Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Among other things this makes sure we always expose a --version command
and show it in the help texts.
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Among other things this also adds a few things necessary for the change:
- Considerably more powerful error returning APIs in libsystemd-bus
- Adapter for connecting an sd_bus to an sd_event
- As I reworked the PolicyKit logic to the new library I also made it
asynchronous, so that PolicyKit requests of one user cannot block out
another user anymore.
- We always use the macro names for common bus error. That way it is
harder to mistype them since the compiler will notice
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Casts are visually heavy, and can obscure unwanted truncations.
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This is the just the library part.
SD_JOURNAL_CURRENT_USER flags is added to sd_j_open(), to open
files from current user.
SD_JOURNAL_SYSTEM_ONLY is renamed to SD_JOURNAL_SYSTEM,
and changed to mean to (also) open system files. This way various
flags can be combined, which gives them nicer semantics, especially
if other ones are added later.
Backwards compatibility is kept, because SD_JOURNAL_SYSTEM_ONLY
is equivalent to SD_JOURNAL_SYSTEM if used alone, and before there
we no other flags.
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static hostname and if the static hostname is set, too
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=957814
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http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2013-April/010510.html
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calls/signals in one call
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Since journal-gatewayd is now running unprivileged, and detecting
virtalization requires privileges, query PID1 via D-Bus for the used
virtualization.
This is also the first time we use libsystemd-bus for more than just
testing.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=62173
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library
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Returns "HTTP/1.0 406 Not Acceptable" instead of silently
closing the connection.
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The request must not be answered immediately (at first call to
response_handler()), but on the second. This is also important
for authentication, which cannot be performed on the first call.
Before:
% wget -O/dev/null -S https://localhost:19531/
--2012-11-28 18:29:43-- https://localhost:19531/
Resolving localhost (localhost)... 127.0.0.1
Connecting to localhost (localhost)|127.0.0.1|:19531... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response...
HTTP/1.1 301 Moved Permanently
Connection: close
Content-Length: 87
Location: /browse
Content-Type: text/html
Date: Wed, 28 Nov 2012 17:29:44 GMT
Location: /browse [following]
--2012-11-28 18:29:43-- https://localhost:19531/browse
Connecting to localhost (localhost)|127.0.0.1|:19531... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response...
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Connection: close
Content-Length: 23260
Content-Type: text/html
Date: Wed, 28 Nov 2012 17:29:44 GMT
Length: 23260 (23K) [text/html]
After:
% wget --no-check-certificate -O/dev/null -S https://localhost:19531/
--2012-11-28 18:30:05-- https://localhost:19531/
Resolving localhost (localhost)... 127.0.0.1
Connecting to localhost (localhost)|127.0.0.1|:19531... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response...
HTTP/1.1 301 Moved Permanently
Content-Length: 87
Location: /browse
Content-Type: text/html
Date: Wed, 28 Nov 2012 17:30:05 GMT
Location: /browse [following]
--2012-11-28 18:30:05-- https://localhost:19531/browse
Reusing existing connection to localhost:19531.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response...
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Length: 23260
Content-Type: text/html
Date: Wed, 28 Nov 2012 17:30:06 GMT
Length: 23260 (23K) [text/html]
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A prefix ("microhttpd: ") is added to the log lines to make it easy to
distinguish the source.
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For now the certificates are passed around as options to the
program. This might not be the most convenient under "production",
but makes for fairly easy testing.
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In preparation for adding more options, split out the option
handling code.
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text/event-stream
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to show their details
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page is a local, yet unitialized, variable.
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This minimal HTTP server can serve journal data via HTTP. Its primary
purpose is synchronization of journal data across the network. It serves
journal data in three formats:
text/plain: the text format known from /var/log/messages
application/json: the journal entries formatted as JSON
application/vnd.fdo.journal: the binary export format of the journal
The HTTP server also serves a small HTML5 app that makes use of the JSON
serialization to present the journal data to the user.
Examples:
This downloads the journal in text format:
# systemctl start systemd-journal-gatewayd.service
# wget http://localhost:19531/entries
Same for JSON:
# curl -H"Accept: application/json" http://localhost:19531/entries
Access via web browser:
$ firefox http://localhost:19531/
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