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On Wed, Aug 14, 2013 at 10:31 PM, Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com> wrote:
> On 08/14/2013 04:17 PM, Kay Sievers wrote:
> >
> > this patch added GPL code to systemd, which otherwise is all LGPL. We need
> > to make sure we can always split out any code to a separate shared library
> > ...
> >
> > Mind if I switch your src/core/selinux-access.[ch] files to LGPL?
> I have no problem with it. Should be LGPL anyways.
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This makes the description string of the backlight service a bit nicer.
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As many laptops don't save/restore screen brightness across reboots,
let's do this in systemd with a minimal tool, that restores the
brightness as early as possible, and saves it as late as possible. This
will cover consoles and graphical logins, but graphical desktops should
do their own per-user stuff probably.
This only touches firmware brightness controls for now.
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This adds a simple generator that is capable of automatically
discovering certain GPT partitions by their type UUID and mount/enable
them. This currently covers swap partitions and /home partitions, but is
expected to grow more features soon.
This currently doesn't handle LUKS encrypted /home.
This enables all swap partitions of type
0657fd6da4ab43c484e50933c84b4f4f, if found.
This mounts the first partition of type 933ac7e12eb44f13b8440e14e2aef915
as /home, if it is found.
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So far, we would show up to 128 bytes from a message, simply
cutting of the rest. With multiline messages, it is quite common
for a message to be longer than that, and this model doesn't really
work anymore.
A new limit is added: up to 3 lines will be shown, unless --full is
used (c.f. first line below). The limit for bytes is extended to 300
bytes. An ellipsis will always be used, if some form of truncation
occurs. If the tail of the message is cut off, either because of
length or line limit, dots will be shown at the end of the last
line. If this last line is short, the dots will be simply appended. If
the last line is too long for that, it will be ellipsized with dots at
the very end.
Note that the limits are in bytes, not characters, and we suck at
outputting unicode strings (c.f. last three lines below).
Aug 11 10:46:21 fedora python[67]: test message
line
line...
Aug 11 10:50:47 fedora python[76]: test message word word word word word word word word word word word wor...
Aug 11 10:55:11 fedora python[83]: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx...
Aug 11 11:03:21 fedora python[90]: ąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąą...
Aug 11 11:03:53 fedora python[97]: aąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąą...
Aug 11 11:25:45 fedora python[121]: aąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąąą�...
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Now --full will show long fields in full, like it already did
with --all.
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Currently we don't respect noauto/nofail root mount options (from
rootflags kernel cmdline). We should map these two flags to the
corresponding boolean variable noauto and nofail when calling
add_mount().
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A regression introduced when we moved to systemd's logging is that the only
way to adjust the log-level of the udev daemon is via the env var, kernel
commandline or the commandline.
This reintroduces support for specifying this in the configuration file.
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composed one
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67848
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Since the journal can handle multiple lines just well natively,
and rsyslog can be configured to handle them as well, there is no need
to truncate messages from syslog() after the first newline.
Reproducer:
1. Add following four lines to /etc/rsyslog.conf
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$EscapeControlCharactersOnReceive off
$ActionFileDefaultTemplate RSYSLOG_SysklogdFileFormat
$SpaceLFOnReceive on
$DropTrailingLFOnReception off
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3. Restart rsyslog
# service rsyslog restart
4. Compile and run the following program
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#include <stdio.h>
#include <syslog.h>
int main()
{
syslog(LOG_INFO, "aaa%caaa", '\n');
return 0;
}
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Actual results:
Below message appears in /var/log/messages.
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Sep 7 19:19:39 localhost test2: aaa
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Expected results:
Below message, which worked prior to systemd-journald
appears in /var/log/messages.
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Sep 7 19:19:39 localhost test2: aaa aaa
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=855313
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This make systemd-delta follow the behaviour of systemctl
and journalctl.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67656
[zj: unify color query methods between those three programs.]
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We export the location of a bunch of directories this way,
so it makes sense to add those three. Especially catalogdir
is something that we want people to add things to.
Note on the naming: the first two are tied closely to systemd
itself, so I prefixed them with "systemd". The third one is
rather more generic, so no prefix.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67635
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hashmap_free() wasn't being called on m->contexts and m->fds resulting
in a leak.
To reproduce do:
while(1) {
sd_journal_open(&j, SD_JOURNAL_LOCAL_ONLY);
sd_journal_close(j);
}
Memory usage will increase until OOM.
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Basically wraps an example provided by George McCollister.
Should help with leaks in the future.
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It can be quite useful when somebody confuses _PID with COREDUMP_PID :).
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This is the standard upstream location where kbd installs keymaps.
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If two instances of test-fileio were run in parallel,
they could fail when trying to write the same file.
This predictable name in /tmp/ wasn't actually a security
issue, because write_env_file would not follow symlinks,
so this could be an issue only when running tests in
parallel.
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bash ignores SIGTERM, and can only be terminated cleanly via SIGHUP.
Hence make sure that we the scope unit for the session is created with
SendSIGHUP enabled.
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This is useful to fake session ends for processes like shells.
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reply
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67273
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Stop importing non-sensical kernel-exported variables. All
parameters in the kernel command line are exported to the
initial environment of PID1, but suppressed if they are
recognized by kernel built-in code. The EFI booted kernel
will add further kernel-internal things which do not belong
into userspace.
The passed original environ data of the process is not touched
and preserved across re-execution, to allow external reading of
/proc/self/environ for process properties like container*=.
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In case of scripts, _EXE is set to the interpreter name, and
_COMM is set based on the file name. Add a match for _COMM,
and _EXE if the interpreter is not a link (e.g. for yum,
the interpreter is /usr/bin/python, but it is a link to
/usr/bin/python2, which in turn is a link to /usr/bin/python2.7,
at least on Fedora, so we end up with _EXE=/usr/bin/python2.7).
I don't think that such link chasing makes sense, because
the final _EXE name is more likely to change.
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67273
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src/python-systemd/_reader.c: In function Reader_get_catalog:
src/python-systemd/_reader.c:912:53: warning: comparison between signed and unsigned integer expressions [-Wsign-compare]
assert(mid_len > l);
^
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"systemctl load" has always been racy since the GC could hit any time,
before making use of the loaded unit. Very recent systemd will run GC
immeidately after all unit state changes which has the effect that the
the effect of "systemctl load" is completely gone now, so let's remove
the support for it in "systemctl" for good.
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"systemctl set-log-level" is a command for analysis and tracing hence
"systemd-analyze" should be the better home for it, thus allowing us to
make the overly large "systemctl" a bit smaller.
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It's an analysis command and its format is explicitly not covered by any
stability guarantees, hence move away from systemctl and into
systemd-analyze, minimizing the already large interface of systemctl a
bit.
This patch also adds auto-paging to the various systemd-analyze commands
where that makes sense
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Avoid pulling-in selinux for tools which just create directories
but not need to fix the selinux label.
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