Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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bus can never be NULL due to assert
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The kernel nowadays sends these along, and that's OK, hence don't even
debug log about it, but completely ignore it.
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Both strv_free() and mfree() return NULL pointer after free.
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Recently mfree() was introduced to reduce work of tedious free + reset
pointers. Use it in bus_reset_queues() too.
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The safe_close() already checks the fd and returns -1.
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busctl: make sure --address connects as bus-client
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tree-wide: introduce mfree()
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There is really no reason to use `busctl` to connect to legacy private
bus endpoints. Fix this and make sure `busctl --address=unix:path=/foo`
works!
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Pretty trivial helper which wraps free() but returns NULL, so we can
simplify this:
free(foobar);
foobar = NULL;
to this:
foobar = mfree(foobar);
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Using --size option triggers an assert failure below because
parse_size() requires the second argument, base, being either 1000 or
1024. As it's for a packet size, it'd be better using IEC binary
suffix (base 1024) IMHO.
$ busctl --size 2048
Assertion 'base == 1000 || base == 1024' failed at src/basic/util.c:2222,
function parse_size(). Aborting.
Aborted (core dumped)
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The size option was to specify maximum captured patch length but was
missing its description in the command line help. Add it.
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In member_compare_func(), it compares interface, type and name of
members. But as it can contain NULL pointer, it needs to check them
before calling strcmp(). So make it as a separate strcmp_ptr
function (named after streq_ptr) so that it can be used by others.
Also let streq_ptr() to use it in order to make the code simpler.
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The NameAcquired and NameLost signals are _directed_ signals. Make sure
we properly set the destination correctly, and verify it in our
proxy-test.
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sd-bus: fix parsing of KDBUS_CMD_LIST
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We *must not* assume that an entry returned by KDBUS_CMD_LIST only
carries a single KDBUS_ITEM_OWNED_NAME. Similarly, we already parse
multiple such items for message-metadata, so make sure we support the
same on KDBUS_CMD_LIST.
By relying on the kernel to return all names separately, we limit the
kernel API significantly. Stop this and let the kernel decide how to
return its data.
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Use free_and_strdup() where appropriate and replace equivalent,
open-coded versions.
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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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The gvariant root container contains a 'variant' at the end, which embeds
the whole message body. This variant *must* contain a structure so we are
compatible to dbus1. Otherwise, it could encode at most 1 type, instead
of a full signature.
Our gvariant message parser already parses the variant-content as a
structure, so we're mostly good. However, it does *not* include the
opening and closing parantheses, nor does it parse them.
This patch fixes the decoder to verify a message contains the
parantheses, and also make the encoder add those parantheses into the
marshaled message.
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The unary type has a fixed size of 1 in gvariant. Make sure we properly
encode it as such. Right now, we encode/decode it as empty sequence.
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If c->item_size is 0, the next item to parse in a structure is empty.
However, this also implies that the signature must be empty. The latter
case is already handled just fine by enter_struct_or_dict_entry() so
there is no reason to handle the same case in the caller.
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Right now sd_bus_message_skip() will abort execution if passed a
signature of the unary type "()". Regardless whether this should be
supported or not, we really must not abort. Drop the incorrect assertion
and add a test-case for this.
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Each signal of the ObjectManager interface carries the path of the object
in question as an argument. Therefore, a caller will deduce the object
this signal is generated for, by parsing the _argument_. A caller will
*not* use the object-path of the message itself (i.e., message->path).
This is done on purpose, so the caller can rely on message->path to be
the path of the actual object-manager that generated this signal, instead
of the path of the object that triggered this signal.
This commit fixes all InterfacesAdded/Removed signals to use the path of
the closest object-manager as message->path. 'closest' in this case means
closest parent with at least one object-manager registered.
This fix raises the question what happens if we stack object-managers in
a hierarchy. Two implementations are possible: First, we report each
object only on the nearest object-manager. Second, we report it on each
parent object-manager. This patch chooses the former. This is compatible
with other existing ObjectManager implementations, which are required to
call GetManagedObjects() recursively on each object they find, which
implements the ObjectManager interface.
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Defaults to zero, which retains the current behaviour.
Fixes #577
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In bus_kernel_translate_message(), we print a DEBUG message on unknown
items. But right now, we also print this message for KDBUS_ITEM_TIMESTAMP
despite parsing it properly. Fix this!
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Hook up container userns with nss-mymachines
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Instead of open-coding, use isempty() to check NULL or empty string
for consistency.
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This adds test-bus-proxy which should be used to test correct behavior of
systemd-bus-proxyd. The first test that was added is to verify we actually
receive NameAcquired signals for ourselves on bus-connect.
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If the caller does not specify arg1 for NameOwnerChanged matches, we
really must take the ID from arg2 or arg3, if provided. They are
guaranteed to be identical to arg1 if either is supplied, but there is no
strict requiredment that arg1 is supplied. Hence, make sure to always
take the more restrictive match. Otherwise, we install rather wide
matches without anyone requiring them.
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Make sure we don't install NameOwnerChanged matches if the caller passed
a destination='' match (except if it is the broadcast address). Per spec,
all NameOwnerChanged signals are broadcasts.
Only the NameLost/NameAcquired signals are unicasts, but those are never
received through sd-bus. Instead, the bus-proxy synthesizes them and it
already installs proper matches for them.
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Make sure we actually parse "unsigned long long" if we encode a uint64_t.
Otherwise, we will get random data from the stack.
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In gvariant, all fixed-size objects need to be sized a multiple of their
alignment. If a structure has only fixed-size members, it is required to
be fixed size itself. If you imagine a structure like (ty), you have an
8-byte member followed by an 1-byte member. Hence, the overall inner-size
is 9. The alignment of the object is 8, though. Therefore, the specs
mandates final padding after fixed-size structures, to make sure it's
sized a multiple of its alignment (=> 16).
On the gvariant decoder side, we already account for this in
bus_gvariant_get_size(), as we apply overall padding to the size of the
structure. Therefore, our decoder correctly skips such final padding when
parsing fixed-size structure.
On the gvariant encoder side, however, we don't account for this final
padding. This patch fixes the structure and dict-entry encoders to
properly place such padding at the end of non-uniform fixed-size
structures.
The problem can be easily seen by running:
$ busctl --user monitor
and
$ busctl call --user org.freedesktop.systemd1 / org.foobar foobar "(ty)" 777 8
The monitor will fail to parse the message and print an error. With this
patch applied, everything works fine again.
This patch also adds a bunch of test-cases to force non-uniform
structures with non-pre-aligned positions.
Thanks to Jan Alexander Steffens <jan.steffens@gmail.com> for spotting
this and narrowing it down to non-uniform gvariant structures. Fixes #597.
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So right now our object-tree is limited to 2 levels at most
('/' and '/foo/...../bar'). We never link any intermediate levels, even
though that was clearly the plan. Fix the bus_node_allocate() helper to
actually link all intermediate nodes, too, not just the root node.
This fixes a simple inverse ptr-diff bug.
The downside of this fix is that we clearly never tested (nor used) the
object tree in any way. The only reason that the introspection works is
that our enumerators shortcut the object tree.
Lets see whether that code actually works..
Thanks to: Nathaniel McCallum <nathaniel@themccallums.org>
..for reporting this. See #524 for an actual example code.
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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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Given a container "foo", that maps user id $UID to container user, using
user namespaces, this NSS module extenstion will now map the $UID to a
name "vu-foo-$TUID" for the translated UID $UID.
Similar, userns groups are mapped to "vg-foo-$TGID" for translated GIDs
of $GID.
This simple change should make userns users more discoverable. Also,
given that many tools like "adduser" check NSS before allocating a UID,
should lower the chance of UID range conflicts between tools.
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sd-bus: include queried path in GetManagedObjects
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If GetManagedObjects is called on /foo/bar, then it should also include
the object /foo/bar, if it exists. Right now, we only include objects
underneath /foo/bar/.
This follows the behavior of existing dbus implementations.
Obsoletes #527 and fixes #525. Reported by: Nathaniel McCallum
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All other *_get_description() functions use 'const char**', so make sure
sd_bus_slot_get_description() does the same.
This changes API, but ABI stays stable. I think this is fine, but I
wouldn't mind bumping SONAME.
Reported in #528.
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Right now, if you're already in a session and call CreateSession, we
return information about the current session of yours. This is highy
confusing and a nasty hack. Avoid that, and instead return a commonly
known error, so the caller can detect that.
This has the side-effect, that we no longer override XDG_VTNR and XDG_SEAT
in pam_systemd, if you're already in a session. But this sounds like the
right thing to do, anyway.
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Right now, we never install destination matches on kdbus as the kernel did
not support MATCH rules on those. With the introduction of
KDBUS_ITEM_DST_ID we can now match on destination IDs, so add explicit
support for those.
This requires a recent kdbus module to work. However, there seems to be no
user-space that uses "Destination=''" matches, yet, so old kdbus modules
still work fine (we couldn't find any real user).
This is needed to match on unicast signals in bus-proxy. A followup will
add support for this.
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sd-bus: introduce new sd_bus_flush_close_unref() call
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Running `busctl monitor` currently buffers data for several seconds /
kilobytes before writing stdout. This is highly confusing if you dump in a
file, ^C busctl and then end up with a file with data of the last few
_seconds_ missing.
Fix this by explicitly flushing after each signal.
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sd_bus_flush_close_unref() is a call that simply combines sd_bus_flush()
(which writes all unwritten messages out) + sd_bus_close() (which
terminates the connection, releasing all unread messages) +
sd_bus_unref() (which frees the connection).
The combination of this call is used pretty frequently in systemd tools
right before exiting, and should also be relevant for most external
clients, and is hence useful to cover in a call of its own.
Previously the combination of the three calls was already done in the
_cleanup_bus_close_unref_ macro, but this was only available internally.
Also see #327
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When we get notifications from the kernel, we always turn them into
synthetic dbus1 messages. This means, we do *not* consume the kdbus
message, and as such have to free the offset.
Right now, the translation-helpers told the caller that they consumed the
message, which is wrong. Fix this by explicitly releasing all kernel
messages that are translated.
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Fixes #306.
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In kdbus we still have to support org.freedesktop.DBus matches even though
there is no real bus driver. The reason is that bus-control.c turns
NameOwnerChanged matches into proper kdbus matches. If we drop DRIVER
matches early, we will never match on name-changes for kdbus.
Two ways to fix this:
1) Install DRIVER matches on kdbus (which is the simple way our and which
is what this patch does).
2) Properly fix the scope-detection to let NameOwnerChanged matches
through (or better: block anything with Member!=NameOwnerChanged).
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./configure --enable/disable-kdbus can be used to set the default
behavior regarding kdbus.
If no kdbus kernel support is available, dbus-dameon will be used.
With --enable-kdbus, the kernel command line option "kdbus=0" can
be used to disable kdbus.
With --disable-kdbus, the kernel command line option "kdbus=1" is
required to enable kdbus support.
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Stop talking about the "XDG" version of basename()
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XDG refers to X Desktop Group, a former name for freedesktop.org.
This group is responsible for specifications like basedirs,
.desktop files and icon naming, but as far as I know, it has never
tried to redefine basename().
I think these references were meant to say XPG (X/Open Portability
Guide), a precursor of POSIX. POSIX is better-known and less easily
confused with XDG, and is how the basename(3) man page describes
the libgen.h version of basename().
The other version of basename() is glibc-specific and is described
in basename(3) as "the GNU version"; specifically mention that
version, to disambiguate.
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