This updates the "systemd-analyze syscall-filter" command to show a
special section of syscalls that are included in @known but in no other
group. Typically this should show syscalls we either should add to any
of the existing groups or where we unsure were they best fit in.
Right now, it mostly shows arch-specific compat syscalls, we probably
should move "@obsolete". This patch doesn't add thta however.
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.
If we're using a set with _put_strdup(), most of the time we want to use
string hash ops on the set, and free the strings when done. This defines
the appropriate a new string_hash_ops_free structure to automatically free
the keys when removing the set, and makes set_put_strdup() and set_put_strdupv()
instantiate the set with those hash ops.
hashmap_put_strdup() was already doing something similar.
(It is OK to instantiate the set earlier, possibly with a different hash ops
structure. set_put_strdup() will then use the existing set. It is also OK
to call set_free_free() instead of set_free() on a set with
string_hash_ops_free, the effect is the same, we're just overriding the
override of the cleanup function.)
No functional change intended.
The enum used for column names is integer type while table_set_display() is parsing
arguments on size_t alignment which may result in assert in table_set_display() if
the size between types missmatch. This patch cast the enums to size_t.
It also fixes all other occurences for table_set_display() and
table_set_sort().
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.
v2:
- do not watch mtime of transient and generated dirs
We'd reload the map after every transient unit we created, which we don't
need to do, since we create those units ourselves and know their fragment
path.
waitid(2) and the libc function signature calls this "exit status", and
uses "exit code" for something different. Let's stick to the same
nomenclature hence.
I mean, let's not miss out on this excellent opportunity to use
hyperlinks on terminals.
(Unfortunately not see unless you invoke 'systemd-analyze --no-pager
--help', because 'less' is so much stuck in the past :-(.)
We had 'calendar' and 'timespan', but the third one was missing.
Also consistently order the verbs as calendar/timestamp/timespan in help.
The output from 'timespan' is highlighted more.
Fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1711065.