Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Twelfth DNSSEC PR
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Fstab gen fix device timeout
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This adds a DNSSEC= setting to .network files, and makes resolved honour
them.
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networkd previously knew an enum "ResolveSupport" for configuring
per-interface LLMNR support, resolved had a similar enum just called
"Support", with the same value and similar pasers.
Unify this, call the enum ResolveSupport, and port both daemons to it.
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Previously, we'd not allow control characters to be embedded in domain
names, even when escaped. Since cloudflare uses \000 however to
implement its synthethic minimally covering NSEC RRs, we should allow
them, as long as they are properly escaped.
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All our other domain name handling functions make no destinction between
domain names that end in a dot plus a NUL, or those just ending in a
NUL. Make sure dns_name_compare_func() and dns_label_unescape_suffix()
do the same.
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Be stricter when searching suitable NSEC3 RRs for proof: generalize the
check we use to find suitable NSEC3 RRs, in nsec3_is_good(), and add
additional checks, such as checking whether all NSEC3 RRs use the same
parameters, have the same suffix and so on.
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Note that this is still not complete, one additional step is still
missing: when we verified that a wildcard RRset is properly signed, we
still need to do an NSEC/NSEC3 proof that no more specific RRset exists.
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Journal decompression fixes
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parse_field() checks if the field has the expected format, and returns
0 if it doesn't. In that case, value and size are not
set. Nevertheless, we would try to continue, and hit an assert in
safe_atou64. This case shouldn't happen, unless sd_j_get_data is borked,
so cleanly assert that we got the expected field.
Also, oom is the only way that parse_field can fail, which we log
already. Instead of outputting a debug statement and carrying on,
treat oom as fatal.
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JobTimeoutSec
There was no need for such conversion and it was actually wrong since
any device timeout less than a second was converted into 0 which means
waits forever.
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The current code is not compatible with current dkr protocols anyway,
and dkr has a different focus ("microservices") than nspawn anyway
("whole machine containers"), hence drop support for it, we cannot
reasonably keep this up to date, and it creates the impression we'd
actually care for the microservices usecase.
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Expose soft limits on the bus
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The next step of a general cleanup of our includes. This one mostly
adds missing includes but there are a few removals as well.
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This adds most basic operation for doing DNSSEC validation on the
client side. However, it does not actually add the verification logic to
the resolver. Specifically, this patch only includes:
- Verifying DNSKEY RRs against a DS RRs
- Verifying RRSets against a combination of RRSIG and DNSKEY RRs
- Matching up RRSIG RRs and DNSKEY RRs
- Matching up RR keys and RRSIG RRs
- Calculating the DNSSEC key tag from a DNSKEY RR
All currently used DNSSEC combinations of SHA and RSA are implemented. Support
for MD5 hashing and DSA or EC cyphers are not. MD5 and DSA are probably
obsolete, and shouldn't be added. EC should probably be added
eventually, if it actually is deployed on the Internet.
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canonical names
We'll need this later when putting together RR serializations to
checksum.
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This is a follow-up for https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/1994
See https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/1994#issuecomment-160087219
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Some calls used ENOBUFS to indicate too-short result buffers, others
used ENOSPC. Let's unify this on ENOBUFS.
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Let's better be safe than sorry.
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domain
The root domain consists of zero labels, and we should be able to encode
that.
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Make sure dns_name_normalize(), dns_name_concat(), dns_name_is_valid()
do not accept/generate invalidly long hostnames, i.e. longer than 253
characters.
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Labels of zero length are not OK, refuse them early on. The concept of a
"zero-length label" doesn't exist, a zero-length full domain name
however does (representing the root domain). See RFC 2181, Section 11.
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Two unrelated fixes
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journal: clean up permission setting and acl adjustements on user journals
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When we have non-owner user or group entries, we need the mask
for the acl to be valid. But acl_calc_mask() calculates the mask
to include all permissions, even those that were masked before.
Apparently this happens when we inherit *:r-x permissions from
a parent directory — the kernel sets *:r-x, mask:r--, effectively
masking the executable bit. acl_calc_mask() would set the mask:r-x,
effectively enabling the bit. To avoid this, be more conservative when
to add the mask entry: first iterate over all entries, and do nothing
if a mask.
This returns the code closer to J.A.Steffens' original version
in v204-90-g23ad4dd884.
Should fix https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/1977.
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Most of the function is moved to acl-util.c to make it possible to
add tests in subsequent commit.
Setting of the mode in server_fix_perms is removed:
- we either just created the file ourselves, and the permission be better right,
- or the file was already there, and we should not modify the permissions.
server_fix_perms is renamed to server_fix_acls to better reflect new
meaning, and made static because it is only used in one file.
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Let's distuingish the cases where our code takes an active role in
selinux management, or just passively reports whatever selinux
properties are set.
mac_selinux_have() now checks whether selinux is around for the passive
stuff, and mac_selinux_use() for the active stuff. The latter checks the
former, plus also checks UID == 0, under the assumption that only when
we run priviliged selinux management really makes sense.
Fixes: #1941
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The header file defines some helpers for GLIBC NSS and doesn't include
anything else but glibc headers, hence there's little reason to keep it
in shared/.
See: #2008
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GLIB has recently started to officially support the gcc cleanup
attribute in its public API, hence let's do the same for our APIs.
With this patch we'll define an xyz_unrefp() call for each public
xyz_unref() call, to make it easy to use inside a
__attribute__((cleanup())) expression. Then, all code is ported over to
make use of this.
The new calls are also documented in the man pages, with examples how to
use them (well, I only added docs where the _unref() call itself already
had docs, and the examples, only cover sd_bus_unrefp() and
sd_event_unrefp()).
This also renames sd_lldp_free() to sd_lldp_unref(), since that's how we
tend to call our destructors these days.
Note that this defines no public macro that wraps gcc's attribute and
makes it easier to use. While I think it's our duty in the library to
make our stuff easy to use, I figure it's not our duty to make gcc's own
features easy to use on its own. Most likely, client code which wants to
make use of this should define its own:
#define _cleanup_(function) __attribute__((cleanup(function)))
Or similar, to make the gcc feature easier to use.
Making this logic public has the benefit that we can remove three header
files whose only purpose was to define these functions internally.
See #2008.
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core: rename Random* to RandomizedDelay*
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The name RandomSec is too generic: "Sec" just specifies the default
unit type, and "Random" by itself is not enough. Rename to something
that should give the user general idea what the setting does without
looking at documentation.
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The new dns_label_escape() call now operates on a buffer passed in,
similar to dns_label_unescape(). This should make decoding a bit faster,
and nicer.
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For similar reasons as dns_name_is_root() got changed in the previous
commit.
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Let's change the return value to bool. If we encounter an error while
parsing, return "false" instead of the actual parsing error, after all
the specified hostname does not qualify for what the function is
supposed to test.
Dealing with the additional error codes was always cumbersome, and
easily misused, like for example in the DHCP code.
Let's also rename the functions from dns_name_root() to
dns_name_is_root(), to indicate that this function checks something and
returns a bool. Similar for dns_name_is_signal_label().
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Most servers apparently always implicitly convert DNAME to CNAME, but
some servers don't, hence implement this properly, as this is required
by edns0.
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This adds dns_service_join() and dns_service_split() which may be used
to concatenate a DNS-SD service name, am SRV service type string, and a
domain name into a full resolvable DNS domain name string. If the
service name is specified as NULL, only the type and domain are
appended, to implement classic, non-DNS-SD SRV lookups.
The reverse is dns_service_split() which takes the full name, and split
it into the three components again.
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tree-wide: sort includes in *.h
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libsystemd-network: add support for "Client FQDN" DHCP option (v2)
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This is a continuation of the previous include sort patch, which
only sorted for .c files.
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This allows configuration of a random time on top of the elapse events,
in order to spread time events in a network evenly across a range.
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The function converts a domain name string to the wire format
described in RFC 1035 Section 3.1.
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Sort the includes accoding to the new coding style.
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