Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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level rather than debug
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Commit 681f9718 introduced an additional null terminator for the zone names.
Increase the allocation of "transitions" to actually make room for this.
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Bump libblkid requirement from 2.20 to 2.24.
util-linux 2.25 is actually required since fdbbad981cc5da8bb4ed7e9b6646e7a114745ec5
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Previously, if we provided getty@.service to systemctl edit it would
have failed when using the bus because it is an invalid unit name.
But it would have succeeded when searching in the filesystem.
Now, we check if we have a template, if we do we search in the
filesystem, if we don't have a templae and we can use the bus, we do.
Furthermore, if we provided getty@tty1.service it would not have worked
when searching the filesystem, but it would have worked with the bus.
So now, when using the filesystem we use the template name and not the
unit name, and the same when logging errors.
(Also did a refactoring to avoid a long function)
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Add more test cases for:
- unit_name_is_instance
- unit_name_to_instance
Add tests for:
- unit_name_template
- unit_name_is_template
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try_context() is such a hot path that the hashmap lookup is expensive.
The number of contexts is small - it is the number of object types.
Using a hashmap is overkill. A plain array will do.
Before:
$ time ./journalctl --since=2014-06-01 --until=2014-07-01 > /dev/null
real 0m9.445s
user 0m9.228s
sys 0m0.213s
After:
$ time ./journalctl --since=2014-06-01 --until=2014-07-01 > /dev/null
real 0m5.438s
user 0m5.266s
sys 0m0.170s
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This never had any callers. Contexts are freed when the MMapCache is
freed.
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Note that numbers 0 and -1 are both replaced with OBJECT_UNUSED,
because they are treated the same everywhere (e.g. type_to_context()
translates them both to 0).
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If type==0 and a non-NULL object were given as arguments to
journal_file_hmac_put_object(), its object type check would fail and it
would return -EBADMSG.
All existing callers use either a positive type or -1. Still, for
behavior consistency with journal_file_move_to_object() let's allow
type 0 to pass.
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It has no other callers. It does not need to be in the header file.
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The only user is sd_journal_enumerate_unique() and, as explained in
the previous commit (fed67c38e3 "journal: map objects to context set by
caller, not by actual object type"), the use of them there is now
superfluous. Let's remove them.
This reverts major parts of commits:
ae97089d49 journal: fix access to munmapped memory in
sd_journal_enumerate_unique
06cc69d44c sd-journal: fix sd_journal_enumerate_unique skipping values
Tested with an "--enable-debug" build and "journalctl --list-boots".
It gives the expected number of results. Additionally, if I then revert
the previous commit ("journal: map objects to context set by caller, not
to actual object type"), it crashes with SIGSEGV, as expected.
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When the caller of journal_file_move_to_object() specifies type==0,
the object header is at first mapped in context 0. Then after the header
is checked, the whole object is mapped in a context determined by
the actual object type (which is not even range-checked using
type_to_context()). This looks wrong. It should map in the
caller-specified context.
An old comment in sd_journal_enumerate_unique() supports this view:
/* We do not use the type context here, but 0 instead,
* so that we can look at this data object at the same
* time as one on another file */
Clearly the expectation was that the data object will remain mapped
in context 0 without being pushed away by mapping other objects in
context OBJECT_DATA.
I suspect that this was the real bug that got fixed by ae97089d49
"journal: fix access to munmapped memory in sd_journal_enumerate_unique".
In other words, journal_file_object_keep/release are superfluous after
applying this patch.
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This is useful for exposing unsafe access to mmapped objects after
the context that they were mapped in was already moved.
For example:
journal_file_move_to_object(f1, OBJECT_DATA, p1, &o1);
journal_file_move_to_object(f2, OBJECT_DATA, p2, &o2);
t = o1->object.type; /* this usually works, but is unsafe */
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There will be more debugging options later.
--enable-debug will enable them all.
--enable-debug=hashmap will enable only hashmap debugging.
Also rename the C #define to ENABLE_DEBUG_* pattern.
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An early version used underscore prefixes for internal functions, but
the current version uses the prefix "internal_".
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cppcheck would give up with "syntax error" without them. This led
to reports of syntax errors in unrelated locations and potentially
hid other errors
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without parameters
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from all interfaces
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further arguments is passed
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names it knows
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cap_to_name(), for compat reasons
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Also, when booting up an ephemeral container of / use the system
hostname as default machine name.
This way specifiyng -M is unnecessary when booting up an ephemeral
container, while allowing any number of ephemeral containers to run from
the same tree.
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system of the OS
This works now:
# systemd-nspawn -xb -D / -M foobar
Which boots up an ephemeral container, based on the host's root file
system. Or in other words: you can now run the very same host OS you
booted your system with also in a container, on top of it, without
having it interfere. Great for testing whether the init system you are
hacking on still boots without reboot the system!
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Make sure to set send-attach-flags on BUS_MAKE. These control which
information is revealed about the bus-owner.
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Make sure we don't call into any bus_kernel_*() functions before
b->is_kernel is set to true. Hard-code the CMD_FREE just like the other
helpers do.
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This adds --template= to duplicate an OS tree as btrfs snpashot and run
it
This also adds --ephemeral or -x to create a snapshot of an OS tree and
boot that, removing it after exit.
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definitions
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resulting name is actually valid
Also, rename filename_is_safe() to filename_is_valid(), since it
actually does a full validation for what the kernel will accept as file
name, it's not just a heuristic.
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Rework the sd-journal iterators to avoid dangling 'else' ambiguity. For a
detailed explanation, see:
commit bff686e2a981ccd0888cdf1981977d24320f1770
Author: David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Dec 12 09:43:54 2014 +0100
hwdb: fix dangling 'else' ambuguity
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Imagine the following use of hwdb:
if (condition_A)
SD_HWDB_FOREACH_PROPERTY(hwdb, modalias, key, value)
operation_A(key, value);
else
log_error("...");
This should work just fine, but but definitely does not what you would
expect. Due to how SD_HWDB_FOREACH_PROPERTY is defined, the dangling
'else' is linked to the hidden 'if' statement in the macro instead of the
outer 'if (condition_A)'. This is unexpected and really annoying to debug.
Fix this by never leaving un-finished if-statements in
SD_HWDB_FOREACH_PROPERTY(). We simply inverse the if() statement and
explicitly add an 'else'-branch. This way, the statement is closed and all
ambuguities are resolved.
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Lets not pollute the global namespace. Prefix all our exported names and
macros with SD_HWDB_*.
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