Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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If we requeue jobs, we are no longer interested in old jobs. Hence, we
better ignore any JobRemoved signals for old jobs and concentrate on our
replacements.
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When queuing unit jobs, we should rather replace existing units than
fail. This is especially important when we queued a user-shutdown and a
new login is encountered. In this case, we better raplce the shutdown
jobs. systemd takes care of everything else.
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Enable TasksMax by default for all units
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Always validate first before we start processing the data.
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This new setting configures the TasksMax= field for the slice objects we
create for each user.
This alters logind to create the slice unit as transient unit explicitly
instead of relying on implicit generation of slice units by simply
starting them. This also enables us to set a friendly description for
slice units that way.
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capability-util.[ch]
The files are named too generically, so that they might conflict with
the upstream project headers. Hence, let's add a "-util" suffix, to
clarify that this are just our utility headers and not any official
upstream headers.
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Also, move a couple of more path-related functions to path-util.c.
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So far we had two pretty much identical calls in user-util.[ch]:
lookup_uid() and uid_to_name(). Get rid of the former, in favour of the
latter, and while we are at it, rewrite it, to use getpwuid_r()
correctly, inside an allocation loop, as POSIX intended.
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There are more than enough to deserve their own .c file, hence move them
over.
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This really deserves its own file, given how much code this is now.
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When the Suspend method is called, the only log message we write
(unless debugging is enabled) is "Operation finished.". This is
not very helpful when trying to figure out what is going on, so
add what operation we are talking about to the message:
"Operation 'sleep' finished.".
Hat tip to Daniel Aleksandersen for pointing this out.
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systemd-logind[27]: System is rebooting. (Applied kernel updates.)
is changed to
systemd-logind[27]: System is rebooting (Applied kernel updates).
Users should not add a dot in the sentence in --message, i.e. the correct usage is now:
$ systemctl reboot --message "Applied kernel updates"
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Allow passing a "dry-" prefix to the action parameter passed to
.ScheduleShutdown(). When strings with this prefix are passed,
the scheduled action will not take place. Instead, an info message
is logged.
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This replaces this:
free(p);
p = NULL;
by this:
p = mfree(p);
Change generated using coccinelle. Semantic patch is added to the
sources.
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various fixes to the core, logind, machined, nspawn
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Extra details for an action can be supplied when calling polkit's
CheckAuthorization method. Details are a list of key/value string pairs.
Custom policy can use these details when making authorization decisions.
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We treat an empty wall-message equal to a NULL wall-message since:
commit 5744f59a3ee883ef3a78214bd5236157acdc35ba
Author: Lennart Poettering <lennart@poettering.net>
Date: Fri Sep 4 10:34:47 2015 +0200
logind: treat an empty wall message like a NULL one
Fix the shutdown scheduler to not deref a NULL pointer, but properly
check for an empty wall-message.
Fixes: #1120
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And not bool.
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Enable unprivileged users to set wall message on a shutdown
operation. When the message is set via the --message option,
it is logged together with the default shutdown message.
$ systemctl reboot --message "Applied kernel updates."
$ journalctl -b -1
...
systemd-logind[27]: System is rebooting. (Applied kernel updates.)
...
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Use mfree() where we can.
Drop unnecessary {}.
Drop unnecessary variable declarations.
Cast syscall invocations where explicitly don't care for the return
value to (void).
Reword a comment.
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If we get a weird signal, then we should log about it, but not return an
error, since sd-bus will not call us again then anymore, but for these
signals we match here we actually do want to be called on the next
invocation.
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Let logind use the sd_bus_track helper object to track the controllers of
sessions. This does not only remove quite some code but also kills the
unconditional matches for all NameOwnerChanged signals.
The latter is something we should never ever do, as it wakes up the daemon
every time a client connects, which doesn't scale.
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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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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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WRITE_STRING_FILE_ATOMIC is only valid if WRITE_STRING_FILE_CREATE is also
given. IOW, an atomic file write operation is only possible when creating a
file is also being asked for.
This is a regression from the recent write_string_file() rework.
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A while back we opened up all of logind's bus calls to unprivileged
users, via PK. However, the dbus1 policy wasn't updated accordingly.
With this change, the dbus1 policy is opened up for all bus calls that
should be available to unprivileged clients.
(also rearranges some calls in the vtable, to make more sense, and be in
line with the order in the bus policy file)
Fixes #471.
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Make sure a greeter can forcefully spawn a session on a VT that is
in-use. A recent patch prevented this (this used to be possible for all
session types) as it is highly fragile. However, as it turns out,
greeters seem to rely on that feature. Therefore, make sure we allow it
explicitly for greeters.
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fileio: consolidate write_string_file*()
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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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Old gdm and lightdm start the user-session during login before they
destroy the greeter-session. Therefore, the user-session will take over
the VT from the greeter. We recently prevented this by never allowing
multiple sessions on the same VT. Fix this now, by explicitly allowing
this if the owning session is a GREETER.
Note that gdm no longer behaves like this. Instead, due to wayland, they
always use a different VT for each session. All other login-managers are
highly encouraged to destroy the greeter-session _before_ starting the
user-session. We now work around this, but this will probably not last
forever (and will already have nasty side-effects on the greeter-session).
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Merge write_string_file(), write_string_file_no_create() and
write_string_file_atomic() into write_string_file() and provide a flags mask
that allows combinations of atomic writing, newline appending and automatic
file creation. Change all users accordingly.
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Right now, if you start a session via 'su' or 'sudo' from within a
session, we make sure to re-use the existing session instead of creating a
new one. We detect this by reading the session of the requesting PID.
However, with gnome-terminal running as a busname-unit, and as such
running outside the session of the user, this will no longer work.
Therefore, this patch makes sure to return the existing session of a VT if
you start a new one.
This has the side-effect, that you will re-use a session which your PID is
not part of. This works fine, but will break assumptions if the parent
session dies (and as such close your session even though you think you're
part of it). However, this should be perfectly fine. If you run multiple
logins on the same session, you should really know what you're doing. The
current way of silently accepting it but choosing the last registered
session is just weird.
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Commit c0f32805 ("logind: use sd_event timer source for inhibitor
logic") reworked the main loop logic of logind so that it uses a
real timeout callback handler to execute delayed functions.
What the old code did, however, was to call those functions on
every iteration in the main loop, not only when the timeout
expired.
Restore that behavior by bringing back manager_dispatch_delayed(),
and call it from manager_run(). The internal event source callback
manager_inhibit_timeout_handler() was turned into a wrapper of
manager_dispatch_delayed() now.
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Previously, we'd just count connected displays, and if there was 2 or
more we assumed a "docked" state.
With this change we now:
- Only count external displays, ignore internal ones (which we detect by
checking the connector name against a whitelist of known external plug
types)
- We ignore connectors which are explicitly disabled
- We then compare the count with >= 1 rather than >= 2 as before
This new logic has the benefit that systems that disconnect the internal
display when the lid is closed are better supported. Also, explicitly
disabled ports do not confuse the algorithm anymore.
This new algorithm has been suggested here:
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/intel-gfx/2015-June/068821.html
This also makes two functions static, that are not used outside of their
.c files.
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everywhere: actually make use of DUAL_TIMESTAMP_NULL macro
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We know the state anyway, let's expose it in the bus. It's useful for
debugging at least, but it might be useful for DEs too.
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Let's use it as initializer where appropriate.
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When (for example) switching from X11 to a new VT and logging in there,
creating a new session, the user state file (/run/systemd/users/$uid) is
not updated after the session becomes active. The latest time it is
saved is when the session is in SESSION_OPENING.
This results in a /run/systemd/users/$uid file which contains
STATE=online for the current user on the current active VT, which is
obviously wrong.
As functions like sd_uid_get_state() use this file to get the user’s
state, this could result in things like PolicyKit making incorrect
decisions about the user’s state. (See
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=76358.)
Fix this by re-saving the state for a session’s user after completing
the state_job for that session.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=90818
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Make Coverity happy and tell it we're not interested in the return
value of these two calls.
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When a scheduled is cancelled, make sure to remove /run/nologin.
This is a regression from the recent shutdownd removal and logind rework.
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If NULL is specified for the bus it is now automatically derived from
the passed in message.
This commit also changes a number of invocations of sd_bus_send() to
make use of this.
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This should simplify the prototype a bit. The bus parameter is redundant
in most cases, and in the few where it matters it can be derived from
the message via sd_bus_message_get_bus().
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log_error_errno() already adds a newline, so drop them.
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Port over more code from shutdownd and teach logind to write /run/nologin at
least 5 minutes before the system is going down, and
/run/systemd/shutdown/scheduled when a shutdown is scheduled.
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