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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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This is useful for debugging and feels pretty natural. For example
answering the question "is this big .journal file worth keeping?"
is made easier.
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AND term usually don't have many subterms (4 seems to be the maximum
sensible number, e.g. _BOOT_ID && _SYSTEMD_UNIT && _PID && MESSAGE_ID).
Nevertheless, the cost of checking each subterm can be relatively
high, especially when the nested terms are compound, and it
makes sense to minimize the number of checks.
Instead of looping to the end and then again over the whole list once
again after at least one term changed the offset, start the loop at
the term which caused the change. This way ½ terms in the AND match
are not checked unnecessarily again.
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This is the just the library part.
SD_JOURNAL_CURRENT_USER flags is added to sd_j_open(), to open
files from current user.
SD_JOURNAL_SYSTEM_ONLY is renamed to SD_JOURNAL_SYSTEM,
and changed to mean to (also) open system files. This way various
flags can be combined, which gives them nicer semantics, especially
if other ones are added later.
Backwards compatibility is kept, because SD_JOURNAL_SYSTEM_ONLY
is equivalent to SD_JOURNAL_SYSTEM if used alone, and before there
we no other flags.
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=65382
https://bugs.gentoo.org/472060?id=472060
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$ journalctl -o verbose _EXE=/quiet/binary -f
-- Logs begin at Sun 2013-03-17 17:28:22 EDT. --
Failed to get realtime timestamp: Cannot assign requested address
JOURNAL_FOREACH_DATA_RETVAL is added, which allows the caller
to get the return value from sd_journal_enumerate_data. I think
we might want to expose this macro like SD_JOURNAL_FOREACH_DATA,
but for now it is in journal-internal.h.
There's a change in behaviour for output_*, not only in
output_verbose, that errors in sd_j_enumerate_data are not silently
ignored anymore.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56459
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Without this you have to use %40 with the -H flag because dbus doesn't
like the @ sign being unescaped.
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[ 0.019862] fedora kernel: CPU0: Thermal monitoring enabled (TM1)
[ 0.019900] fedora kernel: Last level iTLB entries: 4KB 512, 2MB 0, 4MB 0
Last level dTLB entries: 4KB 512, 2MB 32, 4MB 32
tlb_flushall_shift: 5
[ 0.020118] fedora kernel: Freeing SMP alternatives: 24k freed
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This is a minor fix because it's not a major issue, this fix just avoid
to get EINVAL error from sigaction(2).
There are two signals can not handled at user space, SIGKILL and
SIGSTOP even we're PID 1, trying to handle these two signals will get
EINVAL error.
There are two kinds of systemd instance, running as system manager or
user session manager, apparently, the latter is a general user space
process which can not handle SIGKILL. The special pid 1 also can not
do that refer to kernel/signal.c:do_sigaction().
However, pid 1 is unkillable because the kernel did attach
SIGNAL_UNKILLABLE to it at system boot up, refer to
init/main.c:start_kernel()
--> rest_init()
--> kernel_thread()
--> kernel_init()
--> init_post()
current->signal->flags |= SIGNAL_UNKILLABLE
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Also reworded a few debug messages for brevity, and added a log
statement which prints out the filter at debug level:
Journal filter: (((UNIT=sys-module-configfs.device AND _PID=1) OR (COREDUMP_UNIT=sys-module-configfs.device AND MESSAGE_ID=fc2e22bc6ee647b6b90729ab34a250b1) OR _SYSTEMD_UNIT=sys-module-configfs.device) AND _BOOT_ID=4e3c518ab0474c12ac8de7896fe6b154)
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Before, one the unit file was deleted, install_context_for_removal()
would refuse to look for symlinks. But we can remove dangling symlinks
anyway.
In principle, package installation/deinstallation scripts should do
that before the unit is uninstalled, but they don't always do. Also,
a user might have added additional symlinks manually.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=62395
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--system is default anyway, and some poor user might type 9
characters without needing to.
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systemctl set-default NAME links the default.target to the given unit,
get-default prints out the path to the currently set default target.
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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.
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Patch resolves the problem that 'systemctl is-enabled' does
not work for templated units.
Without this patch, systemctl is-enabled something@abc.service
returned "No such file or directory", because it first checked
if /usr/lib/systemd/system/something@abc.service, etc. exists.
If systemctl is-enabled is called for templated units, this
check should be omitted and it should search for symlinks in
the .wants dirs right away.
This patch fixes the broken behaviour and resolves
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55318.
[zj: fixed the patch to still check for broken symlinks and
masked instances. Also removed untrue assumptions from
the patch description.]
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This is preparation to allow sd_bus_message obejcts to be processed in a
different thread from their originating sd_bus object.
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static hostname and if the static hostname is set, too
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=957814
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A new config file /etc/systemd/sleep.conf is added.
It is parsed by systemd-sleep and logind. The strings written
to /sys/power/disk and /sys/power/state can be configured.
This allows people to use different modes of suspend on
systems with broken or special hardware.
Configuration is shared between systemd-sleep and logind
to enable logind to answer the question "can the system be
put to sleep" as correctly as possible without actually
invoking the action. If the user configured systemd-sleep
to only use 'freeze', but current kernel does not support it,
logind will properly report that the system cannot be put
to sleep.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=57793
https://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git;a=commit;h=7e73c5ae6e7991a6c01f6d096ff8afaef4458c36
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2013-February/009238.html
SYSTEM_CONFIG_FILE and USER_CONFIG_FILE defines were removed
since they were used in only a few places and with the
addition of /etc/systemd/sleep.conf it becomes easier to just
append the name of each file to the dir name.
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The new function allows one to write to an already
open file.
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with a dot
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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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hexchar,unhexchar,octchar,unoctchar,decchar,undecchar are
all const functions.
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cg_get_machine_path is modified to include the escaped machine name
+ ".nspawn" if the machine argument is nonnull.
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Since it must be NULL terminated.
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normalized named hierarchies
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systemd:/system subtree
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Also, always accept both our simple hexdump syntax and UUID syntax.
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clang emits warnings about unused attribute _saved_errno_, which drown
out other—potentially useful—warnings. gcc documentation is not exactly
verbose about the effects of __attribute__((unused)) on variables, but
let's assume that it works if the unit test passes.
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It is imperative that open source code be well attributed.
Sprinkle attribute((alloc_size)) here and there, telling gcc
how much memory we are actually allocating.
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According to gcc documentation, returned pointer "cannot alias any
other pointer valid when the function returns" and "the memory has
undefined content". This second part is (hopefully) untrue for all
those functions.
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Partially revert 2b3c81b02fa5dd47b19558c7684e113f36a48486, which
tried to avoid inconsistent rules about when and how to create the
/dev/rtc symlink.
Instead of conditionally or not creating the /dev/rtc link at all,
now always create it with additional and more reliable udev rules.
First try to find the "system rtc" with the hctosys flag, if this
is not found, fall back to create the link for /dev/rtc0.
Our code now never actively searches for the "system rtc" it can
always use /dev/rtc.
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This adds some syntactic sugar with a macro RUN_WITH_LOCALE() that reset
the thread-specific locale temporarily.
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Disallow recursive .include, and make it unavailable in anything but
unit files.
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Let's better be safe than sorry.
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parse_env_file_internal()
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The export of the RTCs hctosys flag is uneccesary, the kernel takes care
of the persistemt clock management itself, without any need for:
CONFIG_RTC_HCTOSYS=y
CONFIG_RTC_HCTOSYS_DEVICE="rtc0"
"Chaotic hardware platforms" without native kernel persistent clock
support will find the proper RTC with the logic rtc_open() without
the need for a custom symlink.
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Freeing in error path is the common pattern with set_put().
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Session objects will now get the .session suffix, user objects the .user
suffix, nspawn containers the .nspawn suffix.
This also changes the user cgroups to be named after the numeric UID
rather than the username, since this allows us the parse these paths
standalone without requiring access to the cgroup file system.
This also changes the mapping of instanced units to cgroups. Instead of
mapping foo@bar.service to the cgroup path /user/foo@.service/bar we
will now map it to /user/foo@.service/foo@bar.service, in order to
ensure that all our objects are properly suffixed in the tree.
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As discussed with Dan Berrange it's a good idea to suffix all objects in
the cgroup tree with ".something", so that when the system is
partitioned using a resource management tool we can drop objects of
different types into the same partition directory without generate
namespace conflicts.
We'l add this to the Pax Control Group document as soon as write access
to the fdo wiki is restored.
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