These lines are generally out-of-date, incomplete and unnecessary.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.
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.
Since time began, scope units had a concept of "Controllers", a bus peer
that would be notified when somebody requested a unit to stop. None of
our code used that facility so far, let's change that.
This way, nspawn can print a nice message when somebody invokes
"systemctl stop" on the container's scope unit, and then react with the
right action to shut it down.
Previously, only when --register=yes was set (the default) the invoked
container would get its own scope, created by machined on behalf of
nspawn. With this change if --register=no is set nspawn will still get
its own scope (which is a good thing, so that --slice= and --property=
take effect), but this is not done through machined but by registering a
scope unit directly in PID 1.
Summary:
--register=yes → allocate a new scope through machined (the default)
--register=yes --keep-unit → use the unit we are already running in an register with machined
--register=no → allocate a new scope directly, but no machined
--register=no --keep-unit → do not allocate nor register anything
Fixes: #5823
We were hardcoding "systemd-nspawn" as the value of the $container env
variable and "nspawn" as the service string in machined registration.
This commit allows the user to configure it by setting the
$SYSTEMD_NSPAWN_CONTAINER_SERVICE env variable when calling
systemd-nspawn.
If $SYSTEMD_NSPAWN_CONTAINER_SERVICE is not set, we use the string
"systemd-nspawn" for both, fixing the previous inconsistency.