We'd log to the "console", losing structured logs during configuration file parsing.
Let's be nice to journalctl users, and log to the journal immediately.
This partially reverts 25de7aa7b9. I don't think the
change was intended there.
The problem I'm trying to solve: for /dev/kvm we get first an ADD uevent, and
then CHANGE whenever something connects or disconnects to the character device.
The rules in 50-default-udev.rules set UID, GID, and MODE on ADD, but not on
CHANGE. When the change event happens, we would reset the ownership and
permissions.
This happens because node_permissions_apply() would (after 25de7aa7b9)
set uid=gid=0 if they weren't set by the rules.
So let's only pass uid/gid/mode to node_permissions_apply() if appropriately
configured. Also let node_permissions_apply() do the skip of uid/gid/mode if
not set, and rename "always_apply" to more closely reflect its meaning.
It is pretty hard to figure out what the problem actually is, esp. when the rule
is long.
On my machine:
systemd[1]: Starting udev Kernel Device Manager...
systemd-udevd[217399]: /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/11-dm-lvm.rules:40 Invalid value for OPTIONS key, ignoring: 'event_timeout=180'
systemd-udevd[217399]: /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/11-dm-lvm.rules:40 The line takes no effect, ignoring.
systemd-udevd[217399]: /etc/udev/rules.d/60-ipath.rules:4 Invalid value "kcopy/%02n" for NAME (char 7: invalid substitution type), ignoring, but please fix it.
systemd-udevd[217399]: /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/65-md-incremental.rules:28 Invalid value "/sbin/mdadm -I $env{DEVNAME} --export $devnode --offroot ${DEVLINKS}" for IMPORT (char 58: invalid substitution type), ignoring, but please fix it.
systemd-udevd[217399]: /etc/udev/rules.d/73-special-net-names.rules:14 Invalid value "/bin/sh -ec 'D=${DEVPATH#*/vio/}; D=${D%%%%/*}; D=${D#????}; D=${D#0}; D=${D#0}; D=${D#0}; D=${D#0}; echo ${D:-0}'" for PROGRAM (char 16: invalid substitution type), ignoring, but please fix it.
systemd-udevd[217399]: /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/84-nm-drivers.rules:10 Invalid value "/bin/sh -c 'ethtool -i $1 | sed -n s/^driver:\ //p' -- $env{INTERFACE}" for PROGRAM (char 24: invalid substitution type), ignoring, but please fix it.
systemd-udevd[217399]: /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/90-libgpod.rules:19 IMPORT key takes '==' or '!=' operator, assuming '==', but please fix it.
systemd-udevd[217399]: /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/90-libgpod.rules:23 IMPORT key takes '==' or '!=' operator, assuming '==', but please fix it.
systemd-udevd[217399]: /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/99-vmware-scsi-udev.rules:5 Invalid value "/bin/sh -c 'echo 180 >/sys$DEVPATH/device/timeout'" for RUN (char 27: invalid substitution type), ignoring, but please fix it.
systemd-udevd[217399]: /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/99-vmware-scsi-udev.rules:6 Invalid value "/bin/sh -c 'echo 180 >/sys$DEVPATH/device/timeout'" for RUN (char 27: invalid substitution type), ignoring, but please fix it.
systemd[1]: Started udev Kernel Device Manager.
# udevadm control --property=HELLO=WORLD
Received udev control message (ENV), unsetting 'HELLO'
# udevadm control --property=HELLO=
Received udev control message (ENV), setting 'HELLO='
Oh no, it's busted. Let's try removing this one little negation real quick
to see if it helps...
# udevadm control --property=HELLO=WORLD
Received udev control message (ENV), setting 'HELLO=WORLD'
# udevadm control --property=HELLO=
Received udev control message (ENV), unsetting 'HELLO'
Feels much better now.
This is for 6d36464065. It turns out that this is causing more problems than
expected. Let's retroactively introduce naming scheme v241 to conditionalize
this change.
Follow-up for #12792 and 6d36464065. See also
https://bugzilla.suse.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1136600.
$ SYSTEMD_LOG_LEVEL=debug NET_NAMING_SCHEME=v240 build/udevadm test-builtin net_setup_link /sys/class/net/br11
$ SYSTEMD_LOG_LEVEL=debug NET_NAMING_SCHEME=v241 build/udevadm test-builtin net_setup_link /sys/class/net/br11
...
@@ -20,11 +20,13 @@
link_config: could not set ethtool features for br11
Could not set offload features of br11: Operation not permitted
br11: Device has name_assign_type=3
-Using interface naming scheme 'v240'.
+Using interface naming scheme 'v241'.
br11: Policy *keep*: keeping existing userspace name
br11: Device has addr_assign_type=1
-br11: No stable identifying information found
-br11: Could not generate persistent MAC: No data available
+br11: Using "br11" as stable identifying information
+br11: Using generated persistent MAC address
+Could not set Alias=, MACAddress= or MTU= on br11: Operation not permitted
+br11: Could not apply link config, ignoring: Operation not permitted
Unload module index
Unloaded link configuration context.
ID_NET_DRIVER=bridge
This is in preparation for later changes. Let's change the documentation of
net.naming-scheme= to also say that it applies to MAC addresses. This commit
doesn't actually implement that though.
When udevadm trigger is called, the list of devices to trigger is always
generated through enumeration, and devices can come and go, so we should not
treat -ENOENT as a failure. But other types of failure should be logged.
It seems they were logged until baa30fbc2c.
Also, return the first error. (I'm not sure if there are other failure modes
which we want to ignore. If they are, they'll need to be whitelisted like
-ENOENT.).
This does the following:
- rename enum udev_builtin_cmd -> UdevBuiltinCmd
- rename struct udev_builtin -> UdevBuiltin
- move type definitions to udev-rules.h
- move prototypes of functions defined in udev-rules.c to udev-rules.h
- drop to use strbuf
- propagate critical errors in applying rules,
- drop limitation for number of tokens per line.
This suppress the following warning:
```
systemd-udevd[437]: Config file /usr/lib/systemd/network/99-default.link
applies to device based on potentially unpredictable interface name 'wlan0'
```
Follow-up for 84ea567eb4.
The length of device identification VPD page is filled with two bytes,
but scsi_id only gets the low byte. Fix it.
Signed-off-by: Zhang Xianwei <zhang.xianwei8@zte.com.cn>
Fixes the following build failure with musl:
../git/src/udev/udev-event.c: In function 'spawn_wait':
../git/src/udev/udev-event.c:600:53: error: 'WEXITED' undeclared (first use in this function); did you mean 'WIFEXITED'?
r = sd_event_add_child(e, NULL, spawn->pid, WEXITED, on_spawn_sigchld, spawn);
^~~~~~~
This looks like a bug in udev-event.c that could also have broken
the compilation after some future glibc header reshuffle.
Follow-up for faae64fa3d, which increased the
default number of udev workers per cpu regardless of how big the system is.
It's not really clear from the commit message if the new number of workers
improved the overall time for the boot process or only reduced the number of
times the max number of children limit was reached (and in this case
5406c36844 commit might have been more appropriate in the first place).
But systems with ~1000 CPUs are not rare these days and the worker numbers get
quite large with CPU factor of 8. Spawning more than 2000 workers can't be
healthy on any system, no matter how big.
Indeed the main mistake is the belief that udev is CPU-intensive, and thus the
number of allowed workers has to increase with the number of CPUs. It is not,
at probably has never been. It's I/O bound, and sometimes, bound by resources
such as locks.
This is an argument to:
- scale only weakly with the number of CPUs, and the rationale to switch back
to a scale factor C=2 but with a higher offset number which should affect
systems with a small number of CPUs only. With this patch applied the offset
is increased from O=8 to O=16.
- put an absolute maximum limit to make sure no more than 2048 workers are
spawned no matter how big the system is.
This still provides more workers for the laptop cases (where the number of CPUs
is limited), while avoiding sky-rocketing numbers for big systems.
Note that on most desktop systems, the memory limit will kick in. The following
table collects numbers about children-max. For each scenario, the first column
is the "cpu_limit" limit, and the second number is the minimum amount of memory
for the "cpu_limit" limit to become relevant (with less RAM, memory will limit
the number of children thus "mem_limit" will become the active limit).
| > v240 | < v240 | this patch |
CPUs | C = 8, O = 8 | C = 2, O = 8 | C = 2, O = 16 |
-------------------------------------------------------
1 | 16 2 | 10 1.3 | 18 2 |
2 | 24 3 | 12 1.5 | 20 2 |
4 | 40 5 | 16 2 | 24 3 |
8 | 72 9 | 24 3 | 32 4 |
16 | 136 17 | 40 5 | 48 5 |
64 | 520 65 | 136 17 | 144 18 |
1024 | 8200 1025 | 2056 263 | 2048 256 |
2048 |16392 2049 | 4104 513 | 2048 256 |
This patch is mainly based on Martin Wilck's analyze and comments.
The comment in udev-builtin-net_id.c (removed in grandparent commit) showed the
property without the prefix. I assume that was always the intent, because it
doesn't make much sense to concatenate anything to an arbitrary user-specified
field.
I decided to make this a separate man page because it is freakin' long.
This content could equally well go in systemd-udevd.service(8), systemd.link(5),
or a new man page for the net_id builtin.
v2:
- rename to systemd.net-naming-scheme
- add udevadm test-builtin net_id example
Checking if we are root on the client side is generally pointless, since the
privileged operation will fail anyway and we can than log what precisly went
wrong.
A check like this makes sense only if:
- we need to do some expensive unprivileged operation before attempting the
privileged operation, and the check allows us avoid wasting resources.
- the privileged operation would fail but in an unclear way.
Neither of those cases applies here.
This fixes calls like 'udevadm control -h' as unprivileged user.
gcc was warning about strncpy() leaving an unterminated string.
In this case, it was correct.
The code was doing strncpy()+strncat()+strlen() essentially to determine
if the strings have expected length. If the length was correct, a buffer
overread was performed (or at least some garbage bytes were used from the
uninitialized part of the buffer). Let's do the length check first and then
only copy stuff if everything agrees.
For some reason the function was called "prepend", when it obviously does
an "append".
When booting with "udev.log-priority=debug" for example, the output might be
spammed with messages like this:
systemd-udevd[23545]: maximum number (248) of children reached
systemd-udevd[23545]: maximum number (248) of children reached
systemd-udevd[23545]: maximum number (248) of children reached
systemd-udevd[23545]: maximum number (248) of children reached
systemd-udevd[23545]: maximum number (248) of children reached
systemd-udevd[23545]: maximum number (248) of children reached
systemd-udevd[23545]: maximum number (248) of children reached
While the message itself is useful, printing it per batch of events should be
enough.
In order to properly and predictably name netdevsim netdevices,
introduce a separate implementation, as the netdevices reside on a
specific netdevsim bus. Note that this applies only to netdevsim devices
created using sysfs, because those expose phys_port_name attribute.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Pirko <jiri@mellanox.com>
We had all kinds of indentation: 2 sp, 3 sp, 4 sp, 8 sp, and mixed.
4 sp was the most common, in particular the majority of scripts under test/
used that. Let's standarize on 4 sp, because many commandlines are long and
there's a lot of nesting, and with 8sp indentation less stuff fits. 4 sp
also seems to be the default indentation, so this will make it less likely
that people will mess up if they don't load the editor config. (I think people
often use vi, and vi has no support to load project-wide configuration
automatically. We distribute a .vimrc file, but it is not loaded by default,
and even the instructions in it seem to discourage its use for security
reasons.)
Also remove the few vim config lines that were left. We should either have them
on all files, or none.
Also remove some strange stuff like '#!/bin/env bash', yikes.
We have a few cases or reported issues which are about a timeout to parse
the input in 25 s. In all cases, the input is a few hundred kb. We don't really
care if the config parsers are super efficent, so let's set a limit on the input
size to avoid triggering such issues. The parsers often contain quadratic
algorithms. This is OK, because the numbers of elements are almost always very
small in real use. Rewriting the code to use more complicated data structures
to speed this up would not only complicate the code, but also pessimize behaviour
for the overwhelmingly common case of small samples. Note that in all those
cases, the input data is trusted. We care about memory correctness, and not
not so much about efficiency.
The size checks are done twice: using options for libfuzzer, and using an
internal check for afl. Those should be changed together. I didn't use a define,
because there is no easy mechanism to share the define between the two files.
It was already the case before commit a75211421f,
which upgraded the log to warning.
This seems an unintended side effect as the commit message doesn't mention it
and the old behavior looks more appropriate.
This fixes bugs introduced by 29448498c7
and d838e14515.
Previously, RUN and SECLABEL keys are stored in udev_list with its unique
flag is false. If the flag is false, then udev_list is just a linked
list and new entries are always added in the last.
So, we should use OrderedHashmap instead of Hashmap.
Fixes#11368.
CID#996458. Coverity warns that we trust desc->bLength as read in
the input data to adjust our position in the buffer. This value could
be anything, leading to overflow. It's unlikely that the kernel feeds
us invalid data, but let's me more careful.
If any error is encountered, more logs are given.
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.
This also set lower log level for the messages.
6e2efb6c73 introduces the log messages.
But udevd may be started with --resolve-names=never, and the behavior
is expected.
Fixes#11720.
According to the specification[1] the 'capabilities' describe the physical
device as a whole and the 'device_caps' describe the current device node.
The existence of 'device_caps' is indicated by the V4L2_CAP_DEVICE_CAPS
capability flag.
Use the 'device_caps' if available to generate the correct
ID_V4L_CAPABILITIES for the current device node.
This is relevant for UVC devices with current kernels: Two /dev/videoX
devices exist for those. One for video and one for metadata. The
V4L2_CAP_VIDEO_CAPTURE flag is present in the 'capabilities' for both
device nodes but only in the 'device_caps' of the video device node.
Without this, the ID_V4L_CAPABILITIES of the metadata device node
incorrectly contains 'capture'.
[1] https://www.linuxtv.org/downloads/v4l-dvb-apis-new/uapi/v4l/vidioc-querycap.html
Originally commented as "devices names might have changed/swapped in the meantime",
but may not. For safety, let's block the following events with same
devpath.
This may fix#6514.
Fixes#3374. The problem is that we set MACPolicy=persistent (i.e. we would
like to generate persistent MAC addresses for interfaces which don't have a
fixed MAC address), but various virtual interfaces including bridges, tun/tap,
bonds, etc., do not not have the necessary ID_NET_NAME_* attributes and udev
would not assing the address and warn:
Could not generate persistent MAC address for $name: No such file or directory
Basic requirements which I think a solution for this needs to satisfy:
1. No changes to MAC address generation for those cases which are currently
handled successfully. This means that net_get_unique_predictable_data() must
keep returning the same answer, which in turn means net_get_name() must keep
returning the same answer. We can only add more things we look at with lower
priority so that we start to cover cases which were not covered before.
2. Like 1, but for IPvLL seed and DHCP IAD. This is less important, but "nice
to have".
3. Keep MACPolicy=persistent. If people don't want it, they can always apply
local configuration, but in general stable MACs are a good thing. I have never
seen anyone complain about that.
== Various approaches that have been proposed
=== https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/3374#issuecomment-223753264 (tomty89)
if !ID_BUS and INTERFACE, use INTERFACE
I think this almost does the good thing, but I don't see the reason to reject ID_BUS
(i.e. physical hardware). Stable MACs are very useful for physical hardware that has
no physical MAC.
=== https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/3374#issuecomment-224733069 (teg)
if (should_rename(device, true))
This means looking at name_assign_type. In particular for
NET_NAME_USER should_rename(..., true) returns true. It only returns false
for NET_NAME_PREDICTABLE. So this would cover stuff like br0, bond0, etc,
but would not cover lo and other devices with predictable names. That doesn't
make much sense.
But did teg mean should_rename() or !should_rename()?
=== https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/3374#issuecomment-234628502 (tomty89):
+ if (!should_rename(device, true))
+ return udev_device_get_sysname(device)
This covers only devices with NET_NAME_PREDICTABLE. Since the problem applies as
much to bridges and such, this isn't neough.
=== https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/3374#issuecomment-281745967 (grafi-tt)
+ /* if the machine doesn't provide data about the device, use the ifname specified by userspace
+ * (this is the case when the device is virtual, e.g., bridge or bond) */
+ s = udev_device_get_sysattr_value(device, "name_assign_type");
+ if (s && safe_atou(s, &type) >= 0 && type == NET_NAME_USER)
+ return udev_device_get_sysname(device);
This does not cover bond0, vnet0, tun/tap and similar.
grafi-tt also proposes patching the kernel, but *not* setting name_assign_type
seems intentional in those cases, because the device name is a result of
enumeration, not set by the userspace.
=== https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/3374#issuecomment-288882355 (tomty89)
(also PR #11372)
- MACAddressPolicy=persistent
This break requirement 3. above. It would solve the immediate problem, but I
think the disruption is too big.
=== This patch
This patch means that we will set a "stable" MAC for pretty much any virtual
device by default, where "stable" means keyed off the machine-id and interface
name.
It seems like a big change, but we already did this for most physical devices.
Doing it also for virtual devices doesn't seem like a big issue. It will make
the setup and monitoring of virtualized networks slightly nicer. I don't think
anyone is depending on having the MAC address changed when those devices are
destoryed and recreated. If they do, they'd have to change MACAddressPolicy=.
== Implementation
net_get_name() is called from dhcp_ident_set_iaid() so I didn't change
net_get_name() like in grafi-tt's patch, but net_get_unique_predictable_data().
net_get_unique_predictable_data() is called from get_mac() in link-config.c
and sd_ipv4ll_set_address_seed(), so both of those code paths are affected
and will now get data in some cases where they errored out previously.
The return code is changed to -ENODATA since that gives a nicer error string.
If "keep" policy is specified, and the interface has a name that is
NET_NAME_USER or NET_NAME_RENAMED, we stop processing rules. "keep" should
probably be specified either first or last depending on the preference.
This partially reimplements 55b6530baa, in the
sense that if the "keep" policy is not specified, and if the interface has
a NamingPolicy, it will be renamed, even if it had a name previously.
So this breaks backwards compatibility in this case, but that's more in line
with what users expect.
Closes#9006.
What policy we dicide to use it rather important, but this bit of information
wasn't logged. Let's always do that.
The code was also written in a confusing way, which probably contributed to the
unintended effects of 55b6530baa and other commits.
We would loop over all policies, and note if "kernel" was specified, and then
possibly unset the result at the end. Let's immediately log the result and cut
to the end if we can figure out the answer.
No functional change intended, except for the new log lines.
Using goto is not very elegant, but we can't use break because of the switch,
and there are multiple conditions to break the loop, so using goto is cleanest.
This reverts commit 55b6530baa.
This commit description says "Always rename an interface to its name specified
in config if no NamePolicy= is specified", but it does much more:
1. It completely changes the meaning of NamePolicy=kernel. Before, it meant that an interface
with type==NAMEPOLICY_KERNEL would not be renamed. After, the kernel name only works as
a fallback, if no policy matches.
2. The "if no NamePolicy= is specified" part is not true at all, the interface will be renamed
according to the specified NamePolicy=.
After 55b6530baa, the should_rename() function is named very misleadingly: it is only used
to mean "respect kernel predictable name if no naming policy matches".
Let's revert, and start with a clean slate. This fixes#11436.
Before:
IMPORT builtin 'hwdb' fails: No such file or directory
After:
IMPORT builtin 'hwdb' fails: No data available
Previous log is confusing and may be understood as hwdb file not exist.
Now, not a few udevd debug logs come from sd-device or sd-hwdb.
Only setting LOG_REALM_UDEV may not sufficient to debug.
We have already similar code in main() and udevadm.
Found by inspecting results of running this small program:
int main(int argc, const char **argv) {
for (int i = 1; i < argc; i++) {
FILE *f;
char line[1024], prev[1024], *r;
int lineno;
prev[0] = '\0';
lineno = 1;
f = fopen(argv[i], "r");
if (!f)
exit(1);
do {
r = fgets(line, sizeof(line), f);
if (!r)
break;
if (strcmp(line, prev) == 0)
printf("%s:%d: error: dup %s", argv[i], lineno, line);
lineno++;
strcpy(prev, line);
} while (!feof(f));
fclose(f);
}
}
c4b69e990f effectively moved the initalization of socket.
Before that commit:
run → listen_fds → udev_ctrl_new → udev_ctrl_new_from_fd → socket()
After:
run → main_loop → manager_new → udev_ctrl_new_from_fd → socket()
The problem is that main_loop was called after daemonization. Move manager_new
out of main_loop and before daemonization.
Fixes#11314 (hopefully ;)).
v2: Yu Watanabe
sd_event is initialized in main_loop().
When running PROGRAM="...", we would log
systemd-udevd[447]: Failed to wait spawned command '...': Input/output error
no matter why the program actually failed, at error level.
The code wouldn't distinguish between an internal failure and a failure in the
program being called and run sd_event_exit(..., -EIO) on any kind of error. EIO
is rather misleading here, becuase it suggests a serious error.
on_spawn_sigchld is updated to set the return code to distinguish failure to
spawn, including the program being killed by a signal (a negative return value),
and the program failing (positive return value).
The logging levels are adjusted, so that for PROGRAM= calls, which are
essentially "if" statements, we only log at debug level (unless we get a
timeout or segfault or another unexpected error).
The idea was that those vars could be configured to 'no' to not install the .pc
files, or they could be set to '', and then they would be built but not
installed. This was inherited from the autoconf build system. This couldn't
work because '' is replaced by the default value. Also, having this level of
control doesn't seem necessary, since creating those files is very
quick. Skipping with 'no' was implemented only for systemd.pc and not the other
.pc files. Let's simplify things and skip installation if the target dir
is configured as 'no' for all .pc files.
$ build/systemctl --version
systemd 239-3555-g6178cbb5b5
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +IMA -APPARMOR +SMACK +SYSVINIT +UTMP +LIBCRYPTSETUP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS +ACL +XZ +LZ4 +SECCOMP +BLKID +ELFUTILS +KMOD -IDN2 +IDN +PCRE2 default-hierarchy=hybrid
$ git tag v240 -m 'v240'
$ ninja -C build
ninja: Entering directory `build'
[76/76] Linking target fuzz-unit-file.
$ build/systemctl --version
systemd 240
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +IMA -APPARMOR +SMACK +SYSVINIT +UTMP +LIBCRYPTSETUP +GCRYPT +GNUTLS +ACL +XZ +LZ4 +SECCOMP +BLKID +ELFUTILS +KMOD -IDN2 +IDN +PCRE2 default-hierarchy=hybrid
This is very useful during development, because a precise version string is
embedded in the build product and displayed during boot, so we don't have to
guess answers for questions like "did I just boot the latest version or the one
from before?".
This change creates an overhead for "noop" builds. On my laptop, 'ninja -C
build' that does nothing goes from 0.1 to 0.5 s. It would be nice to avoid
this, but I think that <1 s is still acceptable.
Fixes#7183.
PACKAGE_VERSION is renamed to GIT_VERSION, to make it obvious that this is the
more dynamically changing version string.
Why save to a file? It would be easy to generate the version tag using
run_command(), but we want to go through a file so that stuff gets rebuilt when
this file changes. If we just defined an variable in meson, ninja wouldn't know
it needs to rebuild things.
PROJECT_VERSION is used in preparation for future changes. Let's simplify the
code by using structured initialization. If the string written to .version ever
became to long, the compiler will truncate it and tell us:
../src/udev/udev-ctrl.c: In function ‘ctrl_send’:
../src/udev/udev-ctrl.c:221:28: warning: initializer-string for array of chars is too long
.version = "udev-" STRINGIFY(R_VERSION),
^~~~~~~
../src/udev/udev-ctrl.c:221:28: note: (near initialization for ‘ctrl_msg_wire.version’)
No functional change.
Let's not use atoi() if we can simply provide the project version as a number.
In C code, this is the numerical project version. In substitutions in other
files, this is just the bare substitution.
The "PACKAGE_" prefix is from autotools, and is strange. We call systemd a
"project", and "package" is something that distros build. Let's rename.
PACKAGE_URL is renamed to PROJECT_URL for the same reasons and for consistency.
(This leave PACKAGE_VERSION as the stringified define for C code.)
_c is misleading because .h files should be included in those lists too
(this tells meson that the build outputs should be rebuilt if the header
files change).
Follow-up for 1437822638.
We had two very similar functions: device_read_db_aux and device_read_db,
and a number of wrappers for them:
device_read_db_aux
← device_read_db (in sd-device.c)
← all functions in sd-device.c, including sd_device_is_initialized
← device_read_db_force
← event_execute_rules_on_remove (in udev-event.c)
device_read_db (in device-private.c)
← functions in device_private.c (but not device_read_db_force):
device_get_devnode_{mode,uid,gid}
device_get_devlink_priority
device_get_watch_handle
device_clone_with_db
← called from udevadm, udev-{node,event,watch}.c
Before 7141e4f62c (sd-device: don't retry loading
uevent/db files more than once), the two implementations were the same. In that
commit, device_read_db_aux was changed. Those changes were reverted in the parent
commit, so the two implementations are now again the same except for superficial
differences. This commit removes device_read_db (in sd-device.c), and renames
device_read_db_aux to device_read_db_internal and makes everyone use this one
implementation. There should be no functional change.
From the results of CIs in #11076, changing buffer size may cause
issue #10754. So, let's prohibit to change the size if it is already
bound.
This also reverts commit 986ab0d2dc.
This is useful for distributions, where the stability of interface names should
be preseved after an upgrade of systemd. So when some specific release of the
distro is made available, systemd defaults to the latest & greatest naming
scheme, and subsequent updates set the same default. This default may still
be overriden through the kernel and env var options.
A special value "latest" is also allowed. Without a specific name, it is harder
to verride from meson. In case of 'combo' options, meson reads the default
during the initial configuration, and "remembers" this choice. When systemd is
updated, old build/ directories could keep the old default, which would be
annoying. Hence, "latest" is introduced to make it explicit, yet follow the
upstream. This is actually useful for the user too, because it may be used
as an override, without having to actually specify a version.
With this we can stabilize how naming works for network interfaces. A
user can request through a kernel cmdline option or an env var which
scheme to follow. The idea is that installers use this to set into stone
(a very soft stone though) the scheme used during installation so that
interface naming doesn't change afterwards anymore.
Why use env vars and kernel cmdline options, and not a config file of
its own?
Well, first of all there's no obvious existing one to use. But more
importantly: I have the feeling that this logic is kind of an incomplete
hack, and I simply don't want to do advertise this as a perfectly
working solution. So far we used env vars for the non-so-official
options and proper config files for the official stuff. Given how
incomplete this logic is (i.e. the big variable for naming remains the
kernel, which might expose sysfs attributes in newer versions that we
check for and didn't exist in older versions — and other problems like
this), I am simply not confident in giving this first-class exposure in
a primary configuration file.
Fixes: #10448
This is convenient when working with device units in systemd. Instead of
converting the systemd unit name to a path to feed to udevadm, udevadm
info|trigger can be called directly on the unit name.
The man page is reworked a bit to describe the modern syntax with positional
arguments first. It's just simpler to use than the positional options.
udevadm would dump help() output, instead of printing a message about what is
wrong. That's just bad UX. Let's use a different message if the argument is
missing, and a different one if it is invalid.
Also, rework the code to separate the business logic from argument parsing.
Let's not use "default:" in switch statements. This way, the compiler will warn
us if we miss one of the cases.
Whenever we invoke external, foreign code from code that has
RLIMIT_NOFILE's soft limit bumped to high values, revert it to 1024
first. This is a safety precaution for compatibility with programs using
select() which cannot operate with fds > 1024.
This commit adds the call to rlimit_nofile_safe() to all invocations of
exec{v,ve,l}() and friends that either are in code that we know runs
with RLIMIT_NOFILE bumped up (which is PID 1 and all journal code for
starters) or that is part of shared code that might end up there.
The calls are placed as early as we can in processes invoking a flavour
of execve(), but after the last time we do fd manipulations, so that we
can still take benefit of the high fd limits for that.
Before c4b69e990f, if the socket fd is
passed from pid1, `udev_monitor_set_receive_buffer_size()` (now it is
a wrapper of `sd_device_monitor_set_receive_buffer_size()`) was not
called. Let's preserve the original logic.
Ideally, coccinelle would strip unnecessary braces too. But I do not see any
option in coccinelle for this, so instead, I edited the patch text using
search&replace to remove the braces. Unfortunately this is not fully automatic,
in particular it didn't deal well with if-else-if-else blocks and ifdefs, so
there is an increased likelikehood be some bugs in such spots.
I also removed part of the patch that coccinelle generated for udev, where we
returns -1 for failure. This should be fixed independently.
This removes the call to log_close(), and refactors how fork() is done. Now
the parent also goes through normal cleanup. This isn't necessary to use the
macro, but it feels cleaner this way.
This removes a call to log_close(). I don't think this should matter.
The call to mac_selinux_init() is moved after parse_argv(). We probably
don't need selinux when printing help().