This does the following:
- rename enum udev_builtin_cmd -> UdevBuiltinCmd
- rename struct udev_builtin -> UdevBuiltin
- move type definitions to udev-rules.h
- move prototypes of functions defined in udev-rules.c to udev-rules.h
- drop to use strbuf
- propagate critical errors in applying rules,
- drop limitation for number of tokens per line.
Ideally, coccinelle would strip unnecessary braces too. But I do not see any
option in coccinelle for this, so instead, I edited the patch text using
search&replace to remove the braces. Unfortunately this is not fully automatic,
in particular it didn't deal well with if-else-if-else blocks and ifdefs, so
there is an increased likelikehood be some bugs in such spots.
I also removed part of the patch that coccinelle generated for udev, where we
returns -1 for failure. This should be fixed independently.
This effectively reverts 2bc54be485
and relevant changes in #9920, as it is used to determine the version
of udev, e.g., dracut.
Fixesdracutdevs/dracut#468.
$ git grep -e 'This program is free software' -l |grep -v LICENSE | \
xargs perl -i -0pe 's/ \* This program.*?for more details.\s*\*\n( \* You should have.*licenses.>.\n)?//gms'
For some reason they were missed previously. All those files seem to
have proper SDPX tags.
This adds missing options, mainly '--version' in getopt(), removes
an unused option from getopt().
Also, this adds a deprecate message in `udevadm hwdb`, and cleanups
help messages.
Follow-up for 65eb4378c3.
There are more than enough calls doing string manipulations to deserve
its own files, hence do something about it.
This patch also sorts the #include blocks of all files that needed to be
updated, according to the sorting suggestions from CODING_STYLE. Since
pretty much every file needs our string manipulation functions this
effectively means that most files have sorted #include blocks now.
Also touches a few unrelated include files.
This patch removes includes that are not used. The removals were found with
include-what-you-use which checks if any of the symbols from a header is
in use.
include-what-you-use automatically does this and it makes finding
unnecessary harder to spot. The only content of poll.h is a include
of sys/poll.h so should be harmless.
All "btrfs" file systems will be registered with the kernel when they
show up.
Incomplete multi-device volumes will set SYSTEMD_READY=0, to prevent
access until the volume is complete and fully registered.