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That message is emitted by every systemd instance on every resume:
Dec 06 08:03:38 laptop systemd[1]: Time has been changed
Dec 06 08:03:38 laptop systemd[823]: Time has been changed
Dec 06 08:03:38 laptop systemd[916]: Time has been changed
Dec 07 08:00:32 laptop systemd[1]: Time has been changed
Dec 07 08:00:32 laptop systemd[823]: Time has been changed
Dec 07 08:00:32 laptop systemd[916]: Time has been changed
-- Reboot --
Dec 07 08:02:46 laptop systemd[836]: Time has been changed
Dec 07 08:02:46 laptop systemd[1]: Time has been changed
Dec 07 08:02:46 laptop systemd[926]: Time has been changed
Dec 07 19:48:12 laptop systemd[1]: Time has been changed
Dec 07 19:48:12 laptop systemd[836]: Time has been changed
Dec 07 19:48:12 laptop systemd[926]: Time has been changed
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Fixes #4896.
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This add a new message id for the end of user instance startup.
User manager startup is a different beast then the system startup.
Their descriptions are completely different too. Let's just separate
them.
Partially fixes #3351.
Also remove "successful" from the description, since we don't know if
the startup was successful or not.
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Confirm spawn fixes/enhancements
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It's rather hard to parse the confirmation messages (enabled with
systemd.confirm_spawn=true) amongst the status messages and the kernel
ones (if enabled).
This patch gives the possibility to the user to redirect the confirmation
message to a different virtual console, either by giving its name or its path,
so those messages are separated from the other ones and easier to read.
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When booting with systemd.confirm_spawn=true, the eye of cylon
animation kicks in pretty quickly so user doesn't have any chance to
answer the questions which services to start before the confirmation
message is screwed by the cylon.
This basically breaks the confirm_spawn functionality completely.
This patch prevents the cylon animation to kick in when
confirmation_spawn=yes.
Fixes: #2194
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In contrast to all other unit types device units when queued just track
external state, they cannot effect state changes on their own. Hence unless a
client or other job waits for them there's no reason to keep them in the job
queue. This adds a concept of GC'ing jobs of this type as soon as no client or
other job waits for them anymore.
To ensure this works correctly we need to track which clients actually
reference a job (i.e. which ones enqueued it). Unfortunately that's pretty
nasty to do for direct connections, as sd_bus_track doesn't work for
them. For now, work around this, by simply remembering in a boolean that a job
was requested by a direct connection, and reset it when we notice the direct
connection is gone. This means the GC logic works fine, except that jobs are
not immediately removed when direct connections disconnect.
In the longer term, a rework of the bus logic should fix this properly. For now
this should be good enough, as GC works for fine all cases except this one, and
thus is a clear improvement over the previous behaviour.
Fixes: #1921
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We count the units in the GC queue with this, but actually never make use of
it, hence drop it.
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Tree wide cleanups
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This makes strjoin and strjoina more similar and avoids the useless final
argument.
spatch -I . -I ./src -I ./src/basic -I ./src/basic -I ./src/shared -I ./src/shared -I ./src/network -I ./src/locale -I ./src/login -I ./src/journal -I ./src/journal -I ./src/timedate -I ./src/timesync -I ./src/nspawn -I ./src/resolve -I ./src/resolve -I ./src/systemd -I ./src/core -I ./src/core -I ./src/libudev -I ./src/udev -I ./src/udev/net -I ./src/udev -I ./src/libsystemd/sd-bus -I ./src/libsystemd/sd-event -I ./src/libsystemd/sd-login -I ./src/libsystemd/sd-netlink -I ./src/libsystemd/sd-network -I ./src/libsystemd/sd-hwdb -I ./src/libsystemd/sd-device -I ./src/libsystemd/sd-id128 -I ./src/libsystemd-network --sp-file coccinelle/strjoin.cocci --in-place $(git ls-files src/*.c)
git grep -e '\bstrjoin\b.*NULL' -l|xargs sed -i -r 's/strjoin\((.*), NULL\)/strjoin(\1)/'
This might have missed a few cases (spatch has a really hard time dealing
with _cleanup_ macros), but that's no big issue, they can always be fixed
later.
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I think it's an antipattern to have to count the number of bytes in
the prefix by hand. We should do this automatically to avoid wasting
programmer time, and possible errors. I didn't any offsets that were
wrong, so this change is mostly to make future development easier.
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Fixes #4306
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Since we ignore the result anyway, downgrade errors to warning.
log_oom() will still emit an error, but that's mostly theoretical, so it
is not worth complicating the code to avoid the small inconsistency
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This adds a new invocation ID concept to the service manager. The invocation ID
identifies each runtime cycle of a unit uniquely. A new randomized 128bit ID is
generated each time a unit moves from and inactive to an activating or active
state.
The primary usecase for this concept is to connect the runtime data PID 1
maintains about a service with the offline data the journal stores about it.
Previously we'd use the unit name plus start/stop times, which however is
highly racy since the journal will generally process log data after the service
already ended.
The "invocation ID" kinda matches the "boot ID" concept of the Linux kernel,
except that it applies to an individual unit instead of the whole system.
The invocation ID is passed to the activated processes as environment variable.
It is additionally stored as extended attribute on the cgroup of the unit. The
latter is used by journald to automatically retrieve it for each log logged
message and attach it to the log entry. The environment variable is very easily
accessible, even for unprivileged services. OTOH the extended attribute is only
accessible to privileged processes (this is because cgroupfs only supports the
"trusted." xattr namespace, not "user."). The environment variable may be
altered by services, the extended attribute may not be, hence is the better
choice for the journal.
Note that reading the invocation ID off the extended attribute from journald is
racy, similar to the way reading the unit name for a logging process is.
This patch adds APIs to read the invocation ID to sd-id128:
sd_id128_get_invocation() may be used in a similar fashion to
sd_id128_get_boot().
PID1's own logging is updated to always include the invocation ID when it logs
information about a unit.
A new bus call GetUnitByInvocationID() is added that allows retrieving a bus
path to a unit by its invocation ID. The bus path is built using the invocation
ID, thus providing a path for referring to a unit that is valid only for the
current runtime cycleof it.
Outlook for the future: should the kernel eventually allow passing of cgroup
information along AF_UNIX/SOCK_DGRAM messages via a unique cgroup id, then we
can alter the invocation ID to be generated as hash from that rather than
entirely randomly. This way we can derive the invocation race-freely from the
messages.
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Let's not accept datagrams with embedded NUL bytes. Previously we'd simply
ignore everything after the first NUL byte. But given that sending us that is
pretty ugly let's instead complain and refuse.
With this change we'll only accept messages that have exactly zero or one NUL
bytes at the very end of the datagram.
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large ones
Let's make the kernel let us know the full, original datagram size of the
incoming message. If it's larger than the buffer space provided by us, drop the
whole message with a warning.
Before this change the kernel would truncate the message for us to the buffer
space provided, and we'd not complain about this, and simply process the
incomplete message as far as it made sense.
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process
If the kernel doesn't permit us to dequeue/process an incoming notification
datagram message it's still better to stop processing the notification messages
altogether than to enter a busy loop where we keep getting notified but can't
do a thing about it.
With this change, manager_dispatch_notify_fd() behaviour is changed like this:
- if an error indicating a spurious wake-up is seen on recvmsg(), ignore it
(EAGAIN/EINTR)
- if any other error is seen on recvmsg() propagate it, thus disabling
processing of further wakeups
- if any error is seen on later code in the function, warn about it but do not
propagate it, as in this cas we're not going to busy loop as the offending
message is already dequeued.
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For some certification, it should not be possible to reboot the machine through ctrl-alt-delete. Currently we suggest our customers to mask the ctrl-alt-delete target, but that is obviously not enough.
Patching the keymaps to disable that is really not a way to go for them, because the settings need to be easily checked by some SCAP tools.
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This prevented systemd-analyze from unprivileged operation on older systemd
installations, which should be possible.
Also, we shouldn't touch the file system in test mode even if we can.
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"closing all" might suggest that _all_ fds received with the notification message
will be closed. Reword the message to clarify that only the "unused" ones will be
closed.
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No functional change.
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It's probably easier to diagnose a bad notification message if the
contents are printed. But still, do anything only if debugging is on.
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This undoes 531ac2b234. I acked that patch without looking at the code
carefully enough. There are two problems:
- we want to process the fds anyway
- in principle empty notification messages are valid, and we should
process them as usual, including logging using log_unit_debug().
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If manager_dispatch_notify_fd() fails and returns an error then the handling of
service notifications will be disabled entirely leading to a compromised system.
For example pid1 won't be able to receive the WATCHDOG messages anymore and
will kill all services supposed to send such messages.
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Fixes #4234.
Signed-off-by: Jorge Niedbalski <jnr@metaklass.org>
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This adds two (privileged) bus calls Ref() and Unref() to the Unit interface.
The two calls may be used by clients to pin a unit into memory, so that various
runtime properties aren't flushed out by the automatic GC. This is necessary
to permit clients to race-freely acquire runtime results (such as process exit
status/code or accumulated CPU time) on successful service termination.
Ref() and Unref() are fully recursive, hence act like the usual reference
counting concept in C. Taking a reference is a privileged operation, as this
allows pinning units into memory which consumes resources.
Transient units may also gain a reference at the time of creation, via the new
AddRef property (that is only defined for transient units at the time of
creation).
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This adds the boolean RemoveIPC= setting to service, socket, mount and swap
units (i.e. all unit types that may invoke processes). if turned on, and the
unit's user/group is not root, all IPC objects of the user/group are removed
when the service is shut down. The life-cycle of the IPC objects is hence bound
to the unit life-cycle.
This is particularly relevant for units with dynamic users, as it is essential
that no objects owned by the dynamic users survive the service exiting. In
fact, this patch adds code to imply RemoveIPC= if DynamicUser= is set.
In order to communicate the UID/GID of an executed process back to PID 1 this
adds a new "user lookup" socket pair, that is inherited into the forked
processes, and closed before the exec(). This is needed since we cannot do NSS
from PID 1 due to deadlock risks, However need to know the used UID/GID in
order to clean up IPC owned by it if the unit shuts down.
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Currently, systemd uses either the legacy hierarchies or the unified hierarchy.
When the legacy hierarchies are used, systemd uses a named legacy hierarchy
mounted on /sys/fs/cgroup/systemd without any kernel controllers for process
management. Due to the shortcomings in the legacy hierarchy, this involves a
lot of workarounds and complexities.
Because the unified hierarchy can be mounted and used in parallel to legacy
hierarchies, there's no reason for systemd to use a legacy hierarchy for
management even if the kernel resource controllers need to be mounted on legacy
hierarchies. It can simply mount the unified hierarchy under
/sys/fs/cgroup/systemd and use it without affecting other legacy hierarchies.
This disables a significant amount of fragile workaround logics and would allow
using features which depend on the unified hierarchy membership such bpf cgroup
v2 membership test. In time, this would also allow deleting the said
complexities.
This patch updates systemd so that it prefers the unified hierarchy for the
systemd cgroup controller hierarchy when legacy hierarchies are used for kernel
resource controllers.
* cg_unified(@controller) is introduced which tests whether the specific
controller in on unified hierarchy and used to choose the unified hierarchy
code path for process and service management when available. Kernel
controller specific operations remain gated by cg_all_unified().
* "systemd.legacy_systemd_cgroup_controller" kernel argument can be used to
force the use of legacy hierarchy for systemd cgroup controller.
* nspawn: By default nspawn uses the same hierarchies as the host. If
UNIFIED_CGROUP_HIERARCHY is set to 1, unified hierarchy is used for all. If
0, legacy for all.
* nspawn: arg_unified_cgroup_hierarchy is made an enum and now encodes one of
three options - legacy, only systemd controller on unified, and unified. The
value is passed into mount setup functions and controls cgroup configuration.
* nspawn: Interpretation of SYSTEMD_CGROUP_CONTROLLER to the actual mount
option is moved to mount_legacy_cgroup_hierarchy() so that it can take an
appropriate action depending on the configuration of the host.
v2: - CGroupUnified enum replaces open coded integer values to indicate the
cgroup operation mode.
- Various style updates.
v3: Fixed a bug in detect_unified_cgroup_hierarchy() introduced during v2.
v4: Restored legacy container on unified host support and fixed another bug in
detect_unified_cgroup_hierarchy().
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A following patch will update cgroup handling so that the systemd controller
(/sys/fs/cgroup/systemd) can use the unified hierarchy even if the kernel
resource controllers are on the legacy hierarchies. This would require
distinguishing whether all controllers are on cgroup v2 or only the systemd
controller is. In preparation, this patch renames cg_unified() to
cg_all_unified().
This patch doesn't cause any functional changes.
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service is running
This adds a new boolean setting DynamicUser= to service files. If set, a new
user will be allocated dynamically when the unit is started, and released when
it is stopped. The user ID is allocated from the range 61184..65519. The user
will not be added to /etc/passwd (but an NSS module to be added later should
make it show up in getent passwd).
For now, care should be taken that the service writes no files to disk, since
this might result in files owned by UIDs that might get assigned dynamically to
a different service later on. Later patches will tighten sandboxing in order to
ensure that this cannot happen, except for a few selected directories.
A simple way to test this is:
systemd-run -p DynamicUser=1 /bin/sleep 99999
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As it turns out 512 is max number of tasks per service is hit by too many
applications, hence let's bump it a bit, and make it relative to the system's
maximum number of PIDs. With this change the new default is 15%. At the
kernel's default pids_max value of 32768 this translates to 4915. At machined's
default TasksMax= setting of 16384 this translates to 2457.
Why 15%? Because it sounds like a round number and is close enough to 4096
which I was going for, i.e. an eight-fold increase over the old 512
Summary:
| on the host | in a container
old default | 512 | 512
new default | 4915 | 2457
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(#3738)
During stop when service has one "regular" pid one main pid and one
control pid and the sighld for the regular one is processed first the
unit_tidy_watch_pids will skip the main and control pid and does not
remove them from u->pids(). But then we skip the sigchld event because we
already did one in the iteration and there are two pids in u->pids.
v2: Use general unit_main_pid() and unit_control_pid() instead of
reaching directly to service structure.
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A 'llu' formatting statement was used in a debugging printf statement
instead of a 'PRIu64'. Correcting that mistake here.
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By default, each iteration of manager_dispatch_sigchld() results in a unit level
sigchld event being invoked. For scope units, this results in a scope_sigchld_event()
which can seemingly stall for workloads that have a large number of PIDs within the
scope. The stall exhibits itself as a SIG_0 being initiated for each u->pids entry
as a result of pid_is_unwaited().
v2:
This patch resolves this condition by only paying to cost of a sigchld in the underlying
scope unit once per sigchld iteration. A new "sigchldgen" member resides within the
Unit struct. The Manager is incremented via the sd event loop, accessed via
sd_event_get_iteration, and the Unit member is set to the same value as the manager each
time that a sigchld event is invoked. If the Manager iteration value and Unit member
match, the sigchld event is not invoked for that iteration.
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Delete the dbus1 generator and some critical wiring. This prevents
kdbus from being loaded or detected. As such, it will never be used,
even if the user still has a useful kdbus module loaded on their system.
Sort of fixes #3480. Not really, but it's better than the current state.
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When unit is marked as UNSURE, we are trying to find if it state was
changed over and over again. So lets not go through the UNSURE states
again. Also when we find a GOOD unit lets propagate the GOOD state to
all units that this unit reference.
This is a problem on machines with a lot of initscripts with different
starting priority, since those units will reference each other and the
original algorithm might get to n! complexity.
Thanks HATAYAMA Daisuke for the expand_good_state code.
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We currently generate log message about unit being started even when
unit was started already and job didn't do anything. This is because job
was requested explicitly and hence became anchor job of the transaction
thus we could not eliminate it. That is fine but, let's not pollute
journal with useless log messages.
$ systemctl start systemd-resolved
$ systemctl start systemd-resolved
$ systemctl start systemd-resolved
Current state:
$ journalctl -u systemd-resolved | grep Started
May 05 15:31:42 rawhide systemd[1]: Started Network Name Resolution.
May 05 15:31:59 rawhide systemd[1]: Started Network Name Resolution.
May 05 15:32:01 rawhide systemd[1]: Started Network Name Resolution.
After patch applied:
$ journalctl -u systemd-resolved | grep Started
May 05 16:42:12 rawhide systemd[1]: Started Network Name Resolution.
Fixes #1723
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The macro determines the right length of a AF_UNIX "struct sockaddr_un" to pass to
connect() or bind(). It automatically figures out if the socket refers to an
abstract namespace socket, or a socket in the file system, and properly handles
the full length of the path field.
This macro is not only safer, but also simpler to use, than the usual
offsetof() + strlen() logic.
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dbus-daemon currently uses a backlog of 30 on its D-bus system bus socket. On
overloaded systems this means that only 30 connections may be queued without
dbus-daemon processing them before further connection attempts fail. Our
cgroups-agent binary so far used D-Bus for its messaging, and hitting this
limit hence may result in us losing cgroup empty messages.
This patch adds a seperate cgroup agent socket of type AF_UNIX/SOCK_DGRAM.
Since sockets of these types need no connection set up, no listen() backlog
applies. Our cgroup-agent binary will hence simply block as long as it can't
enqueue its datagram message, so that we won't lose cgroup empty messages as
likely anymore.
This also rearranges the ordering of the processing of SIGCHLD signals, service
notification messages (sd_notify()...) and the two types of cgroup
notifications (inotify for the unified hierarchy support, and agent for the
classic hierarchy support). We now always process events for these in the
following order:
1. service notification messages (SD_EVENT_PRIORITY_NORMAL-7)
2. SIGCHLD signals (SD_EVENT_PRIORITY_NORMAL-6)
3. cgroup inotify and cgroup agent (SD_EVENT_PRIORITY_NORMAL-5)
This is because when receiving SIGCHLD we invalidate PID information, which we
need to process the service notification messages which are bound to PIDs.
Hence the order between the first two items. And we want to process SIGCHLD
metadata to detect whether a service is gone, before using cgroup
notifications, to decide when a service is gone, since the former carries more
useful metadata.
Related to this:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=95264
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/1961
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This moves the O_TMPFILE handling from the coredumping code into common library
code, and generalizes it as open_tmpfile_linkable() + link_tmpfile(). The
existing open_tmpfile() function (which creates an unlinked temporary file that
cannot be linked into the fs) is renamed to open_tmpfile_unlinkable(), to make
the distinction clear. Thus, code may now choose between:
a) open_tmpfile_linkable() + link_tmpfile()
b) open_tmpfile_unlinkable()
Depending on whether they want a file that may be linked back into the fs later
on or not.
In a later commit we should probably convert fopen_temporary() to make use of
open_tmpfile_linkable().
Followup for: #3065
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