Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Since the invention of read-only memory, write-only memory has been
considered deprecated. Where appropriate, either make use of the
value, or avoid writing it, to make it clear that it is not used.
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Triggered false negatives when encoding a string which needed every
character to be escaped, e.g. "LABEL=/".
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Instead of fixing the hashmap bucket array to 127 entries dynamically
size it, starting with a smaller one of 31. As soon as a fill level of
75% is reached, quadruple the size, and so on.
This should siginficantly optimize the lookup time in large tables
(from O(n) back to O(1)), and save memory on smaller tables (which most
are).
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=69887
Based-on-a-patch-by: Hans Petter Jansson <hpj@copyleft.no>
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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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Prefer firmware-provided performance data over loader-exported ones; if
ACPI data is available, always use it, otherwise try to read the loader
data.
The firmware-provided variables start at the time the first EFI image
is executed and end when the operating system exits the boot services;
the (loader) time calculated in systemd-analyze increases.
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In the process, rename udev_encode_string which is poorly named for what
it does. It deals specifically with encoding names that udev creates and
has its own rules: utf8 is valid but some ascii is not (e.g. path
separators), and everything else is simply escaped. Rename it to
encode_devnode_name.
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This unifies the utf8 handling code which was previously duplicated in
udev and systemd.
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Without a call to log_parse_environment(), things
like SYSTEMD_LOG_LEVEL do not work.
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Resolves a longstanding bug which caused this function to wrongly
handle (escape) valid utf8 characters.
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There's now some more obvious overlap amongst the two utf8 validation
functions, but no more than there already was previously.
This also adds some menial tests for anyone who wants to do more
merging of these two in the future.
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Previously the specifier calls could only indicate OOM by returning
NULL. With this change they will return negative errno-style error codes
like everything else.
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Travis tests are failing, probably because /proc/meminfo is not available
in the test environment. The same might be true in some virtualized systems,
so just treat missing /proc/meminfo as a sign that hibernation is not
possible.
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Condition that is checked is taken from upower:
active(anon) < free swap * 0.98
This is really stupid, because the kernel knows the situation better,
e.g. there could be two swap files, and then hibernation would be
impossible despite passing this check, or the kernel could start
supporting compressed swap and/or compressed hibernation images, and
then this this check would be too stringent. Nevertheless, until
we have something better, this should at least return a true negative
if there's no swap.
Logging of capabilities in the journal is changed to not strip leading
zeros. I consider this more readable anyway.
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/upower/tree/src/up-daemon.c#n613
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1007059
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bash allows them, and so should we.
string_has_cc is changed to allow tabs, and if they are not wanted,
they must be now checked for explicitly. There are two other callers,
apart from the env file loaders, and one already checked anyway, and
the other is changed to check.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68592
https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=481554
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Spaces, quotes, and such, were not properly escaped. We should
write them like we read them.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67971
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* Introduce a macro to conditionally execute tests. This avoids
skipping the entire test if some parts require systemd
* Skip the journal tests when no /etc/machine-id is present
* Change test-catalog to load the catalog from the source directory
of systemd.
* /proc/PID/comm got introduced in v2.6.33 but travis is still
using v2.6.32.
* Enable make check and make distcheck on the travis build
* Use -D"CATALOG_DIR=STR($(abs_top_srcdir)/catalog)" as a STRINGIY
would result in the path '/home/ich/source/linux' to be expanded
to '/home/ich/source/1' as linux is defined to 1.
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Existing --pretty, --transient, --static options, used previously
for 'set-hostname' verb, are reused for the 'status' verb. If one
of them is given, only the specified hostname is printed. This
way there's no need to employ awk to get the hostname in a script.
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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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Jan: test-tables fails on my system. The one it's failing on is:
syscall: 222 → (null) → -1
... and indeed, our own tables should not have holes, but syscall
tables certainly might.
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Previously for an instantiated unit foo@bar.service we created a cgroup
foo@.service/foo@bar.service, in order to place all instances of the
same template inside the same subtree. As we now implicitly add all
instantiated units into one per-template slice we don't need this
complexity anymore, and instance units can map directly to the cgroups
of their full name.
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The tests check if the tables have entries for all values
in the enum, and that the entries are unique.
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Replace the very generic cgroup hookup with a much simpler one. With
this change only the high-level cgroup settings remain, the ability to
set arbitrary cgroup attributes is removed, so is support for adding
units to arbitrary cgroup controllers or setting arbitrary paths for
them (especially paths that are different for the various controllers).
This also introduces a new -.slice root slice, that is the parent of
system.slice and friends. This enables easy admin configuration of
root-level cgrouo properties.
This replaces DeviceDeny= by DevicePolicy=, and implicitly adds in
/dev/null, /dev/zero and friends if DeviceAllow= is used (unless this is
turned off by DevicePolicy=).
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- This changes all logind cgroup objects to use slice objects rather
than fixed croup locations.
- logind can now collect minimal information about running
VMs/containers. As fixed cgroup locations can no longer be used we
need an entity that keeps track of machine cgroups in whatever slice
they might be located. Since logind already keeps track of users,
sessions and seats this is a trivial addition.
- nspawn will now register with logind and pass various bits of metadata
along. A new option "--slice=" has been added to place the container
in a specific slice.
- loginctl gained commands to list, introspect and terminate machines.
- user.slice and machine.slice will now be pulled in by logind.service,
since only logind.service requires this slice.
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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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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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