Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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journalctl -u unit is not very useful, because it doesn't show
systemd messages about starting, stopping, coredumps, etc,
like systemctl status unit does. Make it show the same
information using the same rules.
If somebody really want to see just messages from by the unit,
it is easy enough to use _SYSTEMD_UNIT=...
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After that functions which add matches, show_journal_by_unit
and show_journal_by_user_unit, become nearly identical, so
I merged them into one function.
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There are very few differences in the implementations of the kill method in the
unit types that have one. Let's unify them.
This does not yet unify unit_kill() with unit_kill_context().
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Just like mempcpy() is almost identical to memcpy() except the useful
return value, so is the relation of mempset() to memset().
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Instead of using local-fs*.target in the initrd, use root-fs.target for
sysroot.mount and initrd-fs.target for /sysroot/usr and friends.
Using local-fs.target would mean to carry over the activated
local-fs.target to the isolated initrd-switch-root.target and thus in
the real root. Having local-fs.target already active after
deserialization causes ordering problems with the real root services and
targets.
We better isolate to targets for initrd-switch-root.target, which are
only available in the initrd.
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This should help readers of the man or HTML pages know if the documentation
is out of date. An alternative to use a date generated from 'git log' was
considered, but since we try to keep user visible documentation up to date,
showing the project version should be enough.
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ignored
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The running jobs animation is supposed to hide itself when jobs are
progressing sufficiently fast.
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We should not try to get information about mount unit from fragment
if the unit was created because of /proc/self/mountinfo event.
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BogdanR> I think it's cool it supports SMACK and that it encourages
them to use a propper mount point for smackfs but I don't
think it's cool that it's printing on the screen even when
I parse quiet to the kernel that "SMACK support is not
enabled ...".
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It is only needed in files designed to be usable in standalone
compilation. In those files the #ifdefinery is indented. When
compiling in-tree, GNU_SOURCE is always defined, so remove one
definition.
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system inherits the kernel default
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Let's update bootchar to share the coding style a bit more with the rest
of the package.
- Some tabs/spaces fixes
- add #pragma to header
- split up header so that we have a 1:1 relation between .c and .h files
like everywhere else
- Prefix user command line arguments/configuration settings with "arg_".
- other coding style fixes
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The udevadm utility is needed during early boot, so move it to
rootbindir to support split-/usr configurations.
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<Lekensteyn> The 198 announcement mentions
"/etc/systemd/systemd/foobar.service.d/*.conf", is that a
typo? I only have a /etc/systemd/system/. Is there a
manpage describing this new feature?
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I forgot to commit the layout file, because it was gitignored.
Fixed now.
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The result is ugly enough, I hope, to motivate someone with
design skills to fix it.
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Update systemd-analyze to follow the coding style of the other tools
more closely. Also, update the CODING_STYLE to document this for future
additions.
Changes:
- Always use usec_t for time units, so that we always use the same types
everywhere, and format times the same way as everywhere else.
- Add "static" to global variables
- Make sure we can always distuingish OOM and other errors: ensure we
always return useful error codes from all functions.
- Always free unit_times array
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Priority 0 is acceptable (it's LOG_EMERG).
BTW, I'm not sure why we allow priorities up to 999, but I'm leaving
this be for now.
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2013-March/009510.html
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Commit 984a2be4 failed to adjust this caller of status_printf().
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No need for strdup. We can slice the path in place if we always undo it
afterwards.
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The argument given to the __attribute__((cleanup)) functions is the
address of the variable that's going out of scope. It cannot be NULL.
The "if (!s)" check in set_freep() is pointless.
Perhaps "if (!*s)" was intented. But that's pointless too, because
set_free()/set_free_free() are OK to call with a NULL argument (just
like free()).
Setting "*s = NULL" is pointless, because the variable that s points
to is about to go out of scope.
The same holds for strv_freep().
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Improve test coverage a bit with tests for
close_many
strappend (to cover all ways through strnappend)
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In order to maintain compatibility with older initrds which do not have
AllowIsolate=yes set for their target units, fallback to JOB_REPLACE if
JOB_ISOLATE doesn't work, but complain about it.
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Make sure the pager does not have to buffer an unbounded number of log
messages, by default.
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This reverts commit 0ea9530d401827e299c6e04a433e69a7a2a89d80.
attribute(cleanup) can only be used inside functions (*of, sysfd
are leaked).
Cleanup functions are only called once when exiting scope (*f
is leaked twice).
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https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=868383
Primary reason to do this is to ensure "-e" works as intended, and is
not ignored because the user set his own LESS variable.
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$ journalctl -be
is what you want :)
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=867841
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use _cleanup_{close_,fclose_} to close streams and file descriptors
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SMACK is the Simple Mandatory Access Control Kernel, a minimal
approach to Access Control implemented as a kernel LSM.
The kernel exposes the smackfs filesystem API through which access
rules can be loaded. At boot time, we want to load the access rules
as early as possible to ensure all early boot steps are checked by Smack.
This patch mounts smackfs at the new location at /sys/fs/smackfs for
kernels 3.8 and above. The /smack mountpoint is not supported.
After mounting smackfs, rules are loaded from the usual location.
For more information about Smack see:
http://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/security/Smack.txt
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move mount_setup_early() call to main.c, before security module setup,
so there are no more repeat calls.
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arguments in PID 1
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=880025
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It's better to explictly check, instead of just documenting it.
The return value from init is changed from 1 to -1 on error.
Python seems to ignore 1 every second time. Looks like a bug
in Python, but the return value doesn't seem to be documented
anywhere, and -1 works as expected... so let's just use that.
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ENODEV because the device is gone
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=907890
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