Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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We place the opening bracket of a function on the same line as the
function name. Let's do so in the DHCP sources too.
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No need to invole atomic ops in single-threaded APIs, let's simplify
this.
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refcnt.h only exists for cases where objects are simultaneously handled
by different threads. Otherwise it should not be used. The only case
where this applies is sd_bus, really, and pretty much none of our APIs,
since we do not claim thread-safety for them.
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When we make sd-dhcp public one day we really should not make
sd_dhcp_lease_save() and sd_dhcp_lease_load() public, since it's pretty
much only useful as internal utility for networkd itself.
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Let's try to generate log messages that resemble english language
sentences, hence uppercase the first character.
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Previoulsy, we just checked whether the domain names specified in
incoming DHCP leases are valid. Given that validation code actually
internally normalizes anyway, it's a good idea to simply do the full
normalization and store that in the lease structure. This allows us to
remove the manual removal of a trailing dot, if there is one.
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This one is simply to add: encode the tzdata timezone in the DHCP
options and optionally make use of it.
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Let's make sure there's no embedded 0 byte. Also, let's reset the string
if the length is zero.
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Also, we should only accept trailing dots where we have to, but not
everywhere, hence be more strict when validating configured hostnames.
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Let's move the timedated-specific code to time-util.h and make it
generic.
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strv_extend() does not consume the passed entry, hence, we must properly
free it. Furthermore, we should *not* use strv_consume() as we do greedy
allocations on 'ret'; and greedy-allocations should only be used for short
lived objects or caches.
Fix the domainname parser to properly free temporary storage when done.
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In our API design, getter-functions don't ref objects. Calls like
foo_get_bar() will not ref 'bar'. We never do that and there is no real
reason to do it in single threaded APIs. If you need a ref-count, you
better take it yourself *BEFORE* doing anything else on the parent object
(as this might invalidate your pointer).
Right now, sd_dhcp?_get_lease() refs the lease it returns. A lot of
code-paths in systemd do not expect this and thus leak the lease
reference. Fix this by changing the API to not ref returned objects.
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machinectl: pass $TERM into "machinectl shell" sessions
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selinux: fix regression of systemctl subcommands when absolute unit file paths are specified
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import: don't create sparse tar archives
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Otherwise the epoll removal will fail and result in a warning.
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paths are specified
The commit 4938696301a914ec26bcfc60bb99a1e9624e3789 overlooked the
fact that unit files can be specified as unit file paths, not unit
file names, wrongly passing a unit file path to the 1st argument of
manager_load_unit() that handles it as a unit file name. As a result,
the following 4 systemctl subcommands:
enable
disable
reenable
link
mask
unmask
fail with the following error message:
# systemctl enable /usr/lib/systemd/system/kdump.service
Failed to execute operation: Unit name /usr/lib/systemd/system/kdump.service is not valid.
# systemctl disable /usr/lib/systemd/system/kdump.service
Failed to execute operation: Unit name /usr/lib/systemd/system/kdump.service is not valid.
# systemctl reenable /usr/lib/systemd/system/kdump.service
Failed to execute operation: Unit name /usr/lib/systemd/system/kdump.service is not valid.
# cp /usr/lib/systemd/system/kdump.service /tmp/
# systemctl link /tmp/kdump.service
Failed to execute operation: Unit name /tmp/kdump.service is not valid.
# systemctl mask /usr/lib/systemd/system/kdump.service
Failed to execute operation: Unit name /usr/lib/systemd/system/kdump.service is not valid.
# systemctl unmask /usr/lib/systemd/system/kdump.service
Failed to execute operation: Unit name /usr/lib/systemd/system/kdump.service is not valid.
To fix the issue, first check whether a unit file is passed as a unit
file name or a unit file path, and then pass the unit file to the
appropreate argument of manager_load_unit().
By the way, even with this commit mask and unmask reject unit file
paths as follows and this is a correct behavior:
# systemctl mask /usr/lib/systemd/system/kdump.service
Failed to execute operation: Invalid argument
# systemctl unmask /usr/lib/systemd/system/kdump.service
Failed to execute operation: Invalid argument
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test-util: fix a memleak
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nspawn: make sure --template= and --machine= my be combined
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Add --directory= option for reading alternate journal
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fix "systemctl status idontexist.service" showing the full cgroup tree
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Bring back a return statement 106784eb errornously removed.
Thanks to @phomes for reporting.
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trivial cleanups
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various resolved fixes
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Set _EXEC_UTMP_MODE_INVALID to -1. This matches the return value from
string_table_lookup.
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Internally, the root cgroup is stored as the empty string in
Unit.cgroup_path, and "no cgroup" as NULL. Unfortunately, D-Bus does not
know a NULL concept, hence when reporting the cgroup to clients we
should turn the root cgroup into "/", and leave the empty string for the
"no cgroup" case.
This should make sure that "systemctl status -- -.slice" works correctly
and shows the entire cgroup tree.
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This reverts commit b04c25f9ef6359ed0ae403bdbfe4df840aba0f58.
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Fixes #1018.
Based on a patch from Seth Jennings.
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In the Cockpit integration tests we hang onton the journal files
for a failed test and would like to inspect them using coredumpctl.
This commit adds the ability to specify an alternate directory
for coredumpctl to read the journal from.
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Some flags are defined differently on unicast DNS and LLMNR, let's
document this in the DNS_PACKET_MAKE_FLAGS() macro.
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This partially reverts 106784ebb7b303ae471851100a773ad2aebf5b80, ad
readds separate DNS_PACKET_MAKE_FLAGS() invocations for the LLMNR and
DNS case. This is important since SOme flags have different names and
meanings on LLMNR and on DNS and we should clarify that via the comments
and how we put things together.
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This hopefully makes this a bit more expressive and clarifies that the
fd is not used for the DNS TCP socket. This also mimics how the LLMNR
UDP fd is named in the manager object.
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Add a couple of new properties to the supported set we can pass in
systemd-run's and systemd-nspawn's --property= switch.
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Add new "machinectl shell" command for su(1)-like behaviour
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logind/systemctl: introduce SetWallMessage and --message
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Currently, dns_cache_put() does a number of things:
1) It unconditionally removes all keys contained in the passed
question before adding keys from the newly arrived answers.
2) It puts positive entries into the cache for all RRs contained
in the answer.
3) It creates negative entries in the cache for all keys in the
question that are not answered.
Allow passing q = NULL in the parameters and skip 1) and 3), so
we can use that function for mDNS responses. In this case, the
question is irrelevant, we are interested in all answers we got.
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Rename the enum, the lookup functions and the parser for LLMNRSupport so
the type can be reused for mDNS.
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Make a scope with invalid protocol state fail as soon as possible.
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With more protocols to come, switch repetitive if-else blocks with a
switch-case statements.
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Enable unprivileged users to set wall message on a shutdown
operation. When the message is set via the --message option,
it is logged together with the default shutdown message.
$ systemctl reboot --message "Applied kernel updates."
$ journalctl -b -1
...
systemd-logind[27]: System is rebooting. (Applied kernel updates.)
...
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If we try to resoolve an LLMNR PTR RR we shall connect via TCP directly
to the specified IP address. We already refuse to do this if the address
to resolve is of a different address family as the transaction's scope.
The error returned was EAFNOSUPPORT. Let's change this to ESRCH which is
how we indicate "not server available" when connecting for LLMNR or DNS,
since that's what this really is: we have no server we could connect to
in this address family.
This allows us to ensure that no server errors are always handled the same
way.
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If the user specifies an interface by its ifindex we should handle this
nicely. Hence let's try to parse the ifindex as a number before we try
to resolve it as an interface name.
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