Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Fix stdout stream parsing
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This is a continuation of the previous include sort patch, which
only sorted for .c files.
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tree-wide: group include of libudev.h with sd-*
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journalctl: don't print -- No entries -- in quiet mode
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use them everywhere
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siphash24: let siphash24_finalize() and siphash24() return the result…
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Rather than passing a pointer to return the result, return it directly
from the function calls.
Also, return the result in native endianess, and let the callers care
about the conversion. For hash tables and bloom filters, we don't care,
but in order to keep MAC addresses and DHCP client IDs stable, we
explicitly convert to LE.
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Sort the includes accoding to the new coding style.
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Change the "out" parameter from uint8_t[8] to uint64_t. On architectures which
enforce pointer alignment this fixes crashes when we previously cast an
unaligned array to uint64_t*, and on others this should at least improve
performance as the compiler now aligns these properly.
This also simplifies the code in most cases by getting rid of typecasts. The
only place which we can't change is struct duid's en.id, as that is _packed_
and public API, so we can't enforce alignment of the "id" field and have to
use memcpy instead.
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Adding 3/4th of the watchdog frequency as accuracy on top of 1/2 of the
watchdog frequency means we might end up at 5/4th of the frequency which
means we might miss the message from time to time.
Maybe fixes #1804
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Previously, we'd rely on the mtime timestamps of the touch files to see
if our sync/rotation requests were already suppressed. This means we
rely on CLOCK_REALTIME timestamps. With this patch we instead store the
CLOCK_MONOTONIC timestamp *in* the touch files, and avoid relying on
mtime.
This should make things more reliable when the clock or underlying mtime
granularity is not very good.
This also adds warning messages if writing any of the flag files fails.
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No functional changes.
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Of course, ideally we'd just use normal synchronous bus calls, but this
is out of the question as long as we rely on dbus-daemon (which logs to
journald, and thus cannot use to avoid cyclic sync loops). Hence,
instead, reuse the wait logic already implemented for --sync, and use a
signal in one direction, and a mtime watch file for the reply.
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With this new "--sync" switch we add a synchronous way to sync
everything queued to disk, and return only after that's complete. This
command gives the guarantee that anything queued before has hit the disk
before the command returns.
While we are at it, also improve the man pages and help text for
journalctl a bit.
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The event might be flagged with stuff we don't expect, hence don't
be needlessly picky, just rely on the kernel passing us sensible events.
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This is pretty much a work-around for a security vulnerability in
kernels that allow unprivileged user namespaces.
Fixes #1822.
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Let's make sure to process all queued log data before exiting, so that
we don't unnecessary lose messages when shutting down.
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/1812#issuecomment-155149871
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The macro is generically useful for putting together search paths, hence
let's make it truly generic, by dropping the implicit ".d" appending it
does, and leave that to the caller. Also rename it from
CONF_DIRS_NULSTR() to CONF_PATHS_NULSTR(), since it's not strictly about
dirs that way, but any kind of file system path.
Also, mark CONF_DIR_SPLIT_USR() as internal macro by renaming it to
_CONF_PATHS_SPLIT_USR() so that the leading underscore indicates that
it's internal.
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[v2] treewide: treatment of errno and other cleanups
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with small manual cleanups for style.
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For low end embedded systems 4 MiB for each journal file is a lot of
memory. Journald will use at least 512 KiB even if JOURNAL_FILE_SIZE_MIN is
set to less than that so just use 512 KiB.
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manpage says:
posix_fallocate() returns zero on success, or an error number on
failure. Note that errno is not set.
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Our functions return negative error codes.
Do not rely on errno being set after calling our own functions.
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pread() returns -1 on error and sets errno. Do not use the -1 as errno.
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This replaces the use of ftell() with ftello() for 64-bit size on all
archs.
Also drops a pointless check for NULL before calling strbuf_cleanup().
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write_catalog() use the hashmap only to get its size. The size is
already given in parameter 'n'.
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When we enumerate journal files and encounter an invalid one, remember
which this, and show it to the user.
Note the possibly slightly surprising logic here: we store only one path
per error code. This means we show all error kinds but not every actual
error we encounter. This has the benefit of not requiring us to keep a
potentially unbounded list of errors with their sources around, but can
still provide a pretty complete overview on the errors we encountered.
Fixes #1669.
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- Always print a debug log message about files and directories we cannot
open right when it happens instead of the caller, thus reducing the
number of places where we need to generate the debug message.
- Always push the errors we encounter immediately into the error set,
when we run into them, instead of in the caller. Thus, we never forget
to push them in.
- Use stack instead of heap memory where we can.
- Make remove_file() void, since it cannot fail anyway and always
returned 0.
- Make local machine check of journal directories explicit in a
function, to make things more readable.
- Port to all directory listing loops FOREACH_DIRENT_ALL()
- sd-daemon is library code, hence never log at higher log levels than
LOG_DEBUG.
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When reading stuff, we should only return EIO when an actual read error
occured, not when we don't like the data for whatever reason.
We already return ENODATA for all other kinds of file truncation, hence
do the same for the most obvious kind, so that callers know what ENODATA
means.
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sd-journal.c: port to extract_first_word
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Otherwise we might run into deadlocks, when journald blocks on the
notify socket on PID 1, and PID 1 blocks on IPC to dbus-daemon and
dbus-daemon blocks on logging to journald. Break this cycle by making
sure that journald never ever blocks on PID 1.
Note that this change disables support for event loop watchdog support,
as these messages are sent in blocking style by sd-event. That should
not be a big loss though, as people reported frequent problems with the
watchdog hitting journald on excessively slow IO.
Fixes: #1505.
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capability-util.[ch]
The files are named too generically, so that they might conflict with
the upstream project headers. Hence, let's add a "-util" suffix, to
clarify that this are just our utility headers and not any official
upstream headers.
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