The only way to control "ShowStatus" property programmatically was to use the
signal API and wait until the property "ShowStatus" switched to the new value.
This interface is rather cumbersome to use and doesn't allow to temporarily
override the current setting and later restore the overridden value in
race-free manner.
The new method also accepts the empty string as argument which allows to
restore the initial value of ShowStatus, ie the value before it was overridden
by this method.
Fixes: #11447.
This is useful for foreign container runtimes implementing the OCI
runtime spec, which only wants to deal with cgroup paths. There's
already an API to translate units into cgroup paths, with this we add
the reverse.
This adds a new bus call to service and scope units called
AttachProcesses() that moves arbitrary processes into the cgroup of the
unit. The primary user for this new API is systemd itself: the systemd
--user instance uses this call of the systemd --system instance to
migrate processes if itself gets the request to migrate processes and
the kernel refuses this due to access restrictions.
The primary use-case of this is to make "systemd-run --scope --user …"
invoked from user session scopes work correctly on pure cgroupsv2
environments. There, the kernel refuses to migrate processes between two
unprivileged-owned cgroups unless the requestor as well as the ownership
of the closest parent cgroup all match. This however is not the case
between the session-XYZ.scope unit of a login session and the
user@ABC.service of the systemd --user instance.
The new logic always tries to move the processes on its own, but if
that doesn't work when being the user manager, then the system manager
is asked to do it instead.
The new operation is relatively restrictive: it will only allow to move
the processes like this if the caller is root, or the UID of the target
unit, caller and process all match. Note that this means that
unprivileged users cannot attach processes to scope units, as those do
not have "owning" users (i.e. they have now User= field).
Fixes: #3388
This patch does four things:
1. Adds more comments that clarify the order in which things appear in
the file
2. All entries are placed in the order in which their SD_BUS_METHOD()
macros appear in the C vtables.
3. A couple of missing entries are added that should be open to all or
do polkit
4. Corrects the interface name for the GetProcesses() calls. They belong
to the per-unit interface, not to Unit
It may be desired by users to know what targets a particular service is
installed into. Improve user friendliness by teaching the is-enabled
command to show such information when used with --full.
This patch makes use of the newly added UnitFileFlags and adds
UNIT_FILE_DRY_RUN flag into it. Since the API had already been modified,
it's now easy to add the new dry-run feature for other commands as
well. As a next step, --dry-run could be added to systemctl, which in
turn might pave the way for a long requested dry-run feature when
running systemctl start.
This adds a new invocation ID concept to the service manager. The invocation ID
identifies each runtime cycle of a unit uniquely. A new randomized 128bit ID is
generated each time a unit moves from and inactive to an activating or active
state.
The primary usecase for this concept is to connect the runtime data PID 1
maintains about a service with the offline data the journal stores about it.
Previously we'd use the unit name plus start/stop times, which however is
highly racy since the journal will generally process log data after the service
already ended.
The "invocation ID" kinda matches the "boot ID" concept of the Linux kernel,
except that it applies to an individual unit instead of the whole system.
The invocation ID is passed to the activated processes as environment variable.
It is additionally stored as extended attribute on the cgroup of the unit. The
latter is used by journald to automatically retrieve it for each log logged
message and attach it to the log entry. The environment variable is very easily
accessible, even for unprivileged services. OTOH the extended attribute is only
accessible to privileged processes (this is because cgroupfs only supports the
"trusted." xattr namespace, not "user."). The environment variable may be
altered by services, the extended attribute may not be, hence is the better
choice for the journal.
Note that reading the invocation ID off the extended attribute from journald is
racy, similar to the way reading the unit name for a logging process is.
This patch adds APIs to read the invocation ID to sd-id128:
sd_id128_get_invocation() may be used in a similar fashion to
sd_id128_get_boot().
PID1's own logging is updated to always include the invocation ID when it logs
information about a unit.
A new bus call GetUnitByInvocationID() is added that allows retrieving a bus
path to a unit by its invocation ID. The bus path is built using the invocation
ID, thus providing a path for referring to a unit that is valid only for the
current runtime cycleof it.
Outlook for the future: should the kernel eventually allow passing of cgroup
information along AF_UNIX/SOCK_DGRAM messages via a unique cgroup id, then we
can alter the invocation ID to be generated as hash from that rather than
entirely randomly. This way we can derive the invocation race-freely from the
messages.
This adds two (privileged) bus calls Ref() and Unref() to the Unit interface.
The two calls may be used by clients to pin a unit into memory, so that various
runtime properties aren't flushed out by the automatic GC. This is necessary
to permit clients to race-freely acquire runtime results (such as process exit
status/code or accumulated CPU time) on successful service termination.
Ref() and Unref() are fully recursive, hence act like the usual reference
counting concept in C. Taking a reference is a privileged operation, as this
allows pinning units into memory which consumes resources.
Transient units may also gain a reference at the time of creation, via the new
AddRef property (that is only defined for transient units at the time of
creation).
This new method returns information by unit names. Instead of ListUnitsByPatterns
this method returns information of inactive and even unexisting units.
Moved dbus unit reply logic into a separate shared function.
Resolves https://github.com/coreos/fleet/pull/1418
This adds a new GetProcesses() bus call to the Unit object which returns an
array consisting of all PIDs, their process names, as well as their full cgroup
paths. This is then used by "systemctl status" to show the per-unit process
tree.
This has the benefit that the client-side no longer needs to access the
cgroupfs directly to show the process tree of a unit. Instead, it now uses this
new API, which means it also works if -H or -M are used correctly, as the
information from the specific host is used, and not the one from the local
system.
Fixes: #2945
This allows dropping all user configuration and reverting back to the vendor
default of a unit file. It basically undoes what "systemctl edit", "systemctl
set-property" and "systemctl mask" do.
DBus methods that retrieve information can be called by anyone.
DBus methods that modify state of units are verified via polkit
action: org.freedesktop.systemd1.manage-units
DBus methods that modify state of unit files are verified via polkit
action: org.freedesktop.systemd1.manage-unit-files
DBus methods that reload the entire daemon state are verified via polkit
action: org.freedesktop.systemd1.reload-daemon
DBus methods that modify job state are callable from the clients
that started the job.
root (ie: CAP_SYS_ADMIN) can continue to perform all calls, property
access etc. There are several DBus methods that can only be
called by root.
Open up the dbus1 policy for the above methods.
(Heavily modified by Lennart, making use of the new
bus_verify_polkit_async() version that doesn't force us to always
pass the original callback around. Also, interactive auhentication must
be opt-in, not unconditional, hence I turned this off.)