Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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string-util.[ch]
There are more than enough calls doing string manipulations to deserve
its own files, hence do something about it.
This patch also sorts the #include blocks of all files that needed to be
updated, according to the sorting suggestions from CODING_STYLE. Since
pretty much every file needs our string manipulation functions this
effectively means that most files have sorted #include blocks now.
Also touches a few unrelated include files.
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This really deserves its own file, given how much code this is now.
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This is quite a lot of code these days, hence move it to its own source
file.
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util: Replace state with separate booleans in extract_first_word
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btrfs quota beef up and various other unrelated changes
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This simplifies the logic and uniformizes the way single and double
quotes are handled. In the end, the code is about 40 lines shorter.
Tested by running the excellent test cases from test-util. Also
installed the systemd binaries including this patch and booted a
system with it, everything looked normal.
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extract_first_word understands "\'string" but doesn't understand "\"string"
fixed this inconsistency.
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Simplify the call, and add dir_is_populated() as inverse call, in order
to make some checks easier to read.
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nspawn: skip /sys-as-tmpfs if we don't use private-network
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Since v3.11/7dc5dbc ("sysfs: Restrict mounting sysfs"), the kernel
doesn't allow mounting sysfs if you don't have CAP_SYS_ADMIN rights over
the network namespace.
So the mounting /sys as a tmpfs code introduced in
d8fc6a000fe21b0c1ba27fbfed8b42d00b349a4b doesn't work with user
namespaces if we don't use private-net. The reason is that we mount
sysfs inside the container and we're in the network namespace of the host
but we don't have CAP_SYS_ADMIN over that namespace.
To fix that, we mount /sys as a sysfs (instead of tmpfs) if we don't use
private network and ignore the /sys-as-a-tmpfs code if we find that /sys
is already mounted as sysfs.
Fixes #1555
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A bit snake-oilish, but can't hurt.
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The child process is shortliving, hence always set O_NOCTTY so that the
tty doesn't quickly become controlling TTY and then gives it up again.
Also set O_CLOEXEC, because it's cleaner, and doesn't affect the parent
anyway.
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Add support for naming fds for socket activation and more
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This adds support for naming file descriptors passed using socket
activation. The names are passed in a new $LISTEN_FDNAMES= environment
variable, that matches the existign $LISTEN_FDS= one and contains a
colon-separated list of names.
This also adds support for naming fds submitted to the per-service fd
store using FDNAME= in the sd_notify() message.
This also adds a new FileDescriptorName= setting for socket unit files
to set the name for fds created by socket units.
This also adds a new call sd_listen_fds_with_names(), that is similar to
sd_listen_fds(), but also returns the names of the fds.
systemd-activate gained the new --fdname= switch to specify a name for
testing socket activation.
This is based on #1247 by Maciej Wereski.
Fixes #1247.
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That way, we don't ever open the file, thus leave the atime untouched,
and this works even when unprivileged.
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Let's clean up our tree a bit, and reduce invocations of the
thread-unsafe strerror() by replacing it with printf()'s %m specifier.
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extract_first() already skips trailing whitespace, hence no reason to
explicitly check for it.
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It's pretty untypical for our parsing functions to log on their own.
Clarify in the name that this one does.
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- Rely everywhere that we use abs() on the error code passed in anyway,
thus don't need to explicitly negate what we pass in
- Never attach synthetic error number information to log messages. Only
log about errors we *receive* with the error number we got there,
don't log any synthetic error, that don#t even propagate, but just eat
up.
- Be more careful with attaching exactly the error we get, instead of
errno or unrelated errors randomly.
- Fix one occasion where the error number and line number got swapped.
- Make sure we never tape over OOM issues, or inability to resolve
specifiers
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This also allows us to drop build.h from a ton of files, hence do so.
Since we touched the #includes of those files, let's order them properly
according to CODING_STYLE.
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This is highly complex code after all, we really should make sure to
only keep one implementation of this extremely difficult function
around.
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Also, make it slightly more powerful, by accepting a flags argument, and
make it safe for handling if more than one cmsg attribute happens to be
attached.
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Use the new code in config_parse_cpu_affinity2.
Tested by modifying CPUAffinity=... setting in /etc/systemd/system.conf
and reloading the daemon, then checking ^Cpus_allowed in /proc/1/status
to confirm the correct CPU mask is in place.
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Introduce personality support for Linux on z Systems to run
particular services with a 64-bit or 31-bit personality.
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A variety of mostly unrelated fixes
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Of course, because Linux is broken we cannot actually really order it,
and must keep linux/fs.h after sys/mount.h... Yay for Linux!
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Never log when we fail due to OOM when translating enums, let the caller
do that. Translating basic types like enums should be something where
the caller logs, not the translatior functions.
Return -1 when NULL is passed to all enum parser functions.
The non-fallback versions of the enum translator calls already handle
NULL as failure, instead of hitting an assert, and we should do this
here, too.
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When 0 bytes are to be written, make sure to go into read() at least
once, in order to validate the parameters, such as the passed fd.
Return error on huge values, add a couple of asserts and casts where
appropriate.
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Introduce two new helpers that send/receive a single fd via a unix
transport. Also make nspawn use them instead of hard-coding it.
Based on a patch by Krzesimir Nowak.
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off_t is a really weird type as it is usually 64bit these days (at least
in sane programs), but could theoretically be 32bit. We don't support
off_t as 32bit builds though, but still constantly deal with safely
converting from off_t to other types and back for no point.
Hence, never use the type anymore. Always use uint64_t instead. This has
various benefits, including that we can expose these values directly as
D-Bus properties, and also that the values parse the same in all cases.
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Adds a coccinelle script to port things over automatically.
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Introduce a proper enum, and don't pass around string ids anymore. This
simplifies things quite a bit, and makes virtualization detection more
similar to architecture detection.
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parse_uid() returns EINVAL for invalid strings, but ENXIO for the
(uid_t) -1 user ids in order to distinguish these two cases. Document
this.
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This simply factors out the uid validation checks from parse_uid() and
uses them everywhere. This simply verifies that the passed UID is
neither 64bit -1 nor 32bit -1.
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It makes assumptions about the pty path, hence better call it in the
container namespace rather than the host.
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Refactor allocation of the result string to the top, since it is
currently done in both branches of the condition.
Remove unreachable code checking for EXTRACT_DONT_COALESCE_SEPARATORS
when state == SEPARATOR (the only place where SEPARATOR is assigned to
state follows a check for EXTRACT_DONT_COALESCE_SEPARATORS that jumps to
the end of the function.)
Tested by running test-util successfully.
Follow up to: 206644aedeb8859801051ac170ec562c6a113a79
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This covers the case where an argument is an empty string, such as ''.
Instead of allocating the empty string in the individual conditions when
state == VALUE, just always allocate it at the end of state == START, at
which point we know we will have an argument.
Tested that test-util keeps passing after the refactor.
Follow up to: 14e685c29d5b317b815e3e9f056648027852b07e
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When enumerating machines from /run, and when accepting machine names
for operations, be more strict and always validate.
Note that these checks are strictly speaking unnecessary, since
enumeration happens only on the trusted /run...
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As it turns out machine_name_is_valid() does the exact same thing as
hostname_is_valid() these days, as it just invoked that and checked the
name length was < 64. However, hostname_is_valid() checks the length
against HOST_NAME_MAX anyway (which is 64 on Linux), hence any
additional check is redundant.
We hence replace machine_name_is_valid() by a macro that simply maps it
to hostname_is_valid() but sets the allow_trailing_dot parameter to
false. We also move this this call to hostname-util.h, to the same place
as the hostname_is_valid() declaration.
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Fix machinectl login with containers in user namespaces (v2)
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To be able to use `systemd-run` or `machinectl login` on a container
that is in a private user namespace, the sub-process must have entered
the user namespace before connecting to the container's D-Bus, otherwise
the UID and GID in the peer credentials are garbage.
So we extend namespace_open and namespace_enter to support UID namespaces,
and we enter the UID namespace in bus_container_connect_{socket,kernel}.
namespace_open will degrade to a no-op if user namespaces are not enabled
in the kernel.
Special handling is required for the setns call in namespace_enter with
a user namespace, since transitioning to your own namespace is forbidden,
as it would result in re-entering your user namespace as root.
Arguably it may be valid to check this at the call site, rather than
inside namespace_enter, but it is less code to do it inside, and if the
intention of calling namespace_enter is to *be* in the target namespace,
rather than to transition to the target namespace, it is a reasonable
approach.
The check for whether the user namespace is the same must happen before
entering namespaces, as we may not be able to access /proc during the
intermediate transition stage.
We can't instead attempt to enter the user namespace and then ignore
the failure from it being the same namespace, since the error code is
not distinct, and we can't compare namespaces while mid-transition.
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This is for shell-style \ escaping rather than quoting, which while it
has the same effect in produced shell commands, is not exclusively
useful for shell commands.
shell_escape would be useful for producing sed commands, as you would be
able to \ escape the normal special characters, plus whichever argument
separator was chosen; or it could be used to escape arguments passed to
the overlayfs mount command.
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