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This way we can unify handling of credentials that are attached to
messages, or can be queried for bus name owners or connection peers.
This also adds the ability to extend incomplete credential information
with data from /proc,
Also, provide a convenience call that will automatically determine the
most appropriate credential object for an incoming message, by using the
the attached information if possible, the sending name information if
available and otherwise the peer's credentials.
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This field is always false, drop it. If you want a reliable way to get
session state, call session_get_state(). Testing for any flags directly
doesn't work currently so don't pretend it would.
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Sessions on seat0 must pass us a vtnr, otherwise, you shouldn't try
attaching it to seat0. For seats without VTs, we do the exact opposite: we
forbid VTs.
There can be odd situations if the session-files contain invalid
combinations. However, we try to keep sessions alive and restore state as
good as possible.
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Fix the whole code to use "unsigned int" for vtnr. 0 is an invalid vtnr so
we don't need negative numbers at all.
Note that most code already assumes it's unsigned so in case there's a
negative vtnr, our code may, under special circumstances, silently break.
So this patch makes sure all sources of vtnrs verify the validity. Also
note that the dbus api already uses unsigned ints.
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If a session process calls TakeControl(), we now put the VT into
KD_GRAPHICS+K_OFF mode. This way, the new session controller can solely
rely on the logind-dbus API to manage the session.
Once the controller exits or calls ReleaseControl(), we restore the VT. We
also restore it, if we lost a controller during crash/restart (but only if
there really *was* a controller previously).
Note that we also must put the VT into VT_PROCESS mode. We want VT_AUTO
semantics, but VT_AUTO+KD_GRAPHICS actually disables *all* VT switches
(who came up with that great idea?). Hence, we set VT_PROCESS for logind
but acknowledge *all* requests immediately.
If a compositor wants custom VT setups, they can still get this by *first*
calling TakeControl() and afterwards setting up the VT. logind doesn't
touch the VT during controller runtime, only during setup/teardown. This
is actually what weston already does.
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We now save the unique bus-name of a session-controller as CONTROLLER=%s
in the session files. This allows us to restore the controller after a
crash or restart.
Note that we test whether the name is still valid (dbus guarantees that
the name is unique as long as the machine is up and running). If it is,
we know that the controller still exists and can safely restore it. Our
dbus-name-tracking guarantees that we're notified once it exits.
Also note that session-devices are *not* restored. We have no way to know
which devices where used before the crash. We could store all these on
disk, too, or mark them via udev. However, this seems to be rather
cumbersome. Instead, we expect controllers to listen for NewSession
signals for their own session. This is sent on session_load() and they can
then re-request all devices.
The only race I could find is if logind crashes, then the session
controller tries calling ReleaseControl() (which will fail as logind is
down) but keeps the bus-connection valid for other independent requests.
If logind is restarted, it will restore the old controller and thus block
the session.
However, this seems unlikely for several reasons:
- The ReleaseControl() call must occur exactly in the timespan where
logind is dead.
- A process which calls ReleaseControl() usually closes the
bus-connection afterwards. Especially if ReleaseControl() fails, the
process should notice that something is wrong and close the bus.
- A process calling ReleaseControl() usually exits afterwards. There may
be any cleanup pending, but other than that, usual compositors exit.
- If a session-controller calls ReleaseControl(), a session is usually
considered closing. There is no known use-case where we hand-over
session-control in a single session. So we don't care whether the
controller is locked afterwards.
So this seems negligible.
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Unfortunately, close() on a revoked/removed character-device fails with
ENODEV. I tried tracking this down in the kernel, but couldn't figure out
were exactly it comes from. However, can be easily reproduced with:
fd = open("/dev/input/event0", O_RDWR);
ioctl(fd, EVIOCREVOKE, 0);
r = close(fd);
A second close on @fd would return EBADF so the close is actually valid.
We simply ignore close() errors for all session-devices as their access
may be revoked asynchronously, or the device might get unplugged.
We use close_nointr() in case anyone ever looks at the return value (or
anyone runs "grep 'close(' -r src/" to find broken close() calls).
Fixes:
systemd-logind[31992]: Assertion 'close_nointr(fd) == 0' failed at src/shared/util.c:185, function close_nointr_nofail(). Aborting.
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Existing applications like gdm already depend on new sessions to get
immediately activated on seats without VTs. Fixes a bug reported as:
[systemd-devel] systemd 208:trouble with inactive user sessions at non-seat0 seats
This patch restores the original behavior. We either need to add a new
flag for session-creation or some other heuristic to avoid activating new
sessions in the future.
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not the same as the newly logged in one
It's better not to set any XDG_RUNTIME_DIR at all rather than one of a
different user. So let's do this.
This changes the bus call parameters of CreateSession(), but that is
explicitly an internal API hence should be fine. Note however, that a
logind restart (the way the RPM postinst scriptlets do it) is necessary
to make things work again.
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Pass on the line on which a section was decleared to the parsers, so they
can distinguish between multiple sections (if they chose to). Currently
no parsers take advantage of this, but a follow-up patch will do that
to distinguish
[Address]
Address=192.168.0.1/24
Label=one
[Address]
Address=192.168.0.2/24
Label=two
from
[Address]
Address=192.168.0.1/24
Label=one
Address=192.168.0.2/24
Label=two
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Just in order to bring things inline with the method and property
callbacks.
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Message handler callbacks can be simplified drastically if the
dispatcher automatically replies to method calls if errors are returned.
Thus: add an sd_bus_error argument to all message handlers. When we
dispatch a message handler and it returns negative or a set sd_bus_error
we send this as message error back to the client. This means errors
returned by handlers by default are given back to clients instead of
rippling all the way up to the event loop, which is desirable to make
things robust.
As a side-effect we can now easily turn the SELinux checks into normal
function calls, since the method call dispatcher will generate the right
error replies automatically now.
Also, make sure we always pass the error structure to all property and
method handlers as last argument to follow the usual style of passing
variables for return values as last argument.
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This patch converts PID 1 to libsystemd-bus and thus drops the
dependency on libdbus. The only remaining code using libdbus is a test
case that validates our bus marshalling against libdbus' marshalling,
and this dependency can be turned off.
This patch also adds a couple of things to libsystem-bus, that are
necessary to make the port work:
- Synthesizing of "Disconnected" messages when bus connections are
severed.
- Support for attaching multiple vtables for the same interface on the
same path.
This patch also fixes the SetDefaultTarget() and GetDefaultTarget() bus
calls which used an inappropriate signature.
As a side effect we will now generate PropertiesChanged messages which
carry property contents, rather than just invalidation information.
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If the session fifo is not created the session state written to
the session file is "closing". This caused the lock screen in
gnome-shell to go into a loop trying to find the active session.
The problem was introduced in the sd-bus port in
cc3773810855956bad92337cee8fa193584ab62e
Fixes: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=71525
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everywhere
We want to emphasize bus connections as per-thread communication
primitives, hence introduce a concept of a per-thread default bus, and
make use of it everywhere.
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it everywhere
Try to emphasize a bit that there should be a mapping between event
loops and threads, hence introduce a logic that there's one "default"
event loop for each thread, that can be queried via
"sd_event_default()".
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The call is one of the most important ones we expose, where we place
major emphasis on. We should make sure to give it a short, memorable
name.
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"make check-api-unused" informs us about code that is not used anymore
or that is exported but only used internally. Fix these all over the
place.
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bus_log_parse_error()
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NOTE: the show-* subcommands do not print some properties:
this are those with types like (so), a(so), (uo),...
we need to fix this, but I'm not sure how
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Otherwise sd_bus_message cleanup would close it.
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systemd_pam would ignore all params after the first invalid one.
Instead ignore just this one, and parse the rest. There's just
one now, but as a matter of principle ;)
Also, allow debug as an alias for debug=1, and don't treat
invalid debug= options as fatal.
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Among other things this makes sure we always expose a --version command
and show it in the help texts.
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This way we can without races always determine the machine for a leader
PID. This allows machine managers to query the machine for a forked off
container/VM without a race where the child might already have died
before we could read the cgroup information from /proc/$PID/cgroup.
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callers session, user, seat or machine object
This way clients can skip invoking GetSessionByPID() for their own PID
or a similar call to access these objects.
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called with a PID == 0
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