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basic/ can be used by everything
cannot use anything outside of basic/
libsystemd/ can use basic/
cannot use shared/
shared/ can use libsystemd/
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This allows us to ensure that Requisite= dependencies never cause
propagation between units, while Requires= dependencies might.
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2015-May/031742.html
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from unit names
Let's better be safe then sorry.
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A variety of changes:
- Make sure all our calls distuingish OOM from other errors if OOM is
not the only error possible.
- Be much stricter when parsing escaped paths, do not accept trailing or
leading escaped slashes.
- Change unit validation to take a bit mask for allowing plain names,
instance names or template names or an combination thereof.
- Refuse manipulating invalid unit name
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Simplify unit_name_mangle() and unit_name_mangle_with_suffix() to
always behave the same, and only append a suffix if there is no
type suffix. If a user says 'isolate blah.device' it is better to
return an error that the type cannot be isolated, than to try to
isolate blah.device.target.
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Suggested-by: Russ Allbery <rra@debian.org>
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In order to prepare things for the single-writer cgroup scheme, let's
make logind use systemd's own primitives for cgroup management.
Every login user now gets his own private slice unit, in which his sessions
live in a scope unit each. Also, add user@$UID.service to the same
slice, and implicitly start it on first login.
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"Scope" units are very much like service units, however with the
difference that they are created from pre-existing processes, rather
than processes that systemd itself forks off. This means they are
generated programmatically via the bus API as transient units rather
than from static configuration read from disk. Also, they do not provide
execution-time parameters, as at the time systemd adds the processes to
the scope unit they already exist and the parameters cannot be applied
anymore.
The primary benefit of this new unit type is to create arbitrary cgroups
for worker-processes forked off an existing service.
This commit also adds a a new mode to "systemd-run" to run the specified
processes in a scope rather then a transient service.
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Transient units can be created via the bus API. They are configured via
the method call parameters rather than on-disk files. They are subject
to normal GC. Transient units currently may only be created for
services (however, we will extend this), and currently only ExecStart=
and the cgroup parameters can be configured (also to be extended).
Transient units require a unique name, that previously had no
configuration file on disk.
A tool systemd-run is added that makes use of this functionality to run
arbitrary command lines as transient services:
$ systemd-run /bin/ping www.heise.de
Will cause systemd to create a new transient service and run ping in it.
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In order to prepare for the kernel cgroup rework, let's introduce a new
unit type to systemd, the "slice". Slices can be arranged in a tree and
are useful to partition resources freely and hierarchally by the user.
Each service unit can now be assigned to one of these slices, and later
on login users and machines may too.
Slices translate pretty directly to the cgroup hierarchy, and the
various objects can be assigned to any of the slices in the tree.
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I'm assuming that it's fine if a _const_ or _pure_ function
calls assert. It is assumed that the assert won't trigger,
and even if it does, it can only trigger on the first call
with a given set of parameters, and we don't care if the
compiler moves the order of calls.
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For "systemctl snapshot" it makes no sense to complete an incomplete
name with ".service" as we previously did, use ".snapshot" instead.
Also, don't bother with mount units or suchlike, we know that this must
be a snapshot and hence is the only sane way for completion.
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The list of types and load states if lengthy, so a little reminder
can be sometimes useful.
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https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=752774
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#pragma once has been "un-deprecated" in gcc since 3.3, and is widely supported
in other compilers.
I've been using and maintaining (rebasing) this patch for a while now, as
it annoyed me to see #ifndef fooblahfoo, etc all over the place,
almost arrogant about the annoyance of having to define all these names to
perform a commen but neccicary functionality, when a completely superior
alternative exists.
I havn't sent it till now, cause its kindof a style change, and it is bad
voodoo to mess with style that has been established by more established
editors. So feel free to lambast me as a crazy bafoon.
v2 - preserve externally used headers
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This makes it possible to use them from systemctl without linking
against the core.
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to unit-name.h
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This makes it possible to use them from systemctl without linking
against the core. A string->enum lookup table is added.
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unit names
This makes sure that
systemctl status /home
is implicitly translated to:
systemctl status /home.mount
Similar, /dev/foobar becomes dev-foobar.device.
Also, all characters that cannot be part of a unit name are implicitly
escaped.
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Use the same function in core and in systemctl.
get_unit_path() in systemctl becomes unnecessary.
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