Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
I'm trying to track down a relatively recent change in systemd
which broke OSTree; see https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743891
Systemd started to stop sysroot.mount, and this patch should help
me debug why at least.
While we're here, "break" on the first unit we find that will
deactivate, as there's no point in further iteration.
|
|
(David: fix up compile-failure and simplify code a bit)
|
|
|
|
|
|
"machinectl set-limit"
When the pool size limit is altered with "machinectl set-limit", then
not only set the subvolume quota of the /var/lib/machine subvolume, but
also resize the backing loop file and the btrfs file system on it
dynamically.
|
|
It probably is but check anyway to make coverity happy.
CID#1271354
|
|
When running in user mode unmounting of mount units when a device
vanishes is unlikely to work, and even if it would work is already done
by PID 1 anyway. HEnce, when creating implicit dependencies between
mount units and their backing devices, created a Wants= type dependency
in --user mode, but leave a BindsTo= dependency in --system mode.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Commit 668c965af "journal: skipping of exhausted journal files is bad if
direction changed" fixed a correctness issue, but it also significantly
limited the cases where the optimization that skips exhausted journal
files could apply.
As a result, some journalctl queries are much slower in v219 than in v218.
(e.g. queries where a "--since" cutoff should have quickly eliminated
older journal files from consideration, but didn't.)
If already in the initial iteration find_location_with_matches() finds
no entry, the journal file's location is not updated. This is fine,
except that:
- We must update at least f->last_direction. The optimization relies on
it. Let's separate that from journal_file_save_location() and update
it immediately after the direction checks.
- The optimization was conditional on "f->current_offset > 0", but it
would always be 0 in this scenario. This check is unnecessary for the
optimization.
|
|
|
|
Add getrandom syscall numbers for MIPS. Based on Linux 3.17 kernel
(commit 42944521af97a3b25516f15f3149aec3779656dc, "MIPS: Wire up new
syscalls getrandom and memfd_create").
|
|
If we have less samples than expected, systemd-bootchart will crash.
|
|
CID#1271347/1271348
|
|
CID#1271351
|
|
CID#1271344/1271345
|
|
|
|
arguments show statistics about pool
|
|
assert(b->pipe[0] >= 0 && b->pipe[0] >= 0);
Test the same condition twice, pretty sure we mean
assert(b->pipe[0] >= 0 && b->pipe[1] >= 0);
|
|
Many of machined's operations are now opened up to unprivileged clients
via PolicyKit. Open up the dbus policy so that we can actually make
these calls.
kdbus doesn't reuqire this, hence this wasn't noticed before.
|
|
When manipulating container and VM images we need efficient and atomic
directory snapshots and file copies, as well as disk quota. btrfs
provides this, legacy file systems do not. Hence, implicitly create a
loopback file system in /var/lib/machines.raw and mount it to
/var/lib/machines, if that directory is not on btrfs anyway.
This is done implicitly and transparently the first time the user
invokes "machinectl import-xyz".
This allows us to take benefit of btrfs features for container
management without actually having the rest of the system use btrfs.
The loopback is sized 500M initially. Patches to grow it dynamically are
to follow.
|
|
|
|
|
|
gcc5 spits out a warning about test-hashmap.c:
CC src/test/test-hashmap.o
src/test/test-hashmap.c: In function ‘test_string_compare_func’:
src/test/test-hashmap.c:76:79: warning: logical not is only applied to the left hand side of comparison [-Wlogical-not-parentheses]
|
|
Fix the following gcc5 warning:
CC src/shared/libsystemd_shared_la-unit-name.lo
src/shared/unit-name.c: In function 'unit_name_is_valid':
src/shared/unit-name.c:102:34: warning: logical not is only applied to the left hand side of comparison [-Wlogical-not-parentheses]
if (!template_ok == TEMPLATE_VALID && at+1 == e)
^
|
|
It is not necessary when running as telinit, etc.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1184712
|
|
Commit 6e1bf7ab99 used the wrong directory; we need rootlibexecdir, not
rootlibdir, as the latter is something like /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ on
multi-arch systems.
https://launchpad.net/bugs/1423867
|
|
The kernel part of kdbus does not allow userspace to make any assumption on
which unique address the first user on the bus will get.
Instead, use sd_bus_get_unique_name() to get the server's address.
|
|
|
|
CC src/shared/libsystemd_shared_la-time-util.lo
src/shared/time-util.c: In function 'parse_nsec':
src/shared/time-util.c:789:25: warning: logical not is only applied to the left hand side of comparison [-Wlogical-not-parentheses]
if (!*s != 0)
^
|
|
Follow two small changes in the kdbus API:
* Flags are now returned in cmd->return_flags by KDBUS_CMD_NAME_ACQUIRE
* struct kdbus_item_list has been dropped. The information stored in
this struct was redundant since awhile already, as all commands
report their returned slice size anyway.
|
|
We would print the filename header before trying to open the file. But since
the header was printed to stdout, and the error to stderr, the error would appear
on the terminal before the header. It is cleaner to open the file first, then
and only then print the header.
Also exit on first error. We shouldn't report success if we were unable to open
a file.
|
|
|
|
|
|
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=89202
https://bugs.debian.org/778656
Status quo ante can be restored with:
getfacl -p /var/log/journal/`cat /etc/machine-id`|grep -v '^#'|sort -u|sudo setfacl --set-file=- /var/log/journal/`cat /etc/machine-id`
|
|
This change exposed a bug in kernel headers:
/usr/include/linux/if_bridge.h:184:20: error: field 'ip6' has incomplete type
struct in6_addr ip6;
^
/usr/include/linux/if_tunnel.h:76:19: error: field 'prefix' has incomplete type
struct in6_addr prefix;
^
|
|
Include <sys/socket.h> from util.h and bus-message.h in order to
build errors like the ones below on kdbus enabled systems.
./src/shared/util.h:976:32: warning: its scope is only this definition or declaration, which is probably not what you want
In file included from src/libsystemd/sd-bus/bus-kernel.c:37:0:
./src/shared/util.h:1081:28: warning: 'struct msghdr' declared inside parameter list
void cmsg_close_all(struct msghdr *mh);
^
CC src/libsystemd/sd-bus/libsystemd_la-bus-creds.lo
In file included from src/libsystemd/sd-bus/bus-creds.c:25:0:
./src/shared/util.h:976:32: warning: 'struct ucred' declared inside parameter list
int getpeercred(int fd, struct ucred *ucred);
^
|
|
This patch removes includes that are not used. The removals were found with
include-what-you-use which checks if any of the symbols from a header is
in use.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Make sure we don't inspect sun_path of unnamed sockets.
Since we cannot know if two unnamed sockets' adresses refer to the same
socket, just return false.
|
|
Just call socket_address_equal() from socket_address_matches_fd()
instead of implementing similar comparing of addresses.
|
|
Cleanup. No behavior change.
|
|
When dbus.socket is updated like this:
-ListenStream=/var/run/dbus/system_bus_socket
+ListenStream=/run/dbus/system_bus_socket
... and daemon-reload is performed, bad things happen.
During deserialization systemd does not recognize that the two paths
refer to the same named socket and replaces the socket file with a new
one. As a result, applications hang when they try talking to dbus.
Fix this by finding a match not only when the path names are equal, but
also when they point to the same inode.
In socket_address_equal() it is necessary to move the address size
comparison into the abstract sockets branch. For path name sockets the
comparison must not be done and for other families it is redundant
(their sizes are constant and checked by socket_address_verify()).
FIFOs and special files can also have multiple pathnames, so compare the
inodes for them as well. Note that previously the pathname checks used
streq_ptr(), but the paths cannot be NULL.
Fixes: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1186018
|
|
This syncs up the new KDBUS_CMD_CONN_INFO behavior:
- attach-flags are passed in .attach_flags, instead of directly merged
with the command flags.
|
|
|
|
|
|
(This is incomplete, /proc and /sys are still owned by root from outside
the container, not inside)
|
|
Fix result testing of is_symlink() to ignore negative results, which happen if
the file name does not exist at all. In this case we do not want a warning and
unlink the non-existing link.
https://bugs.debian.org/778700
|