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If two instances of test-fileio were run in parallel,
they could fail when trying to write the same file.
This predictable name in /tmp/ wasn't actually a security
issue, because write_env_file would not follow symlinks,
so this could be an issue only when running tests in
parallel.
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In case of scripts, _EXE is set to the interpreter name, and
_COMM is set based on the file name. Add a match for _COMM,
and _EXE if the interpreter is not a link (e.g. for yum,
the interpreter is /usr/bin/python, but it is a link to
/usr/bin/python2, which in turn is a link to /usr/bin/python2.7,
at least on Fedora, so we end up with _EXE=/usr/bin/python2.7).
I don't think that such link chasing makes sense, because
the final _EXE name is more likely to change.
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systemd does not want to understand comments after the first
non-whitespace char occured.
key=foo #comment will result into key == "foo #comment"
key="foo" #comment will result into key == "foo#comment"
"key= #comment" will result into key == "#comment"
"key #comment" is an invalid line
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Because "export key=val" is not supported by systemd, an error is logged
where the invalid assignment is coming from.
Introduce strv_env_clean_log() to log invalid environment assignments,
where logging is possible and allowed.
parse_env_file_internal() is modified to allow WHITESPACE in keys, to
report the issues later on.
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parse_env_file_internal() could not parse the following lines correctly:
export key="val"
key="val"#comment
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This will properly escape all weird chars when writing env var files.
With this in place we can now read and write environment files where the
values contain arbitrary weird chars.
This enables hostnamed and suchlike to finally properly save pretty host
names with backlashes or quotes in them.
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Implement this with a proper state machine, so that newlines and
escaped chars can appear in string assignments. This should bring the
parser much closer to shell.
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