Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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sd_journal_get_cutoff_realtime_usec() on failure
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If -flto is used then gcc will generate a lot more warnings than before,
among them a number of use-without-initialization warnings. Most of them
without are false positives, but let's make them go away, because it
doesn't really matter.
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Resolve spotted issues related to missing or extraneous commas, dashes.
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sd_j_e_u needs to keep a reference to an object while comparing it
with possibly duplicate objects in other files. Because the size of
mmap cache is limited, with enough files and object to compare to,
at some point the object being compared would be munmapped, resulting
in a segmentation fault.
Fix this issue by turning keep_always into a reference count that can
be increased and decreased. Other callers which set keep_always=true
are unmodified: their references are never released but are ignored
when the whole file is closed, which happens at some point. keep_always
is increased in sd_j_e_u and later on released.
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This commit also adds error handling for failures during
directory reading.
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log message
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show messages from host too
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This adds the new library call sd_journal_open_container() and a new
"-M" switch to journalctl. Particular care is taken that journalctl's
"-b" switch resolves to the current boot ID of the container, not the
host.
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each invocation
We can determine the list entry type via the typeof() gcc construct, and
so we should to make the macros much shorter to use.
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A few asserts are replaced with 'return -EINVAL'. I think that
assert should not be used to check argument in public functions.
Fields in struct sd_journal are rearranged to make it less
swiss-cheesy.
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The order was different in various places, which makes it harder to
read to code. Also consistently use ternany for all direction checks.
Remove one free(NULL).
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The fields in JournalFile are moved around to avoid wasting
7 bytes because of alignment.
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This allows the caller to explicitly specify which journal files
should be opened. The same functionality could be achieved before
by creating a directory and playing around with symlinks. It
is useful to debug stuff and explore the journal, and has been
requested before.
Waiting is supported, the journal will notice modifications on
the files supplied when opening the journal, but will not add
any new files.
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Casts are visually heavy, and can obscure unwanted truncations.
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AND term usually don't have many subterms (4 seems to be the maximum
sensible number, e.g. _BOOT_ID && _SYSTEMD_UNIT && _PID && MESSAGE_ID).
Nevertheless, the cost of checking each subterm can be relatively
high, especially when the nested terms are compound, and it
makes sense to minimize the number of checks.
Instead of looping to the end and then again over the whole list once
again after at least one term changed the offset, start the loop at
the term which caused the change. This way ½ terms in the AND match
are not checked unnecessarily again.
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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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Also reworded a few debug messages for brevity, and added a log
statement which prints out the filter at debug level:
Journal filter: (((UNIT=sys-module-configfs.device AND _PID=1) OR (COREDUMP_UNIT=sys-module-configfs.device AND MESSAGE_ID=fc2e22bc6ee647b6b90729ab34a250b1) OR _SYSTEMD_UNIT=sys-module-configfs.device) AND _BOOT_ID=4e3c518ab0474c12ac8de7896fe6b154)
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I'm assuming that it's fine if a _const_ or _pure_ function
calls assert. It is assumed that the assert won't trigger,
and even if it does, it can only trigger on the first call
with a given set of parameters, and we don't care if the
compiler moves the order of calls.
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This reverts commit 4826f0b7b5c0aefa08b8cc7ef64d69027f84da2c.
Because statfs.t_type can be int on some architecures, we have to cast
the const magic to the type, otherwise the compiler warns about
signed/unsigned comparison, because the magic can be 32 bit unsigned.
statfs(2) man page is also wrong on some systems, because
f_type is not __SWORD_TYPE on some architecures.
The following program:
int main(int argc, char**argv)
{
struct statfs s;
statfs(argv[1], &s);
printf("sizeof(f_type) = %d\n", sizeof(s.f_type));
printf("sizeof(__SWORD_TYPE) = %d\n", sizeof(__SWORD_TYPE));
printf("sizeof(long) = %d\n", sizeof(long));
printf("sizeof(int) = %d\n", sizeof(int));
if (sizeof(s.f_type) == sizeof(int)) {
printf("f_type = 0x%x\n", s.f_type);
} else {
printf("f_type = 0x%lx\n", s.f_type);
}
return 0;
}
executed on s390x gives for a btrfs:
sizeof(f_type) = 4
sizeof(__SWORD_TYPE) = 8
sizeof(long) = 8
sizeof(int) = 4
f_type = 0x9123683e
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direction.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=63672
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This reverts commit a858b64dddf79177e12ed30f5e8c47a1471c8bfe.
This reverts commit aea275c43194b6ac519ef907b62c5c995050fde0.
This reverts commit fc6e6d245ee3989c222a2a8cc82a33475f9922f3.
This reverts commit c4073a27c555aeceac87a3b02a83141cde641a1e.
This reverts commit cddf148028f525be8176e7f1cbbf4f862bd287f6.
This reverts commit 8c68a70170b31f93c287f29fd06c6c17edaf19ad.
The constants are now casted to __SWORD_TYPE, which should resolve the
compiler warnings about signed vs unsigned.
After talking to Kay, we concluded:
This should be fixed in the kernel, not worked around in userspace tools.
Architectures cannot use int and expect magic constants lager than INT_MAX
to work correctly. The kernel header needs to be fixed.
Even coreutils cannot handle it:
#define RAMFS_MAGIC 0x858458f6
# stat -f -c%t /
ffffffff858458f6
#define BTRFS_SUPER_MAGIC 0x9123683E
# stat -f -c%t /mnt
ffffffff9123683e
Although I found the perfect working macro to fix the thing :)
__extension__ ({ \
bool _ret = false; \
switch(f) { case c: _ret=true; }; \
( _ret ); \
})
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http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2013-April/010510.html
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On some architectures (like s390x) the kernel has the type int for
f_type, but long in userspace.
Assigning the 32 bit magic constants from linux/magic.h to the 31 bit
signed f_type in the kernel, causes f_type to be negative for some
constants.
glibc extends the int to long for those architecures in 64 bit mode, so
the negative int becomes a negative long, which cannot be simply
compared to the original magic constant, because the compiler would
automatically cast the constant to long.
To workaround this issue, we also compare to the (int)MAGIC value in a
macro. Of course, we could do #ifdef with the architecure, but it has to
be maintained, and the magic constants are 32 bit anyway.
Someday, when the int is unsigned or long for all architectures, we can
remove this macro again. Until then, keep it as simple as it can be.
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Instead of making a type up, just use __SWORD_TYPE, after reading
statfs(2).
Too bad, this does not fix s390x because __SWORD_TYPE is (long int) and
the kernel uses (int) to fill in the field!!!!!!
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statfs.f_type is signed but the filesystem magics are unsigned.
Casting the magics to signed will not make the signed.
Problem seen on big-endian 64bit s390x with __fsword_t 8 bytes.
Casting statfs.f_type to unsigned on the other hand will get us what we
need.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=953217
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When using "-p" and "-b" in combination with "-u", the output is not
what you would expect. The reason is the sd_journal_add_disjunction()
call in add_matches_for_unit() and add_matches_for_user_unit(), which
adds two ORs without taking the other conditions to every OR.
Adding another level on top with AND and sd_journal_add_conjunction()
solves the problem.
Output before:
$ journalctl -o short-monotonic -ab -p 0 -u sshd.service
-- Reboot --
[ 3.216305] lenovo systemd[1]: Starting OpenSSH server daemon...
-- Reboot --
[ 3.168666] lenovo systemd[1]: Starting OpenSSH server daemon...
[ 3.169639] lenovo systemd[1]: Started OpenSSH server daemon.
[36285.635389] lenovo systemd[1]: Stopped OpenSSH server daemon.
-- Reboot --
[ 10.838657] lenovo systemd[1]: Starting OpenSSH server daemon...
[ 10.913698] lenovo systemd[1]: Started OpenSSH server daemon.
[ 6881.035183] lenovo systemd[1]: Stopped OpenSSH server daemon.
-- Reboot --
[ 6.636228] lenovo systemd[1]: Starting OpenSSH server daemon...
[ 6.662573] lenovo systemd[1]: Started OpenSSH server daemon.
[ 6.681148] lenovo sshd[397]: Server listening on 0.0.0.0 port 22.
[ 6.681379] lenovo sshd[397]: Server listening on :: port 22.
As we see, the output is from _every_ boot and priority 0 is not taken
into account.
Output after patch:
$ journalctl -o short-monotonic -ab -p 0 -u sshd.service
-- Logs begin at Sun 2013-02-24 20:54:44 CET, end at Tue 2013-03-19 14:58:21 CET. --
Increasing the priority:
$ journalctl -o short-monotonic -ab -p 6 -u sshd.service
-- Logs begin at Sun 2013-02-24 20:54:44 CET, end at Tue 2013-03-19 14:59:12 CET. --
[ 6.636228] lenovo systemd[1]: Starting OpenSSH server daemon...
[ 6.662573] lenovo systemd[1]: Started OpenSSH server daemon.
[ 6.681148] lenovo sshd[397]: Server listening on 0.0.0.0 port 22.
[ 6.681379] lenovo sshd[397]: Server listening on :: port 22.
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This would break backwards skipping.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=63250
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Let's do the wake-up logic on NFS internally, making things simpler for
users.
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This function should be used when filling in "struct pollfd"'s .events
field for watching the journal. It will always return POLLIN for now,
but we should keep our options open to change this later on.
This mimics libsystemd-bus' sd_bus_get_events() call with the same
purpose.
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In order to write tests for the catalog functions, they
are made non-static and start taking a 'database' parameter,
which is the name of a file with the preprocessed catalog
entries.
This makes it possible to make test-catalog part of the
normal test suite, since it now only operates on files
in /tmp.
Some more tests are added.
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=62605
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- Reword messages a bit
- Correct check whether EACCES is in the set of errors
- Don't complain if no journal files are found
- allocate Set object for errors lazily since in the best case we don't
need it at all.
- don't consider it an error if /run/log/journal doesn't exist (because
that's the usual case actually, if storage is enabled)
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There are many ways in which we can get those checks wrong, so it is
better to warn and then error out on a real access failure.
The error messages are wrapped to <80 lines, because their primary
use is to be displayed in the terminal, and it is easier to read them
this way. Reading them in the journal can be a bit trickier, but
this is a bug in logs-show.c.
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Seems natural to be able to specify relative directory,
e.g. with journalctl -D. And even if, this should be checked
in front-end code, not in the library.
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One log_debug() moved to match order in other functions.
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The man page says so. Right now 0 would be returned if the data was encrypted,
1 otherwise.
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Logs written by journald from the initramfs may be written to a
directory with the name created from a random machine-id. Afterwards,
when the root filesystem has been mounted and machine-id reinitalized,
logs will be written to the directory with a name created from the
proper machine-id. When logs are flushed to /var/log/journal,
everything is copied to one output directory.
When journalctl without '-m' is run after the logs have been flushed
to /var/log/journal, all messages are shown. However, when run while
logs are still in /run/log/journal, those stored under the random
machine-id will not be shown.
Make journalctl behave the same regardless whether persistent storage
has been enabled or not, and slurp all files from /run/log/journal
even without '-m'.
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Documentation states that 0 is correct, and all other
similar functions return 0 on success.
Pointed-out-by: Steven Hiscocks <steven-systemd@hiscocks.me.uk>
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This introduces a new data threshold setting for sd_journal objects
which controls the maximum size of objects to decompress. This is
relieves the library from having to decompress full data objects even
if a client program is only interested in the initial part of them.
This speeds up "systemd-coredumpctl" drastically when invoked without
parameters.
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