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As it turns out machine_name_is_valid() does the exact same thing as
hostname_is_valid() these days, as it just invoked that and checked the
name length was < 64. However, hostname_is_valid() checks the length
against HOST_NAME_MAX anyway (which is 64 on Linux), hence any
additional check is redundant.
We hence replace machine_name_is_valid() by a macro that simply maps it
to hostname_is_valid() but sets the allow_trailing_dot parameter to
false. We also move this this call to hostname-util.h, to the same place
as the hostname_is_valid() declaration.
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To be able to use `systemd-run` or `machinectl login` on a container
that is in a private user namespace, the sub-process must have entered
the user namespace before connecting to the container's D-Bus, otherwise
the UID and GID in the peer credentials are garbage.
So we extend namespace_open and namespace_enter to support UID namespaces,
and we enter the UID namespace in bus_container_connect_{socket,kernel}.
namespace_open will degrade to a no-op if user namespaces are not enabled
in the kernel.
Special handling is required for the setns call in namespace_enter with
a user namespace, since transitioning to your own namespace is forbidden,
as it would result in re-entering your user namespace as root.
Arguably it may be valid to check this at the call site, rather than
inside namespace_enter, but it is less code to do it inside, and if the
intention of calling namespace_enter is to *be* in the target namespace,
rather than to transition to the target namespace, it is a reasonable
approach.
The check for whether the user namespace is the same must happen before
entering namespaces, as we may not be able to access /proc during the
intermediate transition stage.
We can't instead attempt to enter the user namespace and then ignore
the failure from it being the same namespace, since the error code is
not distinct, and we can't compare namespaces while mid-transition.
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All functions should either log the errors they run into, or only return
them in which case the caller should log them.
Make sure this rule is followed, so that each error is logged precisely
once, and neither never, nor more than once.
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like:
src/shared/install.c: In function ‘unit_file_lookup_state’:
src/shared/install.c:1861:16: warning: ‘r’ may be used uninitialized in
this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
return r < 0 ? r : state;
^
src/shared/install.c:1796:13: note: ‘r’ was declared here
int r;
^
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just a typo fix
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Usually when using loop_read(), we want to read the full buffer.
Add a helper that mirrors loop_write(), and returns 0 when full buffer
was read, and an error otherwise.
Use -ENODATA for the short read, to distinguish it from a read error.
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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.
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include-what-you-use automatically does this and it makes finding
unnecessary harder to spot. The only content of poll.h is a include
of sys/poll.h so should be harmless.
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After all it is now much more like strjoin() than strappend(). At the
same time, add support for NULL sentinels, even if they are normally not
necessary.
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user-status" and "loginctl session-status"
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LOG_DEBUG is already a log level, there is no need to use LOG_PRI which
is for filtering out the facility.
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The one in tmpfiles.c:create_item() even looks like it fixes a bug.
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Using:
find . -name '*.[ch]' | while read f; do perl -i.mmm -e \
'local $/;
local $_=<>;
s/(if\s*\([^\n]+\))\s*{\n(\s*)(log_[a-z_]*_errno\(\s*([->a-zA-Z_]+)\s*,[^;]+);\s*return\s+\g4;\s+}/\1\n\2return \3;/msg;
print;'
$f
done
And a couple of manual whitespace fixups.
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Basically:
find . -name '*.[ch]' | while read f; do perl -i.mmm -e \
'local $/;
local $_=<>;
s/log_(debug|info|notice|warning|error|emergency)\("([^"]*)%s"([^;]*),\s*strerror\(-?([->a-zA-Z_]+)\)\);/log_\1_errno(\4, "\2%m"\3);/gms;print;' \
$f; done
Plus manual indentation fixups.
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It corrrectly handles both positive and negative errno values.
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As a followup to 086891e5c1 "log: add an "error" parameter to all
low-level logging calls and intrdouce log_error_errno() as log calls
that take error numbers", use sed to convert the simple cases to use
the new macros:
find . -name '*.[ch]' | xargs sed -r -i -e \
's/log_(debug|info|notice|warning|error|emergency)\("(.*)%s"(.*), strerror\(-([a-zA-Z_]+)\)\);/log_\1_errno(-\4, "\2%m"\3);/'
Multi-line log_*() invocations are not covered.
And we also should add log_unit_*_errno().
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A small readability improvement...
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string_is_safe()
After all, we know have this as generic validator, so let's be correct
and use it wherver applicable.
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Also, let's try to make function names descriptive, instead of using
bools for flags.
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The --utc option was introduced by commit
9fd290443f5f99fca0dcd4216b1de70f7d3b8db1.
Howerver, the implementation was incomplete.
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Introduce option to display time in UTC.
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It is redundant to store 'hash' and 'compare' function pointers in
struct Hashmap separately. The functions always comprise a pair.
Store a single pointer to struct hash_ops instead.
systemd keeps hundreds of hashmaps, so this saves a little bit of
memory.
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No functional change expected :)
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In "export" format, newlines are significant, and messages containing
newlines must be exported as "binary".
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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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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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"systemctl status"
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If a message had zero length, journalctl would print no newline, and
two output lines would be concatenated. Fix. The problem was
introduced in commit 31f7bf199452 ("logs-show: print multiline
messages"). Affected short and verbose output modes.
Before fix:
Feb 09 21:16:17 glyph dhclient[1323]: Feb 09 21:16:17 glyph NetworkManager[788]: <info> (enp4s2): DHCPv4 state changed nbi -> preinit
after:
Feb 09 21:16:17 glyph dhclient[1323]:
Feb 09 21:16:17 glyph NetworkManager[788]: <info> (enp4s2): DHCPv4 state changed nbi -> preinit
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then read message
There's no EOF generated for AF_UNIX/SOCK_DGRAM sockets, hence let's
wait for the child first to see if it succeeded, only then read the socket.
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bus also switch over PID namespace
This is necessary to ensure that kdbus can collect creds of the
destination namespace when connecting.
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Needed for socketpair, recv
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This adds the new library call sd_journal_open_container() and a new
"-M" switch to journalctl. Particular care is taken that journalctl's
"-b" switch resolves to the current boot ID of the container, not the
host.
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Condition that is checked is taken from upower:
active(anon) < free swap * 0.98
This is really stupid, because the kernel knows the situation better,
e.g. there could be two swap files, and then hibernation would be
impossible despite passing this check, or the kernel could start
supporting compressed swap and/or compressed hibernation images, and
then this this check would be too stringent. Nevertheless, until
we have something better, this should at least return a true negative
if there's no swap.
Logging of capabilities in the journal is changed to not strip leading
zeros. I consider this more readable anyway.
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/upower/tree/src/up-daemon.c#n613
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1007059
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falconindy> the ellipsizing seems a bit wrong here....
I got a bit carried away with putting dots everywhere :)
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This makes verbose behave like short mode, i.e. try to show
the source timestamp, and fall back to journald timestamp
only if unavailable or unparsable. I think verbose should
be like short, only showing more fields, and showing different
timestamps would be confusing.
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Also, always show us timestamps in verbose mode.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=991678
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So far, we would show up to 128 bytes from a message, simply
cutting of the rest. With multiline messages, it is quite common
for a message to be longer than that, and this model doesn't really
work anymore.
A new limit is added: up to 3 lines will be shown, unless --full is
used (c.f. first line below). The limit for bytes is extended to 300
bytes. An ellipsis will always be used, if some form of truncation
occurs. If the tail of the message is cut off, either because of
length or line limit, dots will be shown at the end of the last
line. If this last line is short, the dots will be simply appended. If
the last line is too long for that, it will be ellipsized with dots at
the very end.
Note that the limits are in bytes, not characters, and we suck at
outputting unicode strings (c.f. last three lines below).
Aug 11 10:46:21 fedora python[67]: test message
line
line...
Aug 11 10:50:47 fedora python[76]: test message word word word word word word word word word word word wor...
Aug 11 10:55:11 fedora python[83]: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx...
Aug 11 11:03:21 fedora python[90]: ąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąą...
Aug 11 11:03:53 fedora python[97]: aąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąą...
Aug 11 11:25:45 fedora python[121]: aąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąą�...
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