Tests for the functions defined in src/basic/parse-util.c. Reorder them
to match the order in which the functions are defined in the source
file. Adjusted the list of include files to remove the ones no longer
needed in test-util.c.
Tested that `make check` still passes as expected. Also checked the
number of lines removed from test-util.c matches the expected, as an
additional verification that no tests were dropped or duplicated in the
move.
The files are named too generically, so that they might conflict with
the upstream project headers. Hence, let's add a "-util" suffix, to
clarify that this are just our utility headers and not any official
upstream headers.
So far we had two pretty much identical calls in user-util.[ch]:
lookup_uid() and uid_to_name(). Get rid of the former, in favour of the
latter, and while we are at it, rewrite it, to use getpwuid_r()
correctly, inside an allocation loop, as POSIX intended.
There are more than enough calls doing string manipulations to deserve
its own files, hence do something about it.
This patch also sorts the #include blocks of all files that needed to be
updated, according to the sorting suggestions from CODING_STYLE. Since
pretty much every file needs our string manipulation functions this
effectively means that most files have sorted #include blocks now.
Also touches a few unrelated include files.
If SMACK is enabled, 'smackfsroot=*' option should be specified when
/tmp is mounted since many non-root processes use /tmp for temporary
usage. If not, /tmp is labeled as '_' and smack denial occurs when
writing.
In order to do that, 'SmackFileSystemRoot=*' is newly added into
tmp.mount.
The actual code rename will follow. The reason for the change of name is to make it
simpler and more uniform with how we name other libraries (we don't include the
underlying protocol). The new name also matches the naming in the kernel (which
is particularly relevent here as we expect to let the kernel do some parts of
the protocol and we do others).
This reverts commit 409c2a13fd.
It breaks the bootup of systems which enable smack at compile time, but have no
smack enabled in the kernel. This needs a different solution.
If SMACK is enabled, 'smackfsroot=*' option should be specified in
tmp.mount file since many non-root processes use /tmp for temporary
usage. If not, /tmp is labeled as '_' and smack denial occurs when
writing.
We don't use that anywhere any more. With the introduction of alias names it
also is not a proper mapping any more as several keys (e. g. KEY_COFFEE and
KEY_SCREENLOCK) have the same numerical mapping.
linux/input.h contains alias definitions like
#define KEY_COFFEE 152
#define KEY_SCREENLOCK KEY_COFFEE
#define KEY_ROTATE_DISPLAY 153
#define KEY_DIRECTION KEY_ROTATE_DISPLAY
But we ignored these when building keyboard-keys-list.txt. Also allow the value
to start with "K" now (for KEY_*), and drop the hardcoded COFFEE → SCREENLOCK
aliasing.
This fixes assignments to key "direction".
Fixes#1151
With this rework we introduce systemd-rfkill.service as singleton that
is activated via systemd-rfkill.socket that listens on /dev/rfkill. That
way, we get notified each time a new rfkill device shows up or changes
state, in which case we restore and save its current setting to disk.
This is nicer than the previous logic, as this means we save/restore
state even of rfkill devices that are around only intermittently, and
save/restore the state even if the system is shutdown abruptly instead
of cleanly.
This implements what I suggested in #1019 and obsoletes it.
And remove machine-id-commit as separate binary.
There's really no point in keeping this separate, as the sources are
pretty much identical, and have pretty identical interfaces. Let's unify
this in one binary.
Given that machine-id-commit was a private binary of systemd (shipped in
/usr/lib/) removing the tool is not an API break.
While we are at it, improve the documentation of the command substantially.
When a systemd service running in a container exits with a non-zero
code, it can be useful to terminate the container immediately and get
the exit code back to the host, when systemd-nspawn returns. This was
not possible to do. This patch adds the following to make it possible:
- Add a read-only "ExitCode" property on PID 1's "Manager" bus object.
By default, it is 0 so the behaviour stays the same as previously.
- Add a method "SetExitCode" on the same object. The method fails when
called on baremetal: it is only allowed in containers or in user
session.
- Add support in systemctl to call "systemctl exit 42". It reuses the
existing code for user session.
- Add exit.target and systemd-exit.service to the system instance.
- Change main() to actually call systemd-shutdown to exit() with the
correct value.
- Add verb 'exit' in systemd-shutdown with parameter --exit-code
- Update systemctl manpage.
I used the following to test it:
| $ sudo rkt --debug --insecure-skip-verify run \
| --mds-register=false --local docker://busybox \
| --exec=/bin/chroot -- /proc/1/root \
| systemctl --force exit 42
| ...
| Container rkt-895a0cba-5c66-4fa5-831c-e3f8ddc5810d failed with error code 42.
| $ echo $?
| 42
Fixes https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/1290
These programs should be run manually, typically two instances on a
veth pair to check conflict detection.
Both test programs take the ifname as input, the ACD also takes the
IP address to check, whereas LL (optionally) takes the seed, which
determines the sequence of IP addresses to try.
This splits the Address Conflict Detection out of the Link Local
library so that we can reuse it for DHCP and static addresses in
the future.
Implements RFC5227.
We currently process every ARP packet, but we should only care about the ones
relating to our IP address.
Also rename ipv4ll helpers to apr-utils.[ch], and rework the helpers a bit.
The current implementation directly monitor /proc/self/mountinfo and
/run/mount/utab files. It's really not optimal because utab file is
private libmount stuff without any official guaranteed semantic.
The libmount since v2.26 provides API to monitor mount kernel &
userspace changes and since v2.27 the monitor is usable for
non-root users too.
This patch replaces the current implementation with libmount based
solution.
Signed-off-by: Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com>
.nspawn fiels are simple settings files that may accompany container
images and directories and contain settings otherwise passed on the
nspawn command line. This provides an efficient way to attach execution
data directly to containers.
Tests are modified to check behaviour with relax and without relax.
New tests are added for hostname_cleanup().
Tests are moved a new file (test-hostname-util) because there's
now a bunch of them.
New parameter is not used anywhere, except in tests, so there should
be no observable change.
This drops the libsystemd-terminal and systemd-consoled code for various
reasons:
* It's been sitting there unfinished for over a year now and won't get
finished any time soon.
* Since its initial creation, several parts need significant rework: The
input handling should be replaced with the now commonly used libinput,
the drm accessors should coordinate the handling of mode-object
hotplugging (including split connectors) with other DRM users, and the
internal library users should be converted to sd-device and friends.
* There is still significant kernel work required before sd-console is
really useful. This includes, but is not limited to, simpledrm and
drmlog.
* The authority daemon is needed before all this code can be used for
real. And this will definitely take a lot more time to get done as
no-one else is currently working on this, but me.
* kdbus maintenance has taken up way more time than I thought and it has
much higher priority. I don't see me spending much time on the
terminal code in the near future.
If anyone intends to hack on this, please feel free to contact me. I'll
gladly help you out with any issues. Once kdbus and authorityd are
finished (whenever that will be..) I'll definitely pick this up again. But
until then, lets reduce compile times and maintenance efforts on this code
and drop it for now.
This adds test-bus-proxy which should be used to test correct behavior of
systemd-bus-proxyd. The first test that was added is to verify we actually
receive NameAcquired signals for ourselves on bus-connect.
This target allows to trigger a build of $(BUILT_SOURCES) manually. This
is handy if you tend to use 'make systemd-foobar' to directly build a
single binary. Those do not pull in $(BUILT_SOURCES), unfortunately. See
automake docs for that.
autogen.sh, .dir-locals.el, .vimrc, .ycm_extra_conf.py, .travis.yml,
.mailmap files are only useful with the source tree, for the
developers. Do not install these files as documentation on the
end-user systems, but keep them distributed with the tarball.
The idea is that after adding a new man page, make update-man-list
will be used to regenerate part of the makefile. So the data already
present in the makefile cannot be used to do that.
Also, renames filter out generated xml files in make-man-rules.py
itself in order to make Makefile.am a bit simpler, and rename files
to dist_files to better reflect new meaning.
The main purpose of this hwdb was to tag touchpads that have the physical
trackstick buttons wired to the touchpad (Lenovo Carbon X1 3rd, Lenovo *50
series). This hwdb is not required on kernels 4.0 and above, the kernel now
re-routes button presses through the trackstick's device node. Userspace does
not need to do anything.
See kernel commit cdd9dc195916ef5644cfac079094c3c1d1616e4c.
This reverts commit 001a247324.
It is not udev's task to apply any of these setting that way, or
from udev rules files. Things need to be sortet out in the kernel,
or explicit whitelist can possibly be added to the hardware database.
Until that is sorted out, and general agreement, udev is not
willing to maintain any such lists or power management settings
in general.
"Thanks for digging this out! I thought my Kinesis keyboard got broken
and ordered a new one, only to find out that the new one doesn't work
as well. I'm not sure whether we should start collecting a blacklist
of keyboards which don't work with USB autosuspend, or rather a
whitelist? Or revert this wholesale?"
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/340
Given that some symbols are exposed by multiple libraries (due to the
compatibility libraries), let's ensure "make check-api-docs" only shows
each symbol once by filtering out duplicates.