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In order to support stateless systems that support offline /usr updates
properly, let's restore the ConditionNeesUpdate=/etc line that makes sure we
are run when /usr is updated and this update needs to be propagated to the
/etc/ld.so.conf file stored in /etc.
This reverts part of #2859, which snuck this change in, but really shouldn't
have.
Add a synchronization point so that custom initramfs units can run
after the root device becomes available, before it is fsck'd and
mounted.
This is useful for custom initramfs units that may modify the
root disk partition table, where the root device is not known in
advance (it's dynamically selected by the generators).
When enabling ForwardToSyslog=yes, the syslog.socket is active when entering
emergency mode. Any log message then triggers the start of rsyslog.service (or
other implementation) along with its dependencies such as local-fs.target and
sysinit.target. As these might fail themselves (e. g. faulty /etc/fstab), this
breaks the emergency mode.
This causes syslog.socket to fail with "Failed to queue service startup job:
Transition is destructive".
Add Conflicts=syslog.socket to emergency.service to make sure the socket is
stopped when emergency.service is started.
Fixes#266
Container images from Debian or suchlike contain device nodes in /dev. Let's
make sure we can clone them properly, hence pass CAP_MKNOD to machined.
Fixes: #2867#465
That way we can be sure that local users are logged out before the network is
shut down when the system goes down, so that SSH session should be ending
cleanly before the system goes down.
Fixes: #2390
With the current "Type=forking", systemd tries to guess the PID it
should wait on at reboot (because we have no "PIDFile="). Depending on
how wrong the guess is, we can end up hanging forever at reboot.
Asking it not to do that eliminates the problem.
Also drop ConditionNeedsUpdate=|/etc. Regardless if system is updated
online or offline, updating dynamic loader cache should always be
responsibility of packaging tools/scripts.
When using `%I` for instances of `systemd-nspawn@.service`, the result
will be `systemd-nspawn` trying to launch a container named e.g.
`fedora/23` instead of `fedora-23`.
Using `%i` instead prevents escaping `-` in a container name and uses
the unmodified container name from the machine store.
This commit rips out systemd-bootchart. It will be given a new home, outside
of the systemd repository. The code itself isn't actually specific to
systemd and can be used without systemd even, so let's put it somewhere
else.
As kdbus won't land in the anticipated way, the bus-proxy is not needed in
its current form. It can be resurrected at any time thanks to the history,
but for now, let's remove it from the sources. If we'll have a similar tool
in the future, it will look quite differently anyway.
Note that stdio-bridge is still available. It was restored from a version
prior to f252ff17, and refactored to make use of the current APIs.
This reworks the coredumping logic so that the coredump handler invoked from the kernel only collects runtime data
about the crashed process, and then submits it for processing to a socket-activate coredump service, which extracts a
stacktrace and writes the coredump to disk.
This has a number of benefits: the disk IO and stack trace generation may take a substantial amount of resources, and
hence should better be managed by PID 1, so that resource management applies. This patch uses RuntimeMaxSec=, Nice=, OOMScoreAdjust=
and various sandboxing settings to ensure that the coredump handler doesn't take away unbounded resources from normally
priorized processes.
This logic is also nice since this makes sure the coredump processing and storage is delayed correctly until
/var/systemd/coredump is mounted and writable.
Fixes: #2286
Now that requiring of a masked unit results in failure again, downgrade the dependency on /tmp to Wants= again, so that
our suggested way to disable /tmp-on-tmpfs by masking doesn't result in a failing boot.
References: #2315
The user manager is still limited by its parent slice user-UID.slice,
which defaults to 4096 tasks. However, it no longer has an additional
limit of 512 tasks.
Fixes#1955.
Apparently, util-linux' mount command implicitly drops the smack-related
options anyway before passing them to the kernel, if the kernel doesn't
know SMACK, hence there's no point in duplicating this in systemd.
Fixes#1696
Otherwise we might run into deadlocks, when journald blocks on the
notify socket on PID 1, and PID 1 blocks on IPC to dbus-daemon and
dbus-daemon blocks on logging to journald. Break this cycle by making
sure that journald never ever blocks on PID 1.
Note that this change disables support for event loop watchdog support,
as these messages are sent in blocking style by sd-event. That should
not be a big loss though, as people reported frequent problems with the
watchdog hitting journald on excessively slow IO.
Fixes: #1505.
If SMACK is enabled, 'smackfsroot=*' option should be specified when
/tmp is mounted since many non-root processes use /tmp for temporary
usage. If not, /tmp is labeled as '_' and smack denial occurs when
writing.
In order to do that, 'SmackFileSystemRoot=*' is newly added into
tmp.mount.
This reverts commit 409c2a13fd.
It breaks the bootup of systems which enable smack at compile time, but have no
smack enabled in the kernel. This needs a different solution.
If SMACK is enabled, 'smackfsroot=*' option should be specified in
tmp.mount file since many non-root processes use /tmp for temporary
usage. If not, /tmp is labeled as '_' and smack denial occurs when
writing.
Usually we try to properly uppercase first characters in the
description, do so here, too. Also, keep it close to the string used in
systemd-networkd.service.
With this rework we introduce systemd-rfkill.service as singleton that
is activated via systemd-rfkill.socket that listens on /dev/rfkill. That
way, we get notified each time a new rfkill device shows up or changes
state, in which case we restore and save its current setting to disk.
This is nicer than the previous logic, as this means we save/restore
state even of rfkill devices that are around only intermittently, and
save/restore the state even if the system is shutdown abruptly instead
of cleanly.
This implements what I suggested in #1019 and obsoletes it.
And remove machine-id-commit as separate binary.
There's really no point in keeping this separate, as the sources are
pretty much identical, and have pretty identical interfaces. Let's unify
this in one binary.
Given that machine-id-commit was a private binary of systemd (shipped in
/usr/lib/) removing the tool is not an API break.
While we are at it, improve the documentation of the command substantially.
Apparently, disk IO issues are more frequent than we hope, and 1min
waiting for disk IO happens, so let's increase the watchdog timeout a
bit, for all our services.
See #1353 for an example where this triggers.