Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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*.localdomain != localhost
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".localdomain" is not a reserved suffix (or prefix). I'm not aware of any
product expecting *.localdomain to resolve to localhost, however I am aware of
at least one product that defaults to ".localdomain" as its DNS suffix provided
via DHCP (pfSense). This leads to unexpected results when attempting to access
a host that's offline (or a host that's online, when nsswitch.conf is
[mis-]configured to have myhostname ahead of DNS).
Operate on:
localhost (and localhost.)
*.localhost (and *.localhost.)
localhost.localdomain (and localhost.localdomain.)
*.localhost.localdomain (and *.localhost.localdomain.)
We should not cover:
*.localdomain (nor *.localdomain.)
localdomain (nor localdomain.)
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* tests-functions: improve FSTYPE-support
make clean setup FSTYPE=reiserfs is working fine now :)
* basic: fallback to fstatat if entry->d_type is DT_UNKNOWN
Fixes localectl on reiserfs:
-bash-4.3# mkdir -p /usr/lib/locale
-bash-4.3# stat -f /usr/lib/locale/
File: "/usr/lib/locale/"
ID: bdb0322715b5366e Namelen: 255 Type: reiserfs
Block size: 4096
Blocks: Total: 99835 Free: 60262 Available: 60262
Inodes: Total: 0 Free: 0
-bash-4.3# mkdir /usr/lib/locale/HeyHo
-bash-4.3# localectl list-locales --no-pager
-bash-4.3# mount -t tmpfs tmpfs /usr/lib/locale
-bash-4.3# mkdir /usr/lib/locale/HeyHo
-bash-4.3# localectl list-locales --no-pager
HeyHo
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Earlier during the development of unified hierarchy, the populated event was
reported through by the dedicated "cgroup.populated" file; however, the
interface was updated so that it's reported through the "populated" field of
"cgroup.events" file. Update populated event handling logic accordingly.
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Since Linux v4.4-rc1, __DEVEL__sane_behavior does not exist anymore and
is replaced by a new fstype "cgroup2".
With this patch, systemd no longer supports the old (unstable) way of
doing unified hierarchy with __DEVEL__sane_behavior and systemd now
requires Linux v4.4 for unified hierarchy.
Non-unified hierarchy is still the default and is unchanged by this
patch.
https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/67e9c74b8a873408c27ac9a8e4c1d1c8d72c93ff
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Fixes #2823.
Also remove unnecessary feof check.
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Use sendfile smarter
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We have a bunch of syscall wrapper definitions and it's easier to
see that they follow the same pattern if they are not interspersed
with other defines.
Change the wrappers to be uniform:
- if __NR_XXX is not defined, do not bother to call the syscall,
and return -1/ENOSYS immediately.
- do not check __NR_XXX defines if we detect the symbol as defined,
since we don't need them anyway
- reindent stuff for readability
New file basic/missing_syscall.h is included at the end of missing.h
because it might make use of some of the definitions in missing.h.
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For btrfs, c_f_r() is like BTRFS_IOC_CLONE which we already used, but also
works when max_bytes is set. We do call copy_bytes in coredump code with
max_bytes set, and for large files, so we might see some benefit from using
c_f_r() on btrfs.
For other filesystems, c_f_r() falls back to do_splice_direct(), the same as
sendfile, which we already call, so there shouldn't be much difference.
Tested with test-copy and systemd-coredump on Linux 4.3 (w/o c_f_r)
and 4.5 (w/ c_f_r).
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syscall numbers based on:
https://fedora.juszkiewicz.com.pl/syscalls.html
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Clang warnings
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selinux: use *_raw API from libselinux
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The attribute was removed in commit c047507 in the clang repository as it
was never properly implemented anyway. Avoid using the attribute with
clang because it generates a ton of annoying warnings.
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We called sendfile with 16kb (a.k.a. COPY_BUFFER_SIZE) as the maximum
number of bytes to copy. This seems rather inefficient, especially with
large files. Instead, call sendfile with a "large" maximum.
What "large" max means is a bit tricky: current file offset + max
must fit in loff_t. This means that as we call sendfile more than once,
we have to lower the max size.
With this patch, test-copy calls sendfile twice, e.g.:
sendfile(4, 3, NULL, 9223372036854775807) = 738760
sendfile(4, 3, NULL, 9223372036854037047) = 0
The second call is necessary to determine EOF.
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It was added in 2.6.39, and causes an assertion to fail when running in mock
hosted on 2.6.23-based RHEL-6:
Assertion 'clock_gettime(map_clock_id(clock_id), &ts) == 0' failed at systemd/src/basic/time-util.c:70, function now(). Aborting.
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Since glibc is moving away from implicitly including sys/sysmacros.h
all the time via sys/types.h, include the header directly in more
places. This seems to cover most makedev/major/minor usage.
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We'd still use the invalid errno for a return value. Rework
the code to simply return the right error right away.
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Currently socket_address_listen() calls mac_selinux_bind() to bind a UNIX
socket and checks its return value and errno for EADDRINUSE. This is not
correct. When there's an SELinux context change made for the new socket,
bind() is not the last function called in mac_selinux_bind(). In that
case the last call is setfscreatecon() from libselinux which can change
errno as it uses access() to check if /proc/thread-self is available.
It fails on kernels before 3.17 and errno is set to ENOENT.
It's safe to check only the return value at it's set to -errno.
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This is a follow-up to 5c5433ad32
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Selinux loading fix and warning cleanups
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It seems that it is signed both on i386 and arm.
Avoids a stupid gcc warning on arm:
src/udev/udevadm-monitor.c: In function ‘print_device’:
src/udev/udevadm-monitor.c:44:16: warning: format ‘%u’ expects argument of type ‘unsigned int’, but argument 3 has type ‘__time_t {aka long int}’ [-Wformat=]
printf("%-6s[%"PRI_TIME".%06ld] %-8s %s (%s)\n",
^
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As suggested by Evgeny Vereshchagin as a follow up for
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/2781#issuecomment-191043402.
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https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/2508#issuecomment-190901170
Maybe fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1308771.
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As described in the documentation:
When O_PATH is specified in flags, flag bits other than O_CLOEXEC,
O_DIRECTORY, and O_NOFOLLOW are ignored.
So, we can remove unnecessary flags in a case when O_PATH is passed
to the open() or openat().
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resolved iteration fix
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shorten hostname before checking for trailing dot
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core: avoid compiler warning when compiling with -fexceptions
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Shortening can lead to a hostname that has a trailing dot.
Therefore it should be done before checking from trailing dots.
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Initialize auto variables with cleanup attribute, otherwise we
get a compiler warning with -fexceptions.
./configure CFLAGS='-Wmaybe-uninitialized -fexceptions -O2'
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As we default to "hardware clock is in UTC" if /etc/adjtime is not present, it
also makes sense to have that default if /etc/adjtime contains only one or two
lines.
Drop the "gibberish" test case, as this was just EIO because of not containing
three lines, which is already contained in other tests. clock_is_localtime()
never actually validated the format of the first two lines, and there is little
point in doing that.
This addresses the reading half of issue #2638.
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Add path argument to clock_is_localtime() and default to "/etc/adjtime" if it's
NULL. This makes the function testable.
Add test-clock: initial test cases for some scenarios, using a temporary file.
This also checks the behaviour with a NULL (i. e. the system's /etc/adjtime)
file.
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tree-wide: minor formatting inconsistency cleanups
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Bugfix set virt=none when running on XEN Dom0
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When running in XEN Dom0 the virtualization check:
1) detect_xen returns HYPERVISOR_NONE so next checks are executed
2) /proc/sys/hypervisor detects a XEN hypervisor
it is lacking the special Dom0 detection as in detect_xen
With this patch, at the end of all virtualization checks we double-check if running in XEN Dom0 or DomU.
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print out every single detection executed and its result.
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Remove systemd-bootchart
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Networkctl prettification
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This was only needed for bootchart, so it can go now.
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tree-wide: make ++/-- usage consistent WRT spacing
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Throughout the tree there's spurious use of spaces separating ++ and --
operators from their respective operands. Make ++ and -- operator
consistent with the majority of existing uses; discard the spaces.
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When a transaction is complete, and we notify its owners, make sure we deal
correctly with the requesters removing themselves from the list of owners while
we continue iterating.
This was previously already dealt with with transactions that require other
transactions for DNSSEC purposes, fix this for other possibly transaction
owners too now.
Since iterating through "Set" objects is not safe regarding removal of entries
from it, rework the logic to use two Sets, and move each entry we notified from
one set to the other set before we dispatch the notification. This move operation
requires no additional memory, and enables us to ensure that we don't notify
any object twice.
Fixes: #2676
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As suggested by CODING_STYLE we should use "void*" as type for generic memory,
and uint8_t* for generic bytes. Hence use that instead of "char*", which should
really be used only for strings these days.
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