Back in 08318a2c5a, value "false" was enabled for
'-Dtests=', but various tests were not conditionalized properly. So even with
-Dtests=false -Dslow-tests=false we'd run 120 tests. Let's make this consistent.
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
```
This adds sd_bus_{get,set}_method_call_timeout().
If the timeout is not set or set to 0, then the timeout value is
parsed from $SYSTEMD_BUS_TIMEOUT= environment variable. If the
environment variable is not set, then built-in timeout is used.
The D-Bus library supplies a va_list variant of
`sd_bus_message_append()` called `sd_bus_message_appendv()`,
but failed to provide a va_list variant of its opposite,
`sd_bus_message_read()`. This commit publicizes a previously static
function as `sd_bus_message_readv()`.
These lines are generally out-of-date, incomplete and unnecessary. With
SPDX and git repository much more accurate and fine grained information
about licensing and authorship is available, hence let's drop the
per-file copyright notice. Of course, removing copyright lines of others
is problematic, hence this commit only removes my own lines and leaves
all others untouched. It might be nicer if sooner or later those could
go away too, making git the only and accurate source of authorship
information.
This part of the copyright blurb stems from the GPL use recommendations:
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.en.html
The concept appears to originate in times where version control was per
file, instead of per tree, and was a way to glue the files together.
Ultimately, we nowadays don't live in that world anymore, and this
information is entirely useless anyway, as people are very welcome to
copy these files into any projects they like, and they shouldn't have to
change bits that are part of our copyright header for that.
hence, let's just get rid of this old cruft, and shorten our codebase a
bit.
Let's add "const" where we don't change structures passed.
Also, we generally use "unsigned char" for IP prefix length values, do
so here too. Previously different parts of the sd-radv.h API used
different types for this.
This adds a function sd_bus_slot_set_destroy_callback() to set a function
which can free userdata or perform other cleanups.
sd_bus_slot_get_destory_callback() queries the callback, and is included
for completeness.
Without something like this, for floating asynchronous callbacks, which might
be called or not, depending on the sequence of events, it's hard to perform
resource cleanup. The alternative would be to always perform the cleanup from
the caller too, but that requires more coordination and keeping of some shared
state. It's nicer to keep the cleanup contained between the callback and the
function that requests the callback.
This adds a new call sd_event_add_inotify() which allows watching for
inotify events on specified paths.
sd-event will try to minimize the number of inotify fds allocated, and
will try to add file watches to the same inotify fd objects as far as
that's possible. Doing this kind of inotify object should optimize
behaviour in programs that watch a limited set of mostly independent
files as in most cases a single inotify object will suffice for watching
all files.
Traditionally, this kind of coalescing logic (i.e. that multiple event
sources are implemented on top of a single inotify object) was very hard
to do, as the inotify API had serious limitations: it only allowed
adding watches by path, and would implicitly merge watches installed on
the same node via different path, without letting the caller know about
whether such merging took place or not.
With the advent of O_PATH this issue can be dealt with to some point:
instead of adding a path to watch to an inotify object with
inotify_add_watch() right away, we can open the path with O_PATH first,
call fstat() on the fd, and check the .st_dev/.st_ino fields of that
against a list of watches we already have in place. If we find one we
know that the inotify_add_watch() will update the watch mask of the
existing watch, otherwise it will create a new watch. To make this
race-free we use inotify_add_watch() on the /proc/self/fd/ path of the
O_PATH fd, instead of the original path, so that we do the checking and
watch updating with guaranteed the same inode.
This approach let's us deal safely with inodes that may appear under
various different paths (due to symlinks, hardlinks, bind mounts, fs
namespaces). However it's not a perfect solution: currently the kernel
has no API for changing the watch mask of an existing watch -- unless
you have a path or fd to the original inode. This means we can "merge"
the watches of the same inode of multiple event sources correctly, but
we cannot "unmerge" it again correctly in many cases, as access to the
original inode might have been lost, due to renames, mount/unmount, or
deletions. We could in theory always keep open an O_PATH fd of the inode
to watch so that we can change the mask anytime we want, but this is
highly problematics, as it would consume too many fds (and in fact the
scarcity of fds is the reason why watch descriptors are a separate
concepts from fds) and would keep the backing mounts busy (wds do not
keep mounts busy, fds do). The current implemented approach to all this:
filter in userspace and accept that the watch mask on some inode might
be higher than necessary due to earlier installed event sources that
might have ceased to exist. This approach while ugly shouldn't be too
bad for most cases as the same inodes are probably wacthed for the same
masks in most implementations.
In order to implement priorities correctly a seperate inotify object is
allocated for each priority that is used. This way we get separate
per-priority event queues, of which we never dequeue more than a few
events at a time.
Fixes: #3982
This new call allows explicit control of the "floating" state of a bus
slot object. This is useful for creating a bus slot object first,
retaining a reference to it, using it for making changes to the slot
object (for example, set a description) and then handing it over to
sd-bus for lifecycle management.
It's also useful to fix#8551.
This patch add support to enables to send User Class option code 77
RFC 3004.
This option MAY carry multiple User Classes.
The format of this option is as follows:
Code Len Value
+-----+-----+--------------------- . . . --+
| 77 | N | User Class Data ('Len' octets) |
+-----+-----+--------------------- . . . --+
where Value consists of one or more instances of User Class Data.
Each instance of User Class Data is formatted as follows:
UC_Len_i User_Class_Data_i
+--------+------------------------ . . . --+
| L_i | Opaque-Data ('UC_Len_i' octets) |
+--------+------------------------ . . . --+
UserClass=
A DHCPv4 client can use UserClass option to identify the type or category of user or applications
it represents. The information contained in this option is an string that represents the user class
of which the client is a member. Each class sets an identifying string of information to be used by the DHCP service to classify clients. Takes a whitespace-separated list.
UserClass= hello world how are you
Closes: RFC: #5134
ISO-C doesn't allow empty initializers, so replace it by explicitly
initializing to zero.
Also add braces because x is a union and we initialize a subobject, so
a compiler might warn about suggesting braces. Shut that up.
Files which are installed as-is (any .service and other unit files, .conf
files, .policy files, etc), are left as is. My assumption is that SPDX
identifiers are not yet that well known, so it's better to retain the
extended header to avoid any doubt.
I also kept any copyright lines. We can probably remove them, but it'd nice to
obtain explicit acks from all involved authors before doing that.
sd_bus_open/sd_bus_open_system/sd_bus_open_user are convenient, but
don't allow the description to be set. After they return, the bus is
is already started, and sd_bus_set_description() fails with -EBUSY.
It would be possible to allow sd_bus_set_description() to update the
description "live", but messages are already emitted from sd_bus_open
functions, so it's better to allow the description to be set in
sd_bus_open/sd_bus_open_system/sd_bus_open_user.
Fixes message like:
Bus n/a: changing state UNSET → OPENING
This makes users can configure DHCPv4 client with ClientIdentifier=duid-only.
If set so, then DHCP client sends only DUID as the client identifier.
This may not be RFC compliant, but some setups require this.
Closes#7828.
We maintain a queue of units and jobs that we are supposed to generate
change/new notifications for because they were either just created or
some of their property has changed. Let's throttle processing of this
queue a bit: as soon as > 1K of bus messages are queued for writing
let's skip processing the queue, and then recheck on the next
iteration again.
Moreover, never process more than 100 units in one go, return to the
event loop after that. Both limits together should put effective limits
on both space and time usage of the function, delaying further
operations until a later moment, when the queue is empty or the the
event loop is sufficiently idle again.
This should keep the number of generated messages much lower than
before on busy systems or where some client is hanging.
Note that this also means a bad client can slow down message dispatching
substantially for up to 90s if it likes to, for all clients. But that
should be acceptable as we only allow trusted bus clients, anyway.
Fixes: #8166
It is often the case that a file descriptor and its corresponding IO
sd_event_source share a life span. When this is the case, developers will
have to unref the event source and close the file descriptor. Instead, we
can just have the event source take ownership of the file descriptor and
close it when the event source is freed. This is especially useful when
combined with cleanup attributes and sd_event_source_unrefp().
This patch adds two new public functions:
sd_event_source_get_io_fd_own()
sd_event_source_set_io_fd_own()
The time-related functions in sd-event.h take as inputs constants (CLOCK_*)
defined in time.h. By including time.h in sd-event.h, we free the developer
from having to do this manually.
Currently, sd-bus supports the ability to have thread-local default busses.
However, this is less useful than it can be since all functions which
require an sd_bus* as input require the caller to pass it. This patch adds
a new macro which allows the developer to pass a constant SD_BUS_DEFAULT,
SD_BUS_DEFAULT_USER or SD_BUS_DEFAULT_SYSTEM instead. This reduces work for
the caller.
For example:
r = sd_bus_default(&bus);
r = sd_bus_call_method(bus, ...);
sd_bus_unref(bus);
Becomes:
r = sd_bus_call_method(SD_BUS_DEFAULT, ...);
If the specified thread-local default bus does not exist, the function
calls will return -ENOPKG. No bus will ever be implicitly created.
Currently, sd-event supports the ability to have a thread-local default
event loop. However, this is less useful than it can be since all functions
which require an sd_event* as input require the caller to pass it. This
patch adds a new macro which allows the developer to pass a constant
SD_EVENT_DEFAULT instead. This reduces work for the caller.
For example:
r = sd_event_default(&e);
r = sd_event_add_io(e, ...);
sd_event_unref(e);
Becomes:
r = sd_event_add_io(SD_EVENT_DEFAULT, ...);
If no thread-local default event loop exists, the function calls will
return -ENOPKG. No event loop will ever be implicitly created.
This also adds the ability to incorporate arrays into netlink messages
and to determine when a netlink message is too big, used by some generic
netlink protocols.
This is useful on direct connections to generate messages with valid
sender fields.
This is particularly useful for services that are accessible both
through direct connections and the broker, as it allows clients to
install matches on the sender service name, and they work the same in
both cases.
The changes both networkd and resolved to make use of the watch_bind
feature of sd-bus to connect to the system bus. This way, both daemons
can be started during early boot, and automatically and instantly
connect to the system bus as it becomes available.
This replaces prior code that used a time-based retry logic to connect
to the bus.
This new call is much light sd_bus_is_open(), but returns true only if
the connection is fully set up, i.e. after we finished with the
authentication and Hello() phase. This API is useful for clients in
particular when using the "watch_bind" feature, as that way it can be
determined in advance whether it makes sense to sync on some operation.
These are convenience helpers that hide the match string logic (which we
probably should never have exposed), and instead just takes regular C
arguments.
We usually enqueue a number of these calls on each service
initialization. Let's do this asynchronously, and thus remove
synchronization points. This improves both performance behaviour and
reduces the chances to deadlock.
They do the same thing as their synchronous counterparts, but only
enqueue the operation, thus removing synchronization points during
service initialization.
If the callback function is passed as NULL we'll fallback to generic
implementations of the reply handlers, that terminate the connection if
the requested name cannot be acquired, under the assumption that not
being able to acquire the name is a technical problem.
This adds a "watch-bind" feature to sd-bus connections. If set and the
AF_UNIX socket we are connecting to doesn't exist yet, we'll establish
an inotify watch instead, and wait for the socket to appear. In other
words, a missing AF_UNIX just makes connecting slower.
This is useful for daemons such as networkd or resolved that shall be
able to run during early-boot, before dbus-daemon is up, and want to
connect to dbus-daemon as soon as it becomes ready.
As DHCPv6 leases may expire at some point, the delegated prefixes
have to be removed. Add a prefix removal function to the Router
Advertisement handling code.
Add a boolean that indicates whether the prefixes will always exist
or if they will time out after the assigned valid lifetime. In the
latter case calculate the expiry times for both preferred and valid
lifetimes for the prefixes, and decrease the remaining lifetimes
each time when a Router Advertisement is sent.
Should the prefix be updated, re-calculate the prefix lifetime. When
updating, update the existing entry, if any, with the lifetimes of
the added entry as the existing entry has its lifetimes set
according to its previously calculated expiry times.