Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This unifies the socket handling with other sd-* libraries.
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We still only return the first message part in callback/synchronous calls.
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Reported-by: Arnaud Gaboury <arnaud.gaboury@gmail.com>
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This patch fixes the broken test-cases for sd-rtnl and add support for ipip
and sit tunnel.
[tomegun: minor fixups]
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Currently when both ipv4ll and dhcp are enabled, ipv4ll
address (if one has been claimed) is removed when dhcp
address is aquired. This is not the best thing to do
since there might be clients unaware of the removal
trying to communicate.
This patch provides a smooth transition between ipv4ll
and dhcp. If ipv4ll address was claimed [1] before dhcp,
address is marked as deprecated. Deprecated address is still
a valid address and packets can be received on it but address
cannot be selected as a source address. If dhcp lease cannot
be extended, then ipv4ll address is marked as valid again.
[1] If there is no collision, claiming IPv4LL takes between 4 to
7 seconds.
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Also fix type parameter passed to new0
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Reported by Thomas Hindoe Paaboel Andersen <phomes@gmail.com>
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We will easily get these when running on newer kernels. However, we can safely ignore them as we
anyway don't know what to do with them.
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Use a static table with all the typing information, rather than repeated
switch statements. This should make it a lot simpler to add new types.
We need to keep all the type info to be able to create containers
without exposing their implementation details to the users of the library.
As a freebee we verify the types of appended/read attributes.
The API is extended to nicely deal with unions of container types.
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The object is not currently used, so just drop the refenence. If/when we end up
using the object in the future, we must make sure to deal with possible mutual
references between rtnl busses and their queued messages; as is done in sd-bus.
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Added support for tunneling netlink attrributes (ipip, gre, sit).
These works with kernel module ipip, gre and sit . The test cases are
moved to a separate file and manual test as well because they require
respective kernel modules as well.
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Currently we only support containers in RTM_*LINK messages.
Reported-by: "Thomas H.P. Andersen <phomes@gmail.com>"
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That way, we don't forget to initialize it when the watchdog is
initialized before all event sources.
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These tests were both broken and redundant, so let's drop them.
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Extend rta_offset_tb into a stack of offset tables, one for each parent of the
current container, and make sd_rtnl_message_{enter,exit}_container() pop/push
to this stack.
Also make sd_rtnl_message_rewind() parse the top-level container, and use this
when reading a message from the socket.
This changes the API by dropping the now redundant sd_rtnl_message_read()
method.
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The bug was introducted in a3d59cd1 ("sd-bus: don't use assert_return()
to check for disconnected bus connections")
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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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CLOCK_BOOTTIME_ALARM, too
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Make sure the returned data fits the datatype we requested. Otherwise return -EIO.
Also fix a broken test that this exposed.
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If a message type occurs repeatedly let the last one win.
Also, don't skip type == MAX.
Based on patch from: Susant Sahani <susant@redhat.com>
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If you allocate a message with bus==NULL and then unref the main bus,
it will free your message underneath and your program will go boom!
To fix that, we really need to figure out what the semantics for
self-references (m->bus) should be and when/where/what accesses are
actually allowed.
Same is true for the pseudo-thread-safety we employ..
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In sd_bus_unref() we check for self-reference loops and destruct our
queues in case we're the only reference holders. However, we do _not_
modify our own ref-count, thus effectively causing the
message-destructions to enter with the same reference count as we did.
The only reason this doesn't cause an endless recursion (or trigger
assert(m->n_ref > 0) in sd_bus_message_unref()) is the fact that we
decrease queue-counters _before_ calling _unref(). That's not obvious at
all, so add a big fat note in bus_reset_queues() to everyone touching that
code.
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Like sd-bus, sd-rtnl can have self-references through queued messages. In
particular, each queued message has the following self-ref loop:
rtnl->wqueue[i]->rtnl == rtnl
Same is true for "rqueue".
When sd_rtnl_unref() gets called, we must therefore make sure we correctly
consider each self-reference when deciding to destroy the object. For each
queued message, there _might_ be one ref. However, rtnl-messages can be
created _without_ a bus-reference, therefore we need to verify the
actually required ref-count.
Once we know exactly how many self-refs exist, and we verified none of the
queued messages has external references, we can destruct the object.
We must immediately drop our own reference, then flush all queues and
destroy the bus object. Otherwise, each sd_rtnl_message_unref() call would
recurse into the same destruction logic as they enter with the same
rtnl-refcnt.
Note: We really should verify _all_ queued messages have m->rtnl set to
the bus they're queued on. If that's given, we can change:
if (REFCNT_GET(rtnl->n_ref) <= refs)
to
if (REFCNT_GET(rtnl->n_ref) == refs)
and thus avoid recalculating the required refs for each message we
remove from the queue during destruction.
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A terminated connection is a runtime error and not a developer mistake,
hence don't use assert_return() to check for it.
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Add a new config 'Activating' directive which denotes whether a busname
is actually registered on the bus. It defaults to 'yes'.
If set to 'no', the .busname unit only uploads policy, which will remain
active as long as the unit is running.
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messages queued for it
This way we can be sure that the service the messages are ultimately
intended for finds all fields it might need.
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negotiate it, refuse to take it
This makes sure we don't mishandle if developers specificy a different
AcceptFileDescriptors= setting in .busname units then they set for the
bus connection in the activated program.
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AcceptFD= defaults to true, thus making sure that by default fd passing
is enabled for all activatable names. Since for normal bus connections
fd passing is enabled too by default this makes sure fd passing works
correctly regardless whether a service is already activated or not.
Making this configurable on both busname units and in bus connections is
messy, but unavoidable since busnames are established and may queue
messages before the connection feature negotiation is done by the
service eventually activated. Conversely, feature negotiation on bus
connections takes place before the connection acquires its names.
Of course, this means developers really should make sure to keep the
settings in .busname units in sync with what they later intend to
negotiate.
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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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After all, it is ultimately linked to libsystems.so anyway, thus belongs
there and shares very little with the rest of logind, hence let's move
this away.
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peers
This is supposed to be an extension of SO_PEERCRED and SO_PEERSEC,
except for cgroup information.
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