Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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We should avoid using CLOCK_BOOTTIME directly unless we actually can
sensible distuingish it from CLOCK_MONOTONIC. CLOCK_BOOTTIME is only
fully feature on very recent Linux kernels, hence we should stick to a
fallback logic, which is already available in the
clock_boottime_or_monotonic() call.
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Some places invoked fflush() directly with their own manual error
checking, let's unify all that by using fflush_and_check().
This also unifies the general error paths of fflush()+rename() file
writers.
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ldp_receive_frame after correct processing of the packet the state
should be LLDP_AGENT_RX_WAIT_FOR_FRAME not LLDP_AGENT_RX_UPDATE_INFO.
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We were using a space more often than not, and this way is
codified in CODING_STYLE.
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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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usec_t is defined as 64 bit wide, but long is 32 bit on many archs.
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Fix a bunch of needless memzero() calls, a bunch of use-after-free
regarding _cleanup_free_ and drop unused variables.
Hint: Do NOT use _cleanup_free_ for temporary strappend() helpers that are
freed multiple times. All you safe is the last free() call, which is
really not worth the trouble resetting it to NULL all the time.
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'k' is marked as _cleanup_free_ so reset it to NULL if we free it
explicitly.
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* (potentially) public headers must reside in src/systemd/ (not in
src/libsystemd*)
* some private (not prefixed with sd_) functions moved from sd-lldp.h to
lldp-internal.h
* introduce lldp-util.h for the cleanup macro, as these should not be public
* rename the cleanup macro, we always name them _cleanup_foo_, never
_cleanup_sd_foo_
* mark some function arguments as 'const'
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This patch introduces LLDP support to networkd. it implements the
receiver side of the protocol.
The Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) is an industry-standard,
vendor-neutral method to allow networked devices to advertise
capabilities, identity, and other information onto a LAN. The Layer 2
protocol, detailed in IEEE 802.1AB-2005.LLDP allows network devices
that operate at the lower layers of a protocol stack (such as
Layer 2 bridges and switches) to learn some of the capabilities
and characteristics of LAN devices available to higher
layer protocols.
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