Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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The rules governing %s where just too complicated. First of
all, looking at $SHELL is dangerous. For systemd --system,
it usually wouldn't be set. But it could be set if the admin
first started a debug shell, let's say /sbin/sash, and then
launched systemd from it. This shouldn't influence how daemons
are started later on, so is better ignored. Similar reasoning
holds for session mode. Some shells set $SHELL, while other
set it only when it wasn't set previously (e.g. zsh). This
results in fragility that is better avoided by ignoring $SHELL
totally.
With $SHELL out of the way, simplify things by saying that
%s==/bin/sh for root, and the configured shell otherwise.
get_shell() is the only caller, so it can be inlined.
Fixes one issue seen with 'make check'.
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When running without a user session, tests fail.
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False positives pop up otherwise.
FAIL: test-unit-name (exit: 134)
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Failed to open /dev/tty0: Permission denied
Failed to create root cgroup hierarchy: Permission denied
Assertion 'manager_new(SYSTEMD_SYSTEM, &m) == 0' failed at src/test/test-unit-name.c:125, function test_unit_printf(). Aborting.
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https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=855863
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unit names
This makes sure that
systemctl status /home
is implicitly translated to:
systemctl status /home.mount
Similar, /dev/foobar becomes dev-foobar.device.
Also, all characters that cannot be part of a unit name are implicitly
escaped.
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