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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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GLIB has recently started to officially support the gcc cleanup
attribute in its public API, hence let's do the same for our APIs.
With this patch we'll define an xyz_unrefp() call for each public
xyz_unref() call, to make it easy to use inside a
__attribute__((cleanup())) expression. Then, all code is ported over to
make use of this.
The new calls are also documented in the man pages, with examples how to
use them (well, I only added docs where the _unref() call itself already
had docs, and the examples, only cover sd_bus_unrefp() and
sd_event_unrefp()).
This also renames sd_lldp_free() to sd_lldp_unref(), since that's how we
tend to call our destructors these days.
Note that this defines no public macro that wraps gcc's attribute and
makes it easier to use. While I think it's our duty in the library to
make our stuff easy to use, I figure it's not our duty to make gcc's own
features easy to use on its own. Most likely, client code which wants to
make use of this should define its own:
#define _cleanup_(function) __attribute__((cleanup(function)))
Or similar, to make the gcc feature easier to use.
Making this logic public has the benefit that we can remove three header
files whose only purpose was to define these functions internally.
See #2008.
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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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Let's clean up our tree a bit, and reduce invocations of the
thread-unsafe strerror() by replacing it with printf()'s %m specifier.
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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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Don't clobber the sd_device struct, and don't leak memory when memory allocation fails.
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In device_update_properties_bufs(), the strv is built from pointers into the
single nul-terminated buf_nulstr string, to avoid allocating the key=value
strings twice. However, we must not do that while building and
GREEDY_REALLOC0()'ing buf_nulstr, as each time when this actually reallocates
memory the pointers we wrote into buf_strv so far become invalid.
So change the logic to first completely build the new buf_nulstr, and then
iterate over it to pick out the pointers to the individual key=value strings
for properties_strv.
This fixes invalid environment for udev callouts.
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A NULL pointer was inserted as the first element of the strv.
This had the effect of always passing the empty environment to processes
spawned by udev.
Reported by Michał Bartoszkiewicz.
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This reverts b67f944. Lazy loading of device properties does not work for devices
that are received over netlink, as these are sealed. Reinstate the unconditional
loading of the device db.
Reported by: Mantas Mikulėnas <grawity@gmail.com>.
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I shall not use alloca() within loops
I shall not use alloca() within loops
I shall not use alloca() within loops
I shall not use alloca() within loops
...
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Use the standard FOREACH_WORD* macros.
The current code was broken in the devlink case so the last one received
was being dropped, causing https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=89894
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unnecessarily
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This provides equivalent functionality to libudev-device, but in the
systemd style. The public API only caters to creating sd_device objects
from for devices that already exist in /sys, there is no support for
listening for monitoring events or creating devices received over
the udev netlink protocol.
The private API contains the necessary functionality to make sd-device
a drop-in replacement for libudev-device, but which we would not
otherwise want to export.
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