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We also add an environment variable $SYSTEMD_JOURNAL_COMPACT that
can be used to disable compact mode if needed (similar to
$SYSTEMD_JOURNAL_KEYED_HASH).
This adds a new flag in preparation for incompatible journal changes
which will be gated behind this flag. The max file size of journal
files in compact mode is limited to 4 GiB.
Currently, even if `--discard=no` is passed to `systemd-repart`, the
`context_discard_gap_after()` function still runs normally, discarding
e.g. all blocks between the GPT and the start of the first partition.
This can lead to issues on some embedded devices, where this space
holds the bootloader and shouldn't be modified (creating a protective
partition there is not always possible due to the specifics of the boot
process of some ARM-based SoC's).
This commit ensures passing `--discard=no` would be enough to ensure
the bootloader isn't wiped in such cases.
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Ferraris <arnaud.ferraris@gmail.com>
- new symbols are available from libbpf 0.6.0 so could be used with
libbpf.so.0, but we're sure the old symbols will be there and this
simplifies code
- detection at runtime should always work, regardless of whether systemd
has been compiled with older or newer libbpf and runs with older or newer
libbpf
The Response Code is contained in the first byte of the SCSI Sense Data.
Bit number 7 is reserved or has a different meaning for some Response Codes
and is set to 1 for some drives.
We already depend on the skeleton APIs introduced in libbpf 0.7 so
let's bump our minimum version to reflect that.
We don't enforce bpf compilation on mkosi anymore since not all
distros have sufficiently up-to-date libbpf available.
The glibc stuff on ppc64le C8S is a little bit wild, as there are two
versions:
```
$ ldconfig -p | grep libc.so
libc.so.6 (libc6,64bit, hwcap: "power9", OS ABI: Linux 3.10.0) => /lib64/glibc-hwcaps/power9/libc-2.28.so
libc.so.6 (libc6,64bit, OS ABI: Linux 3.10.0) => /lib64/libc.so.6
```
and with `/etc/ld.so.cache` present all binaries use the first one:
```
$ ldd /bin/cat
linux-vdso64.so.1 (0x00007fffa8070000)
libc.so.6 => /lib64/glibc-hwcaps/power9/libc-2.28.so (0x00007fffa7e20000)
/lib64/ld64.so.2 (0x00007fffa8090000)
```
However, without the cache the binaries will fall back to `/lib64/libc.so.6`
which breaks tests that use the minimal verity images (like TEST-29),
because we install only the first version (that's shown by `ldd` at
the time the images are created):
```
[ 91.595343] testsuite-29.sh[747]: + portablectl --profile=trusted attach --now --runtime /usr/share/minimal_0.raw minimal-app0
Starting systemd-portabled.service...
[ OK ] Started systemd-portabled.service.
Starting minimal-app0-foo.service...
Starting minimal-app0.service...
[ 104.432217] cat[858]: cat: error while loading shared libraries: libc.so.6: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
[ 104.435080] cat[857]: cat: error while loading shared libraries: libc.so.6: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
[FAILED] Failed to start minimal-app0.service.
See 'systemctl status minimal-app0.service' for details.
```
```
$ chroot /var/tmp/systemd-test.nMHPfc/minimal/
/bin/bash: error while loading shared libraries: libc.so.6: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
```
With the ldconfig's cache it seems to work as expected:
```
$ chroot /var/tmp/systemd-test.gVtYLg/minimal
bash-4.4# cat --version
cat (GNU coreutils) 8.30
...
```
If reading the sysattr failed with such error, the whole operation in
net_id builtin command will fail, and the interface will not be renamed.
Fixes a bug introduced by 5bbcfbaa11a92732f9bbc8d5f77e9311e6ac3d56.
Oct 03 17:33:20 systemd-tmpfiles[872]: Assertion 'IN_SET(i->type, CREATE_BLOCK_DEVICE|CREATE_CHAR_DEVICE)' failed at src/tmpfiles/tmpfiles.c:1837, function create_device(). Aborting.
I think this is caused by the line:
b! /dev/private/smartmontools-dev/sda 0660 root disk - 8:0
Routers may send options with zero lifetime if previously announced
information is outdated. Hence, if we receive such messages, then we
need to drop relevant addresses or friends.
See e.g. https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc4861#section-12.
Follow-up for 2ccada8dc4a3571468a335808fd6fe49b8c6c6dd.
Zero lifetime in RA is special, and we should not assign possibly very
short lifetime addresses or friends.
This should not change anything at least now, preparation for later
commits. Note, DHCPv4 and v6 code also uses it, but sd-dhcp-client and
sd-dhcp6-client already filtered messages with zero lifetime. Hence,
the change should not affect DHCP code.
Otherwise, e.g. if a router is replaced, then the previously received
settings may never dropped.
Follow-up for 2ccada8dc4a3571468a335808fd6fe49b8c6c6dd.
If the lifetime of the route is already expired, do not try to
configure it.
Fixes a use-after-free, as the Request object is already freed, thus, we
cannot use Route or Link stored in Request object.
IPv6 Neighbor Discovery lets us autoconfigure a link's IPv6 addresses,
routes, DNS servers, and DNS search domains by listening for Router
Advertisement (RA) packets broadcast by one or more routers on the link.
Each RA can contain zero or more "options," each describing one piece of
configuration (e.g. a single route).
Currently, when we receive an RA from a router, we delete any addresses,
routes, etc. that originated from that router's previous RAs unless
they're also present as options in the new RA.
That behavior is a violation of RFC 4861[1]. In Section 9, the RFC
states that
Senders MAY send a subset of options in different packets. ... Thus,
a receiver MUST NOT associate any action with the absence of an
option in a particular packet. This protocol specifies that
receivers should only act on the expiration of timers and on the
information that is received in the packets.
Several other passages in the RFC reiterate this. Section 6.2.3:
A router MAY choose not to include some or all options when sending
unsolicited Router Advertisements.
Section 6.3.4:
Hosts accept the union of all received information; the receipt of a
Router Advertisement MUST NOT invalidate all information received in
a previous advertisement or from another source.
At least one consumer router in production today, the Google Nest Wifi,
often sends RAs that omit its global IPv6 prefix. When current versions
of systemd-networkd receive those RAs, they immediately delete the
interface's global IPv6 address, which breaks IPv6 connectivity.
Fix the issue by removing the invalidation logic entirely. It's not
needed at all, since we already invalidate addresses, routes, and DNS
configuration when the interface goes down or their lifetimes expire.
This fix does have the side effect of preventing changes to the .network
file (e.g. denylisted prefixes, whether to add routes from RAs) from
taking effect as soon as a new RA arrives. Instead, a full interface
reconfiguration is needed. But triggering those changes on RA receipt
was already rather arbitrary and out of the administrator's control, so
I think this change is fine.
commit 69203fba700e ("network: ndisc: remove old addresses and routes
after at least one SLAAC address becomes ready") introduced this
behavior. commit 50550722e3ba fixed it partially, by preventing one
router's RAs from invalidating another router's configuration.
[1] https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc4861
Fixes: 69203fba700e ("network: ndisc: remove old addresses and routes after at least one SLAAC address becomes ready")