Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Change cunescape() to return a normal error code, so that we can
distuingish OOM errors from parse errors.
This also adds a flags parameter to control whether "relaxed" or normal
parsing shall be done. If set no parse failures are generated, and the
only reason why cunescape() can fail is OOM.
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- Move to its own file rm-rf.c
- Change parameters into a single flags parameter
- Remove "honour sticky" logic, it's unused these days
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like:
src/shared/install.c: In function ‘unit_file_lookup_state’:
src/shared/install.c:1861:16: warning: ‘r’ may be used uninitialized in
this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
return r < 0 ? r : state;
^
src/shared/install.c:1796:13: note: ‘r’ was declared here
int r;
^
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Audit messages would be displayed as "unknown[1]".
Also specify AUTH as facility... This seems to be the closest match
(/* security/authorization messages */).
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Replace ENOTSUP by EOPNOTSUPP as this is what linux actually uses.
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Usually when using loop_read(), we want to read the full buffer.
Add a helper that mirrors loop_write(), and returns 0 when full buffer
was read, and an error otherwise.
Use -ENODATA for the short read, to distinguish it from a read error.
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It is more elegant to do this in one step.
Coverity complains about the TOCTOU difference, but it is not an
actual problem (CID #1237777).
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Introduced in fa6ac76083b8ff.
Might be related to CID #1261724, but I don't know if coverity can
recurse this deep.
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Lack of this caused journalctl not to display a hint about missing groups
properly when the user lacks permissions.
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For daemons which have a main configuration file, there's
little reason for the administrator to use configuration snippets.
They are useful for packagers which need to override settings, but
we shouldn't advertise that as the main way of configuring those
services.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=89397
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Logs constantly show
systemd-journald[395]: Failed to set file attributes: Inappropriate ioctl for device
This is because ext4 does not support FS_NOCOW_FL.
[zj: fold into one conditional as suggested on the ML and
fix (preexisting) r/errno confusion in error message.]
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Commit 668c965af "journal: skipping of exhausted journal files is bad if
direction changed" fixed a correctness issue, but it also significantly
limited the cases where the optimization that skips exhausted journal
files could apply.
As a result, some journalctl queries are much slower in v219 than in v218.
(e.g. queries where a "--since" cutoff should have quickly eliminated
older journal files from consideration, but didn't.)
If already in the initial iteration find_location_with_matches() finds
no entry, the journal file's location is not updated. This is fine,
except that:
- We must update at least f->last_direction. The optimization relies on
it. Let's separate that from journal_file_save_location() and update
it immediately after the direction checks.
- The optimization was conditional on "f->current_offset > 0", but it
would always be 0 in this scenario. This check is unnecessary for the
optimization.
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This patch removes includes that are not used. The removals were found with
include-what-you-use which checks if any of the symbols from a header is
in use.
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include-what-you-use automatically does this and it makes finding
unnecessary harder to spot. The only content of poll.h is a include
of sys/poll.h so should be harmless.
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This fixes various issues found by globally reordering the include
sections of all .c files.
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Leave it to the compiler to figure out whether it shall inline stuff or
not.
Only place where using static inline is OK to use is in in header
files, really.
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After all it is now much more like strjoin() than strappend(). At the
same time, add support for NULL sentinels, even if they are normally not
necessary.
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If we scale our buffer to be wide enough for the format string, we
should expect that the calculation was correct.
char_array_0() invocations are removed, since snprintf nul-terminates
the output in any case.
A similar wrapper is used for strftime calls, but only in timedatectl.c.
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=87354
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This reverts commit b914ea8d379b446c4c9fac4ba181771676ef38cd.
We really need to put a limit on all our resources, everywhere, and in
particular if we operate on external data.
Hence, let's reintroduce the limit, but bump it substantially, so that
it is guaranteed to be higher than any realistic RLIMIT_NOFILE setting.
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Otherwise they can be optimized away with -DNDEBUG
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Types used for pids and uids in various interfaces are unpredictable.
Too bad.
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client to it
The old "systemd-import" binary is now an internal tool. We still use it
as asynchronous backend for systemd-importd. Since the import tool might
require some IO and CPU resources (due to qcow2 explosion, and
decompression), and because we might want to run it with more minimal
priviliges we still keep it around as the worker binary to execute as
child process of importd.
machinectl now has verbs for pulling down images, cancelling them and
listing them.
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In case CAP_SYS_ADMIN is missing (like in containers), one cannot fake pid in
struct ucred (uid/gid are fine if CAP_SETUID/CAP_SETGID are present).
Ensure that journald will try again to forward the messages to syslog without
faking the SCM_CREDENTIALS pid (which isn't guaranteed to succeed anyway, since
it also does the same thing if the process has already exited).
With this patch, journald will no longer silently discard messages
that are supposed to be sent to syslog in these situations.
https://bugs.debian.org/775067
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Terminals tend to be 80 columns wide by default, and the help
text is only supposed to be a terse reminder anyway.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1183771
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This remove the need for various header files to include the
(relatively heavyweight) util.h.
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This undoes a small part of 13790add4bf648fed816361794d8277a75253410
which was erroneously added, given that zero length datagrams are OK,
and hence zero length reads on a SOCK_DGRAM be no means mean EOF.
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Now that we bump rlimit, we do not really know how many files
we can open. Remove the check.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1179980
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When there are a lot of split out journal files, we might run out of fds
quicker then we want. Hence: bump RLIMIT_NOFILE to 16K if possible.
Do these even for journalctl. On Fedora the soft RLIMIT_NOFILE is at 1K,
the hard at 4K by default for normal user processes, this code hence
bumps this up for users to 4K.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1179980
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fd_setcrtime()
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btrfs' COW logic results in heavily fragment journal files, which is
detrimental for perfomance. Hence, turn off COW for journal files as we
create them.
Turning off COW comes at the cost of data integrity guarantees, but this
should be acceptable, given that we do our own checksumming, and
generally have a pretty conservative write pattern.
Also see discussion on linux-btrfs:
http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-btrfs/msg41001.html
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Our write pattern is quite awful for CoW file systems (btrfs...), as we
keep updating file parts in the beginning of the file. This results in
fragmented journal files. Hence: when rotating files, defragment them,
since at that point we know that no further write accesses will be made.
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LOG_DEBUG is already a log level, there is no need to use LOG_PRI which
is for filtering out the facility.
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Making use of the fd storage capability of the previous commit, allow
restarting journald by serilizing stream state to /run, and pushing open
fds to PID 1.
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deleted, rotate
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1171719
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journal file headers
Since the file headers might be replaced by zeroed pages now due to
sigbus we should make sure we don't end up dividing by zero because we
don't check values read from journal file headers for changes.
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arguments should be prefixed with "arg_"
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This makes them robust regarding truncation. Ideally, we'd export this
as an API, but given how messy SIGBUS handling is, and the uncertain
ownership logic of signal handlers we should not do this (unless libc
one day invents a scheme how to sanely install SIGBUS handlers for
specific memory areas only). However, for now we can still make all our
own tools robust.
Note that external tools will only have read-access to the journal
anyway, where SIGBUS is much more unlikely, given that only writes are
subject to disk full problems.
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