This makes things a bit easier to read I think, and also makes sure we
always use the _unlikely_ wrapper around it, which so far we used
sometimes and other times we didn't. Let's clean that up.
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
I think it would be a good idea to move such fixed, picked values out of
the main sources into the head of a file, to make sure they are
ultimately tunables.
Given that this is a field primarily processed by computers, and not so
much by humans, assign "1" instead of "yes". Also, use parse_boolean()
as we usually do for parsing it again.
This makes things more alike udev options (as one example), such as
SYSTEMD_READY where we also spit out "1" and "0", and parse with
parse_boolean().
[guest@fedora ~]$ coredumpctl
No coredumps found.
[guest@fedora ~]$ ./coredumpctl
Hint: You are currently not seeing messages from other users and the system.
Users in groups 'adm', 'systemd-journal', 'wheel' can see all messages.
Pass -q to turn off this notice.
No coredumps found.
Fixes#1733.
Unit systemd-coredump@1-3854-0.service is failed/failed, not counting it.
TIME PID UID GID SIG COREFILE EXE
Fri 2017-02-24 11:11:00 EST 10002 1000 1000 6 none /home/zbyszek/src/systemd-work/.libs/lt-Sat 2017-02-25 00:49:32 EST 26921 0 0 11 error /usr/libexec/fprintd
Sat 2017-02-25 11:56:30 EST 30703 1000 1000 - - /usr/bin/python3.5
Sat 2017-02-25 13:16:54 EST 3275 1000 1000 11 present /usr/bin/bash
Sat 2017-02-25 17:25:40 EST 4049 1000 1000 11 truncated /usr/bin/bash
For info and gdb output, the filename is marked in red and "(truncated)" is
appended. (Red is necessary because the annotation is hard to see when running
under a pager.)
Fixed#3883.
A few times I have seen the hint unexpectedly. Add this so debug info
so it's easier to see what's happening.
...
Unit systemd-coredump@0-3119-0.service is failed/failed, not counting it.
Unit systemd-coredump@1-3854-0.service is activating/start-pre, counting it.
...
-- Notice: 1 systemd-coredump@.service unit is running, output may be incomplete.
Implement --since/--until (-S/-U) in the same fashion as journalctl.
This lets the user filter the results a bit so it would be easier to
find relevant info in case there were many core dumps.
$ ./coredumpctl --no-pager -1
TIME PID UID GID SIG COREFILE EXE
Sun 2016-11-06 10:10:51 EST 29514 1002 1002 - - /usr/bin/python3.5
$ ./coredumpctl info 29514
PID: 29514 (python3)
UID: 1002 (zbyszek)
GID: 1002 (zbyszek)
Reason: ZeroDivisionError
Timestamp: Sun 2016-11-06 10:10:51 EST (3h 22min ago)
Command Line: python3 systemd_coredump_exception_handler.py
Executable: /usr/bin/python3.5
Control Group: /user.slice/user-1002.slice/user@1002.service/gnome-terminal-server.service
Unit: user@1002.service
User Unit: gnome-terminal-server.service
Slice: user-1002.slice
Owner UID: 1002 (zbyszek)
Boot ID: 1531fd22ec84429e85ae888b12fadb91
Machine ID: 519a16632fbd4c71966ce9305b360c9c
Hostname: laptop
Storage: none
Message: Process 29514 (systemd_coredump_exception_handler.py) of user zbyszek failed with ZeroDivisionError: division by
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "systemd_coredump_exception_handler.py", line 134, in <module>
g()
File "systemd_coredump_exception_handler.py", line 133, in g
f()
File "systemd_coredump_exception_handler.py", line 131, in f
div0 = 1 / 0
ZeroDivisionError: division by zero
Local variables in innermost frame:
a=3
h=<function f at 0x7efdc14b6ea0>
Embedding sd_id128_t's in constant strings was rather cumbersome. We had
SD_ID128_CONST_STR which returned a const char[], but it had two problems:
- it wasn't possible to statically concatanate this array with a normal string
- gcc wasn't really able to optimize this, and generated code to perform the
"conversion" at runtime.
Because of this, even our own code in coredumpctl wasn't using
SD_ID128_CONST_STR.
Add a new macro to generate a constant string: SD_ID128_MAKE_STR.
It is not as elegant as SD_ID128_CONST_STR, because it requires a repetition
of the numbers, but in practice it is more convenient to use, and allows gcc
to generate smarter code:
$ size .libs/systemd{,-logind,-journald}{.old,}
text data bss dec hex filename
1265204 149564 4808 1419576 15a938 .libs/systemd.old
1260268 149564 4808 1414640 1595f0 .libs/systemd
246805 13852 209 260866 3fb02 .libs/systemd-logind.old
240973 13852 209 255034 3e43a .libs/systemd-logind
146839 4984 34 151857 25131 .libs/systemd-journald.old
146391 4984 34 151409 24f71 .libs/systemd-journald
It is also much easier to check if a certain binary uses a certain MESSAGE_ID:
$ strings .libs/systemd.old|grep MESSAGE_ID
MESSAGE_ID=%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x
MESSAGE_ID=%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x
MESSAGE_ID=%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x
MESSAGE_ID=%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x%02x
$ strings .libs/systemd|grep MESSAGE_ID
MESSAGE_ID=c7a787079b354eaaa9e77b371893cd27
MESSAGE_ID=b07a249cd024414a82dd00cd181378ff
MESSAGE_ID=641257651c1b4ec9a8624d7a40a9e1e7
MESSAGE_ID=de5b426a63be47a7b6ac3eaac82e2f6f
MESSAGE_ID=d34d037fff1847e6ae669a370e694725
MESSAGE_ID=7d4958e842da4a758f6c1cdc7b36dcc5
MESSAGE_ID=1dee0369c7fc4736b7099b38ecb46ee7
MESSAGE_ID=39f53479d3a045ac8e11786248231fbf
MESSAGE_ID=be02cf6855d2428ba40df7e9d022f03d
MESSAGE_ID=7b05ebc668384222baa8881179cfda54
MESSAGE_ID=9d1aaa27d60140bd96365438aad20286
Even if pressing Ctrl-c after spawning gdb with "coredumpctl gdb" is not really
useful, we should let gdb handle the signal entirely otherwise the user can be
suprised to see a different behavior when gdb is started by coredumpctl vs when
it's started directly.
Indeed in the former case, gdb exits due to coredumpctl being killed by the
signal.
So this patch makes coredumpctl ignore SIGINT as long as gdb is running.
For the user, if the core file is missing or inaccessible, it is
more interesting that the fact that they forgot to pipe to a file.
So delay the failure from the check until after we have verified
that the file or the COREDUMP field are present.
Partially fixes#4161.
Also, error reporting on failure was duplicated. save_core() now
always prints an error message (because it knows the paths involved,
so can the most useful message), and the callers don't have to.
Propagate errors properly, so that if we hit oom or an error in the
journal, the whole command will fail. This is important when using
the output in scripts.
Support the output of multiple values for the same field with -F.
The journal supports that, and our official commands should too, as
far as it makes sense. -F can be used to print user-defined fields
(e.g. somebody could use a TAG field with multiple occurences), so
we should support that too. That seems better than silently printing
the last value found as was done before.
We would iterate trying to match the same field with all possible
field names. Once we find something, cut the loop short, since we
know that nothing else can match.
The column for "present" was easy to miss, especially if somebody had no
coredumps present at all, in which case the column of spaces of width one
wasn't visually distinguished from the neighbouring columns. Replace this
with an explicit text, one of: "missing", "journal", "present", "error".
$ coredumpctl
TIME PID UID GID SIG COREFILE EXE
Mon 2016-09-26 22:46:31 CEST 8623 0 0 11 missing /usr/bin/bash
Mon 2016-09-26 22:46:35 CEST 8639 1001 1001 11 missing /usr/bin/bash
Tue 2016-09-27 01:10:46 CEST 16110 1001 1001 11 journal /usr/bin/bash
Tue 2016-09-27 01:13:20 CEST 16290 1001 1001 11 journal /usr/bin/bash
Tue 2016-09-27 01:33:48 CEST 17867 1001 1001 11 present /usr/bin/bash
Tue 2016-09-27 01:37:55 CEST 18549 0 0 11 error /usr/bin/bash
Also, use access(…, R_OK), so that we can report a present but inaccessible
file different than a missing one.
In 'list', show present also for coredumps stored in the journal.
In 'status', replace "File" with "Storage" line that is always present.
Possible values:
Storage: none
Storage: journal
Storage: /path/to/file (inacessible)
Storage: /path/to/file
Previously the File field be only present if the file was accessible, so users
had to manually extract the file name precisely in the cases where it was
needed, i.e. when coredumpctl couldn't access the file. It's much more friendly
to always show something. This output is designed for human consumption, so
it's better to be a bit verbose.
The call to sd_j_set_data_threshold is moved, so that status is always printed
with the default of 64k, list uses 4k, and coredump retrieval is done with the
limit unset. This should make checking for the presence of the COREDUMP field
not too costly.
Added in 9fe13294a9 (by me :[```), and later obfuscated in d0c8806d4a, if an
uncompressed external file or an internally stored coredump was supposed to be
written to a file descriptor, nothing would be written.
Back when external storage was initially added in 34c10968cb, this mode of
storage was added. This could have made some sense back when XZ compression was
used, and an uncompressed core on disk could be used as short-lived cache file
which does require costly decompression. But now fast LZ4 compression is used
(by default) both internally and externally, so we have duplicated storage,
using the same compression and same default maximum core size in both cases,
but with different expiration lifetimes. Even the uncompressed-external,
compressed-internal mode is not very useful: for small files, decompression
with LZ4 is fast enough not to matter, and for large files, decompression is
still relatively fast, but the disk-usage penalty is very big.
An additional problem with the two modes of storage is that it complicates
the code and makes it much harder to return a useful error message to the user
if we cannot find the core file, since if we cannot find the file we have to
check the internal storage first.
This patch drops "both" storage mode. Effectively this means that if somebody
configured coredump this way, they will get a warning about an unsupported
value for Storage, and the default of "external" will be used.
I'm pretty sure that this mode is very rarely used anyway.
According to its manual page, flags given to mkostemp(3) shouldn't include
O_RDWR, O_CREAT or O_EXCL flags as these are always included. Beyond
those, the only flag that all callers (except a few tests where it
probably doesn't matter) use is O_CLOEXEC, so set that unconditionally.
Beef up the existing var_tmp() call, rename it to var_tmp_dir() and add a
matching tmp_dir() call (the former looks for the place for /var/tmp, the
latter for /tmp).
Both calls check $TMPDIR, $TEMP, $TMP, following the algorithm Python3 uses.
All dirs are validated before use. secure_getenv() is used in order to limite
exposure in suid binaries.
This also ports a couple of users over to these new APIs.
The var_tmp() return parameter is changed from an allocated buffer the caller
will own to a const string either pointing into environ[], or into a static
const buffer. Given that environ[] is mostly considered constant (and this is
exposed in the very well-known getenv() call), this should be OK behaviour and
allows us to avoid memory allocations in most cases.
Note that $TMPDIR and friends override both /var/tmp and /tmp usage if set.
Many subsystems define own pager_open_if_enabled() function which
checks '--no-pager' command line argument and open pager depends
on its value. All implementations of pager_open_if_enabled() are
the same. Let's merger this function with pager_open() from the
shared/pager.c and remove pager_open_if_enabled() from all subsytems
to prevent code duplication.