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systemctl called LoadUnit, GetUnit, GetAll in this order to get the properties.
It is useless to load units explicitly, because it won't ensure anything. The
unit may be freed immediately by the garbage collector.
It is unnecessary to call GetUnit, because systemctl can easily translate the
unit name to DBus path by itself.
GetAll will load the unit if necessary.
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We need to be able to show the properties even of inactive units.
systemctl loads the unit before getting its properties, but this is racy
as the garbage collector may kick in right after the loading.
Fix it by always loading the unit before handling a message for it.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=814966#c6
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Not everyone is interested in every kind of deltas (and some might
even be interested knowing which files do not have overrides), so this
here is an implementation of a --type=LIST... option for
systemd-delta, that makes it possible to filter what subset of deltas
we want.
The available modifiers are masked, equivalent, redirected, overriden,
and unchanged - they should be self explanatory, and the man page
explains them in a little more detail anyway.
As a side effect, in case of overriden files, the diff output was made
optional.
By default, everything is shown (with a diff, if appropriate) except
for completely unchanged files.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@balabit.hu>
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versions
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can't write the trailing newline
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The same situation as on o32 mips.
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Instead of generic "Starting..." and "Started" messages for all unit use
type-dependent messages. For example, mounts will announce "Mounting..."
and "Mounted".
Add status messages to units of types that used to be entirely silent
(automounts, sockets, targets, devices). For unit types whose jobs are
instantaneous, report only the job completion, not the starting event.
Socket units with non-instantaneous jobs are rare (Exec*= is not used
often in socket units), so I chose not to print the starting messages
for them either.
This will hopefully give people better understanding of the boot.
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The alignment of the "[ OK ]" and "[FAILED]" status marks to the right
side of the terminal makes it difficult to link them with the messages
on the left if your console is wide.
I considered the options:
1. Align them to the 80th column regardless of the console width.
Disadvantage - either:
- truncating messages needlessly, not using available space; or
- If the message is long, write the mark over it. => ugly
2. Write them to the 80th column for short messages,
and further to the right for longer ones.
Disadvantage:
- jagged look
3. Write the marks on the left, before the message.
Disadvantage:
- Breaks tradition from RHL.
Advantages:
+ slightly simpler code
+ Will annoy holy-traditionalists.
I chose option 3.
BTW, Debian now uses similar marks on the left with its makefile-style
boot.
Special values of the "status" argument to status_vprintf are:
NULL - no status mark, no message indentation
"" - no status mark, message indented as if the mark was there
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The red "[ABORT]" for a dependency failure is too scary.
It suggests a crash. And it suggests a problem with the unit itself.
Change it to a yellow "[DEPEND]" message. The color communicates the
level of seriousness better.
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https://launchpad.net/bugs/998621
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The pointer to the end of the string was not advanced after adding
the "cgroups-missing" taint. If "local-hwclock" was detected too,
it would overwrite the previous string.
With 'e' always pointing to the end of the string, removing the last
delimiter is easier.
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"hybrid suspend"
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File names in /etc, /run, /usr/lib are sorted/overridden by basename.
Sorting things like "/dev/null" with the basename "null" in the hash
of config files breaks the ordering and the overriding logic.
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This is useful to allow applications to synchronously save data before
the system is suspended or shut down.
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