sd_path_home() returns ENXIO when a variable (such as $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR) is not
defined. Previously we used ENOKEY for unresolvable specifiers. To avoid having
two codes, or translating ENXIO to ENOKEY, I replaced ENOKEY use with ENXIO.
v2:
- use sd_path_home and change to ENXIO everywhere
This commit adds specifiers %U, %u and %h for the user UID, name and
home directory, respectively.
[zj: drop untrue copy-pasted comments and move the next text
to the new "Specifiers" section.
Now that #7444 has been merged, also drop the specifier functions.]
Fixes#4097.
As of current master, systemd-tmpfiles behaves correctly, apart from a trivial
typo. So let's tell github to close the bug.
With current git:
$ sudo SYSTEMD_LOG_LEVEL=debug build/systemd-tmpfiles --create `pwd`/test/tmpfiles.d/link-loop.conf
Successfully loaded SELinux database in 2.385ms, size on heap is 321K.
Reading config file "/home/zbyszek/src/systemd-work/test/tmpfiles.d/link-loop.conf".
Running create action for entry D /run/hello2
Found existing directory "/run/hello2".
"/run/hello2" has right mode 41777
Running create action for entry f /run/hello2/hello2.test
"/run/hello2/hello2.test" has been created.
"/run/hello2/hello2.test" has right mode 101777
chown "/run/hello2/hello2.test" to 0.84
Running create action for entry L /run/hello2/hello2.link
Found existing symlink "/run/hello2/hello2.link".
Running create action for entry z /run/hello2/hello2.test
"/run/hello2/hello2.test" has right mode 101777
chown "/run/hello2/hello2.test" to 0.0
Running create action for entry z /run/hello2/hello2.link
Skipping mode an owner fix for symlink /run/hello2/hello2.link.
and the permissions are:
$ ls -dl /run/hello2/ /run/hello2/*
drwxrwxrwt. 2 foo bar 80 Nov 22 14:40 /run/hello2/
lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 23 Nov 22 14:40 /run/hello2/hello2.link -> /run/hello2/hello2.test
-rwxrwxrwt. 1 root root 0 Nov 22 14:40 /run/hello2/hello2.test
Everything seems correct.
The code intentionally ignored unknown specifiers, treating them as text. This
needs to change because otherwise we can never add a new specifier in a backwards
compatible way. So just treat an unknown (potential) specifier as an error.
In principle this is a break of backwards compatibility, but the previous
behaviour was pretty much useless, since the expanded value could change every
time we add new specifiers, which we do all the time.
As a compromise for backwards compatibility, only fail on alphanumerical
characters. This should cover the most cases where an unescaped percent
character is used, like size=5% and such, which behave the same as before with
this patch. OTOH, this means that we will not be able to use non-alphanumerical
specifiers without breaking backwards compatibility again. I think that's an
acceptable compromise.
v2:
- add NEWS entry
v3:
- only fail on alphanumerical
In this way, individual errors in files can be treated differently than a
failure of the whole service.
A test is added to check that the expected value is returned.
Some parts are commented out, because it is not. This will be fixed in
a subsequent commit.
Some filesystems do not set d_type value when
readdir is called, so entry type is unknown.
Therefore check if accessing entry does not
return ELOOP error.
As it turns out MAX_HANDLE_SZ is a lie, the handle buffer we pass into
name_to_handle_at() might need to be larger than MAX_HANDLE_SZ, and we
thus need to invoke name_to_handle_at() in a loop, growing the buffer as
needed.
This adds a new wrapper name_to_handle_at_loop() around
name_to_handle_at() that does the necessary looping, and ports over all
users.
Fixes: #7082
In chroot environments, /etc might not be fully initialized: /etc/machine-id
can be missing for example. This makes the expansions of affected specifiers
impossible at that time.
These cases should not be considered as errors and such failures shouldn't be
logged at an error level therefore this patch downgrades the level used to
LOG_NOTICE in such cases.
Also this is logged at LOG_NOTICE only the first time and then downgrade to
LOG_DEBUG for the rest. That way, if debugging is enabled we get the full
output, but otherwise we only see only one message.
The expansion of specifiers is now self contained in a dedicated function
instead of being spread all over the place.
The advantage is that is the name is mispellt, cpp will warn us.
$ git grep -Ee "conf.set\('(HAVE|ENABLE)_" -l|xargs sed -r -i "s/conf.set\('(HAVE|ENABLE)_/conf.set10('\1_/"
$ git grep -Ee '#ifn?def (HAVE|ENABLE)' -l|xargs sed -r -i 's/#ifdef (HAVE|ENABLE)/#if \1/; s/#ifndef (HAVE|ENABLE)/#if ! \1/;'
$ git grep -Ee 'if.*defined\(HAVE' -l|xargs sed -i -r 's/defined\((HAVE_[A-Z0-9_]*)\)/\1/g'
$ git grep -Ee 'if.*defined\(ENABLE' -l|xargs sed -i -r 's/defined\((ENABLE_[A-Z0-9_]*)\)/\1/g'
+ manual changes to meson.build
squash! build-sys: use #if Y instead of #ifdef Y everywhere
v2:
- fix incorrect setting of HAVE_LIBIDN2
If a path passes though an autofs filesystem, then accessing
the path might trigger and automount. As systemd-tmpfiles is run before
the network is up, and as automounts are often used for networked
filesystems, this can cause a deadlock.
So chase_symlinks is enhance to accept a new flag which tells it
to check for autofs, and return -EREMOTE if autofs is found.
tmpfiles is changed to check just before acting on a path so that it
can avoid autofs even if a symlink was created earlier by tmpfiles
that would send this path through an autofs.
This fixes a deadlock that happens when /home is listed in /etc/fstab as
x-systemd.automount for an NFS directory.
tmpfiles.d option "e" when run through systemd-tmpfiles --create should
apply configured permissions (uid,gid) only to already existing
files. When file doesn't exist we bail out with error. Instead we should
silently ignore non-existing files.
$ useradd test
$ cat /etc/tmpfiles.d/foobar.conf
e /tmp/test - test test 1d
$ ls -l /tmp/test
ls: cannot access '/tmp/test': No such file or directory
Before:
$ systemd-tmpfiles --create /etc/tmpfiles.d/foobar.conf
Adjusting owner and mode for /tmp/test failed: No such file or directory
$ echo $?
1
After:
$ systemd-tmpfiles --create /etc/tmpfiles.d/foobar.conf
$ echo $?
0
Currently if tmpfiles is run with force on symlink creation but there already
exists a directory at that location, the creation will fail. This change
updates the behavior to remove the directory with rm_fr and then attempts to
create the symlink again.
All those uses were correct, but I think it's better to be explicit.
Using implicit errno is too error prone, and with this change we can require
(in the sense of a style guideline) that the code is always specified.
Helpful query: git grep -n -P 'log_[^s][a-z]+\(.*%m'
This filters out "." and ".." from glob results. Fixes#5655 and #5644.
Any judgements on whether the path is "safe" are removed. We will not remove
"/" under any name (including "/../" and such), but we will remove stuff that
is specified using paths that include "//", "/./" and "/../". Such paths can be
created when joining strings automatically, or for other reasons, and people
generally know what ".." and "." is.
Tests are added to make sure that the helper functions behave as expected.
This changes the file copy logic of machined to set the UID/GID of all
copied files to 0 if the host and container do not share the same user
namespace.
Fixes: #4078
This adds a unified "copy_flags" parameter to all copy_xyz() function
calls, replacing the various boolean flags so far used. This should make
many invocations more readable as it is clear what behaviour is
precisely requested. This also prepares ground for adding support for
more modes later on.
We don't have plural in the name of any other -util files and this
inconsistency trips me up every time I try to type this file name
from memory. "formats-util" is even hard to pronounce.
I wanted to add a config line that would empty a directory
without creating it if doesn't exist. Existing actions don't allow
this.
v2: properly add 'e' to needs_glob() and takes_ownership()
As described in the documentation:
When O_PATH is specified in flags, flag bits other than O_CLOEXEC,
O_DIRECTORY, and O_NOFOLLOW are ignored.
So, we can remove unnecessary flags in a case when O_PATH is passed
to the open() or openat().
It's not a good idea to create subvolumes for parts of the OS tree (such
as /home, or /var) if the root directory is not a subvolume too. We
shouldn't assume control of "heavier" objects such as subvolumes, if the
originating object (the root directory) is a "light-weight" object, i.e.
a plain directory.
Effectively this means that chroot() environments that are run on a
plain directory do not have to deal with problems around systemd
creating subvolumes that cannot be removed with a simple "rm" anymore.
However, if the chroot manager creates a proper subvolume for such an
environment it will also get further subvolumes placed in there, under
the assumption that the manager understands the concept of subvolumes in
that case.