Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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There are more than enough to deserve their own .c file, hence move them
over.
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string-util.[ch]
There are more than enough calls doing string manipulations to deserve
its own files, hence do something about it.
This patch also sorts the #include blocks of all files that needed to be
updated, according to the sorting suggestions from CODING_STYLE. Since
pretty much every file needs our string manipulation functions this
effectively means that most files have sorted #include blocks now.
Also touches a few unrelated include files.
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Modernize the code a bit:
- Get rid of FOREACH_WORD_SEPARATOR() loop in favour of a
extract_first_word() loop.
- Remove find_binary()'s "local" flag. It's not reasonably possible to
look for binaries on remote systems, we hence should not pretend we
could.
- When we cannot find a suitable binary, return the last error returned
from access() rather than ENOENT unconditionally.
- Rework fsck_exists() and mkfs_exists() to return 1 on success, 0 if
the implementation is missing and negative on real errors. This is
more like we do it in other functions.
- Make sure we also detect direct fsck symlinks to "true", rather than
just absolute ones to /bin/true.
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When we have a structure like this:
/bin -> /usr/bin
/usr is a mount point
Then path_is_mount_point("/bin", AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW) needs to look at the pair
/usr/bin and /usr, not at the pair / and /usr/bin, as the latter have different
mount IDs. But we only want to consider the base name, not any parent.
Thus we have to resolve the given path first to get the real parent when
allowing symlinks.
Bug: https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/61
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This makes path_is_mount_point() consistent with fd_is_mount_point() wrt.
flags.
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Commits 27cc6f166 and f25afeb broke path_is_mount_point() for files (such as
/etc/machine-id → /run/machine-id bind mounts) as with the factorization of
fd_is_mount_point() we lost the parent directory. We cannot determine that from
an fd only as openat(fd, "..") only works for directory fds.
Change fd_is_mount_point() to behave like openat(): It now takes a file
descriptor of the containing directory, a file name in it, and flags (which can
be 0 or AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW). Unlike name_to_handle_at() or openat(), fstatat()
only accepts the inverse flag AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW and complains with EINVAL
about AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW; so we need to transform the flags for that fallback.
Adjust rm_rf_children() accordingly (only other caller of fd_is_mount_point()
aside from path_is_mount_point()).
Add test cases for files, links, and file bind mounts (the latter will only
work when running as root). Split out a new test_path_is_mount_point() test
case function as it got significantly larger now.
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So far a number of utilities implemented their own calls for this, unify
them in prefix_root() and prefix_roota(). The former uses heap memory,
the latter allocates from the stack via alloca().
Port over most users of a --root= logic.
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test for mount points
It's a very recent kernel addition, but certainly makes sense to
support.
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- Move to its own file rm-rf.c
- Change parameters into a single flags parameter
- Remove "honour sticky" logic, it's unused these days
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... and make path_equal() a simple wrapper around it.
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The check for existing unit files and dropins is unified.
path_join() is updated to not insert duplicate separators.
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systemd-run would fail when run with -M or -H and an absolute path,
if this path did not exists locally. Allow it to continue, since we
don't have a nice way of checking if the binary exists remotely.
The case where -M or -H is used and a local path is unchanged, and we
still iterate over $PATH to find the binary. We need to convert to an
absolute path, and we don't have a nice mechanism to check remotely,
so we assume that the binary will be located in the same place locally
and remotely.
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2014-November/025418.html
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Found with coverity. Fixes CID#1237754 and #1237790
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Otherwise they get optimized out when CPPFLAGS='-DNDEBUG' is used, and that
causes the tests to fail.
Tested:
- make check TESTS='test-path-util' CPPFLAGS='-DNDEBUG'
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test-path-utils attempts to find itself, but if the binary is not
in current directory, the test would fail.
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In contrast to a filename-only argument, find_binary() did not
actually check if an path exists, allowing the code to fail later on.
This was OK, but it seems nicer to treat both paths identically.
Also take advantage of path_make_absolute_cwd doing strdup() by itself
if necessary to simplify.
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Modifies find_binary() to accept NULL in the second argument.
fsck.type lookup logic moved to new fsck_exists() function, with a test.
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The only problem is that libgen.h #defines basename to point to it's
own broken implementation instead of the GNU one. This can be fixed
by #undefining basename.
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Also add PATH_FOREACH_PREFIX_MORE which includes the specified dir
itself in the iteration
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Syntactic sugar in a macro PATH_FOREACH_PREFIX.
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