These lines are generally out-of-date, incomplete and unnecessary. With
SPDX and git repository much more accurate and fine grained information
about licensing and authorship is available, hence let's drop the
per-file copyright notice. Of course, removing copyright lines of others
is problematic, hence this commit only removes my own lines and leaves
all others untouched. It might be nicer if sooner or later those could
go away too, making git the only and accurate source of authorship
information.
This part of the copyright blurb stems from the GPL use recommendations:
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.en.html
The concept appears to originate in times where version control was per
file, instead of per tree, and was a way to glue the files together.
Ultimately, we nowadays don't live in that world anymore, and this
information is entirely useless anyway, as people are very welcome to
copy these files into any projects they like, and they shouldn't have to
change bits that are part of our copyright header for that.
hence, let's just get rid of this old cruft, and shorten our codebase a
bit.
On overlayfs, FTW_MOUNT causes nftw to not list *any* files because the
condition used by glibc to verify that it's on the same mountpoint doesn't work
on overlayfs, see https://bugzilla.suse.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1096807 for the
details.
However using FTW_MOUNT doesn't seem to be really needed when walking through
the keymap directorie tree. So until the glibc or the kernel is fixed (which
might take some time), let's make localectl works with overlayfs.
There's a small side effect here, by which regular (non-directory) files with
bind mounts will be parsed while they were skipped by the previous logic.
They are not needed, because anything that is non-zero is converted
to true.
C11:
> 6.3.1.2: When any scalar value is converted to _Bool, the result is 0 if the
> value compares equal to 0; otherwise, the result is 1.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/31551888/casting-int-to-bool-in-c-c
Let's always write "1 << 0", "1 << 1" and so on, except where we need
more than 31 flag bits, where we write "UINT64(1) << 0", and so on to force
64bit values.
We document the rule that return values >= 0 of functions are supposed
to indicate success, and that in case of success all return parameters
should be initialized. Let's actually do so.
Just a tiny coding style fix-up.
Jun 11 14:29:12 krowka systemd[1]: /etc/systemd/system/workingdir.service:6: = path is not normalizedWorkingDirectory: /../../etc
↓
Jun 11 14:32:12 krowka systemd[1]: /etc/systemd/system/workingdir.service:6: WorkingDirectory= path is not normalized: /../../etc
Since bb28e68477 parsing failures of
certain unit file settings will result in load failures of units. This
introduces a new load state "bad-setting" that is entered in precisely
this case.
With this addition error messages on bad settings should be a lot more
explicit, as we don't have to show some generic "errno" error in that
case, but can explicitly say that a bad setting is at fault.
Internally this unit load state is entered as soon as any configuration
loader call returns ENOEXEC. Hence: config parser calls should return
ENOEXEC now for such essential unit file settings. Turns out, they
generally already do.
Fixes: #9107
oss-fuzz flags this as:
==1==WARNING: MemorySanitizer: use-of-uninitialized-value
0. 0x7fce77519ca5 in ascii_is_valid systemd/src/basic/utf8.c:252:9
1. 0x7fce774d203c in ellipsize_mem systemd/src/basic/string-util.c:544:13
2. 0x7fce7730a299 in print_multiline systemd/src/shared/logs-show.c:244:37
3. 0x7fce772ffdf3 in output_short systemd/src/shared/logs-show.c:495:25
4. 0x7fce772f5a27 in show_journal_entry systemd/src/shared/logs-show.c:1077:15
5. 0x7fce772f66ad in show_journal systemd/src/shared/logs-show.c:1164:29
6. 0x4a2fa0 in LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput systemd/src/fuzz/fuzz-journal-remote.c:64:21
...
I didn't reproduce the issue, but this looks like an obvious error: the length
is specified, so we shouldn't use the string with any functions for normal
C-strings.
This is mostly fall-out from d1a1f0aaf0,
however some cases are older bugs.
There might be more issues lurking, this was a simple grep for "%m"
across the tree, with all lines removed that mention "errno" at all.
We do this checks as protection against bind mount cycles on the same
file system. However, the check wasn't really effective for that, as
it would only detect cycles A → B → A this way. By using
fs_is_mount_point() we'll also detect cycles A → A.
Also, while we are at it, make these file system boundary checks
optional. This is not used anywhere, but might be eventually...
Most importantly though add a longer blurb explanation the why.
This fixes the copy routines on overlay filesystem, which typically
returns the underlying st_dev for files, symlinks, etc.
The value of st_dev is guaranteed to be the same for directories, so
checking it on directories only fixes this code on overlay filesystem
and still keeps it from traversing mount points (which was the original
intent.)
There's a small side effect here, by which regular (non-directory) files
with bind mounts will be copied by the new logic (while they were
skipped by the previous logic.)
Tested: ./build/test-copy with an overlay on /tmp.
Fixes: #9134