Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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As far as I can tell, no code in this repository actually uses the ID
field, so this is just a man page change.
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This is not a blind replacement of "Linux" with "GNU/Linux". In some
cases, "Linux" is (correctly) used to refer to just the kernel. In others,
it is in a string for which code must also be adjusted; these instances
are not included in this commit.
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The "is-enabled" command doesn't care whether the symlinks are declared in the
[Install] section of a unit file or not, when returning "enabled". Any alias,
.wants/ or .requires/ symlinks suffice.
Fixes: #975
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Fixes: #846
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Fixes: #1502
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(And similar for resolved)
Fixes: #1630
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Fixes: #1774
Fixes: #1090
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References: #2468
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Fixes: #2523
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cgroup: remove support for NetClass= directive
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Support for net_cls.class_id through the NetClass= configuration directive
has been added in v227 in preparation for a per-unit packet filter mechanism.
However, it turns out the kernel people have decided to deprecate the net_cls
and net_prio controllers in v2. Tejun provides a comprehensive justification
for this in his commit, which has landed during the merge window for kernel
v4.5:
https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=bd1060a1d671
As we're aiming for full support for the v2 cgroup hierarchy, we can no
longer support this feature. Userspace tool such as nftables are moving over
to setting rules that are specific to the full cgroup path of a task, which
obsoletes these controllers anyway.
This commit removes support for tweaking details in the net_cls controller,
but keeps the NetClass= directive around for legacy compatibility reasons.
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Corrects an incompatibility introduced with 36c16a7cdd6c33d7980efc2cd6a2211941f302b4.
Fixes: #2537
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Previously, using --accept would enable inetd-style socket activation in addition to per-connection operation. This is
now split into two switches: --accept only switches between per-connection or single-instance operation. --inetd
switches between inetd-style or new-style fd passing.
This breaks the interface of the tool, but given that it is a debugging tool shipped in /usr/lib/systemd/ it's not
really a public interface.
This change allows testing new-style per-connection daemons.
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Fix for #2467
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unit, not just services
This moves the StartLimitBurst=, StartLimitInterval=, StartLimitAction=, RebootArgument= from the [Service] section
into the [Unit] section of unit files, and thus support it in all unit types, not just in services.
This way we can enforce the start limit much earlier, in particular before testing the unit conditions, so that
repeated start-up failure due to failed conditions is also considered for the start limit logic.
For compatibility the four options may also be configured in the [Service] section still, but we only document them in
their new section [Unit].
This also renamed the socket unit failure code "service-failed-permanent" into "service-start-limit-hit" to express
more clearly what it is about, after all it's only triggered through the start limit being hit.
Finally, the code in busname_trigger_notify() and socket_trigger_notify() is altered to become more alike.
Fixes: #2467
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This is similar how we already do it for logind or machined.
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Build sys and man fixes
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Just a clarification. At least systemd-openqa-generator from
openqa gets this wrong.
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Saying it is the "default" is misleading, because it is almost
never used.
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All distribution-specific code was removed ages ago.
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This makes sure we never run two control processes at the same time, we cannot keep track off.
This introduces a slight change of behaviour but cleans up the definition of ExecStop= and ExecStopPost=. The former is
now invoked only if the service managed to start-up correctly. The latter is called even if start-up failed half-way.
Thus, ExecStopPost= may be used as clean-up step for both successful and failed start-up attempts, but ExecStop='s
purpose is clearly defined as being responsible for shutting down the service and nothing else.
The precise behaviour of this was not documented yet. This commit adds the necessary docs.
Fixes: #1254
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This adds a new switch --as-pid2, which allows running commands as PID 2, while a stub init process is run as PID 1.
This is useful in order to run arbitrary commands in a container, as PID1's semantics are different from all other
processes regarding reaping of unknown children or signal handling.
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Fixes: #2192
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journalctl: add match for the current boot when called with devpath (v2)
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journalctl --fields logic
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Fixes #2176
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This adds two new calls to get the list of all journal fields names currently in use.
This is the low-level support to implement the feature requested in #2176 in a more optimized way.
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event source
This should simplify handling of time events in clients and is in-line with the USEC_INFINITY macro we already have.
This way setting a timeout to 0 indicates "elapse immediately", and a timeout of USEC_INFINITY "elapse never".
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Also introduce sd_journal_has_runtime_files() and
sd_journal_has_persistent_files() to the public API. These functions
can be used to easily find out if the open journal files are runtime
and/or persistent.
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Resolved 2
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man: document special considerations when mixing templated service un…
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DefaultDependencies=no
Fixes #2189.
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belong into
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Docbook renders the man page as "[OPTIONS]--type" without it.
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But also keep the old name as (undocumented) compatibility around.
The reload-or-try-restart was documented to be a NOP if the unit is not running, since the previous commits this is
also implemented. The old name suggests that the "try" logic only applies to restarting. Fix this, by moving the "try-"
to the front, to indicate that the whole option is a NOP if the service isn't running.
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We generally document only the supported verbs, but not the compatibility verbs we also support, in order to keep the
documentation minimal.
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Avoid "mountpoint mounted" (word repetition),
"queriable" (no match in m-w.com and dict.cc).
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