Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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meson: build systemd using meson
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Also detect libgpg-error. Require both to be present for HAVE_CRYPT,
even though libgpg-error is only used in src/resolve. If one is available,
the other should be too, so it doesn't seem worth the trouble to make two
separate conditions.
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deleted/moved (#5580)
When caller invokes sd_journal_open() we usually open at least one
directory with journal files. add_root_directory() function increments
current_invalidate_counter. After sd_journal_open() returns
current_invalidate_counter != last_invalidate_counter.
After caller waits for journal events (e.g. waits for new messages in
journal) then it usually calls sd_journal_process(). However, on first
call to sd_journal_process(), function determine_change() returns
SD_JOURNAL_INVALIDATE even though no journal files were
deleted/moved. This is because current_invalidate_counter !=
last_invalidate_counter.
After the fix we make sure counters has the same value before we begin
processing inotify events.
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Shell scripts should be executable so that meson reports their
invocation succinctly (does not print 'sh' '-e').
Python scripts should not be executable so that meson does the
detection of the right python binary itself.
Add -u everywhere to catch potential errors.
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The indentation for emacs'es meson-mode is added .dir-locals.
All files are reindented automatically, using the lasest meson-mode from git.
Indentation should now be fairly consistent.
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v2:
- ignore errors in chown/chmod/setfacl
- obey -Dadm-group=false, -Dwheel-group=false
- fix reversed condition for systemd-hwdb update hook
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This simplifies things and leads to a smaller installation footprint.
libsystemd_internal and libsystemd_journal_internal are linked into
libystemd-shared and available to all programs linked to libsystemd-shared.
libsystemd_journal_internal is not needed anymore, and libsystemd-shared
is used everwhere. The few exceptions are: libsystemd.so, test-engine,
test-bus-error, and various loadable modules.
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This implementation assumes that the arguments in compiler.cmd_array()
don't contain any spaces. Since we are only interested in compilation
on Linux, I think this is a safe assumption.
Solution suggested by Nirbheek Chauhan.
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It uses libsystemd_journal_internal_sources, so we need to
make sure that audit_type-to-name.h is generated early enough.
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It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010!
... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems
by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out
345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is
cool and shiny, let's use it.
This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique.
- rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated.
- rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and
repetitive, but there's lots of them.
- it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full"
compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled.
- busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose.
Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the
autoconf install, except for .la files.
It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options.
I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking
then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary
deps.
meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate
for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the
nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the
version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason.
The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely
that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd
make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different
languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet.
v2:
- use get_pkgconfig_variable
- use sh not bash
- use add_project_arguments
v3:
- drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo
v4:
- use find_library('bz2')
- add TTY_GID definition
- define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__
- use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute
v5:
- replace all declare_dependency's with []
- add more conf.get guards around optional components
v6:
- drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson
- use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the
hand-rolled checks.
- fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name
- use the right .sym file for pam_systemd
- rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic.
v7:
- use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D
- rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir
("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake)
- wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1
- use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under
split-usr==true.
v8:
- use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;)
- add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it
v9:
- indentation
v10:
- fix check for qrencode and libaudit
v11:
- unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs
This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the
autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the
filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of
loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident.
In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs.
In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin),
but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path.
C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576.
- call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity.
- sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
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Both gcc and clang issue a host of warnings about void pointers used in
arithmetic. The warning must be ignored in that file to avoid multiple
warnings.
Makefile.am used to set this for all libsystemd-journal-internal.a sources,
because there's no finer granularity for warnings. Let's just set it for
this one file.
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Various meson-independent cleanups from the meson patchset
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and lz4
I think it's nice to mark the test as skipped instead of omitting
it entirely, hence #ifdefs in the code instead of excluding the test
in Makefile.am/meson.build.
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Fixes wrong indent introduced by the commit 43688c49d1fdb585196d94e2e30bb29755fa591b.
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Native journal messages (_TRANSPORT=journal) typically don't have a
syslog facility attached to it. As a result when forwarding the messages
to syslog they ended up with facility 0 (LOG_KERN).
Apply syslog_fixup_facility() so we use LOG_USER instead.
Fixes: #5640
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It is possible to overflow uint64_t while validating the header of
a journal file. To prevent this, the addition itself is checked to
be within the limits of UINT64_MAX first.
To keep this readable, I have introduced two stack variables which
hold the converted values during validation.
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The only functional change is that log_notice("No journal files were found.")
is not printed any more with --quiet. log_error("No journal files were opened
due to insufficient permissions.") is still printed.
I wasn't quite sure where to put this function, but shared/ seems to be the
right place and none of the existing files seem to fit too well.
v2: rename journal_access_check to journal_access_check_and_warn.
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The cg_pid_get_path_shifted() is called twice during
server_dispatch_message(). We can get rid of the second by passing the
path to dispatch_message_real().
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Found with:
git grep '"[^"]*[a-z0-9]([0-9]\+p\?)' src/ | grep -vF man:
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SD_ID128_MAKE is clearly not a standard C macro, so let’s point the user
to its documentation to let them know which header they need and what
they can then do with MESSAGE_XYZ.
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Embedding sd_id128_t's in constant strings was rather cumbersome. We had
SD_ID128_CONST_STR which returned a const char[], but it had two problems:
- it wasn't possible to statically concatanate this array with a normal string
- gcc wasn't really able to optimize this, and generated code to perform the
"conversion" at runtime.
Because of this, even our own code in coredumpctl wasn't using
SD_ID128_CONST_STR.
Add a new macro to generate a constant string: SD_ID128_MAKE_STR.
It is not as elegant as SD_ID128_CONST_STR, because it requires a repetition
of the numbers, but in practice it is more convenient to use, and allows gcc
to generate smarter code:
$ size .libs/systemd{,-logind,-journald}{.old,}
text data bss dec hex filename
1265204 149564 4808 1419576 15a938 .libs/systemd.old
1260268 149564 4808 1414640 1595f0 .libs/systemd
246805 13852 209 260866 3fb02 .libs/systemd-logind.old
240973 13852 209 255034 3e43a .libs/systemd-logind
146839 4984 34 151857 25131 .libs/systemd-journald.old
146391 4984 34 151409 24f71 .libs/systemd-journald
It is also much easier to check if a certain binary uses a certain MESSAGE_ID:
$ strings .libs/systemd.old|grep MESSAGE_ID
MESSAGE_ID=%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x
MESSAGE_ID=%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x
MESSAGE_ID=%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x
MESSAGE_ID=%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x
$ strings .libs/systemd|grep MESSAGE_ID
MESSAGE_ID=c7a787079b354eaaa9e77b371893cd27
MESSAGE_ID=b07a249cd024414a82dd00cd181378ff
MESSAGE_ID=641257651c1b4ec9a8624d7a40a9e1e7
MESSAGE_ID=de5b426a63be47a7b6ac3eaac82e2f6f
MESSAGE_ID=d34d037fff1847e6ae669a370e694725
MESSAGE_ID=7d4958e842da4a758f6c1cdc7b36dcc5
MESSAGE_ID=1dee0369c7fc4736b7099b38ecb46ee7
MESSAGE_ID=39f53479d3a045ac8e11786248231fbf
MESSAGE_ID=be02cf6855d2428ba40df7e9d022f03d
MESSAGE_ID=7b05ebc668384222baa8881179cfda54
MESSAGE_ID=9d1aaa27d60140bd96365438aad20286
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No functional change.
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The compiler should not be able to optimize out the memset, because optarg is global
memory. In this case, not making the argument an empty string is nicer, so just use
an open-coded version of string_erase from before the explicit_bzero change.
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Cleanup of error code mismatch for masked units
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76ec966f0e33685f833 changed the code from ESHUTDOWN to ERFKILL, but missed one
spot in bus-common-errors.c. Fix that.
The code in transaction.c was checking for ERFKILL, but I'm not sure if this
mismatch had any effect, i.e. if there were any code paths in which the wrong
code actually made difference.
Also add comments when ESHUTDOWN is used in the journal code, so it's easy to
distinguish those cases when grepping. Standarize on the same capitalization.
(There's also a bunch of uses in sd-bus.c, but that's clearly different.)
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More information about unsupported journal file flags
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Let's do a merge to preserve all the commit messages.
This reverts commit 785d345145bbd06c8f1c75c6a0b119c4e8f411db.
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* logind: trivial simplification
free_and_strdup() handles NULL arg, so make use of that.
* boot: fix two typos
* pid1: rewrite check in ignore_proc() to not check condition twice
It's harmless, but it seems nicer to evaluate a condition just a single time.
* core/execute: reformat exec_context_named_iofds() for legibility
* core/execute.c: check asprintf return value in the usual fashion
This is unlikely to fail, but we cannot rely on asprintf return value
on failure, so let's just be correct here.
CID #1368227.
* core/timer: use (void)
CID #1368234.
* journal-file: check asprintf return value in the usual fashion
This is unlikely to fail, but we cannot rely on asprintf return value
on failure, so let's just be correct here.
CID #1368236.
* shared/cgroup-show: use (void)
CID #1368243.
* cryptsetup: do not return uninitialized value on error
CID #1368416.
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This file doesn't include any of our headers, so just use the pragma
without defining it in macros.h
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gcc 7 adds -Wimplicit-fallthrough=3 to -Wextra. There are a few ways
we could deal with that. After we take into account the need to stay compatible
with older versions of the compiler (and other compilers), I don't think adding
__attribute__((fallthrough)), even as a macro, is worth the trouble. It sticks
out too much, a comment is just as good. But gcc has some very specific
requiremnts how the comment should look. Adjust it the specific form that it
likes. I don't think the extra stuff we had in those comments was adding much
value.
(Note: the documentation seems to be wrong, and seems to describe a different
pattern from the one that is actually used. I guess either the docs or the code
will have to change before gcc 7 is finalized.)
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This is unlikely to fail, but we cannot rely on asprintf return value
on failure, so let's just be correct here.
CID #1368236.
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https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1416201
$ journalctl -b
Journal file /var/log/journal/ad18f69b80264b52bb3b766240742383/system@0005467d92e23784-a6571c8b69d09124.journal~ uses an unsupported feature, ignoring file.
Use SYSTEMD_LOG_LEVEL=debug journalctl --file=/var/log/journal/ad18f69b80264b52bb3b766240742383/system@0005467d92e23784-a6571c8b69d09124.journal~ to see the details.
-- No entries --
$ journalctl --file=/var/log/journal/ad18f69b80264b52bb3b766240742383/system@0005467d92e23784-a6571c8b69d09124.journal~
Journal file /var/log/journal/ad18f69b80264b52bb3b766240742383/system@0005467d92e23784-a6571c8b69d09124.journal~ uses incompatible flag lz4-compressed disabled at compilation time.
Failed to open journal file /var/log/journal/ad18f69b80264b52bb3b766240742383/system@0005467d92e23784-a6571c8b69d09124.journal~: Protocol not supported
mmap cache statistics: 0 hit, 1 miss
Failed to open files: Protocol not supported
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In preparation for later changes.
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This is harmless, it would only happen if --verify-key is used multiple times.
But let's fix it for correctness.
CID ##1368415.
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After parsing the --verify-key argument, overwrite it with null bytes.
This minimizes (but does not completely eliminate) the time frame within
which another process on the system can extract the verification key
from the journalctl command line.
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gperf-3.1 generates lookup functions that take a size_t length
parameter instead of unsigned int. Test for this at configure time.
Fixes: https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/5039
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The journalctl man page says: "-m, --merge Show entries interleaved from all
available journals, including remote ones.", but current version of journalctl
doesn't live up to this promise. This patch simply adds
"/var/log/journal/remote" to search path if --merge flag is used.
Should fix issue #3618
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This changes journald to not write to /var/log/journal until it received
SIGUSR1 for the first time, thus having been requested to flush the runtime
journal to disk.
This makes the journal work nicer with systems which have the root file system
writable early, but still need to rearrange /var before journald should start
writing and creating files to it, for example because ACLs need to be applied
first, or because /var is to be mounted from another file system, NFS or tmpfs
(as is the case for systemd.volatile=state).
Before this change we required setupts with /var split out to mount the root
disk read-only early on, and ship an /etc/fstab that remounted it writable only
after having placed /var at the right place. But even that was racy for various
preparations as journald might end up accessing the file system before it was
entirely set up, as soon as it was writable.
With this change we make scheduling when to start writing to /var/log/journal
explicit. This means persistent mode now requires
systemd-journal-flush.service in the mix to work, as otherwise journald would
never write to the directory.
See: #1397
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This improves kernel command line parsing in a number of ways:
a) An kernel option "foo_bar=xyz" is now considered equivalent to
"foo-bar-xyz", i.e. when comparing kernel command line option names "-" and
"_" are now considered equivalent (this only applies to the option names
though, not the option values!). Most of our kernel options used "-" as word
separator in kernel command line options so far, but some used "_". With
this change, which was a source of confusion for users (well, at least of
one user: myself, I just couldn't remember that it's systemd.debug-shell,
not systemd.debug_shell). Considering both as equivalent is inspired how
modern kernel module loading normalizes all kernel module names to use
underscores now too.
b) All options previously using a dash for separating words in kernel command
line options now use an underscore instead, in all documentation and in
code. Since a) has been implemented this should not create any compatibility
problems, but normalizes our documentation and our code.
c) All kernel command line options which take booleans (or are boolean-like)
have been reworked so that "foobar" (without argument) is now equivalent to
"foobar=1" (but not "foobar=0"), thus normalizing the handling of our
boolean arguments. Specifically this means systemd.debug-shell and
systemd_debug_shell=1 are now entirely equivalent.
d) All kernel command line options which take an argument, and where no
argument is specified will now result in a log message. e.g. passing just
"systemd.unit" will no result in a complain that it needs an argument. This
is implemented in the proc_cmdline_missing_value() function.
e) There's now a call proc_cmdline_get_bool() similar to proc_cmdline_get_key()
that parses booleans (following the logic explained in c).
f) The proc_cmdline_parse() call's boolean argument has been replaced by a new
flags argument that takes a common set of bits with proc_cmdline_get_key().
g) All kernel command line APIs now begin with the same "proc_cmdline_" prefix.
h) There are now tests for much of this. Yay!
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691b90d465 fixed one spot, but missed the other one.
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Fixes: #4660
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Make sure to populate the cache in cache_space_refresh() at least once
otherwise it's possible that the system boots fast enough (and the journal
flush service is finished) before the invalidate cache timeout (30 us) has
expired.
Fixes: #4790
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Let's remove chase_symlinks_prefix() and instead introduce a flags parameter to
chase_symlinks(), with a flag CHASE_PREFIX_ROOT that exposes the behaviour of
chase_symlinks_prefix().
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Let's use chase_symlinks() everywhere, and stop using GNU
canonicalize_file_name() everywhere. For most cases this should not change
behaviour, however increase exposure of our function to get better tested. Most
importantly in a few cases (most notably nspawn) it can take the correct root
directory into account when chasing symlinks.
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Similar to this patch from here:
http://systemd-devel.freedesktop.narkive.com/AvfCbi6c/patch-0-3-using-assert-se-on-actions-with-side-effects-on-test-cases
If the code is compiled with -DNDEBUG which is the default for
some embedded buildsystems, systemd-journald does not startup
and silently fails.
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