Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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When parsing words from input files, optionally automatically unescape
the passed strings, controllable via a new flags parameter.
Make use of this in tmpfiles, and port everything else over, too.
This improves parsing quite a bit, since we no longer have to process the
same string multiple times with different calls, where an earlier call
might corrupt the input for a later call.
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This allows set_action(), read_uevent_file() and read_db() to be made internal to libudev.
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... and make path_equal() a simple wrapper around it.
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The error code is called EDEADLK, stop using legacy names like EDEADLOCK.
Note that _some_ weird architectures define them differently (namely, mips
and sparc), but on all sane architectures they're exactly the same. So
stay with the widely used code, which is EDEADLK.
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gcc5 spits out a warning about test-hashmap.c:
CC src/test/test-hashmap.o
src/test/test-hashmap.c: In function ‘test_string_compare_func’:
src/test/test-hashmap.c:76:79: warning: logical not is only applied to the left hand side of comparison [-Wlogical-not-parentheses]
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This patch removes includes that are not used. The removals were found with
include-what-you-use which checks if any of the symbols from a header is
in use.
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It ran either skip_session() or skip_user_manager(), then ran skip_slices()
iff skip_session() ran. It needs to run skip_slices() in either case.
Included is a test case demonstrating why.
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After all it is now much more like strjoin() than strappend(). At the
same time, add support for NULL sentinels, even if they are normally not
necessary.
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and start of list
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Otherwise they can be optimized away with -DNDEBUG
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Types used for pids and uids in various interfaces are unpredictable.
Too bad.
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This reverts commit 68e68ca8106e7cd874682ae425843b48579c6539. We *need*
root access to create cgroups. The only exception is if it is run from
within a cgroup with "Delegate=yes". However, this is not always true and
we really shouldn't rely on this.
If your terminal runs from within a systemd --user instance, you're fine.
Everyone else is not (like running from ssh, VTs, and so on..).
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We can properly run the tests without being root
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Only 5 tests cannot be executed if we are not root, so just skip them
but not the whole set.
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Check string ops hashmap_put() for keys with a different pointer but the same
value.
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rules, using libiptc
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cunescape_length_with_prefix() is called with the length as an
argument, so it cannot rely on the buffer being NUL terminated.
Move the length check before accessing the memory.
When an incomplete escape sequence was given at the end of the
buffer, c_l_w_p() would read past the end of the buffer. Fix this
and add a test.
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With a command line like "@/something" we would allocate an array with
0 elements. Avoid that, and add a test too.
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Fixes an error introduced by me when the test was added.
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We would ignore options like "fail" and "auto", and for any option
which takes a value the first assignment would win. Repeated and
options equivalent to the default are rarely used, but they have been
documented forever, and people might use them. Especially on the
kernel command line it is easier to append a repeated or negated
option at the end.
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This fixes parsing of options in shared/generator.c. Existing code
had some issues:
- it would treate whitespace and semicolons as seperators. fstab(5)
is pretty clear that only commas matter. And the syntax does
not allow for spaces to be inserted in the field in fstab.
Whitespace might be escaped, but then it should not seperate
options. Treat whitespace and semicolons as any other character.
- it assumed that x-systemd.device-timeout would always be followed
by "=". But this is not guaranteed, hasmntopt will return this
option even if there's no value. Uninitialized memory could be read.
- some error paths would log, and inconsistently, some would just
return an error code.
Filtering is split out to a separate function and tests are added.
Similar code paths in other places are adjusted to use the new function.
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Sometimes it is necessary to stop a generator from running. Either
because of a bug, or for testing, or some other reason. The only way
to do that would be to rename or chmod the generator binary, which is
inconvenient and does not survive upgrades. Allow masking and
overriding generators similarly to units and other configuration
files.
For the systemd instance, masking would be more common, rather than
overriding generators. For the user instances, it may also be useful
for users to have generators in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME to augment or
override system-wide generators.
Directories are searched according to the usual scheme (/usr/lib,
/usr/local/lib, /run, /etc), and files with the same name in higher
priority directories override files with the same name in lower
priority directories. Empty files and links to /dev/null mask a given
name.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=87230
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Remove the optional sepearate opening of the directory,
it would be just too complicated with the change to
multiple directories.
Move the middle of execute_directory() to a seperate
function to make it easier to grok.
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Even though we use fallocate() it appears that file systems like btrfs
will trigger SIGBUS on certain low-disk-space situation. We should
handle that, hence catch the signal, add it to a list of invalidated
pages, and replace the page with an empty memory area. After each write
check if SIGBUS was triggered, and consider the write invalid if it was.
This should make journald a lot more robust with file systems where
fallocate() is not reliable, for example all CoW file systems
(btrfs...), where changing written data can fail with disk full errors.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1045810
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https://github.com/vlajos/misspell_fixer
https://github.com/torstehu/systemd/commit/b6fdeb618cf2f3ce1645b3315f15f482710c7ffa
Thanks to Torstein Husebo <torstein@huseboe.net>.
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This macro calculates A / B but rounds up instead of down. We explicitly
do *NOT* use:
(A + B - 1) / A
as it suffers from an integer overflow, even though the passed values are
properly tested against overflow. Our test-cases show this behavior.
Instead, we use:
A / B + !!(A % B)
Note that on "Real CPUs" this does *NOT* result in two divisions. Instead,
instructions like idivl@x86 provide both, the quotient and the remainder.
Therefore, both algorithms should perform equally well (I didn't verify
this, though).
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This file was introduced with linux-3.2, use it instead of probing for it
via prctl(PR_CAPBSET_READ).
For now, keep the old code for backwards compat. We can drop it once 3.2
is our lowest requirement.
The test-cap-list code is extended to verify cap_last_cap() is the same as
we'd get via prctl probing and /proc.
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In test_raw_clone, make sure the cloned thread calls _exit() and in the parent
thread call waitpid(..., __WCLONE) to wait for the child thread to terminate,
otherwise there is a race condition where the child thread will log to the
console after the test process has already exited and the assertion from the
child thread might not be enforced.
The absence of this patch might also create problems for other tests that would
be added after this one, since potentially both parent and child would run
those tests as the child would continue running.
Tested by confirming that the logs from the child are printed before the test
terminates and that a false assertion in the child aborts the test with a core
dump.
[zj: also add check for the return value.]
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The asserts used in the tests should never be allowed to be optimized away.
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