrics and
transfer speeds to the basis 1000 (SI decimal), while software metrics
and physical volatile memory (RAM) sizes to the basis 1024 (IEC binary).
So far we specified everything in IEC, let's fix that and be more
true to what's otherwise customary. Since we don't want to parse "Mi"
instead of "M" we document each time what the context used is.
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This also changes the names to MTUBytes and BitsPerSecond, respectively. Notice
that the speed was mistakenly documented to be in bytes before this change.
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particular devices nodes
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Also fix a copy-paste error that broke matching on interface name.
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That's what we do for all options in the other man pages. It helps
clarifying that these are options that values need to be assigned to.
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to deprecate them one day
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