Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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There is alot of cleanup that will have to happen to turn on
-fstrict-aliasing, but I think our code should be "correct" to the rule.
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This way "machinectl login" can be opened up to run without privileges.
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Accidentally forgot to commit this. Sorry!
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After all, pretty much all our tools include it, and it should hence be
shared.
Also move sysfs-show.h from core/ to login/, since it has no point to
exist in core.
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on a pty and returns the pty master fd to the client
This is a one-stop solution for "machinectl login", and should simplify
getting logins in containers.
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a PID instead of a container name
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files from core
Stuff in src/shared or src/libsystemd should *never* include code from
src/core or any of the tools, so don't do that here either. It's not OK!
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sd_bus_creds_get_well_known_names() fails with -ENODATA in case the
message has no names attached, which is intended behavior if the
remote connection didn't own any names at the time of sending.
The function already deals with 'sender_names' being an empty strv,
so we can just continue in such cases.
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Messages to destinations that are not currently owned by any bus connection
will cause kdbus related function to return with either -ENXIO or -ESRCH.
Such conditions should not make the proxyd terminate but send a sane
SD_BUS_ERROR_NAME_HAS_NO_OWNER error reply to the proxied connection.
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For that, ask machined for a container PTY and use that.
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container
Then, port "machinectl" over to make use of it.
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was newline-terinated anyway
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I figure "pull-dck" is not a good name, given that one could certainly
read the verb in a way that might be funny for 16year-olds. ;-)
Also, don't hardcode the index URL to use, make it runtime and configure
time configurable instead.
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We originally only supported escaping ucs2 encoded characters (as \uxxxx). This
only covers the BMP. Support escaping also utf16 surrogate pairs (on the form
\uxxxx\uyyyy) to cover all of unicode.
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We originally only supported the BMP (i.e., we treated UTF-16 as UCS-2).
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Originally we only supported ucs2, so move the ucs4 version from libsystemd-terminal to shared
and use that everywhere.
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Kernel notifications carry a timestamp now, so make sure
bus_kernel_translate_message() doesn't complain when it stumbles across
them.
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The KDBUS_CMD_FREE ioctl struct has a size field now, which needs to be set.
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Sync kdbus.h with upstream changes:
* Two optional cancellation points where added for synchronously
blocking KDBUS_CMD_SEND commands: A sigmask to change the mask
of accepted signals before the task is put to sleep, and a
generic file descriptor that can be written to, in order to cancel
the command. Both methods are currently unused.
* The KDBUS_CMD_CANCEL ioctl was removed. sd-bus was never using
that command, so there's no change needed.
* Some kerneldoc fixes
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* (potentially) public headers must reside in src/systemd/ (not in
src/libsystemd*)
* some private (not prefixed with sd_) functions moved from sd-lldp.h to
lldp-internal.h
* introduce lldp-util.h for the cleanup macro, as these should not be public
* rename the cleanup macro, we always name them _cleanup_foo_, never
_cleanup_sd_foo_
* mark some function arguments as 'const'
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hidden_file() is a bit more precise, since dot files usually shouldn't
be ignored, but certainly be considered hidden.
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the verb in it
That way the dispatcher calls know how they got called.
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This adds a new bus call to machined that enumerates /var/lib/container
and returns all trees stored in it, distuingishing three types:
- GPT disk images, which are files suffixed with ".gpt"
- directory trees
- btrfs subvolumes
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extra "#" to the name
That way, we have a simple, somewhat reliable way to detect such
temporary files, by simply checking if they start with ".#".
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EOF is meaningless if the direction of iteration changes.
Move the EOF optimization under the direction check.
This fixes test-journal-interleaving for me.
Thanks to Filipe Brandenburger for telling me about the failure.
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next_with_matches() is odd in that its "unit64_t *offset" parameter is
both input and output. In other it's purely for output.
The function is called from two places in next_beyond_location(). In
both of them "&cp" is used as the argument and in both cases cp is
guaranteed to equal f->current_offset.
Let's just have next_with_matches() ignore "*offset" on input and
operate with f->current_offset.
I did not investigate why it is, but it makes my usual benchmark run
reproducibly faster:
$ time ./journalctl --since=2014-06-01 --until=2014-07-01 > /dev/null
real 0m4.032s
user 0m3.896s
sys 0m0.135s
(Compare to preceding commit, where real was 4.4s.)
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I accidentally broke the detection of duplicate entries in 7943f42275
"journal: optimize iteration by returning previously found candidate
entry".
When we have a known location of a candidate entry, we must not return
from next_beyond_location() immediately. We must go through the
duplicates detection to make sure the candidate differs from the
already iterated entry.
This fix slows down iteration a bit, but it's still faster than it
was before the rework.
$ time ./journalctl --since=2014-06-01 --until=2014-07-01 > /dev/null
real 0m4.448s
user 0m4.298s
sys 0m0.149s
(Compare with results from commit 7943f42275, where real was 5.3s before
the rework.)
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This patch integrates LLDP with networkd.
Example conf:
file : lldp.network
[Match]
Name=em1
[Network]
LLDP=yes
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This patch introduces LLDP support to networkd. it implements the
receiver side of the protocol.
The Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) is an industry-standard,
vendor-neutral method to allow networked devices to advertise
capabilities, identity, and other information onto a LAN. The Layer 2
protocol, detailed in IEEE 802.1AB-2005.LLDP allows network devices
that operate at the lower layers of a protocol stack (such as
Layer 2 bridges and switches) to learn some of the capabilities
and characteristics of LAN devices available to higher
layer protocols.
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