"--offset" takes an optional argument; if none is specified,
stroull() will attempt to parse a NULL pointer. For example:
$ udevadm test-builtin 'blkid --offset' /sys/dev/block/8:1
Update "--offset" to require an argument; also verify that the
offset is not negative.
gcc-8 throws an error if it knows snprintf might truncate output and the
return value is ignored:
../src/udev/udev-builtin-net_id.c: In function 'dev_pci_slot':
../src/udev/udev-builtin-net_id.c:297:47: error: '%s' directive output may be truncated writing up to 255 bytes into a region of size between 0 and 4095 [-Werror=format-truncation=]
snprintf(str, sizeof str, "%s/%s/address", slots, dent->d_name);
^~
../src/udev/udev-builtin-net_id.c:297:17: note: 'snprintf' output between 10 and 4360 bytes into a destination of size 4096
snprintf(str, sizeof str, "%s/%s/address", slots, dent->d_name);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
cc1: some warnings being treated as errors
Let's check all return values. This actually makes the code better, because there's
no point in trying to open a file when the name has been truncated, etc.
If a touchpad has MT axes only but not ABS_X/ABS_Y (DualShock 4 controller),
then we hit both the conditions is_touchpad and the later check for
!has_abs_axes here, assigning is_mouse and ID_INPUT_MOUSE later.
This is a bug, we historically only assigned either of of the pointing device
tags ID_INPUT_MOUSE/TOUCHPAD/JOYSTICK/TOUCHSCREEN, never multiple of them.
Note that we cannot just check for has_abs_axes and has_mt_coordinates because
the apple touch mouse has both. We really need to check if the device has
already been assigned something else.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=105050
This patch adds safe_atoux16 for parsing an unsigned hexadecimal 16bit int, and
uses that for parsing USB device and vendor IDs.
This fixes a compile error with gcc-8 because while we know that USB IDs are 2 bytes,
the compiler does not know that.
../src/udev/udev-builtin-hwdb.c:80:38: error: '%04X' directive output may be
truncated writing between 4 and 8 bytes into a region of size between 2 and 6
[-Werror=format-truncation=]
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Patrick Uiterwijk <puiterwijk@redhat.com>
Coverity now started warning about this ("Calling unlinkat without checking
return value (as is done elsewhere 12 out of 15 times).", and it is right:
most of the time we should at list print a log message so people can figure
out something is wrong when this happens.
v2:
- use warning level in journald too (this is unlikely to happen ever, so it
should be safe to something that is visible by default).
There are cases that we want to trigger and settle only specific
commands. For example, let's say at boot time we want to make sure all
the graphics devices are working correctly because it's critical for
booting, but not the USB subsystem (we'll trigger USB events later). So
we do:
udevadm trigger --action="add" --subsystem-match="graphics"
udevadm settle
However, we cannot block the kernel from emitting kernel events from
discovering USB devices. So if any of the USB kernel event was emitted
before the settle command, the settle command would still wait for the
entire queue to complete. And if the USB event takes a long time to be
processed, the system slows down.
The new `settle` option allows the `trigger` command to wait for only
the triggered events, and effectively solves this problem.
On Linux the former is a compat alias to the latter, and that's really
weird, as inside the kernel the two are distinct. Which means we really
should stay away from it.
log.h really should only include the bare minimum of other headers, as
it is really pulled into pretty much everything else and already in
itself one of the most basic pieces of code we have.
Let's hence drop inclusion of:
1. sd-id128.h because it's entirely unneeded in current log.h
2. errno.h, dito.
3. sys/signalfd.h which we can replace by a simple struct forward
declaration
4. process-util.h which was needed for getpid_cached() which we now hide
in a funciton log_emergency_level() instead, which nicely abstracts
the details away.
5. sys/socket.h which was needed for struct iovec, but a simple struct
forward declaration suffices for that too.
Ultimately this actually makes our source tree larger (since users of
the functionality above must now include it themselves, log.h won't do
that for them), but I think it helps to untangle our web of includes a
tiny bit.
(Background: I'd like to isolate the generic bits of src/basic/ enough
so that we can do a git submodule import into casync for it)
Including BitsPerSecond or Duplex values in .link files did not work when
set_slinksettings was called because the routine was not copying the base
parameters to the structure given to ioctl. As a result, EINVAL was always
reported, and no change occurred on the Ethernet device.
This reduces the meson man=false target count to 1281.
v2:
- link test-engine with libshared instead of libsystemd_static
Previous version built fine on F27, but fails on F26 with the following error:
/usr/bin/ld: /tmp/ccr8HRGw.ltrans6.ltrans.o: undefined reference to symbol '__start_BUS_ERROR_MAP@@SD_SHARED'
/home/zbyszek/fedora/systemd/systemd-9d5aae75c64f5583a110f03b94816aacc03bbf4d/x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu/src/shared/libsystemd-shared-236.so: error adding symbols: DSO missing from command line
v3:
- add libudev_basic
This adds a simple condition/assert/match to the service manager, to
udev's .link handling and to networkd, for matching the kernel version
string.
In this version we only do fnmatch() based globbing, but we might want
to extend that to version comparisons later on, if we like, by slightly
extending the syntax with ">=", "<=", ">", "<" and "==" expressions.
This adds a new safe_fork() wrapper around fork() and makes use of it
everywhere. The new wrapper does a couple of things we previously did
manually and separately in a safer, more correct and automatic way:
1. Optionally resets signal handlers/mask in the child
2. Sets a name on all processes we fork off right after forking off (and
the patch assigns useful names for all processes we fork off now,
following a systematic naming scheme: always enclosed in () – in order
to indicate that these are not proper, exec()ed processes, but only
forked off children, and if the process is long-running with only our
own code, without execve()'ing something else, it gets am "sd-" prefix.)
3. Optionally closes all file descriptors in the child
4. Optionally sets a PR_SET_DEATHSIG to SIGTERM in the child, in a safe
way so that the parent dying before this happens being handled
safely.
5. Optionally reopens the logs
6. Optionally connects stdin/stdout/stderr to /dev/null
7. Debug logs about the forked off processes.
We already use the "_static" suffix for libshared_static ("shared" is the name
of the library, "static" is the format) and other libs, so let's rename for
consistency.
Also change libsystemd_static_sources to libsystemd_sources, since the same
list is used for both and shorter is better.
Otherwise, setting udev_log=debug in /etc/udev/udev.conf has no effects since
systemd-udevd is built with LOG_REALM=LOG_REALM_UDEV.
However using LOG_REALM_UDEV (for libudev_core) reveals another similar bug for
udevadm which should also define LOG_REALM_UDEV.
memset() is weird anyway, since it expects an "int" as second parameter,
which it then uses as a byte, i.e. as uint8_t or something like that.
But by passing -1 to it, things get particularly weird, as that relies
on sign expansion to do the right thing.
This adds missing options, mainly '--version' in getopt(), removes
an unused option from getopt().
Also, this adds a deprecate message in `udevadm hwdb`, and cleanups
help messages.
Follow-up for 65eb4378c3.
IN_SET only works for constant values, hence clarify that. Moreover, we
declared a statement "s" we never made use of. Drop it.
Also, for both scripts, let's support 10 items. More causes spatch to
die with "Stack overflow" for me.