Like it's customary in our codebase bus_error_message() internally takes
abs() of the passed error anyway, hence no need to explicitly negate it.
We mostly got this right, but in too many cases we didn't. Fix that.
Previously we'd use a directory /run/systemd/nspawn/incoming for
accepting mounts to propagate from the host. This is a bit weird, since
we have a shared namespace: /run/systemd/ contains both stuff managed by
the surround nspawn as well as from the systemd inside.
We now have the /run/host/ hierarchy that has special stuff we want to
pass from host to container. Let's make use of that here, and move this
directory here too.
This is not a compat breakage, since the payload never interfaces with
that directory natively: it's only nspawn and machined that need to
agree on it.
This allows more granular access control in PolicyKit rules, similar to
/etc/sudoers, for polkit actions:
* org.freedesktop.machine1.host-shell
* org.freedesktop.machine1.shell
Example configuration, place in /etc/polkit-1/rules.d/
polkit.addRule(function(action, subject) {
if (action.id == "org.freedesktop.machine1.host-shell"
&& subject.user == "my-user"
&& action.lookup("user") == "target-user") {
return polkit.Result.YES;
}
});
Let's move the heavy lifting out of the bus call implemntations, and
into generic code.
This allows us to expose them easily via Varlink too in a later commit.
Presently, CLI utilities such as systemctl will check whether they have a tty
attached or not to decide whether to parse /proc/cmdline or EFI variable
SystemdOptions looking for systemd.log_* entries.
But this check will be misleading if these tools are being launched by a
daemon, such as a monitoring daemon or automation service that runs in
background.
Make log handling of CLI tools uniform by never checking /proc/cmdline or EFI
variables to determine the logging level.
Furthermore, introduce a new log_setup_cli() shortcut to set up common options
used by most command-line utilities.
Primarily, use the new multi-line support in table formatting.
Also, stream-line naming of the "max-addresses" options. We used three
names for the concept internall, let's just unify on the name we use for
this for external users, i.e. "max-addresses".
We don't need a seperate output parameter that is of type int. glibc() says
that the type is "unsigned", but the kernel thinks it's "int". And the
"alternative names" interface also uses ints. So let's standarize on ints,
since it's clearly not realisitic to have interface numbers in the upper half
of unsigned int range.
Before, we'd unref from machine_stop_unit, still keeping the unit name around,
and only forget the name later, when garbage collecting. If we didn't call
manager_stop_unit(), then we wouldn't do the unref. Let's unref at the same
point where we do garbage collection, so that it is always true that
iff we have the name generated with AddRef=1, then have a reference to the unit,
and as soon as we forget the name, we drop the reference.
This should fix the issue when repeated systemd-nspawn --register=yes fails
with "scope already exists" error.
Incidentally, this fixes an error in the code path where r was used instead of q.
Having this function which is called only from one place in a separate file
makes the code harder to follow. In preparation for subsequent changes, let's
make it static.
This cleans up and unifies the outut of --help texts a bit:
1. Highlight the human friendly description string, not the command
line via ANSI sequences. Previously both this description string and
the brief command line summary was marked with the same ANSI
highlight sequence, but given we auto-page to less and less does not
honour multi-line highlights only the command line summary was
affectively highlighted. Rationale: for highlighting the description
instead of the command line: the command line summary is relatively
boring, and mostly the same for out tools, the description on the
other hand is pregnant, important and captions the whole thing and
hence deserves highlighting.
2. Always suffix "Options" with ":" in the help text
3. Rename "Flags" → "Options" in one case
4. Move commands to the top in a few cases
5. add coloring to many more help pages
6. Unify on COMMAND instead of {COMMAND} in the command line summary.
Some tools did it one way, others the other way. I am not sure what
precisely {} is supposed to mean, that uppercasing doesn't, hence
let's simplify and stick to the {}-less syntax
And minor other tweaks.