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This way we can use it on non-const strings, and don't end up with a
const'ified result.
This is similar to libc's strstr() which also takes a const string but
returns a non-const one.
Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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This way we can use it on non-const strings, and don't end up with a
const'ified result.
This is similar to libc's strstr() which also takes a const string but
returns a non-const one.
Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
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The structure of the source tree is basically correct and this is
about as far as we can go without hacking at the C code.
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This commit is a first attempt to isolate the udev code from the
remaining code base. It intentionally does not modify any files
but purely delete files which, on a first examination, appear to
not be needed. This is a sweeping commit which may easily have
missed needed code. Files can be retrieved by doing a checkout
from the previous commit:
git checkout 2944f347d0 -- <filename>
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The warning was invalid, but distracting.
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Draw trees more similar to pstree/findmnt/lsblk/...
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This reduces the number of roundtrips when the client is privileged and
makes the PK dep optional for root clients.
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This was never intended to be pushed.
This reverts commit aea54018a5e66a41318afb6c6be745b6aef48d9e.
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Since we already allow defining the mode of AF_UNIX sockets and FIFO, it
makes sense to also allow specific user/group ownership of the socket
file for restricting access.
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When printing cgroup and sysfs hierarchies, avoid using UTF-8 box drawing
characters if the locale is not UTF-8.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=871153
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journalctl and vconsole-setup both implement utf8 locale detection.
Let's have a common function for it.
The next patch will add another use.
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https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=858799
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The behaviour of the common name##_from_string conversion is surprising.
It accepts not only the strings from name##_table but also any number
that falls within the range of the table. The order of items in most of
our tables is an internal affair. It should not be visible to the user.
I know of a case where the surprising numeric conversion leads to a crash.
We will allow the direct numeric conversion only for the tables where the
mapping of strings to numeric values has an external meaning. This holds
for the following lookup tables:
- netlink_family, ioprio_class, ip_tos, sched_policy - their numeric
values are stable as they are defined by the Linux kernel interface.
- log_level, log_facility_unshifted - the well-known syslog interface.
We allow the user to use numeric values whose string names systemd does
not know. For instance, the user may want to test a new kernel featuring
a scheduling policy that did not exist when his systemd version was
released. A slightly unpleasant effect of this is that the
name##_to_string conversion cannot return pointers to constant strings
anymore. The strings have to be allocated on demand and freed by the
caller.
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strtol() and friends may set EINVAL if no conversion was performed, but
they are not required to do so. In practice they don't. We need to check
for it.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=870577
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commit 49371bb fixed the observed division by zero, but missed another
occurrence of the same bug. It was also not the optimal fix. We can
simply make the divisor a constant by swapping it with the compared
value.
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In early userspace, if kernel initialization happens extremely quickly,
a call to systemd-timestamp can potentially result in division by zero.
Ensure that the check in timespec_load, which only makes sense if tv_sec
is greater than zero, is guarded by this condition.
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to recheck the journal manually for changes in regular intervals
Network file systems generally do not offer inotify() that would work
across the network. We hence cannot rely on inotify() exclusiely in
those case. Provide an API to determine these cases, and suggest doing
manual regular rechecks.
Note that this is not complete yet, as we need to rescan journal dirs on
network file systems explicitly to find new/removed files
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When traversing entry array chains for a bisection or for retrieving an
item by index we previously always started at the beginning of the
chain. Since we tend to look at the same chains repeatedly, let's cache
where we have been the last time, and maybe we can skip ahead with this
the next time.
This turns most bisections and index lookups from O(log(n)*log(n)) into
O(log(n)). More importantly however, we seek around on disk much less,
which is good to reduce buffer cache and seek times on rotational disks.
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This now matches the JSON serialization spec from:
http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/json
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