This is all confusing as hell, becuase in some places lowercase hexadecimal
digits are used, and in other places uppercase. This adds a check for the
most common case that we and others got wrong.
I tried to extend the general grammar in hwdb_grammar() to include this check,
but it quickly became very complicated and didn't seem to work properly. Doing
initial parsing with more general rules is easier and also seems to give better
error messages:
/home/zbyszek/src/systemd-work/build/../hwdb.d/60-autosuspend.hwdb: 3 match groups, 5 matches, 3 properties
Pattern 'v058fp9540*' is invalid: Expected W:(0123...), found 'f' (at char 4), (line:1, col:5)
Defaulting to fedora makes it a pain to override mkosi.default
point to one of the other mkosi settings files. Instead, have
every developer manually add the symlink to his distro
of choice and don't commit the symlink to the repository by
putting it in the .gitignore.
We use LOG_PRI() in all log_*() functions, so let's do that here too for
consistency. Effectively this doesn't change anything since we only use
LOG_{INFO,DEBUG,...} as the argument.
This effectively partially reverts "rules: remove all power management from
udev" / e2452eef02. The rules for emulated QEMU
hardware were removed in one fell swoop with other rules which were causing
problems. But the qemu rules were working properly (and were adjusted through
patches over time). Nowadays we have a hwdb for this, so add hwdb entries using
the new detailed modalias.
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/353#issuecomment-658810289
When the kernel does not provide a modalias, we generate our own for usb devices.
For some reason, we generated the expected usb:vXXXXpYYYY string, suffixed by "*".
It was added that way already in 796b06c21b, but I
think that was a mistake, and Kay was thinking about the match pattern instead
of the matched string.
For example, for a qemu device:
old: "usb:v0627p0001*"
new: "usb:v0627p0001:QEMU USB Tablet"
On the match side, all hwdb files in the wild seem to be using match patterns
with "*" at the end. So we can add more stuff to our generated modalias with
impunity.
This will allow more obvious and more certain matches on USB devices. In
principle the vendor+product id should be unique, but it's only 8 digits, and
there's a high chance of people getting this wrong. And matching the wrong
device would be quite problematic. By including the name in the match string we
make a mismatch much less likely.
E.g. udevadm test prints "Invalid inotify descriptor." which is
meaningless without any context. I think it should be OK to call udev_watch_end()
from a cleanup path without any warning (even at debug level).
967de8face added a note that I found very hard
to understand. Reword it, and also describe how IMPORT and PROGRAM are different
from RUN.
Minor markup adjustements too.
There is no reason to consider this wrong. In fact one could argue that +=
is more appropriate, because we always add to options, and not replace previous
assignments. If we output a debug message, we implicitly ask people to "fix" this,
and we shouldn't.
Also, all our rules use += right now.
The kernel interface requires setting up read-only bind-mounts in
two steps, the bind first and then a read-only remount.
Fix nspawn-mount, and cover this case in the integration test.
Fixes#16484
This only sets the environment for user *services*, it has no effect on
sessions, as those get an env block set up by whatever program sets them
up and not systemd.