The MountEntry's added for EMPTY_DIR work very similarly to the TMPFS ones.
In both cases, .has_prefix is false. In fact, .has_prefix is false in
*all* the MountEntry's we add except for the access mounts (READONLY etc).
But EMPTY_DIR stuck out by explicitly setting .has_prefix = false.
Let's remove that.
... when no mount options are passed.
Change the code, to avoid the following failure in the newly added tests:
exec-temporaryfilesystem-rw.service: Executing: /usr/bin/sh -x -c
'[ "$(stat -c %a /var)" == 755 ]'
++ stat -c %a /var
+ '[' 1777 == 755 ']'
Received SIGCHLD from PID 30364 (sh).
Child 30364 (sh) died (code=exited, status=1/FAILURE)
(And I spotted an opportunity to use TAKE_PTR() at the end).
We can't remount the underlying superblocks, if we are inside a user
namespace and running Linux <= 4.17. We can only change the per-mount
flags (MS_REMOUNT | MS_BIND).
This type of mount() call can only change the per-mount flags, so we
don't have to worry about passing the right string options now.
Fixes#9914 ("Since 1beab8b was merged, systemd has been failing to start
systemd-resolved inside unprivileged containers" ... "Failed to re-mount
'/run/systemd/unit-root/dev' read-only: Operation not permitted").
> It's basically my fault :-). I pointed out we could remount read-only
> without MS_BIND when reviewing the PR that added TemporaryFilesystem=,
> and poettering suggested to change PrivateDevices= at the same time.
> I think it's safe to change back, and I don't expect anyone will notice
> a difference in behaviour.
>
> It just surprised me to realize that
> `TemporaryFilesystem=/tmp:size=10M,ro,nosuid` would not apply `ro` to the
> superblock (underlying filesystem), like mount -osize=10M,ro,nosuid does.
> Maybe a comment could note the kernel version (v4.18), that lets you
> remount without MS_BIND inside a user namespace.
This makes the code longer and I guess this function is still ugly, sorry.
One obstacle to cleaning it up is the interaction between
`PrivateDevices=yes` and `ReadOnlyPaths=/dev`. I've added a test for the
existing behaviour, which I think is now the correct behaviour.
`systemd-resolved.service` runs as `User=systemd-resolved`, and uses certain
Capabilit{y,ies} magic. By my understanding, this means it is started with a
number of "privileges". Indeed, `capabilities(7)` explains
> Linux divides the privileges traditionally
> associated with superuser into distinct units, known as capabilities,
> which can be independently enabled and disabled."
This situation appears to contradict our current code comment which said
> If we are not running as root we assume all privileges are already dropped.
This appears to be a confusion in the comment only. The rest of the code
tells a much clearer story. (Don't ask me if the story is correct.
`capabilities(7)` scares me). Let's tweak the comment to make it consistent
and avoid worrying readers about this.
If logind is not supported, don't try to schedule a shutdown,
immediately poweroff. This is the behavior indicated by the current
message given to the user, but the command is returning an error. I
believe this was broken on this commit:
7f96539d45
sfeatures is a "struct ethtool_sfeatures". Use sizeof() on the correct
data type.
Since "struct ethtool_gstrings" is larger than "struct ethtool_sfeatures",
this had no serious consequences.
Fixes: 50725d10e3
When computing the next network prefix to assign, compute the next
prefix to allocate based on the intended /64 assignment, not the
given prefix length for the whole prefix, e.g. /48, given to
systemd-networkd.
Fixes#9626.
The option is now called simply "Encapsulation=".
Also, "ignoring" is rather misleading, because we use to to mean that some line
is being ignored. Here the whole tunnel is dropped.
Use "falling back" instead of "fallback".
Also, it's not an application-specific machine ID, but rather an
application-and-machine-specific ID. Let's call it "app-machine-speicific" for
short.
This work add support to generic netlink to sd-netlink.
See https://lwn.net/Articles/208755/
networkd: add support FooOverUDP support to IPIP tunnel netdev
https://lwn.net/Articles/614348/
Example conf:
/lib/systemd/network/1-fou-tunnel.netdev
```
[NetDev]
Name=fou-tun
Kind=fou
[FooOverUDP]
Port=5555
Protocol=4
```
/lib/systemd/network/ipip-tunnel.netdev
```
[NetDev]
Name=ipip-tun
Kind=ipip
[Tunnel]
Independent=true
Local=10.65.208.212
Remote=10.65.208.211
FooOverUDP=true
FOUDestinationPort=5555
```
$ ip -d link show ipip-tun
```
5: ipip-tun@NONE: <POINTOPOINT,NOARP> mtu 1472 qdisc noop state DOWN mode DEFAULT group default qlen 1000
link/ipip 10.65.208.212 peer 10.65.208.211 promiscuity 0
ipip remote 10.65.208.211 local 10.65.208.212 ttl inherit pmtudisc encap fou encap-sport auto encap-dport 5555 noencap-csum noencap-csum6 noencap-remcsum numtxqueues 1 numrxqueues 1 gso_max_size 65536 gso_max_segs 65535
```