Systemd/src/core/manager.h

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#pragma once
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/***
This file is part of systemd.
Copyright 2010 Lennart Poettering
systemd is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
systemd is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
along with systemd; If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
***/
#include <libmount.h>
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#include <stdbool.h>
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#include <stdio.h>
#include "sd-bus.h"
#include "sd-event.h"
#include "cgroup-util.h"
#include "fdset.h"
#include "hashmap.h"
#include "list.h"
#include "ratelimit.h"
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/* Enforce upper limit how many names we allow */
#define MANAGER_MAX_NAMES 131072 /* 128K */
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typedef struct Manager Manager;
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typedef enum ManagerState {
MANAGER_INITIALIZING,
MANAGER_STARTING,
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MANAGER_RUNNING,
MANAGER_DEGRADED,
MANAGER_MAINTENANCE,
MANAGER_STOPPING,
_MANAGER_STATE_MAX,
_MANAGER_STATE_INVALID = -1
} ManagerState;
typedef enum ManagerExitCode {
MANAGER_OK,
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MANAGER_EXIT,
MANAGER_RELOAD,
MANAGER_REEXECUTE,
MANAGER_REBOOT,
MANAGER_POWEROFF,
MANAGER_HALT,
MANAGER_KEXEC,
MANAGER_SWITCH_ROOT,
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_MANAGER_EXIT_CODE_MAX,
_MANAGER_EXIT_CODE_INVALID = -1
} ManagerExitCode;
typedef enum StatusType {
STATUS_TYPE_EPHEMERAL,
STATUS_TYPE_NORMAL,
STATUS_TYPE_EMERGENCY,
} StatusType;
#include "execute.h"
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#include "job.h"
#include "path-lookup.h"
#include "show-status.h"
#include "unit-name.h"
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struct Manager {
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/* Note that the set of units we know of is allowed to be
* inconsistent. However the subset of it that is loaded may
* not, and the list of jobs may neither. */
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/* Active jobs and units */
Hashmap *units; /* name string => Unit object n:1 */
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Hashmap *jobs; /* job id => Job object 1:1 */
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/* To make it easy to iterate through the units of a specific
* type we maintain a per type linked list */
LIST_HEAD(Unit, units_by_type[_UNIT_TYPE_MAX]);
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/* Units that need to be loaded */
LIST_HEAD(Unit, load_queue); /* this is actually more a stack than a queue, but uh. */
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/* Jobs that need to be run */
LIST_HEAD(Job, run_queue); /* more a stack than a queue, too */
/* Units and jobs that have not yet been announced via
* D-Bus. When something about a job changes it is added here
* if it is not in there yet. This allows easy coalescing of
* D-Bus change signals. */
LIST_HEAD(Unit, dbus_unit_queue);
LIST_HEAD(Job, dbus_job_queue);
/* Units to remove */
LIST_HEAD(Unit, cleanup_queue);
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/* Units to check when doing GC */
LIST_HEAD(Unit, gc_queue);
/* Units that should be realized */
LIST_HEAD(Unit, cgroup_queue);
sd_event *event;
/* We use two hash tables here, since the same PID might be
* watched by two different units: once the unit that forked
* it off, and possibly a different unit to which it was
* joined as cgroup member. Since we know that it is either
* one or two units for each PID we just use to hashmaps
* here. */
Hashmap *watch_pids1; /* pid => Unit object n:1 */
Hashmap *watch_pids2; /* pid => Unit object n:1 */
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/* A set contains all units which cgroup should be refreshed after startup */
Set *startup_units;
/* A set which contains all currently failed units */
Set *failed_units;
sd_event_source *run_queue_event_source;
char *notify_socket;
int notify_fd;
sd_event_source *notify_event_source;
core: use an AF_UNIX/SOCK_DGRAM socket for cgroup agent notification dbus-daemon currently uses a backlog of 30 on its D-bus system bus socket. On overloaded systems this means that only 30 connections may be queued without dbus-daemon processing them before further connection attempts fail. Our cgroups-agent binary so far used D-Bus for its messaging, and hitting this limit hence may result in us losing cgroup empty messages. This patch adds a seperate cgroup agent socket of type AF_UNIX/SOCK_DGRAM. Since sockets of these types need no connection set up, no listen() backlog applies. Our cgroup-agent binary will hence simply block as long as it can't enqueue its datagram message, so that we won't lose cgroup empty messages as likely anymore. This also rearranges the ordering of the processing of SIGCHLD signals, service notification messages (sd_notify()...) and the two types of cgroup notifications (inotify for the unified hierarchy support, and agent for the classic hierarchy support). We now always process events for these in the following order: 1. service notification messages (SD_EVENT_PRIORITY_NORMAL-7) 2. SIGCHLD signals (SD_EVENT_PRIORITY_NORMAL-6) 3. cgroup inotify and cgroup agent (SD_EVENT_PRIORITY_NORMAL-5) This is because when receiving SIGCHLD we invalidate PID information, which we need to process the service notification messages which are bound to PIDs. Hence the order between the first two items. And we want to process SIGCHLD metadata to detect whether a service is gone, before using cgroup notifications, to decide when a service is gone, since the former carries more useful metadata. Related to this: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=95264 https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/1961
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int cgroups_agent_fd;
sd_event_source *cgroups_agent_event_source;
int signal_fd;
sd_event_source *signal_event_source;
int time_change_fd;
sd_event_source *time_change_event_source;
sd_event_source *jobs_in_progress_event_source;
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UnitFileScope unit_file_scope;
LookupPaths lookup_paths;
Set *unit_path_cache;
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char **environment;
usec_t runtime_watchdog;
usec_t shutdown_watchdog;
dual_timestamp firmware_timestamp;
dual_timestamp loader_timestamp;
dual_timestamp kernel_timestamp;
dual_timestamp initrd_timestamp;
dual_timestamp userspace_timestamp;
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dual_timestamp finish_timestamp;
dual_timestamp security_start_timestamp;
dual_timestamp security_finish_timestamp;
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dual_timestamp generators_start_timestamp;
dual_timestamp generators_finish_timestamp;
dual_timestamp units_load_start_timestamp;
dual_timestamp units_load_finish_timestamp;
struct udev* udev;
/* Data specific to the device subsystem */
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struct udev_monitor* udev_monitor;
sd_event_source *udev_event_source;
Hashmap *devices_by_sysfs;
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/* Data specific to the mount subsystem */
struct libmnt_monitor *mount_monitor;
sd_event_source *mount_event_source;
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/* Data specific to the swap filesystem */
FILE *proc_swaps;
sd_event_source *swap_event_source;
Hashmap *swaps_by_devnode;
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/* Data specific to the D-Bus subsystem */
sd_bus *api_bus, *system_bus;
Set *private_buses;
int private_listen_fd;
sd_event_source *private_listen_event_source;
/* Contains all the clients that are subscribed to signals via
the API bus. Note that private bus connections are always
considered subscribes, since they last for very short only,
and it is much simpler that way. */
sd_bus_track *subscribed;
char **deserialized_subscribed;
/* This is used during reloading: before the reload we queue
* the reply message here, and afterwards we send it */
sd_bus_message *queued_message;
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Hashmap *watch_bus; /* D-Bus names => Unit object n:1 */
bool send_reloading_done;
uint32_t current_job_id;
uint32_t default_unit_job_id;
/* Data specific to the Automount subsystem */
int dev_autofs_fd;
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/* Data specific to the cgroup subsystem */
Hashmap *cgroup_unit;
core: unified cgroup hierarchy support This patch set adds full support the new unified cgroup hierarchy logic of modern kernels. A new kernel command line option "systemd.unified_cgroup_hierarchy=1" is added. If specified the unified hierarchy is mounted to /sys/fs/cgroup instead of a tmpfs. No further hierarchies are mounted. The kernel command line option defaults to off. We can turn it on by default as soon as the kernel's APIs regarding this are stabilized (but even then downstream distros might want to turn this off, as this will break any tools that access cgroupfs directly). It is possibly to choose for each boot individually whether the unified or the legacy hierarchy is used. nspawn will by default provide the legacy hierarchy to containers if the host is using it, and the unified otherwise. However it is possible to run containers with the unified hierarchy on a legacy host and vice versa, by setting the $UNIFIED_CGROUP_HIERARCHY environment variable for nspawn to 1 or 0, respectively. The unified hierarchy provides reliable cgroup empty notifications for the first time, via inotify. To make use of this we maintain one manager-wide inotify fd, and each cgroup to it. This patch also removes cg_delete() which is unused now. On kernel 4.2 only the "memory" controller is compatible with the unified hierarchy, hence that's the only controller systemd exposes when booted in unified heirarchy mode. This introduces a new enum for enumerating supported controllers, plus a related enum for the mask bits mapping to it. The core is changed to make use of this everywhere. This moves PID 1 into a new "init.scope" implicit scope unit in the root slice. This is necessary since on the unified hierarchy cgroups may either contain subgroups or processes but not both. PID 1 hence has to move out of the root cgroup (strictly speaking the root cgroup is the only one where processes and subgroups are still allowed, but in order to support containers nicey, we move PID 1 into the new scope in all cases.) This new unit is also used on legacy hierarchy setups. It's actually pretty useful on all systems, as it can then be used to filter journal messages coming from PID 1, and so on. The root slice ("-.slice") is now implicitly created and started (and does not require a unit file on disk anymore), since that's where "init.scope" is located and the slice needs to be started before the scope can. To check whether we are in unified or legacy hierarchy mode we use statfs() on /sys/fs/cgroup. If the .f_type field reports tmpfs we are in legacy mode, if it reports cgroupfs we are in unified mode. This patch set carefuly makes sure that cgls and cgtop continue to work as desired. When invoking nspawn as a service it will implicitly create two subcgroups in the cgroup it is using, one to move the nspawn process into, the other to move the actual container processes into. This is done because of the requirement that cgroups may either contain processes or other subgroups.
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CGroupMask cgroup_supported;
char *cgroup_root;
core: unified cgroup hierarchy support This patch set adds full support the new unified cgroup hierarchy logic of modern kernels. A new kernel command line option "systemd.unified_cgroup_hierarchy=1" is added. If specified the unified hierarchy is mounted to /sys/fs/cgroup instead of a tmpfs. No further hierarchies are mounted. The kernel command line option defaults to off. We can turn it on by default as soon as the kernel's APIs regarding this are stabilized (but even then downstream distros might want to turn this off, as this will break any tools that access cgroupfs directly). It is possibly to choose for each boot individually whether the unified or the legacy hierarchy is used. nspawn will by default provide the legacy hierarchy to containers if the host is using it, and the unified otherwise. However it is possible to run containers with the unified hierarchy on a legacy host and vice versa, by setting the $UNIFIED_CGROUP_HIERARCHY environment variable for nspawn to 1 or 0, respectively. The unified hierarchy provides reliable cgroup empty notifications for the first time, via inotify. To make use of this we maintain one manager-wide inotify fd, and each cgroup to it. This patch also removes cg_delete() which is unused now. On kernel 4.2 only the "memory" controller is compatible with the unified hierarchy, hence that's the only controller systemd exposes when booted in unified heirarchy mode. This introduces a new enum for enumerating supported controllers, plus a related enum for the mask bits mapping to it. The core is changed to make use of this everywhere. This moves PID 1 into a new "init.scope" implicit scope unit in the root slice. This is necessary since on the unified hierarchy cgroups may either contain subgroups or processes but not both. PID 1 hence has to move out of the root cgroup (strictly speaking the root cgroup is the only one where processes and subgroups are still allowed, but in order to support containers nicey, we move PID 1 into the new scope in all cases.) This new unit is also used on legacy hierarchy setups. It's actually pretty useful on all systems, as it can then be used to filter journal messages coming from PID 1, and so on. The root slice ("-.slice") is now implicitly created and started (and does not require a unit file on disk anymore), since that's where "init.scope" is located and the slice needs to be started before the scope can. To check whether we are in unified or legacy hierarchy mode we use statfs() on /sys/fs/cgroup. If the .f_type field reports tmpfs we are in legacy mode, if it reports cgroupfs we are in unified mode. This patch set carefuly makes sure that cgls and cgtop continue to work as desired. When invoking nspawn as a service it will implicitly create two subcgroups in the cgroup it is using, one to move the nspawn process into, the other to move the actual container processes into. This is done because of the requirement that cgroups may either contain processes or other subgroups.
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/* Notifications from cgroups, when the unified hierarchy is
* used is done via inotify. */
int cgroup_inotify_fd;
sd_event_source *cgroup_inotify_event_source;
Hashmap *cgroup_inotify_wd_unit;
/* Make sure the user cannot accidentally unmount our cgroup
* file system */
int pin_cgroupfs_fd;
core: unified cgroup hierarchy support This patch set adds full support the new unified cgroup hierarchy logic of modern kernels. A new kernel command line option "systemd.unified_cgroup_hierarchy=1" is added. If specified the unified hierarchy is mounted to /sys/fs/cgroup instead of a tmpfs. No further hierarchies are mounted. The kernel command line option defaults to off. We can turn it on by default as soon as the kernel's APIs regarding this are stabilized (but even then downstream distros might want to turn this off, as this will break any tools that access cgroupfs directly). It is possibly to choose for each boot individually whether the unified or the legacy hierarchy is used. nspawn will by default provide the legacy hierarchy to containers if the host is using it, and the unified otherwise. However it is possible to run containers with the unified hierarchy on a legacy host and vice versa, by setting the $UNIFIED_CGROUP_HIERARCHY environment variable for nspawn to 1 or 0, respectively. The unified hierarchy provides reliable cgroup empty notifications for the first time, via inotify. To make use of this we maintain one manager-wide inotify fd, and each cgroup to it. This patch also removes cg_delete() which is unused now. On kernel 4.2 only the "memory" controller is compatible with the unified hierarchy, hence that's the only controller systemd exposes when booted in unified heirarchy mode. This introduces a new enum for enumerating supported controllers, plus a related enum for the mask bits mapping to it. The core is changed to make use of this everywhere. This moves PID 1 into a new "init.scope" implicit scope unit in the root slice. This is necessary since on the unified hierarchy cgroups may either contain subgroups or processes but not both. PID 1 hence has to move out of the root cgroup (strictly speaking the root cgroup is the only one where processes and subgroups are still allowed, but in order to support containers nicey, we move PID 1 into the new scope in all cases.) This new unit is also used on legacy hierarchy setups. It's actually pretty useful on all systems, as it can then be used to filter journal messages coming from PID 1, and so on. The root slice ("-.slice") is now implicitly created and started (and does not require a unit file on disk anymore), since that's where "init.scope" is located and the slice needs to be started before the scope can. To check whether we are in unified or legacy hierarchy mode we use statfs() on /sys/fs/cgroup. If the .f_type field reports tmpfs we are in legacy mode, if it reports cgroupfs we are in unified mode. This patch set carefuly makes sure that cgls and cgtop continue to work as desired. When invoking nspawn as a service it will implicitly create two subcgroups in the cgroup it is using, one to move the nspawn process into, the other to move the actual container processes into. This is done because of the requirement that cgroups may either contain processes or other subgroups.
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int gc_marker;
unsigned n_in_gc_queue;
/* Flags */
ManagerExitCode exit_code:5;
bool dispatching_load_queue:1;
bool dispatching_dbus_queue:1;
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bool taint_usr:1;
bool test_run:1;
/* If non-zero, exit with the following value when the systemd
* process terminate. Useful for containers: systemd-nspawn could get
* the return value. */
uint8_t return_value;
ShowStatus show_status;
bool confirm_spawn;
bool no_console_output;
ExecOutput default_std_output, default_std_error;
usec_t default_restart_usec, default_timeout_start_usec, default_timeout_stop_usec;
usec_t default_start_limit_interval;
unsigned default_start_limit_burst;
bool default_cpu_accounting;
bool default_memory_accounting;
core: add io controller support on the unified hierarchy On the unified hierarchy, blkio controller is renamed to io and the interface is changed significantly. * blkio.weight and blkio.weight_device are consolidated into io.weight which uses the standardized weight range [1, 10000] with 100 as the default value. * blkio.throttle.{read|write}_{bps|iops}_device are consolidated into io.max. Expansion of throttling features is being worked on to support work-conserving absolute limits (io.low and io.high). * All stats are consolidated into io.stats. This patchset adds support for the new interface. As the interface has been revamped and new features are expected to be added, it seems best to treat it as a separate controller rather than trying to expand the blkio settings although we might add automatic translation if only blkio settings are specified. * io.weight handling is mostly identical to blkio.weight[_device] handling except that the weight range is different. * Both read and write bandwidth settings are consolidated into CGroupIODeviceLimit which describes all limits applicable to the device. This makes it less painful to add new limits. * "max" can be used to specify the maximum limit which is equivalent to no config for max limits and treated as such. If a given CGroupIODeviceLimit doesn't contain any non-default configs, the config struct is discarded once the no limit config is applied to cgroup. * lookup_blkio_device() is renamed to lookup_block_device(). Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <htejun@fb.com>
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bool default_io_accounting;
bool default_blockio_accounting;
bool default_tasks_accounting;
uint64_t default_tasks_max;
usec_t default_timer_accuracy_usec;
struct rlimit *rlimit[_RLIMIT_MAX];
/* non-zero if we are reloading or reexecuting, */
int n_reloading;
unsigned n_installed_jobs;
unsigned n_failed_jobs;
/* Jobs in progress watching */
unsigned n_running_jobs;
unsigned n_on_console;
unsigned jobs_in_progress_iteration;
/* Do we have any outstanding password prompts? */
int have_ask_password;
int ask_password_inotify_fd;
sd_event_source *ask_password_event_source;
/* Type=idle pipes */
int idle_pipe[4];
sd_event_source *idle_pipe_event_source;
char *switch_root;
char *switch_root_init;
/* This maps all possible path prefixes to the units needing
* them. It's a hashmap with a path string as key and a Set as
* value where Unit objects are contained. */
Hashmap *units_requiring_mounts_for;
/* Reference to the kdbus bus control fd */
int kdbus_fd;
/* Used for processing polkit authorization responses */
Hashmap *polkit_registry;
/* Dynamic users/groups, indexed by their name */
Hashmap *dynamic_users;
/* When the user hits C-A-D more than 7 times per 2s, reboot immediately... */
RateLimit ctrl_alt_del_ratelimit;
core,network: major per-object logging rework This changes log_unit_info() (and friends) to take a real Unit* object insted of just a unit name as parameter. The call will now prefix all logged messages with the unit name, thus allowing the unit name to be dropped from the various passed romat strings, simplifying invocations drastically, and unifying log output across messages. Also, UNIT= vs. USER_UNIT= is now derived from the Manager object attached to the Unit object, instead of getpid(). This has the benefit of correcting the field for --test runs. Also contains a couple of other logging improvements: - Drops a couple of strerror() invocations in favour of using %m. - Not only .mount units now warn if a symlinks exist for the mount point already, .automount units do that too, now. - A few invocations of log_struct() that didn't actually pass any additional structured data have been replaced by simpler invocations of log_unit_info() and friends. - For structured data a new LOG_UNIT_MESSAGE() macro has been added, that works like LOG_MESSAGE() but prefixes the message with the unit name. Similar, there's now LOG_LINK_MESSAGE() and LOG_NETDEV_MESSAGE(). - For structured data new LOG_UNIT_ID(), LOG_LINK_INTERFACE(), LOG_NETDEV_INTERFACE() macros have been added that generate the necessary per object fields. The old log_unit_struct() call has been removed in favour of these new macros used in raw log_struct() invocations. In addition to removing one more function call this allows generated structured log messages that contain two object fields, as necessary for example for network interfaces that are joined into another network interface, and whose messages shall be indexed by both. - The LOG_ERRNO() macro has been removed, in favour of log_struct_errno(). The latter has the benefit of ensuring that %m in format strings is properly resolved to the specified error number. - A number of logging messages have been converted to use log_unit_info() instead of log_info() - The client code in sysv-generator no longer #includes core code from src/core/. - log_unit_full_errno() has been removed, log_unit_full() instead takes an errno now, too. - log_unit_info(), log_link_info(), log_netdev_info() and friends, now avoid double evaluation of their parameters
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const char *unit_log_field;
const char *unit_log_format_string;
int first_boot; /* tri-state */
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};
#define MANAGER_IS_SYSTEM(m) ((m)->unit_file_scope == UNIT_FILE_SYSTEM)
#define MANAGER_IS_USER(m) ((m)->unit_file_scope != UNIT_FILE_SYSTEM)
#define MANAGER_IS_RELOADING(m) ((m)->n_reloading > 0)
int manager_new(UnitFileScope scope, bool test_run, Manager **m);
Manager* manager_free(Manager *m);
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void manager_enumerate(Manager *m);
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int manager_startup(Manager *m, FILE *serialization, FDSet *fds);
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Job *manager_get_job(Manager *m, uint32_t id);
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Unit *manager_get_unit(Manager *m, const char *name);
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int manager_get_job_from_dbus_path(Manager *m, const char *s, Job **_j);
int manager_load_unit_prepare(Manager *m, const char *name, const char *path, sd_bus_error *e, Unit **_ret);
int manager_load_unit(Manager *m, const char *name, const char *path, sd_bus_error *e, Unit **_ret);
int manager_load_unit_from_dbus_path(Manager *m, const char *s, sd_bus_error *e, Unit **_u);
int manager_add_job(Manager *m, JobType type, Unit *unit, JobMode mode, sd_bus_error *e, Job **_ret);
int manager_add_job_by_name(Manager *m, JobType type, const char *name, JobMode mode, sd_bus_error *e, Job **_ret);
int manager_add_job_by_name_and_warn(Manager *m, JobType type, const char *name, JobMode mode, Job **ret);
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void manager_dump_units(Manager *s, FILE *f, const char *prefix);
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void manager_dump_jobs(Manager *s, FILE *f, const char *prefix);
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void manager_clear_jobs(Manager *m);
unsigned manager_dispatch_load_queue(Manager *m);
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int manager_environment_add(Manager *m, char **minus, char **plus);
int manager_set_default_rlimits(Manager *m, struct rlimit **default_rlimit);
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int manager_loop(Manager *m);
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int manager_open_serialization(Manager *m, FILE **_f);
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int manager_serialize(Manager *m, FILE *f, FDSet *fds, bool switching_root);
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int manager_deserialize(Manager *m, FILE *f, FDSet *fds);
int manager_reload(Manager *m);
void manager_reset_failed(Manager *m);
void manager_send_unit_audit(Manager *m, Unit *u, int type, bool success);
void manager_send_unit_plymouth(Manager *m, Unit *u);
bool manager_unit_inactive_or_pending(Manager *m, const char *name);
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void manager_check_finished(Manager *m);
void manager_recheck_journal(Manager *m);
void manager_set_show_status(Manager *m, ShowStatus mode);
void manager_set_first_boot(Manager *m, bool b);
void manager_status_printf(Manager *m, StatusType type, const char *status, const char *format, ...) _printf_(4,5);
void manager_flip_auto_status(Manager *m, bool enable);
Set *manager_get_units_requiring_mounts_for(Manager *m, const char *path);
const char *manager_get_runtime_prefix(Manager *m);
ManagerState manager_state(Manager *m);
int manager_update_failed_units(Manager *m, Unit *u, bool failed);
const char *manager_state_to_string(ManagerState m) _const_;
ManagerState manager_state_from_string(const char *s) _pure_;