This is quite ugly, but provides us with an avenue for moving
distributions to define the "nobody" user properly without breaking legacy
systems that us the name for other stuff.
The idea is basically, that the distribution adopts the new definition
of "nobody" (and thus recompiles systemd with it) and then touches
/etc/systemd/dont-synthesize-nobody on legacy systems to turn off
possibly conflicting synthesizing of the nobody name by systemd.
Instead of contacting PID 1 for dynamic UID/GID lookups for all
UIDs/GIDs that do not qualify as "system" do the more precise check
instead: check if they actually qualify for the "dynamic" range.
This adds uid_is_system() and gid_is_system(), similar in style to
uid_is_dynamic(). That a helper like this is useful is illustrated by
the fact that test-condition.c didn't get the check right so far, which
this patch fixes.
This adds a new call get_user_creds_clean(), which is just like
get_user_creds() but returns NULL in the home/shell parameters if they contain
no useful information. This code previously lived in execute.c, but by
generalizing this we can reuse it in run.c.
So far we had two pretty much identical calls in user-util.[ch]:
lookup_uid() and uid_to_name(). Get rid of the former, in favour of the
latter, and while we are at it, rewrite it, to use getpwuid_r()
correctly, inside an allocation loop, as POSIX intended.