Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This was already supported in path_id, so should be uncontroversial.
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This reverts commit 4cd1214db6cf4b262e8ce6381bc710091b375c96.
This may still be fixed in the kernel, revert this for now until
we see how it all shakes out.
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Not long ago a failed command would print:
"Failed to start something.service: ..."
regardless of whether the command was to start/stop/restart/etc.
With e3e0314 this was improved to print the method used. E.g. for stopping:
"Failed to StopUnit something.service: ..."
This patch matches the method to a more human readable word. E.g:
"Failed to stop something.service: ..."
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When DEVTYPE is not set for a nic, it means it is a wired/ethernet
device.
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This debug information may be useful when comapring to dropped rtnetlink messages.
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This gives a bit better messages when a link is added twice.
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We set the variable in the unit file for --user, so this check is
always true.
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No need to wait for the NEWLINK message to arrive.
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Unfortunately a different cleanup function is necessary per type,
because cap_t** and char** are incompatible with void**.
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struct sd_rtnl_message would keep two additional pointers into the hdr
field. Every time hdr was realloced, those pointers should be adjusted,
but weren't. It seems less error-prone to keep offsets instead.
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Because messages in the read and write queues hold a reference on the
bus, and the bus holds a reference on each of them, we would never
free the bus if the read or write queues were not empty. Explicitly
substract the number of messages in those queue from the bus reference
count when deciding whether to free or not.
A simple test which creates and unrefs simple objects is added.
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It is nicer to predefine patterns using configure time check instead of
using casts everywhere.
Since we do not need to use any flags, include "%" in the format instead
of excluding it like PRI* macros.
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https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1047304
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Information about signals which are not routinely received by systemd
are printed at info level. This should make it easier to see what is
happening in the system.
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We need to be able to stop the dhcp client at any time, and the function appears to be written to handle this.
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If a network is not (yet) set for a link, we do not care about its state (as we
anyway don't know what to do with it).
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Remove redundant messages, add some debugging ones and make wording more uniform.
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We were requesting the state and then ignoring it...
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This adds basic DHCPv4 support. Link-sense is enabled unconditionally,
but the plan is to make that configurable.
I tested this in a VM with lots of NICs and over wifi in the various
coffee shops I found this Christmas, but more testing would definitely
be appreciated.
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Static addresses/routes are associated with a network. Dynamic
addresses/routes are associtade with links (as the corresponding network
may be shared by several links).
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GREEDY_REALLOC needs to have two size variables: one for the
allocated size, and a second one for the used size. Using
the allocated size only lead to leaving some elements unitialized
and assigning some more than once.
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Before 34a3baa4d 'sleep-config: Dereference pointer before check for NULL'
oom conditions would not be detected properly. After that commit, a double
free was performed.
Rework the whole function to be easier to understand, and also replace
strv_split_nulstr with strv_new, since we know the strings anyway.
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2 lines after the changed line we assign err to efi_get_variable(...)
unconditionally, so it makes no sense to initialize it to some value.
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This fixes a bug pointed out by http://css.csail.mit.edu/stack/
(Optimization-unstable code)
It is a similar fix as f146f5e159 (2013-12-30, core:
Forgot to dereference pointer when checking for NULL)
To explain this bug consider the following similar, but simpler code:
if (!p)
free(*p)
Assume the if condition evaluates to true, then we will access *p,
which means the compiler can assume p is a valid pointer, so it could
dereference p and use the value *p.
Assuming p as a valid pointer, !p will be false.
But initally we assumed the condition evaluates to true.
By this reasoning the optimizing compiler can deduce, we have dead code.
("The if will never be taken, as *p must be valid, because otherwise
accessing *p inside the if would segfault")
This led to an error message of the static code checker, so I checked the
code in question.
As we access *modes and *states before the check in the changed line of
this patch, I assume the line to be wrong and we actually wanted to check
for *modes and *states being both non null.
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Directly before the changed line there is:
while ((parent->next_ps && parent->pid != ps->ppid))
parent = parent->next_ps;
which looks one element ahead of the list, hence we can rely on parent
being non null here.
If 'parent' were NULL at that while loop already, it would crash as we're
dereferencing 'parent' when checking for next_ps already.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
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As suggested by Kay, it is better to describe what is done,
not what might happen.
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Actually we already checked for !rt before, now we'd like to examine
the return value of the memory allocation.
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The return value of 0 would be treated as failure by mistake,
resulting in " SystemError: error return without exception set".
The way that set_error() is used is changed to be the same
everywhere.
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Nspawn has --setenv, and systemd itself accepts systemd.setenv.
It is nice to have the same parameter name everywhere.
Old name is accepted, but not advertised.
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This was causing a nasty coredump
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SELinux check will be done using the context of the unit file as as a
target instead of the default init_t context, allowing selinux control
on the level of individual units.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1022762
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