Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Reply of dbus_message_new_method_return was check twice and
path from unit_dbus_path was not.
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The removal of the TIMEOUT= handling in udevd put firmware requests into the
devpath parent/child dependency tracking. Drivers which block in module_init()
asking userspace for firmware ran into a 30 sec device timeout.
The whole firmware loading willl hopefully move into the kernel and
the fragile-since-day-one fake async driver-core device dance involving
udev can be retired:
http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git;a=commit;h=abb139e75c2cdbb955e840d6331cb5863e409d0e
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If the final key in any sysctl.d file is a duplicate, systemd-sysctl
will exit with an error (and no explaination why). Ignore this, as
duplicate keys are to be expected when overriding settings in the
directory hierarchy.
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This allows unprivileged clients to check for the used virtualization
even when lacking the privileges that some of the virtualization tests
require.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=684801
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handle-hibernate-key in systemd-inhibit help and man.
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to IPv4/IPv6
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No longer override the default kernel keymap if nothing is specified in
vconsole.conf.
The default should be to do nothing (i.e., use what is already in the
kernel) unless the distro/admin has explicitly requested it.
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No longer override the default kernel font if nothing is specified in
vconsole.conf.
The default kernel font[0] provides ISO-8859-1 and box characters. Users
of Arabic, Cyrilic or Hebrew must set a different font manually as these
character sets were provided by the old default font [1], but are not
any longer.
Rationale:
* it is counter-intuitive that an empty vconsole.conf file is different
from adding FONT="";
* the version of the default font shipped with Arch (which is the
upstream one) behaves very badly during early boot[2] (which should
admittedly be fixed in the font itself);
* the kernel already supplies a default font, it seems reasonable to
use that unless anything else is specified;
* This also avoids a needless slow call to setfont; and
* We don't want to work around problems in the kernel (in case the
compiled-in font is not acceptable for whatever reason).
[0]: <https://dev.archlinux.org/~tomegun/kernel.bdf>
[1]: <https://dev.archlinux.org/~tomegun/latarcyrheb.bdf>
[2]: <http://i.imgur.com/J2tM4.jpg>
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can reuse it in logind
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As audit is pretty much just a special kind of logging we should treat
it similar, and manage the audit fd in a static variable.
This simplifies the audit fd sharing with the SELinux access checking
code quite a bit.
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a) Instead of parsing the bus messages inside of selinux-access.c
simply pass everything pre-parsed in the functions
b) implement the access checking with a macro that resolves to nothing
on non-selinux builds
c) split out the selinux checks into their own sources
selinux-util.[ch]
d) this unifies the job creation code behind the D-Bus calls
Manager.StartUnit() and Unit.Start().
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page is a local, yet unitialized, variable.
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This makes mkdir_p actually behave like mkdir -p.
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The documentation for --link-journal is also reworded.
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This is useful for systems such as kmscon which want to invoke classic
/sbin/login but use it on multiple seats.
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d4e9eb91ea changed the behavior for the F and f actions, wrongly sending
them to glob_item(). Restore the old behavior and shortcut straight to
write_one_file().
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This minimal HTTP server can serve journal data via HTTP. Its primary
purpose is synchronization of journal data across the network. It serves
journal data in three formats:
text/plain: the text format known from /var/log/messages
application/json: the journal entries formatted as JSON
application/vnd.fdo.journal: the binary export format of the journal
The HTTP server also serves a small HTML5 app that makes use of the JSON
serialization to present the journal data to the user.
Examples:
This downloads the journal in text format:
# systemctl start systemd-journal-gatewayd.service
# wget http://localhost:19531/entries
Same for JSON:
# curl -H"Accept: application/json" http://localhost:19531/entries
Access via web browser:
$ firefox http://localhost:19531/
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Among other cleanups this introduces a threshold for the size of binary
blobs we serialize as integer arrays in the JSON output. THis can be
disabled via --all.
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55213
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The old code used a timestamp to print a timespan for unsealed journalfiles,
incorrectly showing things like 2230 days of unsealed entries. Print the timespan
between the first and last entry instead.
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journalctl needs to know wether the file has been sealed to
be able to do verification.
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This requires a little bit of tip-toeing around to explicitly avoid
touching the environment from a sig handler. Instead, simply create a
function to reset the var to its "unset" state, allowing the next call
to columns() to recalculate and cache the new value.
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