Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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The available_space function now returns 0 if reading the directory
fails. Previously, such errors were silently ignored.
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-- fix grammar and reword some descriptions for clarity
-- add a useful description of what --follow does
-- fix the description for --after-cursor
-- properly introduce the FSS acronym for "Forward Secure Sealing" in
both sections
-- clarify the --disk-usage command
[zj: perform similar changes to zsh completions]
squash! journalctl: fix several issues in --help message text
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also define noreturn w/o <stdnoreturn.h>
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we also do 'last_index = (uint64_t) -1;' at the end of the while
loop so there is no reason to also do it here.
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While all the libc implementations I know return NULL when memchr's size
parameter is 0, without accessing any memory, passing NULL to memchr is
still invalid:
C11 7.24.1p2: Where an argument declared as "size_t n" specifies the length
of the array for a function, n can have the value zero on a call to that
function. Unless explicitly stated otherwise in the description of a
particular function in this subclause, pointer arguments on such a call
shall still have valid values, as described in 7.1.4. On such a call, a
function that locates a character finds no occurrence, a function that
compares two character sequences returns zero, and a function that copies
characters copies zero characters.
see http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=18247
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Detection would fail if language was not specified in the filename
but a dot appeared somewhere higher in the path.
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for non-static functions
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Clang is a bit more strict wrt format-nonliterals:
http://clang.llvm.org/docs/LanguageExtensions.html#format-string-checking
Adding these extra printf attributes also makes gcc able to find more
problems. E.g. this patch uncovers a format issue in udev-builtin-path_id.c
Some parts looked intetional about breaking the format-nonliteral check.
I added some supression for warnings there.
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We really should return errors from event handlers if we have a
continous problem and don't know any other solution.
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With this change a failing event source handler will not cause the
entire event loop to fail. Instead, we just disable the specific event
source, log a message at debug level and go on.
This also introduces a new concept of "exit code" which can be stored in
the event loop and is returned by sd_event_loop(). We also rename "quit"
to "exit" everywhere else.
Altogether this should make things more robus and keep errors local
while still providing a way to return event loop errors in a clear way.
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journalctl help output might run off the screen, so be consistent
as other systemd tools do and pipe it into a pager.
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we close it
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log message
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show messages from host too
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generating them fresh for each log entry
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connection
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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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In the time it takes to process incoming log messages, the process we
are logging details for may exit. This means the cgroup data is no
longer available from '/proc'. Unfortunately, the way the code was
structured before, we never log _SYSTEMD_UNIT if we don't have this
cgroup information.
Add an else if case that allows the passed in unit_id to be logged even
if we couldn't capture cgroup information. This ensures a command like
`journalctl -u run-XXX` will return all log messages from a oneshot
process.
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Just as 'identifier' is strdup-ed and freed, we need to do the same for
unit_id.
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The only problem is that libgen.h #defines basename to point to it's
own broken implementation instead of the GNU one. This can be fixed
by #undefining basename.
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- Add space between if/for and the opening parentheses
- Place the opening brace on same line as the function (not for udev)
From the CODING_STYLE
Try to use this:
void foo() {
}
instead of this:
void foo()
{
}
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"syslog(3) and sd_journal_print() may largely be used interchangeably
functionality-wise" according to sd_journal_print(3). This socket
should be always available except in rare circumstatances, and we
don't random applications to fail on logging, so let's do what syslog
did. The alternative of forcing all callers to do error handling for
this rare case doesn't really have any benefits, since if they can't
log there isn't much they can do anyway.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1023041
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let's just do a single fallocate() as far as possible, and don't
distuingish between allocated space and file size.
This way we can save a syscall for each append, which makes quite some
benefits.
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files into a single new one
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chain element
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This way we can do a quick restart limiting a bit how wildly we need to
jump around during the bisection process.
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Also for log_error() except where a specific error is specified
e.g. errno ? strerror(errno) : "Some user specified message"
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Pass on the line on which a section was decleared to the parsers, so they
can distinguish between multiple sections (if they chose to). Currently
no parsers take advantage of this, but a follow-up patch will do that
to distinguish
[Address]
Address=192.168.0.1/24
Label=one
[Address]
Address=192.168.0.2/24
Label=two
from
[Address]
Address=192.168.0.1/24
Label=one
Address=192.168.0.2/24
Label=two
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journald mimics the kernel here: timestamps will be printed if
/sys/module/printk/parameters/time contains "Y".
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everywhere
We want to emphasize bus connections as per-thread communication
primitives, hence introduce a concept of a per-thread default bus, and
make use of it everywhere.
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"make check-api-unused" informs us about code that is not used anymore
or that is exported but only used internally. Fix these all over the
place.
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