Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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It's a bit easier to read because shorter. Also, most likely a tiny bit faster.
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Throughout the tree there's spurious use of spaces separating ++ and --
operators from their respective operands. Make ++ and -- operator
consistent with the majority of existing uses; discard the spaces.
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Better support of OPENPGPKEY, CAA, TLSA packets and tests
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ISO/IEC 9899:1999 §7.21.1/2 says:
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.
In base64_append_width memcpy was called as memcpy(x, NULL, 0). GCC 4.9
started making use of this and assumes This worked fine under -O0, but
does something strange under -O3.
This patch fixes a bug in base64_append_width(), fixes a possible bug in
journal_file_append_entry_internal(), and makes use of the new function
to simplify the code in other places.
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This should be handled fine now by .dir-locals.el, so need to carry that
stuff in every file.
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Let's distuingish the cases where our code takes an active role in
selinux management, or just passively reports whatever selinux
properties are set.
mac_selinux_have() now checks whether selinux is around for the passive
stuff, and mac_selinux_use() for the active stuff. The latter checks the
former, plus also checks UID == 0, under the assumption that only when
we run priviliged selinux management really makes sense.
Fixes: #1941
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actually enabled
Otherwise we might end up mistaking a SMACK label for an selinux label.
Also, fixes unexpect debug messages:
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2015-November/034913.html
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There are more than enough to deserve their own .c file, hence move them
over.
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string-util.[ch]
There are more than enough calls doing string manipulations to deserve
its own files, hence do something about it.
This patch also sorts the #include blocks of all files that needed to be
updated, according to the sorting suggestions from CODING_STYLE. Since
pretty much every file needs our string manipulation functions this
effectively means that most files have sorted #include blocks now.
Also touches a few unrelated include files.
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The size of the allocated array for received file descriptors was
incorrectly calculated. This did not matter when a single file
descriptor was received, but for more descriptors the allocation was
insufficient.
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We were ignoring failures from unhexchar, which meant that invalid
hex characters were being turned into garbage rather than the string
rejected.
Fix this by making unhexmem return an error code, also change the API
slightly, to return the size of the returned memory, reflecting the
fact that the memory is a binary blob,and not a string.
For convenience, still append a trailing NULL byte to the returned
memory (not included in the returned size), allowing callers to
treat it as a string without doing a second copy.
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It's only marginally shorter then the usual for() loop, but certainly
more readable.
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use it anymore
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This appears to be the right time to do it for SOCK_STREAM
unix sockets.
Also: condition bus_get_owner_creds_dbus1 was reversed. Split
it out to a separate variable for clarity and fix.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1224211
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SELinux information cannot be retrieved this way, since we are
using stream unix sockets and SCM_SECURITY does not work for
them.
SCM_CREDENTIALS use dropped to be consistent. We also should
get this information at connection time.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1224211
"SCM_SECURITY was only added for datagram sockets."
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mask/handlers
Also, when the child is potentially long-running make sure to set a
death signal.
Also, ignore the result of the reset operations explicitly by casting
them to (void).
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No functional changes.
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GNU memmem() requires a nonnull first parameter. Let's introduce
memmem_safe() that removes this restriction for zero-length parameters,
and make use of it where appropriate.
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2015-May/031705.html
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direct connection
It's never a good idea, let's just not do it, not even on dierct
connections.
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So far we authenticate direct connections primarily at connection time,
but let's also do this for each method individually, by attaching the
creds we need for that right away.
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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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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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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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No functional change expected :)
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safe_close_pair() is more like safe_close(), except that it handles
pairs of fds, and doesn't make and misleading allusion, as it works
similarly well for socketpairs() as for pipe()s...
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safe_close() automatically becomes a NOP when a negative fd is passed,
and returns -1 unconditionally. This makes it easy to write lines like
this:
fd = safe_close(fd);
Which will close an fd if it is open, and reset the fd variable
correctly.
By making use of this new scheme we can drop a > 200 lines of code that
was required to test for non-negative fds or to reset the closed fd
variable afterwards.
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GCC optimizes strlen("string constant") to a constant, even with -O0.
Thus, replace patterns like sizeof("string constant")-1 with
strlen("string constant") where possible, for clarity. In particular,
for expressions intended to add up the lengths of components going into
a string, this often makes it clearer that the expression counts the
trailing '\0' exactly once, by putting the +1 for the '\0' at the end of
the expression, rather than hidden in a sizeof in the middle of the
expression.
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We still only produce on .so, but let's keep the sources separate to make things a bit
less messy.
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