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2016-04-21tree-wide: use mdash instead of a two minusesZbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
2016-04-13tree-wide: remove useless NULLs from strjoinaZbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
The coccinelle patch didn't work in some places, I have no idea why.
2016-04-13basic/util: silence stupid gcc warnings about unitialized variableZbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
2016-04-12core: keep track of the mtime of the transient unit file we wroteLennart Poettering
Otherwise "systemctl status" will immediately report that our unit file is out of date.
2016-04-12core: optimize unit_write_drop_in a bitLennart Poettering
There's no point in first determining the drop-in file name path, then forgetting it again, and then determining it again. Instead, just generated it once, and then write to ti directly.
2016-04-12core: when creating a drop-in snippet, add a comment explaining this to itLennart Poettering
2016-04-12tree-wide: add new SIGNAL_VALID() macro-like function that validates signal ↵Lennart Poettering
numbers And port all code over to use it.
2016-04-12core: rework how transient unit files and property drop-ins workLennart Poettering
With this change the logic for placing transient unit files and drop-ins generated via "systemctl set-property" is reworked. The latter are now placed in the newly introduced "control" unit file directory. The fomer are now placed in the "transient" unit file directory. Note that the properties originally set when a transient unit was created will be written to and stay in the transient unit file directory, while later changes are done via drop-ins. This is preparation for a later "systemctl revert" addition, where existing drop-ins are flushed out, but the original transient definition is restored.
2016-04-12core: don't reorder drop-ins when changing propertiesLennart Poettering
The drop-in order we present should actually show what we is in effect, hence let's not reorder it when writing changes. After all, just sorting alphabetically is going to break things, as it doesn't respect that /etc breaks /run breaks /usr...
2016-04-12core: add a separate unit directory for transient unitsLennart Poettering
Previously, transient units were created below the normal runtime directory /run/systemd/system. With this change they are created in a special transient directory /run/systemd/transient, which only contains data for transient units. This clarifies the life-cycle of transient units, and makes clear they are distinct from user-provided runtime units. In particular, users may now extend transient units via /run/systemd/system, without systemd interfering with the life-cycle of these files. This change also adds code so that when a transient unit exits only the drop-ins in this new directory are removed, but nothing else. Fixes: #2139
2016-04-12core: introduce MANAGER_IS_RELOADING() macroLennart Poettering
This replaces the old function call manager_is_reloading_or_reexecuting() which was used only at very few places. Use the new macro wherever we check whether we are reloading. This should hopefully make things a bit more readable, given the nature of Manager:n_reloading being a counter.
2016-04-12core: remove ManagerRunningAs enumLennart Poettering
Previously, we had two enums ManagerRunningAs and UnitFileScope, that were mostly identical and converted from one to the other all the time. The latter had one more value UNIT_FILE_GLOBAL however. Let's simplify things, and remove ManagerRunningAs and replace it by UnitFileScope everywhere, thus making the translation unnecessary. Introduce two new macros MANAGER_IS_SYSTEM() and MANAGER_IS_USER() to simplify checking if we are running in one or the user context.
2016-04-12Do not report masked units as changed (#2921)Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
* core/unit: extract checking of stat paths into helper function The same code was repeated three times. * core: treat masked files as "unchanged" systemctl prints the "unit file changed on disk" warning for a masked unit. I think it's better to print nothing in that case. When a masked unit is loaded, set mtime as 0. When checking if a unit with mtime of 0 needs reload, check that the mask is still in place. * test-dnssec: fix build without gcrypt Also reorder the test functions to follow the way they are called from main().
2016-03-31core: treat masked files as "unchanged"Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
systemctl prints the "unit file changed on disk" warning for a masked unit. I think it's better to print nothing in that case. When a masked unit is loaded, set mtime as 0. When checking if a unit with mtime of 0 needs reload, check that the mask is still in place.
2016-03-31core/unit: extract checking of stat paths into helper functionZbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
The same code was repeated three times.
2016-02-22tree-wide: make ++/-- usage consistent WRT spacingVito Caputo
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.
2016-02-12core: fix indenting in dump outputLennart Poettering
Fixes: #2593
2016-02-10cgroup: remove support for NetClass= directiveDaniel Mack
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.
2016-02-10Merge pull request #2569 from zonque/removalsMartin Pitt
Remove some old cruft
2016-02-10tree-wide: remove Emacs lines from all filesDaniel Mack
This should be handled fine now by .dir-locals.el, so need to carry that stuff in every file.
2016-02-10core: make the StartLimitXYZ= settings generic and apply to any kind of ↵Lennart Poettering
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
2016-02-07treewide: fix typos and spacingTorstein Husebø
2016-02-01core: rework unit timeout handling, and add new setting RuntimeMaxSec=Lennart Poettering
This clean-ups timeout handling in PID 1. Specifically, instead of storing 0 in internal timeout variables as indication for a disabled timeout, use USEC_INFINITY which is in-line with how we do this in the rest of our code (following the logic that 0 means "no", and USEC_INFINITY means "never"). This also replace all usec_t additions with invocations to usec_add(), so that USEC_INFINITY is properly propagated, and sd-event considers it has indication for turning off the event source. This also alters the deserialization of the units to restart timeouts from the time they were originally started from. Before this patch timeouts would be restarted beginning with the time of the deserialization, which could lead to artificially prolonged timeouts if a daemon reload took place. Finally, a new RuntimeMaxSec= setting is introduced for service units, that specifies a maximum runtime after which a specific service is forcibly terminated. This is useful to put time limits on time-intensive processing jobs. This also simplifies the various xyz_spawn() calls of the various types in that explicit distruction of the timers is removed, as that is done anyway by the state change handlers, and a state change is always done when the xyz_spawn() calls fail. Fixes: #2249
2016-02-01core: store for each unit when the last low-level unit state change took placeLennart Poettering
This adds a new timestamp field to the Unit struct, storing when the last low-level state change took place, and make sure this is restored after a daemon reload. This new field is useful to allow restarting of per-state timers exactly where they originally started.
2016-01-28core: make sure "systemctl reload-or-try-restart is actually a noop if a ↵Lennart Poettering
unit is not running This makes sure we follow the same basic logic for try-restart if we have a try-reload. Fixes #688
2016-01-12tree-wide: use xsprintf() where applicableDaniel Mack
Also add a coccinelle receipt to help with such transitions.
2016-01-12capabilities: keep bounding set in non-inverted format.Ismo Puustinen
Change the capability bounding set parser and logic so that the bounding set is kept as a positive set internally. This means that the set reflects those capabilities that we want to keep instead of drop.
2016-01-10tree-wide: unify argument lists of IN_SET()Daniel Mack
The new implementation will not allow passing the same values more than once, so clean up first.
2015-11-27tree-wide: expose "p"-suffix unref calls in public APIs to make gcc cleanup easyLennart Poettering
GLIB has recently started to officially support the gcc cleanup attribute in its public API, hence let's do the same for our APIs. With this patch we'll define an xyz_unrefp() call for each public xyz_unref() call, to make it easy to use inside a __attribute__((cleanup())) expression. Then, all code is ported over to make use of this. The new calls are also documented in the man pages, with examples how to use them (well, I only added docs where the _unref() call itself already had docs, and the examples, only cover sd_bus_unrefp() and sd_event_unrefp()). This also renames sd_lldp_free() to sd_lldp_unref(), since that's how we tend to call our destructors these days. Note that this defines no public macro that wraps gcc's attribute and makes it easier to use. While I think it's our duty in the library to make our stuff easy to use, I figure it's not our duty to make gcc's own features easy to use on its own. Most likely, client code which wants to make use of this should define its own: #define _cleanup_(function) __attribute__((cleanup(function))) Or similar, to make the gcc feature easier to use. Making this logic public has the benefit that we can remove three header files whose only purpose was to define these functions internally. See #2008.
2015-11-24core: Do not bind a mount unit to a device, if it was from mountinfoHarald Hoyer
If a mount unit is bound to a device, systemd tries to umount the mount point, if it thinks the device has gone away. Due to the uevent queue and inotify of /proc/self/mountinfo being two different sources, systemd can never get the ordering reliably correct. It can happen, that in the uevent queue ADD,REMOVE,ADD is queued and an inotify of mountinfo (or libmount event) happend with the device in question. systemd cannot know, at which point of time the mount happend in the ADD,REMOVE,ADD sequence. The real ordering might have been ADD,REMOVE,ADD,mount and systemd might think ADD,mount,REMOVE,ADD and would umount the mountpoint. A test script which triggered this behaviour is: rm -f test-efi-disk.img dd if=/dev/null of=test-efi-disk.img bs=1M seek=512 count=1 parted --script test-efi-disk.img \ "mklabel gpt" \ "mkpart ESP fat32 1MiB 511MiB" \ "set 1 boot on" LOOP=$(losetup --show -f -P test-efi-disk.img) udevadm settle mkfs.vfat -F32 ${LOOP}p1 mkdir -p mnt mount ${LOOP}p1 mnt ... <dostuffwith mnt> Without the "udevadm settle" systemd unmounted mnt while the script was operating on mnt. Of course the question is, why there was a REMOVE in the first place, but this is not part of this patch.
2015-11-17core: Minor cleaning up of unit/log status and log logicLennart Poettering
We only reorder a few things and modernize some constructs. No functional changes. - Move some if checks from the caller to the callee of a few functions. - Use IN_SE() where we can - Move status printing functions together
2015-11-17core: make unit_make_transient() more thoroughLennart Poettering
Let's reset more stuff that does not apply to transient units. Also, let's readd the unito to all queues, because it's identity now changed.
2015-11-17core: move check whether a unit is suitable to become transient into unit.cLennart Poettering
Lets introduce unit_is_pristine() that verifies whether a unit is suitable to become a transient unit, by checking that it is no referenced yet and has no data on disk assigned.
2015-11-13core: now that .snapshot unit are gone, we don't need the per-type .no_gc ↵Lennart Poettering
bool anymore
2015-11-13core: add new DefaultTasksMax= setting for system.confLennart Poettering
This allows initializing the TasksMax= setting of all units by default to some fixed value, instead of leaving it at infinity as before.
2015-11-13Merge pull request #1869 from poettering/kill-overridableMichal Schmidt
Remove support for RequiresOverridable= and RequisiteOverridable=
2015-11-12core: drop "override" flag when building transactionsLennart Poettering
Now that we don't have RequiresOverridable= and RequisiteOverridable= dependencies anymore, we can get rid of tracking the "override" boolean for jobs in the job engine, as it serves no purpose anymore. While we are at it, fix some error messages we print when invoking functions that take the override parameter.
2015-11-12core: remove support for RequiresOverridable= and RequisiteOverridable=Lennart Poettering
As discussed at systemd.conf 2015 and on also raised on the ML: http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2015-November/034880.html This removes the two XyzOverridable= unit dependencies, that were basically never used, and do not enhance user experience in any way. Most folks looking for the functionality this provides probably opt for the "ignore-dependencies" job mode, and that's probably a good idea. Hence, let's simplify systemd's dependency engine and remove these two dependency types (and their inverses). The unit file parser and the dbus property parser will now redirect the settings/properties to result in an equivalent non-overridable dependency. In the case of the unit file parser we generate a warning, to inform the user. The dbus properties for this unit type stay available on the unit objects, but they are now hidden from usual introspection and will always return the empty list when queried. This should provide enough compatibility for the few unit files that actually ever made use of this.
2015-11-12install: follow unit file symlinks in /usr, but not /etc when looking for ↵Lennart Poettering
[Install] data Some distributions use alias unit files via symlinks in /usr to cover for legacy service names. With this change we'll allow "systemctl enable" on such aliases. Previously, our rule was that symlinks are user configuration that "systemctl enable" + "systemctl disable" creates and removes, while unit files is where the instructions to do so are store. As a result of the rule we'd never read install information through symlinks, since that would mix enablement state with installation instructions. Now, the new rule is that only symlinks inside of /etc are configuration. Unit files, and symlinks in /usr are now valid for installation instructions. This patch is quite a rework of the whole install logic, and makes the following addional changes: - Adds a complete test "test-instal-root" that tests the install logic pretty comprehensively. - Never uses canonicalize_file_name(), because that's incompatible with operation relative to a specific root directory. - unit_file_get_state() is reworked to return a proper error, and returns the state in a call-by-ref parameter. This cleans up confusion between the enum type and errno-like errors. - The new logic puts a limit on how long to follow unit file symlinks: it will do so only for 64 steps at max. - The InstallContext object's fields are renamed to will_process and has_processed (will_install and has_installed) since they are also used for deinstallation and all kinds of other operations. - The root directory is always verified before use. - install.c is reordered to place the exported functions together. - Stricter rules are followed when traversing symlinks: the unit suffix must say identical, and it's not allowed to link between regular units and templated units. - Various modernizations - The "invalid" unit file state has been renamed to "bad", in order to avoid confusion between UNIT_FILE_INVALID and _UNIT_FILE_STATE_INVALID. Given that the state should normally not be seen and is not documented this should not be a problematic change. The new name is now documented however. Fixes #1375, #1718, #1706
2015-11-11Merge pull request #1837 from poettering/grabbag2Tom Gundersen
variety of fixes
2015-11-10Remove snapshot unit typeZbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
Snapshots were never useful or used for anything. Many systemd developers that I spoke to at systemd.conf2015, didn't even know they existed, so it is fairly safe to assume that this type can be deleted without harm. The fundamental problem with snapshots is that the state of the system is dynamic, devices come and go, users log in and out, timers fire... and restoring all units to some state from the past would "undo" those changes, which isn't really possible. Tested by creating a snapshot, running the new binary, and checking that the transition did not cause errors, and the snapshot is gone, and snapshots cannot be created anymore. New systemctl says: Unknown operation snapshot. Old systemctl says: Failed to create snapshot: Support for snapshots has been removed. IgnoreOnSnaphost settings are warned about and ignored: Support for option IgnoreOnSnapshot= has been removed and it is ignored http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2015-November/034872.html
2015-11-10core: try to continue if coldplugging of a unit failsLennart Poettering
2015-11-02core: be more verbose when NameOwnerChanged subscriptions failDaniel Mack
2015-10-31core: set_unit_path overwrites SYSTEMD_UNIT_PATHEvgeny Vereshchagin
2015-10-27util-lib: split out allocation calls into alloc-util.[ch]Lennart Poettering
2015-10-27util-lib: split stat()/statfs()/stavfs() related calls into stat-util.[ch]Lennart Poettering
2015-10-27util: remove path_get_parent(), in favour of dirname_malloc()Lennart Poettering
We don't need two functions that do essentialy the same, hence drop path_get_parent(), and stick to dirname_malloc(), but move it to path-util.[ch].
2015-10-27util-lib: split string parsing related calls from util.[ch] into parse-util.[ch]Lennart Poettering
2015-10-26util-lib: split out user/group/uid/gid calls into user-util.[ch]Lennart Poettering
2015-10-24util-lib: split our string related calls from util.[ch] into its own file ↵Lennart Poettering
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.