Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This stripping is contolled by a new boolean parameter. When the parameter
is true, it means that the caller does not care about the distinction between
initrd and real root, and wants to act on both rd-dot-prefixed and unprefixed
parameters in the initramfs, and only on the unprefixed parameters in real
root. If the parameter is false, behaviour is the same as before.
Changes by caller:
log.c (systemd.log_*): changed to accept rd-dot-prefix params
pid1: no change, custom logic
cryptsetup-generator: no change, still accepts rd-dot-prefix params
debug-generator: no change, does not accept rd-dot-prefix params
fsck: changed to accept rd-dot-prefix params
fstab-generator: no change, custom logic
gpt-auto-generator: no change, custom logic
hibernate-resume-generator: no change, does not accept rd-dot-prefix params
journald: changed to accept rd-dot-prefix params
modules-load: no change, still accepts rd-dot-prefix params
quote-check: no change, does not accept rd-dot-prefix params
udevd: no change, still accepts rd-dot-prefix params
I added support for "rd." params in the three cases where I think it's
useful: logging, fsck options, journald forwarding options.
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No functional change.
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Previously, we'd not mount the ESP except on EFI boots, and only when the ESP
used for booting matches the ESP we found.
With this change on non-EFI boots we'll mount a discovered ESP anyway, and on
EFI boots we'll only mount it if it matches the ESP we booted from.
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Let's make the EFI generator a bit smarter: if /efi exists it is used as mount
point for the ESP, otherwise /boot is used. This should increase compatibility
with distros which use legacy boot loaders that insist on having /boot as
something that isn't the ESP.
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Add a synchronization point so that custom initramfs units can run
after the root device becomes available, before it is fsck'd and
mounted.
This is useful for custom initramfs units that may modify the
root disk partition table, where the root device is not known in
advance (it's dynamically selected by the generators).
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This should be handled fine now by .dir-locals.el, so need to carry that
stuff in every file.
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Let's make sure we don't choke if blkid_probe_lookup_value() returns a NULL string.
Also, make sur we propagate the correct error when blkid_probe_lookup_value() fails.
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partition table
Fixes: #2483
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Sort the includes accoding to the new coding style.
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with small manual cleanups for style.
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Also, move a couple of more path-related functions to path-util.c.
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There are more than enough to deserve their own .c file, hence move them
over.
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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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We shouldn't exit the loop early, otherwise our duplicate backing
partition check won't work.
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We need to prevent the creation of the gpt automount unit, which will not
get overridden by the fstab mount unit.
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/1378
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Since 59512f21 the parameters were passed in the wrong order, causing the
options to be interpreted as the description.
Also, while "false" was supposed to be passed for "rw", the ESP should actually
be mounted read-write. It just happened to be "true" since the description char*
was passed for "rw".
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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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Let's query the flags only once, and document why we ignore it for the
ESP.
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If the root file system is located on an encrypted root disk, we'll not
find the GPT partition table for it. Let's fix that by following the
slaves/ symlinks in /sys for the device. We only handle devices having
exactly one backing device.
Also see: #1167
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add_automount() was only used on EFI systems, compile it conditionally
to avoid the warning.
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The partition-type flags are defined independently for every partition-type. Apply
them only to the types where they are defined, and not to the ESP, which does not
appear to share the same set of flags.
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/920
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Use free_and_strdup() where appropriate and replace equivalent,
open-coded versions.
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Some places invoked fflush() directly with their own manual error
checking, let's unify all that by using fflush_and_check().
This also unifies the general error paths of fflush()+rename() file
writers.
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Merge write_string_file(), write_string_file_no_create() and
write_string_file_atomic() into write_string_file() and provide a flags mask
that allows combinations of atomic writing, newline appending and automatic
file creation. Change all users accordingly.
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This makes path_is_mount_point() consistent with fd_is_mount_point() wrt.
flags.
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A variety of changes:
- Make sure all our calls distuingish OOM from other errors if OOM is
not the only error possible.
- Be much stricter when parsing escaped paths, do not accept trailing or
leading escaped slashes.
- Change unit validation to take a bit mask for allowing plain names,
instance names or template names or an combination thereof.
- Refuse manipulating invalid unit name
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A stateless system has a tmpfs as root file system. That obviously
does not have any block device associated with it. So try falling back
to the device of the /usr filesystem if the root filesystem fails.
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add_mount() is OK with unknow file type, but we have to initalize
the variable to NULL not to pass garbage on error.
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=89226
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This patch removes includes that are not used. The removals were found with
include-what-you-use which checks if any of the symbols from a header is
in use.
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After all it is now much more like strjoin() than strappend(). At the
same time, add support for NULL sentinels, even if they are normally not
necessary.
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Using the same scripts as in f647962d64e "treewide: yet more log_*_errno
+ return simplifications".
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If the format string contains %m, clearly errno must have a meaningful
value, so we might as well use log_*_errno to have ERRNO= logged.
Using:
find . -name '*.[ch]' | xargs sed -r -i -e \
's/log_(debug|info|notice|warning|error|emergency)\((".*%m.*")/log_\1_errno(errno, \2/'
Plus some whitespace, linewrap, and indent adjustments.
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It corrrectly handles both positive and negative errno values.
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As a followup to 086891e5c1 "log: add an "error" parameter to all
low-level logging calls and intrdouce log_error_errno() as log calls
that take error numbers", use sed to convert the simple cases to use
the new macros:
find . -name '*.[ch]' | xargs sed -r -i -e \
's/log_(debug|info|notice|warning|error|emergency)\("(.*)%s"(.*), strerror\(-([a-zA-Z_]+)\)\);/log_\1_errno(-\4, "\2%m"\3);/'
Multi-line log_*() invocations are not covered.
And we also should add log_unit_*_errno().
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A negative return code was treated as a true value.
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