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This adds support for searching single-label hostnames in a set of
configured search domains.
A new object DnsQueryCandidate is added that links queries to scopes.
It keeps track of the search domain last used for a query on a specific
link. Whenever a host name was unsuccessfuly resolved on a scope all its
transactions are flushed out and replaced by a new set, with the next
search domain appended.
This also adds a new flag SD_RESOLVED_NO_SEARCH to disable search domain
behaviour. The "systemd-resolve-host" tool is updated to make this
configurable via --search=.
Fixes #1697
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For now, let's just expose the LLMNR hostname currently in use; a
combined list of all dns servers with their interface indexes; a
combined list of all search domains with their interface indexes.
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Let's split this out from the resolv.conf parser, so that this becomes
generically useful.
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ordered_set_ensure_allocated() does for an OrderedSet, what
set_ensure_allicated() does for a Set.
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This copies concepts we introduced for the DnsSearchDomain stuff, and
reworks the operations on lists of dns servers to be reusable and
generic for use both with the Link and the Manager object.
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With this change, we add a new object to resolved, "DnsSearchDomain="
which wraps a search domain. This is then used to introduce a global
search domain list, in addition to the existing per-link search domain
list which is reword to make use of this new object too.
This is preparation for implement proper unicast DNS search domain
support.
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Previously, we'd keep adding new dns servers we discover to the end of
our linked list of servers. When we encountered a pre-existing server,
we'd just leave it where it was. In essence that meant that old servers
ended up at the front, and new servers at the end, but not in an order
that would reflect the configuration.
With this change we ensure that every pre-existing server we want to add
again we move to the back of the linked list, so that the order is
stable and in sync with the requested configuration.
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Closes #342.
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Previously, there was a chance of memory corruption, because when
switching to the next DNS server we didn't care whether they linked list
of DNS servers was still valid.
Clean up lifecycle of the dns server logic:
- When a DnsServer object is still in the linked list of DnsServers for
a link or the manager, indicate so with a "linked" boolean field, and
never follow the linked list if that boolean is not set.
- When picking a DnsServer to use for a link ot manager, always
explicitly take a reference.
This also rearranges some logic, to make the tracking of dns servers by
link and globally more alike.
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resolved-dns-server.c
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No functional changes.
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Let's use the same parser when parsing dns server information from
/etc/resolv.conf and our native configuration file.
Also, move all code that manages lists of dns servers to a single place.
resolved-dns-server.c
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Don't propagate any error in this case, it's really not an error.
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Wen DnsQuestion objects are used for DnsQuery objects all contained keys
have to share the same name, but otherwise they generally don't have to,
and this can actually happen in real-life because DnsPacket objects for
mDNS use DnsQuestion for the question section.
Hence, rename:
dns_question_is_valid() to dns_question_is_valid_for_query(), since the
name uniqueness check it does is only relevant when used for a query.
Similar, rename dns_question_name() to dns_question_first_name(),
to be more accurate, as this difference matters if we keys don#t have to
share the same name.
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Commit 5e5b137a (networkd: link - drop foreign config when configuring
link) introduced a regression where addresses (including 127.0.0.1) are
removed from loopback device.
Do not handle loopback device when removing foreign configs.
Signed-off-by: Christian Hesse <mail@eworm.de>
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core: mount flags remove FOREACH_WORD_SEPARATOR
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The x32 architecture has a small "long" type which is not enough to hold
struct statfs.f_type.
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FOREACH_WORD_SEPARATOR is no need here since we only
apply only one mount flag. The rvalue is sufficient for
this.
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Most servers apparently always implicitly convert DNAME to CNAME, but
some servers don't, hence implement this properly, as this is required
by edns0.
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networkd: link - fix reading routes
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This also adds client-side support for this to systemd-resolve-host.
Note that the ResolveService() API can deal both with DNS-SD service
(consisting of service name, type and domain), as well as classic SRV
services (consisting just of a type and a domain), all exposed in the
same call.
This patch also reworks CNAME handling in order to reuse it between
hostname, RR and service lookups.
In contrast to Avahi and Bonjour, this new API will actually reolve the
A/AAAA RRs the SRV RRs point to in one go (unless this is explicitly
disabled). This normally comes for free, as these RRs are sent along
the SRV responses anyway, hence let's make use of that. This makes the
API considerably easier to use, as a single ResolveService() invocation
will return all necessary data to pick a server and connect() to it.
Note that this only implements the DNS-SD resolving step, it does not
implement DNS-SD browsing, as that makes sense primarily on mDNS, due to
its continuous nature.
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We need to free the rtnl watch too.
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This adds dns_service_join() and dns_service_split() which may be used
to concatenate a DNS-SD service name, am SRV service type string, and a
domain name into a full resolvable DNS domain name string. If the
service name is specified as NULL, only the type and domain are
appended, to implement classic, non-DNS-SD SRV lookups.
The reverse is dns_service_split() which takes the full name, and split
it into the three components again.
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RFC 6763 is very clear that TXT RRs should allow arbitrary binary
content, hence let's actually accept that. This also means accepting NUL
bytes in the middle of strings.
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virt: add comment about order in virtualization detection
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https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/2002
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make sure all swap units are ordered before the swap target
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virt: detect dmi before cpuid
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rpm: fix %systemd_user_post() macro.
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Virtualbox should be detected as 'oracle'. This used to work but broke
with commit:
commit 75f86906c52735c98dc0aa7e24b773edb42ee814
Author: Lennart Poettering <lennart@poettering.net>
Date: Mon Sep 7 13:42:47 2015 +0200
basic: rework virtualization detection API
We swap detection for dmi and cpuid, this fixes Virtualbox with KVM.
Hopefully it does not break anything else.
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When shutting down the system, the swap devices can be disabled long
time before the swap target is stopped. They're actually the first
units systemd turns off on my system.
This is incorrect and due to swap devices having multiple associated
swap unit files. The main one is usually created by the fstab
generator and is used to start the swap device.
Once done, systemd creates some 'alias' units for the same swap
device, one for each swap dev link. But those units are missing an
ordering dependencies which was created by the fstab generator for the
main swap unit.
Therefore during shutdown those 'alias' units can be stopped at
anytime before unmount.target target.
This patch makes sure that all swap units are stopped after the
swap.target target.
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Regresssed during port to extract_first_word in
5ab22f3321d238957c03dcc6a6db76491e3989b8
CID #1338060
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Escape "--user" and "--global" arguments with "\\" since rpm treats
arguments starting with "-" as macro options which causes "Unknown
option" rpm error.
Use %{expand:...} to force expansion of the inner macro. Otherwise %{?*}
is recursively defined as "\--user \--global {%?*}" which causes
"Too many levels of recursion in macro expansion" rpm error.
Thanks to Michael Mráka for helping me fix the above issues.
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This regressed during the port to extract_first_word in c598ac76
(v228).
CID #1338083
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We already have a state RUNNING and EXITING when we dispatch regular and
exit callbacks. Let's introduce a new state called PREPARING that is
active while we invoke preparation callbacks. This way we have a state
each for all three kinds of event handlers.
The states are currently not documented, hence let's add a new state to
the end, before we start documenting this.
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Let's make _ref() calls happy when NULL is passed to them, and simply
return NULL without any assertion logic. This makes them nicely
symmetric to the _unref() calls which also are happy to take NULL and
become NOPs then.
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tree-wide: sort includes in *.h
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