Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
|
|
Also add shell completions.
|
|
This tool applies hardware specific settings to network devices before they
are announced via libudev.
Settings that will probably eventually be supported are MTU, Speed,
DuplexMode, WakeOnLan, MACAddress, MACAddressPolicy (e.g., 'hardware',
'synthetic' or 'random'), Name and NamePolicy (replacing our current
interface naming logic). This patch only introduces support for
Description, as a proof of concept.
Some of these settings may later be overriden by a network management
daemon/script. However, these tools should always listen and wait on libudev
before touching a device (listening on netlink is not enough). This is no
different from how things used to be, as we always supported changing the
network interface name from udev rules, which does not work if someone
has already started using it.
The tool is configured by .link files in /etc/net/links/ (with the usual
overriding logic in /run and /lib). The first (in lexicographical order)
matching .link file is applied to a given device, and all others are ignored.
The .link files contain a [Match] section with (currently) the keys
MACAddress, Driver, Type (see DEVTYPE in udevadm info) and Path (this
matches on the stable device path as exposed as ID_PATH, and not the
unstable DEVPATH). A .link file matches a given device if all of the
specified keys do. Currently the keys are treated as plain strings,
but some limited globbing may later be added to the keys where it
makes sense.
Example:
/etc/net/links/50-wireless.link
[Match]
MACAddress=98:f2:e4:42:c6:92
Path=pci-0000:02:00.0-bcma-0
Type=wlan
[Link]
Description=The wireless link
|
|
Always use our own macros, and name all our own macros the same style.
|
|
|
|
Based on a patch by Kay Sievers.
A tag is exported at boot as a symlinks to the device node in the folder
/run/udev/static_node-tags/<tagname>/, if the device node exists.
These tags are cleaned up by udevadm info --cleanup-db, but are otherwise
never removed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
gcc (and other compilers) sometimes generate spurious warnings, and
thus users of public headers must be able to disable warnings.
Printf format attributes can be disabled by setting
#define _sd_printf_attr_
before including the header file.
Also, add similar logic for sentinel attribute:
#define _sd_sentinel_attr_
before including the header file disables the attribute.
|
|
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=62864
|
|
Distros that whish to support old kernels should set
--with-firmware-dirs="/usr/lib/firmware/updates:/usr/lib/firmware"
to retain the old behaviour.
|
|
|
|
|
|
kmod is unecessary if loadable module support is disabled in the kernel,
so make the dependency optional.
|
|
I'm building systemd for an embedded system and we would prefer not having
to include the entire util-linux package just to get a libblkid whose
functionality we don't need.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
error
|
|
|
|
All "btrfs" file systems will be registered with the kernel when they
show up.
Incomplete multi-device volumes will set SYSTEMD_READY=0, to prevent
access until the volume is complete and fully registered.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|