Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
|
|
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.
|
|
- Make string parameter const
- Don't log some OOM errors, but not others
- Don't eat up errors generated by acl_from_text()
- Make sure check for success of every single strv_push() call
|
|
- fix some memory leaks on error conditions
- handle all error cases properly, and log about failures
- move HAVE_ACL and no-HAVE_ACL code closer to each other
|
|
CID#1271344/1271345
|
|
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=89202
https://bugs.debian.org/778656
Status quo ante can be restored with:
getfacl -p /var/log/journal/`cat /etc/machine-id`|grep -v '^#'|sort -u|sudo setfacl --set-file=- /var/log/journal/`cat /etc/machine-id`
|
|
This patch removes includes that are not used. The removals were found with
include-what-you-use which checks if any of the symbols from a header is
in use.
|
|
For ACLs to be valid, a set of entries for user, group, and other
must be always present. Always add those entries.
While at it, only add the mask ACL if it is actually required, i.e.
when at least on ACL for non-owner group or user exists.
|
|
This is much more useful in practice (equivalent to setfacl -m).
|
|
|
|
This mirrors set_consume and makes the common use a bit nicer.
|
|
Since 11ec7ce, journald isn't setting the ACLs properly anymore if
the files had no ACLs to begin with: acl_set_fd fails with EINVAL.
An ACL with ACL_USER or ACL_GROUP entries but no ACL_MASK entry is
invalid, so make sure a mask exists before trying to set the ACL.
|
|
This loop over acls is a bit too much to keep inside
of another loop.
|
|
We finally got the OK from all contributors with non-trivial commits to
relicense systemd from GPL2+ to LGPL2.1+.
Some udev bits continue to be GPL2+ for now, but we are looking into
relicensing them too, to allow free copy/paste of all code within
systemd.
The bits that used to be MIT continue to be MIT.
The big benefit of the relicensing is that closed source code may now
link against libsystemd-login.so and friends.
|
|
|