Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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They're not used outside manager.c anymore.
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unit_status_printf() checks the state of the manager, not of the unit
as such. Move it to manager.c and rename it to manager_status_printf().
Temporarily keep unit_status_printf as a wrapper macro.
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This introduces a new static list of known attributes and their special
semantics. This means that cgroup attribute values can now be
automatically translated from user to kernel notation for command line
set settings, too.
This also adds proper support for multi-line attributes.
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This reverts commit 4a01181e460686d8b4a543b1dfa7f77c9e3c5ab8.
This patch broke LOG_TARGET_AUTO, i.e. automatic selection of STDERR if
it is a TTY with a fallback on the journal and kmsg otherwise.
The general rule should probably be:
log_open() -- open the "best" possible logging channel according to
log_target configuration.
log_dispatch() -- don't open any log channels ever, with the exception
of kmsg since that has no drawbacks. And do this only on true errors of
the better log channel, not just when it wasn't opened.
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Logs written by journald from the initramfs may be written to a
directory with the name created from a random machine-id. Afterwards,
when the root filesystem has been mounted and machine-id reinitalized,
logs will be written to the directory with a name created from the
proper machine-id. When logs are flushed to /var/log/journal,
everything is copied to one output directory.
When journalctl without '-m' is run after the logs have been flushed
to /var/log/journal, all messages are shown. However, when run while
logs are still in /run/log/journal, those stored under the random
machine-id will not be shown.
Make journalctl behave the same regardless whether persistent storage
has been enabled or not, and slurp all files from /run/log/journal
even without '-m'.
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undecchar tests
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The wildcard matching the default loader entry should always be able to point to
the same machine.
So instead of sorting by <distribution>-<kernel-version>-<machine-id>
we better sort by <machine-id>-<kernel-version>.
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For the loader entry a relative path has to be used.
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Add asserts on the resutls in FOREACH_WORD_QUOTED
Added tests for:
FOREACH_WORD
strstrip
delete_chars
in_charset
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This reverts commit cb96a2c69a312fb089fef4501650f4fc40a1420b.
It is not a mistake to pass args when -b is specified. They will simply
be passed on to the container's init.
The manpage needs fixing, that's true.
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=58946
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Should be no functional change.
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Occasionally people report problem with reboot/poweroff operations hanging in
the middle. One known cause is when a new transaction to start a unit is
enqueued while the shutdown is going on. The start of the unit conflicts with
the shutdown jobs, so they get cancelled. The failure case can be quite unpleasant,
becase getty and sshd may already be stopped.
Fix it by using irreversible jobs for shutdown (reboot/poweroff/...) actions.
This applies to commands like "reboot", "telinit 6", "systemctl reboot". Should
someone desire to use reversible jobs, they can say "systemctl start reboot.target".`
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Add a new job mode: replace-irreversibly. Jobs enqueued using this mode
cannot be implicitly canceled by later enqueued conflicting jobs.
They can however still be canceled with an explicit "systemctl cancel"
call.
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"systemctl default" should behave identically to "telinit N" (where N is the
corresponding runlevel target number), therefore it should use isolate job mode
too.
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Documentation states that 0 is correct, and all other
similar functions return 0 on success.
Pointed-out-by: Steven Hiscocks <steven-systemd@hiscocks.me.uk>
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Use /sysroot instead of /new_root to mount the real root in the
initramfs.
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tests for:
test_parse_pid
test_parse_uid
test_safe_atolli
test_safe_atod
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cleanup
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New OOM check patch:
I do assert_se() before variable is used to do correct check.
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On Thu, Feb 7, 2013 at 3:52 PM, Robert Milasan <rmilasan@suse.com> wrote:
> Hi, seems that using some strange usb devices with really bogus serial
> numbers usb_id creates links with junk strings in it:
>
> /dev/disk/by-id/usb-TSSTcorp_BDDVDW_SE-506AB_㡒䍌䜶䉗ぁㄴ㌴†ँ-0:0
>
> Initially was believed that usb_id is to blame, then the kernel, but it
> turns out that really the usb cd/dvd drive has this bogus serial number:
>
> output from dmesg:
> [ 538.200160] usb 1-2: new high-speed USB device number 5 using
> ehci_hcd [ 538.335067] usb 1-2: New USB device found, idVendor=0e8d,
> idProduct=1956 [ 538.335080] usb 1-2: New USB device strings: Mfr=1,
> Product=2, SerialNumber=3 [ 538.335089] usb 1-2: Product: MT1956
> [ 538.335097] usb 1-2: Manufacturer: MediaTek Inc
> [ 538.335105] usb 1-2: SerialNumber:
> \xffffffe3\xffffffa1\xffffff92\xffffffe4\xffffff8d\xffffff8c ...
> [ 538.337540] scsi6 : usb-storage 1-2:1.0 [ 539.341385] scsi 6:0:0:0:
> CD-ROM TSSTcorp BDDVDW SE-506AB TS00 PQ: 0 ANSI: 0
> [ 539.354240] sr0: scsi3-mmc drive: 0x/24x writer dvd-ram cd/rw
> xa/form2 cdda tray [ 539.354777] sr 6:0:0:0: Attached scsi CD-ROM sr0
> [ 539.355122] sr 6:0:0:0: Attached scsi generic sg2 type 5
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Turning off filtering with --filter is just too confusing.
Config option "Filter" doesn't have to be changed, here
"Filter=yes" already meant to filter.
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This makes 'status' behave like 'list-units':
systemctl status -> status of all units
systemctl -t error status -> status of error units
systemctl -t mount status -> etc.
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It is not really necessary to have a hard requirement dependency on
systemd-journald.socket in almost every unit. The socket gets pulled
into boot via at least two ways:
sockets.target -> systemd-journald.socket
sysinit.target -> systemd-journald.service -> systemd-journald.socket
So just assume something pulled the socket in and drop the automatic
requirement dependencies on it.
"systemctl stop systemd-journald.socket" will now not take the whole
system down with it.
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journald is supposed to work. Failure to connect to its socket implies
losing messages. It should be a very unusual event. Log the failure with
LOG_CRIT.
Just because this unit's stdout/stderr failed to connect to the journal
does not necessarily mean that we shouldn't try to log the failure using
a structured entry, so let's use log_struct_unit.
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The functions are quite similar. Unify them into one.
The source gets shorter, the binary gets slightly smaller.
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Almost every unit logs to the journal. If journald gets a permanent
failure, units would not be able to start (exit code 209/STDOUT).
Add a fallback to /dev/null to avoid making the system entirely
unusable in such a case.
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write_to_journal() returns 0 if journal_fd is closed and nothing is
written. We need to make sure we'll try log_open_kmsg() then to make the
fallback work for "journal-or-kmsg".
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