All this function does is place some data in an in-memory read-only fd,
that may be read back to get the original data back.
Doing this in a way that works everywhere, given the different kernels
we support as well as different privilege levels is surprisingly
complex.
We are using the same pattern at various places: call dup2() on an fd,
and close the old fd, usually in combination with some O_CLOEXEC
fiddling. Let's add a little helper for this, and port a few obvious
cases over.
There are some places in the systemd which are use the same pattern:
fd_cloexec(STDIN_FILENO, false);
fd_cloexec(STDOUT_FILENO, false);
fd_cloexec(STDERR_FILENO, false);
to unset CLOEXEC for standard file descriptors. This patch introduces
the stdio_unset_cloexec() function to hide this and make code cleaner.
This should allow tools like rkt to pre-mount read-only subtrees in the OS
tree, without breaking the patching code.
Note that the code will still fail, if the top-level directory is already
read-only.
The LLMNR spec suggests to do do reverse address lookups by doing direct LLMNR/TCP connections to the indicated
address, instead of doing any LLMNR multicast queries. When we do this and the peer doesn't actually implement LLMNR
this will result in a TCP connection error, which we need to handle. In contrast to most LLMNR lookups this will give
us a quick response on whether we can find a suitable name. Report this as new transaction state, since this should
mostly be treated like an NXDOMAIN rcode, except that it's not one.
Previously, when we couldn't connect to a DNS server via TCP we'd abort the whole transaction using a
"connection-failure" state. This change removes that, and counts failed connections as "lost packet" events, so that
we switch back to the UDP protocol again.