Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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We can't use LZ4_compress_limitedOutput_continue() because in the
worst-case scenario the compressed output can be slightly bigger than
the input block. This generally affects very few blocks and is no reason
to abort the compression process.
I ran into this when I noticed that Chromium core dumps weren't being
compressed. After switching to LZ4_compress_continue() a ~330MB Chromium
core dump gets compressed to ~17M.
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Those symbols were introduced in commit
14cb733684d3c3f50d088a3a370ddf8e8894dfa4 and released in v215.
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NTPv4 servers don't reply with unsynchronized status when they lost
synchronization, they only keep increasing the root dispersion and it's
up to the client to decide at which point they no longer consider it
synchronized.
Ignore replies with root distance over 5 seconds.
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The kernel timestamp (recv_time) is made earlier than current time
(now_ts), use the timestamp captured before sending packet directly.
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free_and_strdup() does exactly the same as sd_event_source_set_name(), use
it!
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This should help in debugging failing event sources.
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Skipping interfaces randomly without the caller specifying it is nasty.
Avoid this and let the caller do that themselves.
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The sd_bus_emit_properties_changed() call for x11 keymap changes lacks
commas.. whoops. Fix it! Now localed emits PropertiesChanged signals
again.
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removes code duplication
also move switch-root to shared
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Similar to container_of(), we now use unique variable names for the bascic
math macros MAX, MIN, CLAMP, LESS_BY. Furthermore, unit tests are added to
verify they work as expected.
For a rationale, see:
commit fb835651aff79a1e7fc5795086c9b26e59a8e6ca
Author: David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Aug 22 14:41:37 2014 +0200
shared: make container_of() use unique variable names
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We must not access slot->floating after we possible dropped the last
reference to it. Fix all callback-invocations to first check
slot->floating and possible disconnect the slot, then release the last
reference.
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Don't leak the device-names during device destruction in sysview. Somehow,
the device-name is "const char*", so make it "char*" first to avoid
warnings when calling free() on it.
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Fix leaking the xkb-state during keyboard destruction, leaking lots of xkb
references into the wild.
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Use SETLINK when modifying an existing link.
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In case 'scan_evdev' and 'scan_drm' are both false, we never set 'r' to
anyhting, thus return an uninitialized error code. Fix this by always
returning 0 as we catch negative codes earlier, anyway. Thanks to Thomas
H.P. Anderson for the report.
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If the journal is corrupted, we might return an object that does
not start with the expected field name and/or is shorter than it
should.
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mmap code crashes when attempting to map an object of zero size.
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=758392
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=82894
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Before forking, block all signals, and unblock them afterwards. This way
the child will have them blocked, and we won't lose them.
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Like systemd-subterm, this new systemd-evcat tool should only be used to
debug libsystemd-terminal. systemd-evcat attaches to the running session
and pushes all evdev devices attached to the current session into an
idev-session. All events of the created idev-devices are then printed to
stdout for input-event debugging.
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The idev-keyboard object provides keyboard devices to the idev interface.
It uses libxkbcommon to provide proper keymap support.
So far, the keyboard implementation is pretty straightforward with one
keyboard device per matching evdev element. We feed everything into the
system keymap and provide proper high-level keyboard events to the
application. Compose-features and IM need to be added later.
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The evdev-element provides linux evdev interfaces as idev-elements. This
way, all real input hardware devices on linux can be used with the idev
interface.
We use libevdev to interface with the kernel. It's a simple wrapper
library around the kernel evdev API that takes care to resync devices
after kernel-queue overflows, which is a rather non-trivial task.
Furthermore, it's a well tested interface used by all other major input
users (Xorg, weston, libinput, ...).
Last but not least, it provides nice keycode to keyname lookup tables (and
vice versa), which is really nice for debugging input problems.
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The idev-interface provides input drivers for all libsystemd-terminal
based applications. It is split into 4 main objects:
idev_context: The context object tracks global state of the input
interface. This will include data like system-keymaps,
xkb contexts and more.
idev_session: A session serves as controller for a set of devices.
Each session on an idev-context is independent of each
other. The session is also the main notification object.
All events raised via idev are reported through the
session interface. Apart of that, the session is a
pretty dumb object that just contains devices.
idev_element: Elements provide real hardware in the idev stack. For
each hardware device, one element is added. Elements
have no knowledge of higher-level device types, they
only provide raw input data to the upper levels. For
example, each evdev device is represented by a different
element in an idev session.
idev_device: Devices are objects that the application deals with. An
application is usually not interested in elements (and
those are hidden to applications), instead, they want
high-level input devices like keyboard, touchpads, mice
and more. Device are the high-level interface provided
by idev. Each device might be fed by a set of elements.
Elements drive the device. If elements are removed,
devices are destroyed. If elements are added, suitable
devices are created.
Applications should monitor the system for sessions and hardware devices.
For each session they want to operate on, they create an idev_session
object and add hardware to that object. The idev interface requires the
application to monitor the system (preferably via sysview_*, but not
required) for hardware devices. Whenever hardware is added to the idev
session, new devices *might* be created. The relationship between hardware
and high-level idev-devices is hidden in the idev-session and not exposed.
Internally, the idev elements and devices are virtual objects. Each real
hardware and device type inherits those virtual objects and provides real
elements and devices. Those types will be added in follow-up commits.
Data flow from hardware to the application is done via idev_*_feed()
functions. Data flow from applications to hardware is done via
idev_*_feedback() functions. Feedback is usually used for LEDs, FF and
similar operations.
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We're going to need multiple binaries that provide session-services via
logind device management. To avoid re-writing the seat/session/device
scan/monitor interface for each of them, this commit adds a generic helper
to libsystemd-terminal:
The sysview interface scans and tracks seats, sessions and devices on a
system. It basically mirrors the state of logind on the application side.
Now, each session-service can listen for matching sessions and
attach to them. On each session, managed device access is provided. This
way, it is pretty simple to write session-services that attach to multiple
sessions (even split across seats).
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The bus_map_all_properties() helper calls
org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties.GetAll() on a given target and parses the
result according to a given property-table. This simplifies dealing with
DBus.Properties significantly. However, the function is blocking and thus
not really useful in many situations.
This patch extracts the core of this function and adds two new helpers
which directly take dbus-messages as arguments. This way, you can issue
asynchronous requests and parse the result via these helpers:
bus_message_map_all_properties():
This is the same as bus_map_all_properties() but takes the result
message from a GetAll() request as argument. You can thus issue an
asynchronous GetAll() request and then use this helper once you got
the result.
bus_message_map_properties_changed():
This function takes a signal-message that was retrieved via a
PropertiesChanged signal and then parses it like if you retrieved
it via GetAll(). Furthermore, this function returns the number of
matched properties that got invalidated by the PropertiesChanged
signal, but didn't carry the new value. This way, the caller can
issue a new GetAll() request and then parse the result.
The old function bus_map_all_properties() is functionally unchanged, but
now uses bus_message_map_all_properties() internally.
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This is a useful helper, make it global. It will be required for
libsystemd-terminal, at minimum.
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fprintf() does not add new-lines automatically like log_*() does. Add the
missing \n specified so "udevadm" invoked without arguments adds a newline
to:
udevadm: missing or unknown command
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Our bus-name watch helpers only remove a bus-name if it's not a
controller, anymore. If we call manager_drop_busname() before
unregistering the controller, the busname will not be dropped. Therefore,
first drop the controller, then drop the bus-name.
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If you stack container_of() macros, you will get warnings due to shadowing
variables of the parent context. To avoid this, use unique names for
variables.
Two new helpers are added:
UNIQ: This evaluates to a truly unique value never returned by any
evaluation of this macro. It's a shortcut for __COUNTER__.
UNIQ_T: Takes two arguments and concatenates them. It is a shortcut for
CONCATENATE, but meant to defined typed local variables.
As you usually want to use variables that you just defined, you need to
reference the same unique value at least two times. However, UNIQ returns
a new value on each evaluation, therefore, you have to pass the unique
values into the macro like this:
#define my_macro(a, b) __max_macro(UNIQ, UNIQ, (a), (b))
#define __my_macro(uniqa, uniqb, a, b) ({
typeof(a) UNIQ_T(A, uniqa) = (a);
typeof(b) UNIQ_T(B, uniqb) = (b);
MY_UNSAFE_MACRO(UNIQ_T(A, uniqa), UNIQ_T(B, uniqb));
})
This way, MY_UNSAFE_MACRO() can safely evaluate it's arguments multiple
times as they are local variables. But you can also stack invocations to
the macro my_macro() without clashing names.
This is the same as if you did:
#define my_macro(a, b) __max_macro(__COUNTER__, __COUNTER__, (a), (b))
#define __my_macro(prefixa, prefixb, a, b) ({
typeof(a) CONCATENATE(A, prefixa) = (a);
typeof(b) CONCATENATE(B, prefixb) = (b);
MY_UNSAFE_MACRO(CONCATENATE(A, prefixa), CONCATENATE(B, prefixb));
})
...but in my opinion, the first macro is easier to write and read.
This patch starts by converting container_of() to use this new helper.
Other macros may follow (like MIN, MAX, CLAMP, ...).
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The UNIQUE() macro works fine if used in un-stacked macros. However, once
you stack them like:
MAX(MIN(a, b),
CLAMP(MAX(c, d), e, f))
you will get warnings due to shadowing other variables. gcc uses the last
line of a macro expansion as value for __LINE__, therefore, we cannot even
avoid this by splitting the expressions across lines.
Remove the only user of UNIQUE() so we introduce a new helper in
follow-ups.
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hibernate-resume-generator understands resume= kernel command line parameter
and instantiates the systemd-resume@.service accordingly if it is passed.
This enables resume from hibernation using device specified on the kernel
command line, and it may be specified either as "/dev/disk/by-foo/bar"
or "FOO=bar", not only "/dev/sdXY" which is understood by the in-kernel
implementation.
So now resume= is brought on par with root= in terms of possible ways to
specify a device.
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/sys/power/resume.
This can be used to initiate a resume from hibernation by path to a swap
device containing the hibernation image.
The respective templated unit is also added. It is instantiated using
path to the desired resume device.
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=82485
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