Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
These units' message format strings are identical to the generic
strings. Since we can always rely on the fallback, these are now
redundant.
|
|
This is similar to "core: always try harder to get unit status
message format string", but for job completion status messages.
It makes generic status messages applicable for printing to the console.
And it rewrites the functions in a more table-based style.
|
|
unit_get_status_message_format() is used only with one of JOB_START,
JOB_STOP, JOB_RELOAD, all of which have fallback message strings
defined, so the function may never return NULL.
|
|
The starting/stopping messages are printed to the console only if the
corresponding format string is defined in the unit's vtable. To avoid
excessive messages on the console, the unit types whose start/stop
jobs are instantaneous had the format strings intentionally undefined.
When logging the same event to the journal, a fallback to generic
Starting/Stopping/Reloading messages is used.
The problem of excessive console messages with instantaneous jobs
is already resolved in a nicer way ("core: fix confusing logging of
instantaneous jobs"), so there's no longer a need to have two ways of
getting the format strings. Let's fold them into one function with
the fallback to generic message strings.
|
|
Return 1 from *_reload() methods to signify "we did something", just
like in *_start(). This causes "Reloading foo..." messages to be logged.
"Reloaded foo." messages are already logged.
|
|
For instantaneous jobs (e.g. starting of targets, sockets, slices, or
Type=simple services) the log shows the job completion
before starting:
systemd[1]: Created slice -.slice.
systemd[1]: Starting -.slice.
systemd[1]: Created slice System Slice.
systemd[1]: Starting System Slice.
systemd[1]: Listening on Journal Audit Socket.
systemd[1]: Starting Journal Audit Socket.
systemd[1]: Reached target Timers.
systemd[1]: Starting Timers.
...
The reason is that the job completes before the ->start() method returns
and only then does unit_start() print the "Starting ..." message.
The same thing happens when stopping units.
Rather than fixing the order of the messages, let's just not emit the
Starting/Stopping message at all when the job completes instantaneously.
The job completion message is sufficient in this case.
|
|
The bug found by David existed in several places, fix them all. Also
extend the tests to cover these cases.
|
|
Bitmap fixes
|
|
networkd: move config parsers to specific header files
|
|
We really must use 64bit integers to calculate long-long shifts.
Otherwise, we will never get higher masks than 2^31.
|
|
Make sure we properly treat NULL bitmaps as empty. Right now, we don't
(which really looks like a typo).
|
|
|
|
If a session is in closing state (and already got rid of its VT), then
never re-select it for that VT. There is no reason why we should grant
something to a session that is already going away *AND* already got rid
of exactly that.
|
|
Our seat->positions[] array keeps track of the 'preferred' session on a
VT. The only situation this is used, is to select the session to activate
when a VT is activated. In the normal case, there's only one session per
VT so the selection is trivial.
Older greeters, however, implement take-overs when they start sessions on
the same VT that the greeter ran on. We recently limited such take-overs
to VTs where a greeter is running on, to force people to never share VTs
in new code that is written.
For legacy reasons, we need to be compatible to old greeters, though.
Hence, we allow those greeters to implement take-over. In such take-overs,
however, we should really make sure that the new sessions gets preferred
over the old one under all circumstances. Hence, make sure we override
the previous preferred session with a new session.
|
|
move config_parse_tunnel_address from networkd.h to
tunnel specific file networkd-netdev-tunnel.h
|
|
move config_parse_vxlan_group_address from
networkd.h to networkd-netdev-vxlan.h
|
|
This adds test-bus-proxy which should be used to test correct behavior of
systemd-bus-proxyd. The first test that was added is to verify we actually
receive NameAcquired signals for ourselves on bus-connect.
|
|
bitmap: use external iterator
|
|
If the caller does not specify arg1 for NameOwnerChanged matches, we
really must take the ID from arg2 or arg3, if provided. They are
guaranteed to be identical to arg1 if either is supplied, but there is no
strict requiredment that arg1 is supplied. Hence, make sure to always
take the more restrictive match. Otherwise, we install rather wide
matches without anyone requiring them.
|
|
Make sure we don't install NameOwnerChanged matches if the caller passed
a destination='' match (except if it is the broadcast address). Per spec,
all NameOwnerChanged signals are broadcasts.
Only the NameLost/NameAcquired signals are unicasts, but those are never
received through sd-bus. Instead, the bus-proxy synthesizes them and it
already installs proper matches for them.
|
|
Make sure we actually parse "unsigned long long" if we encode a uint64_t.
Otherwise, we will get random data from the stack.
|
|
Reuse the Iterator object from hashmap.h and expose a similar API.
This allows us to do
{
Iterator i;
unsigned n;
BITMAP_FOREACH(n, b, i) {
Iterator j;
unsigned m;
BITMAP_FOREACH(m, b, j) {
...
}
}
}
without getting confused. Requested by David.
|
|
In gvariant, all fixed-size objects need to be sized a multiple of their
alignment. If a structure has only fixed-size members, it is required to
be fixed size itself. If you imagine a structure like (ty), you have an
8-byte member followed by an 1-byte member. Hence, the overall inner-size
is 9. The alignment of the object is 8, though. Therefore, the specs
mandates final padding after fixed-size structures, to make sure it's
sized a multiple of its alignment (=> 16).
On the gvariant decoder side, we already account for this in
bus_gvariant_get_size(), as we apply overall padding to the size of the
structure. Therefore, our decoder correctly skips such final padding when
parsing fixed-size structure.
On the gvariant encoder side, however, we don't account for this final
padding. This patch fixes the structure and dict-entry encoders to
properly place such padding at the end of non-uniform fixed-size
structures.
The problem can be easily seen by running:
$ busctl --user monitor
and
$ busctl call --user org.freedesktop.systemd1 / org.foobar foobar "(ty)" 777 8
The monitor will fail to parse the message and print an error. With this
patch applied, everything works fine again.
This patch also adds a bunch of test-cases to force non-uniform
structures with non-pre-aligned positions.
Thanks to Jan Alexander Steffens <jan.steffens@gmail.com> for spotting
this and narrowing it down to non-uniform gvariant structures. Fixes #597.
|
|
resolved: add basic NSEC and NSEC3 support
|
|
So right now our object-tree is limited to 2 levels at most
('/' and '/foo/...../bar'). We never link any intermediate levels, even
though that was clearly the plan. Fix the bus_node_allocate() helper to
actually link all intermediate nodes, too, not just the root node.
This fixes a simple inverse ptr-diff bug.
The downside of this fix is that we clearly never tested (nor used) the
object tree in any way. The only reason that the introspection works is
that our enumerators shortcut the object tree.
Lets see whether that code actually works..
Thanks to: Nathaniel McCallum <nathaniel@themccallums.org>
..for reporting this. See #524 for an actual example code.
|
|
It is highly confusing if a getter function returns 0, but the value is
set to NULL. This, right now, triggers assertions as code relies on the
returned values to be non-NULL.
Like with sd-bus-creds and friends, return 0 only if a value is actually
available.
Discussed with Tom, and actually fixes real bugs as in #512.
|
|
If /etc/machine-id is missing (eg., gold images), we should not fail
installing sd-boot. This is a perfectly fine use-case and we should simply
skip installing the default loader config in that case.
|
|
Needed for DNSSEC.
|
|
This implements more of RFC4648.
|
|
Needed for DNSSEC.
|
|
For when a Hashmap is overkill.
|
|
|
|
sd-dhcp-lease: fix handling of multiple routers
We only support one router, but in case more than one is given, we now ignore subsequent ones, rather than fall over.
|
|
resolved: minor improvements to RR handling
|
|
This implements the recommendations from RFC3597.
|
|
resolved: harden
|
|
This merges:
sd-netlink: respect attribute type flags
..fixing a conflict due to a typo fix.
|
|
Needed for DNSSEC.
|
|
|
|
We used to have one global socket, use one per transaction instead. This
has the side-effect of giving us a random UDP port per transaction, and
hence increasing the entropy and making cache poisoining significantly
harder to achieve.
We still reuse the same port number for packets belonging to the same
transaction (resent packets).
|
|
This improves the resilience against cache poisoning by being stricter
about only accepting responses that match precisely the requst they
are in reply to.
It should be noted that we still only use one port (which is picked
at random), rather than one port for each transaction. Port
randomization would improve things further, but is not required by
the RFC.
|
|
We want to discover information about the server and use that in when crafting
packets to be resent.
|
|
resolve-host: enable dbus-activation
|
|
We want to reference the servers from their active transactions, so make sure
they stay around as long as the transaction does.
|
|
Currently we only make sure our links can handle the size of the payload witohut
taking the headers into account.
|
|
This patch adds support to configure IFF_VNET_HDR flag
for a tap device. It allows whether sending and receiving
large pass larger (GSO) packets. This greatly increases the
achievable throughput.
|
|
As mandated by RFC4034.
|
|
Make all LLMNR related packet inspections conditional to p->protocol.
Use switch-case statements while at it, which will make future additions
more readable.
|
|
The C and T bits in the DNS packet header definitions are specific to LLMNR.
In regular DNS, they are called AA and RD instead. Reflect that by calling
the macros accordingly, and alias LLMNR specific macros.
While at it, define RA, AD and CD getters as well.
|
|
De-duplicate some magic numbers.
|