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usec_t is always 64bit, which means it can cover quite a number of
years. However, 4 digit year display and glibc limitations around time_t
limit what we can actually parse and format. Let's make this explicit,
so that we never end up formatting dates we can#t parse and vice versa.
Note that this is really just about formatting/parsing. Internal
calculations with times outside of the formattable range are not
affected.
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This patch improves parsing and generation of timestamps and calendar
specifications in two ways:
- The week day is now always printed in the abbreviated English form, instead
of the locale's setting. This makes sure we can always parse the week day
again, even if the locale is changed. Given that we don't follow locale
settings for printing timestamps in any other way either (for example, we
always use 24h syntax in order to make uniform parsing possible), it only
makes sense to also stick to a generic, non-localized form for the timestamp,
too.
- When parsing a timestamp, the local timezone (in its DST or non-DST name)
may be specified, in addition to "UTC". Other timezones are still not
supported however (not because we wouldn't want to, but mostly because libc
offers no nice API for that). In itself this brings no new features, however
it ensures that any locally formatted timestamp's timezone is also parsable
again.
These two changes ensure that the output of format_timestamp() may always be
passed to parse_timestamp() and results in the original input. The related
flavours for usec/UTC also work accordingly. Calendar specifications are
extended in a similar way.
The man page is updated accordingly, in particular this removes the claim that
timestamps systemd prints wouldn't be parsable by systemd. They are now.
The man page previously showed invalid timestamps as examples. This has been
removed, as the man page shouldn't be a unit test, where such negative examples
would be useful. The man page also no longer mentions the names of internal
functions, such as format_timestamp_us() or UNIX error codes such as EINVAL.
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We already have a double timestamp object that we use whenever we need both a
MONOTONIC and a REALTIME timestamp taken and stored. With this change we
also add a triple timestamp object that in addition stores a BOOTTIME
timestamp, which is useful for a few usecases.
Note that we keep dual_timestamp around, as it is useful in many cases where
triple_timestamp is not, in particular because retrieving the monotonic and
realtime timestamps is much cheaper on Linux that getting the boottime
timestamp.
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Before we invoke now(CLOCK_BOOTTIME), let's make sure we actually have that
clock, since now() will otherwise hit an assert.
Specifically, let's refuse CLOCK_BOOTTIME early in sd-event if the kernel
doesn't actually support it.
This is a follow-up for #3037, and specifically:
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/3037#issuecomment-210199167
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The deserialize_timestamp_value() is renamed timestamp_deserialize() to be more
consistent with dual_timestamp_deserialize()
And add the NULL check back on realtime and monotonic
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The time-util.c provides dual_timestamp_deserialize() function to
convert value to usec_t and set it as value of ts->monotonic and
ts->realtime.
There are some places in code which do the same but only for one
clockid_t (realtime or monotonic), when dual_timestamp_deserialize()
sets value of both.
This patch introduces the deserialize_timestamp_value() which converts
a given value to usec_t and write it to a given timestamp.
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Remove some old cruft
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This should be handled fine now by .dir-locals.el, so need to carry that
stuff in every file.
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Fix for #2467
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As suggested in: https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/2542#issuecomment-181877820
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The timespec_load_nsec() function has no callers outside of the
time-util.c, so we can make it static.
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The dual_timestamp_from_realtime(), dual_timestamp_from_monotonic()
and dual_timestamp_from_boottime_or_monotonic() shares the same
code for comparison given ts with delta. Let's move it to the
separate inline function to prevent code duplication.
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they do
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This is a cleaned up result of running iwyu but without forward
declarations on src/basic.
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specification of default time unit if none is specified
This is useful if we want to parse RLIMIT_RTTIME values where the common
UNIX syntax is without any units but refers to a non-second unit (µs in
this case), but where we want to allow specification of units.
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to time-util.h. They take an extra argument `bool utc`.
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It's nicer if the assertion failure message from a bad use of xsprintf
actually mentions xsprintf instead of the expression the macro is
implemented as.
The assert_message_se macro was added in the previous commit as an
internal helper, but it can also be used for customizing assertion
failure messages like in this case.
Example:
char buf[10];
xsprintf(buf, "This is a %s message.\n", "long");
Before:
Assertion '(size_t) snprintf(buf, ELEMENTSOF(buf), "This is a %s
message.\n", "long") < ELEMENTSOF(buf)' failed at foo.c:6, function
main(). Aborting.
After:
Assertion 'xsprintf: buf[] must be big enough' failed at foo.c:6,
function main(). Aborting.
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cgls/cgtop: a variety of modernizations
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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.
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Let's move the timedated-specific code to time-util.h and make it
generic.
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Some of the operations machined/machinectl implement are also very
useful when applied to the host system (such as machinectl login,
machinectl shell or machinectl status), hence introduce a pseudo-machine
by the name of ".host" in machined that refers to the host system, and
may be used top execute operations on the host system with.
This copies the pseudo-image ".host" machined already implements for
image related commands.
(This commit also adds a PK privilege for opening a PTY in a container,
which was previously not accessible for non-root.)
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basic/ can be used by everything
cannot use anything outside of basic/
libsystemd/ can use basic/
cannot use shared/
shared/ can use libsystemd/
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