This adds a way to control SO_TIMESTAMP/SO_TIMESTAMPNS socket options
for sockets PID 1 binds to.
This is useful in journald so that we get proper timestamps even for
ingress log messages that are submitted before journald is running.
We recently turned on packet info metadata from PID 1 for these sockets,
but the timestamping info was still missing. Let's correct that.
If the whole call is simple and we don't need to look at the return value
apart from the conditional, let's use a form without assignment of the return
value. When the function call is more complicated, it still makes sense to
use a temporary variable.
In 4c2ef32767 we enabled propagating
triggered unit state to the triggering unit for service units in more
load states, so that we don't accidentally stop tracking state
correctly.
Do the same for our other triggering unit states: automounts, paths, and
timers.
Also, make this an assertion rather than a simple test. After all it
should never happen that we get called for half-loaded units or units of
the wrong type. The load routines should already have made this
impossible.
In containers we might lack the privs to up the socket buffers. Let's
not complain so loudly about that. Let's hence downgrade this to debug
logging if it's a permission problem.
(This wasn't an issue before b92f350789
because back then the failures wouldn't be detected at all.)
A variety of sockopts exist both for IPv4 and IPv6 but require a
different pair of sockopt level/option number. Let's add helpers for
these that internally determine the right sockopt to call.
This should shorten code that generically wants to support both ipv4 +
ipv6 and for the first time adds correct support for some cases where we
only called the ipv4 versions, and not the ipv6 options.
socket_instantiate_service() was doing unit_ref_set(), and the caller was
immediately doing unit_ref_unset(). After we get rid of this, it doesn't seem
worth it to have two functions.
This means that the connection was aborted before we even got to figure out
what the service name will be. Let's treat this as a non-event and close the
connection fd without any further messages.
Code last changed in 934ef6a5.
Reported-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
With the patch:
systemd[1]: foobar.socket: Incoming traffic
systemd[1]: foobar.socket: Got ENOTCONN on incoming socket, assuming aborted connection attempt, ignoring.
...
Also, when we get ENOMEM, don't give the hint about missing unit.
Upon an incoming connection for an accepting socket, we'd create a unit like
foo@0.service, then figure out that the instance name should be e.g. "0-41-0",
and then add the name foo@0-41-0.service to the unit. This obviously violates
the rule that any service needs to have a constance instance part.
So let's reverse the order: we first determine the instance name and then
create the unit with the correct name from the start.
There are two cases where we don't know the instance name:
- analyze-verify: we just do a quick check that the instance unit can be
created. So let's use a bogus instance string.
- selinux: the code wants to load the service unit to extract the ExecStart path
and query it for the selinux label. Do the same as above.
Note that in both cases it is possible that the real unit that is loaded could
be different than the one with the bogus instance value, for example if there
is a dropin for a specific instance name. We can't do much about this, since we
can't figure out the instance name in advance. The old code had the same
shortcoming.
Only log at LOG_INFO level, i.e. make this informational. During start
let's leave it at LOG_WARNING though.
Of course, it's ugly leaving processes around like that either in start
or in stop, but at start its more dangerous than on stop, so be tougher
there.
In all the other cases, I think the code was clearer with the static table.
Here, not so much. And because of the existing dump code, the vtables cannot
be made static and need to remain exported. I still think it's worth to do the
change to have the cmdline introspection, but I'm disappointed with how this
came out.
In subsequent commits, calls to if_nametoindex() will be replaced by a wrapper
that falls back to alternative name resolution over netlink. netlink support
requires libsystemd (for sd-netlink), and we don't want to add any functions
that require netlink in basic/. So stuff that calls if_nametoindex() for user
supplied interface names, and everything that depends on that, needs to be
moved.
It makes sense to filter state changes for some load states that
shouldn't happen, but the common cases should be accepted, because they
might happen during runtime when "systemctl daemon-reload" is issued and
unit files changed state in between. Otherwise we lose events.
Fixes: #4708
Similar, refuse triggering deps on units that cannot trigger.
And rework how we ignore After= dependencies on device units, to work
the same way.
See: #14142
chase_symlinks() would return negative on error, and either a non-negative status
or a non-negative fd when CHASE_OPEN was given. This made the interface quite
complicated, because dependning on the flags used, we would get two different
"types" of return object. Coverity was always confused by this, and flagged
every use of chase_symlinks() without CHASE_OPEN as a resource leak (because it
would this that an fd is returned). This patch uses a saparate output parameter,
so there is no confusion.
(I think it is OK to have functions which return either an error or an fd. It's
only returning *either* an fd or a non-fd that is confusing.)
No functional change, just adjusting code to follow the same pattern
everywhere. In particular, never call _verify() on an already loaded unit,
but return early from the caller instead. This makes the code a bit easier
to follow.
unit_load_fragment_and_dropin() and unit_load_fragment_and_dropin_optional()
are really the same, with one minor difference in behaviour. Let's drop
the second function.
"_optional" in the name suggests that it's the "dropin" part that is optional.
(Which it is, but in this case, we mean the fragment to be optional.)
I think the new version with a flag is easier to understand.
This is the most basic consumer of the new systemd-vs-kernel checker,
both acting as a reasonable standalone exerciser of the code, and also
as a way for easy inspection of deviations from systemd internal state.
v2:
- if RestartKillSignal= is not specified, fall back to KillSignal=. This is necessary
to preserve backwards compatibility (and keep KillSignal= generally useful).
Some PIDs can remain in the watched list even though their processes have
exited since a long time. It can easily happen if the main process of a forking
service manages to spawn a child before the control process exits for example.
However when a pid is about to be mapped to a unit by calling unit_watch_pid(),
the caller usually knows if the pid should belong to this unit exclusively: if
we just forked() off a child, then we can be sure that its PID is otherwise
unused. In this case we take this opportunity to remove any stalled PIDs from
the watched process list.
If we learnt about a PID in any other form (for example via PID file, via
searching, MAINPID= and so on), then we can't assume anything.
Just some renaming, no change in behaviour.
Background: I'd like to add more functions unit_test_xyz() that test
various things, hence let's streamline the naming a bit.
Similar to the cgroup magic we nowadays do when listening to sockets, to
assign them the right bpf programs, let's also do the same and join the
specified netns in the child process.
This allows people to listen in sockets in specific namespaces, or join
multiple services and socket units together to live in the same
namespace.