Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68232
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Previously the specifier calls could only indicate OOM by returning
NULL. With this change they will return negative errno-style error codes
like everything else.
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The logs are unlikely to contain any useful information in this case.
Also, change "walked on cycle path" to "found dependency on", which
is less technical and indicates the direction. With the old message,
I was never sure if prior units depended on later ones, or vice versa.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=996133
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=997082
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As we load unit files lazily, we need to make sure something pulls in swap
units that should be started automatically, otherwise the default dependencies
will never be applied.
This partially reinstates code removed in
commit 64347fc2b983f33e7efb0fd2bb44e133fb9f30f4.
Also don't order swap devices after swap.target when they are 'nofail'.
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Make sure swap.target correctly requires/wants the swap units.
This fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=69291.
Reported-by: Hussam Al-Tayeb
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If the memory_limit of unit is -1, we should write "-1"
to the file memory.limit_in_bytes. not the (unit64_t) -1.
otherwise the memory.limit_in_bytes will be set to zero.
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it should be memory.soft_limit_in_bytes.
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set the value of variable "r" to the return value
of cg_set_attribute.
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Trivial cleanup of repeat_unmount() spelling.
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Services using the watchdog option might want to be restarted
only if the watchdog triggers.
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We don't allow reusing of scopes.
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umount.target in the real root
These mounts should be kept around and unmounted in the shutdown ramfs.
Currently, we will still attempt to umount these in the final kill spree, but
we should consider avoiding that too. Also, the should_umount function should
be generalised and put into util.c or something like that, but we are still
discussing precisely how.
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This makes mount units work like swap units: when the backing device appears
the mount unit will be started.
v2: the device should want the mount unconditionally, not only for DefaultDependencies=yes
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There is no need to restrict this to only the 'nofail' case. In the '!nofail'
case the unit is already wanted by swap.target, so this is not a functional change.
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This patch adds the support for setting up BlockIODeviceWeight
in bus_cgroup_set_property. most of the codes are copied from
the case that sets up DeviceAllow.
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This patch adds the support for setting up BlockIORead/WriteBandwidth
in bus_cgroup_set_property.
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if we get BlockIOReadBandwidth="", we should only remove the
read-bandwidth-entries in blockio_device_bandwidths list.
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Spaces, quotes, and such, were not properly escaped. We should
write them like we read them.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67971
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First drop the capabilities of the userhelpers before dropping our own,
otherwise we might not be allowed to drop the capabilities of the
userhelpers. Especially, if we want to drop CAP_SYS_MODULE.
Credits: Matteo Sasso
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This prevents corruption of the hashmap, because we would free() the
keys in the hashmap, if the unit is already in there, with the same
cgroup path.
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This reverts commit 1f11a0cdfe397cc404d61ee679fc12f58c0a885b.
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If the mode is UNIT_CHECK,it means we only want to check if
the paramaters are valid. the first round of cycle already
did this check, no need to check again.
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If a device node is already in the device_allow list of
CGroupContext, we should replace it instead of create a
new one and append this new one to the end of device_allow
list.
change from v1: use streq to replace !strcmp
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BlockIOReadBandwidth and BlockIOWriteBandwidth both use
config_parse_blockio_bandwidth to set up CGroupBlockIODeviceBandwidth,
We should set the read value based on the left values
in config files.
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We should set up blockio_weight not cpu_shares.
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do not recurse further, if unit_realize_cgroup_now() failed
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On Wed, Aug 14, 2013 at 10:31 PM, Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com> wrote:
> On 08/14/2013 04:17 PM, Kay Sievers wrote:
> >
> > this patch added GPL code to systemd, which otherwise is all LGPL. We need
> > to make sure we can always split out any code to a separate shared library
> > ...
> >
> > Mind if I switch your src/core/selinux-access.[ch] files to LGPL?
> I have no problem with it. Should be LGPL anyways.
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67848
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We export the location of a bunch of directories this way,
so it makes sense to add those three. Especially catalogdir
is something that we want people to add things to.
Note on the naming: the first two are tied closely to systemd
itself, so I prefixed them with "systemd". The third one is
rather more generic, so no prefix.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67635
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This is useful to fake session ends for processes like shells.
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Stop importing non-sensical kernel-exported variables. All
parameters in the kernel command line are exported to the
initial environment of PID1, but suppressed if they are
recognized by kernel built-in code. The EFI booted kernel
will add further kernel-internal things which do not belong
into userspace.
The passed original environ data of the process is not touched
and preserved across re-execution, to allow external reading of
/proc/self/environ for process properties like container*=.
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