Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Yu Watanabe db9ecf0501 license: LGPL-2.1+ -> LGPL-2.1-or-later 2020-11-09 13:23:58 +09:00
Luca Boccassi 2094cd49c4 shared/os-util: fix comment style to follow guidelines 2020-07-16 09:59:59 +01:00
Luca Boccassi e1bb4b0d1d nspawn: implement container host os-release interface 2020-06-23 12:58:21 +01:00
Vito Caputo 4fa744a35c *: convert amenable fdopen calls to take_fdopen
Mechanical change to eliminate some cruft by using the
new take_fdopen{_unlocked}() wrappers where trivial.
2020-03-31 06:48:03 -07:00
Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek a5648b8094 basic/fs-util: change CHASE_OPEN flag into a separate output parameter
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.)
2019-10-24 22:44:24 +09:00
Ben Boeckel 5238e95759 codespell: fix spelling errors 2019-04-29 16:47:18 +02:00
Chris Down e92aaed30e tree-wide: Remove O_CLOEXEC from fdopen
fdopen doesn't accept "e", it's ignored. Let's not mislead people into
believing that it actually sets O_CLOEXEC.

From `man 3 fdopen`:

> e (since glibc 2.7):
> Open the file with the O_CLOEXEC flag. See open(2) for more information. This flag is ignored for fdopen()

As mentioned by @jlebon in #11131.
2018-12-12 20:47:40 +01:00
Lennart Poettering 686d13b9f2 util-lib: split out env file parsing code into env-file.c
It's quite complex, let's split this out.

No code changes, just some file rearranging.
2018-12-02 13:22:29 +01:00
Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek d284b82b3e Move various files that don't need to be in basic/ to shared/
This doesn't have much effect on the final build, because we link libbasic.a
into libsystemd-shared.so, so in the end, all the object built from basic/
end up in libsystemd-shared. And when the static library is linked into binaries,
any objects that are included in it but are not used are trimmed. Hence, the
size of output artifacts doesn't change:

$ du -sb /var/tmp/inst*
54181861	/var/tmp/inst1    (old)
54207441	/var/tmp/inst1s   (old split-usr)
54182477	/var/tmp/inst2    (new)
54208041	/var/tmp/inst2s   (new split-usr)

(The negligible change in size is because libsystemd-shared.so is bigger
by a few hundred bytes. I guess it's because symbols are named differently
or something like that.)

The effect is on the build process, in particular partial builds. This change
effectively moves the requirements on some build steps toward the leaves of the
dependency tree. Two effects:
- when building items that do not depend on libsystemd-shared, we
  build less stuff for libbasic.a (which wouldn't be used anyway,
  so it's a net win).
- when building items that do depend on libshared, we reduce libbasic.a as a
  synchronization point, possibly allowing better parallelism.

Method:
1. copy list of .h files from src/basic/meson.build to /tmp/basic
2. $ for i in $(grep '.h$' /tmp/basic); do echo $i; git --no-pager grep "include \"$i\"" src/basic/ 'src/lib*' 'src/nss-*' 'src/journal/sd-journal.c' |grep -v "${i%.h}.c";echo ;done | less
2018-11-20 07:27:37 +01:00
Renamed from src/basic/os-util.c (Browse further)