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It's so similar to copy_access(), hence let's move it over and rename it
in similar style to the rest of the functions.
No change in behaviour, just moving things over.
This reverts behaviour of systemd-run's unit name generation to the
status quo ante of #18871: we chop off the ":1." prefix if we can.
However, to address the issue that the unique name can overrun we then
do what #18871 did as fallback: only chop off the ":" prefix.
This way we should have pretty names that look like they always looked
in the common case, but in the case of a unique name overrun we still
will have names that work.
Follow-up for #18871
REMOVE_CHMOD is necessary to remove files/dirs that are owned by us but
have an access mode that would not allow us to remove them. In generic
destructor calls for use with `_cleanup_` that are "fire-and-forget"
style we should make use of that, to maximize the chance we can actually
remove the files/dirs.
(Also, add in REMOVE_MISSING_OK. Just because prettier, we ignore the
return codes anyway, but it' a bit nicer to ignore a bit fewer errors.)
Some code in systemd-run checks that a bus's unique name must start with
`:1.`. However the dbus specification on unique connection names only specifies
that it must begin with a colon. And the freedesktop/dbus implementation allows
allows unique names to go up to `:INT_MAX.INT_MAX`. So update the
current check to only look for a colon at the beginning.
Nominally, the bug was in unit_load_dropin(), which just took the last mtime
instead of calculating the maximum. But instead of adding code to wrap the
loop, this patch goes in the other direction.
All (correct) callers of config_parse() followed a very similar pattern to
calculate the maximum mtime. So let's simplify things by making config_parse()
assume that mtime is initialized and update it to the maximum. This makes all
the callers that care about mtime simpler and also fixes the issue in
unit_load_dropin().
config_parse_many_nulstr() and config_parse_many() are different, because it
makes sense to call them just once, and current ret_mtime behaviour make sense.
Fixes#17730, https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1933137.
70-uaccess.rules sets the uaccess tag on devices with ID_SMARTCARD_READER
set, but it is set in 99-systemd.rules .
Move this to a 60-*.rules which already matches USB CCID class, factorising
the matching, so 70-uaccess.rules sets up these devices as expected.
It's useful to be able to combine a regular /usr/ file system with a
tmpfs as root, for an OS that boots up in volatile mode on every single
boot. Let's add explicit support for this via root=tmpfs.
Note the relationship to the existing systemd.volatile= option:
1. The kernel command line "root=/dev/… systemd.volatile=yes" will mount
the specified root fs, and then hide everything at the top by
overmounting it with a tmpfs, except for the /usr subtree.
2. The kernel command line "root=tmpfs mount.usr=/dev/…" otoh will mount
a toot fs at the top (just like the case above), but will then mount
the top-level dir of the fs specified in mount.usr= directly below
it.
Or to say this differently: in the first case /usr/ from the physical
storage fs is going to become /usr/ of the hierarchy ultimately booted,
while in the second case / from the physical storage fs is going to
become /usr of the hierarchy booted.
Philosophically I figure systemd.volatile= is more an option for
"one-off" boots, while root=tmpfs is something to have as default mode
of operation for suitable images.
This is currently hard to test reasonably, since Dracut refuses to
accept root=tmpfs. This needs to be addressed separately though.