The number of verbs supported by systemd-analyze has grown quite a bit, and the
man page has become an unreadable wall of text. Let's put each verb in a
separate subsection, grouping similar verbs together, and add a lot of examples
to guide the user.
The "include" files had type "book" for some raeason. I don't think this
is meaningful. Let's just use the same everywhere.
$ perl -i -0pe 's^..DOCTYPE (book|refentry) PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.[25]//EN"\s+"http^<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"\n "http^gms' man/*.xml
No need to waste space, and uniformity is good.
$ perl -i -0pe 's|\n+<!--\s*SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1..\s*-->|\n<!-- SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1+ -->|gms' man/*.xml
This makes L2TP.Local= support an empty string, 'auto', 'static', and
'dynamic'. When one of the values are specified, a local address is
automatically picked from the local interface of the tunnel.
Previously, 'degraded' state is ambiguous for bonding or bridge master:
1. one or more slave interfaces does not have carrier,
2. no link local address is assigned to the master,
3. combination of the above two.
This makes the above case 1 and 3 are in the new 'degraded-carrier'
state, and makes 'degraded' state as all slaves are active but no
link local address on master.
Things are currently fairly ugly in Fedora: we create $BOOT/$MACHINE_ID/$KERNEL_VERSION/,
and then 20-grub.install that is installed by grub2-common.rpm wants to remove that
directory before 50-dracut.install get a chance to run. 50-dracut.install
checks for the presence of that directory to decide where to install the
kernel. So let's make the creation of the directory conditional. Previous
commit changes bootctl install to create $BOOT/$MACHINE_ID, and this commit
makes kernel-install not create it. In effect, the entry directory will only be
created if 'bootctl install' or something else created the parent directory.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1648907
When enabled, three samples are used to determine the value of a
received bit by majority rule.
This patch adds support for the TripleSampling= option in the [CAN]
section of .network files.
This makes it easier to see what is going on. Documentation for
--verbose and --help is added to the man page. Our plugins are updated
to also log a bit.
(This also removes support for booting into the EFI firmware setup
without logind. That's because otherwise the non-EFI fallback logind
implements can't work.)
Fixes: #9896
The option cursor-file takes a filename as argument. If the file exists and
contains a valid cursor, this is used to start the output after this position.
At the end, the last cursor gets written to the file.
This allows for an easy implementation of a timer that regularly looks in the
journal for some messages.
journalctl --cursor-file err-cursor -b -p err
journalctl --cursor-file audit-cursor -t audit --grep DENIED
Or you might want to walk the journal in steps of 10 messages:
journalctl --cursor-file ./curs -n10 --since=today -t systemd
adds a fully safe way how apps can pin files into /tmp temporarily, excepting them from the tmpfiles aging algorithm, based on BSD file locks on dirs we descend into
Let services use a private UTS namespace. In addition, a seccomp filter is
installed on set{host,domain}name and a ro bind mounts on
/proc/sys/kernel/{host,domain}name.
This adds /usr/local/lib/udev/rules.d to the search path on non-split-usr systems.
On split-usr systems, the paths with /usr/-prefixes are added too.
In the past, on split-usr systems, it made sense to only load rules from
/lib/udev/rules.d, because /usr could be mounted late. But we don't support running
without /usr since 80758717a6, so in practice it doesn't matter whether the
rules files are in /lib/udev/rules.d or /usr/lib/udev/rules.d. Distributions
that maintain the illusion of functional split-usr are welcome to simply not put any
files in /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/.
In practice this doesn't change much, but it makes udev more consistent with the
rest of the systemd suite.
/usr/local/lib/systemd/dnssd is now also included in the search path. This
path is of limited usefulness, but it makes sense to be consistent.
Documentation is updated to match. Outdated advice against drop-ins in /usr
is removed.
standard-conf.xml is currently included by:
man/binfmt.d.xml
man/environment.d.xml
man/modules-load.d.xml
man/sysctl.d.xml
man/coredump.conf.xml
man/journal-remote.conf.xml
man/journal-upload.conf.xml
man/journald.conf.xml
man/logind.conf.xml
man/networkd.conf.xml
man/resolved.conf.xml
man/systemd-sleep.conf.xml
man/systemd-system.conf.xml
All those programs actually use CONF_PATHS_NULSTR or CONF_PATHS_STRV,
so this changes the documentation to match code.
Linux can be run on a device meant to act as a USB peripheral. In order
for a machine to act as such a USB device it has to be equipped with
a UDC - USB Device Controller.
This patch adds a target reached when UDC becomes available. It can be used
for activating e.g. a service unit which composes a USB gadget with
configfs and activates it.