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On a very slow machine, things are executed out-of-order, and something
pins the previously-exited unit. Instead of fighting with this with daemon-reload,
let's just use a different cleanup unit.
Hopefully fixes#22755.
Same idea as 03677889f0.
No functional change intended. The type of the iterator is generally changed to
be 'const char*' instead of 'char*'. Despite the type commonly used, modifying
the string was not allowed.
I adjusted the naming of some short variables for clarity and reduced the scope
of some variable declarations in code that was being touched anyway.
Our coding style dictates that return parameters should be initialized
always on success, hence do so here also in the shortcut codepath.
Issue discovered by @fbuihuu:
ca8503f168 (r831911069)
When we do mkdir, we should just use 0o777 and let the umask take care of the
rest. Specifying an explicit mode is inappropriate. And when touching the code,
let's replace black madness with normal python style.
To notify user of kill events from systemd-oomd we now use
`SERVICE_FAILURE_OOM_KILL` as the failure result.
`unit_check_oomd_kill` now calls `notify_cgroup_oom` to
update the service result to `oom-kill`.
We add a new xattr `user.oomd_ooms` to keep track of the OOM kills
initiated by systemd-oomd, this helps us resolve a race between sending
SIGKILL to processes and checking for OOM kill status from the xattr.
Related to: #20649
When sorting paths it actually matters to use the right comparison
function. Example:
```
a/x
a-b/y
a_/z
```
I think people would probably expect this:
```
a/x
a-b/y
a_a/z
```
but if you use strcmp() instead of path_compare() you'd instead get:
```
a-b/y
a/x
a_a/z
```
That's because `/` is between `-` and `a` in the ascii table. I think
that's quite confusing, and we shouldn#t order that way hence.
As discussed: https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/22662#discussion_r831174776
The actual minimum size of the pool across supported kernel versions is
32 bytes. So adjust this minimum.
I've audited every single usage of random_pool_size(), and cannot see
anywhere that this would have any impact at all on anything. We could
actually just not change the constant and everything would be fine, or
we could change it here and that's fine too. From both a functionality
and crypto perspective, it doesn't really seem to make a substantive
difference any which way, so long as the value is ≥32. However, it's
better to be correct and have the function do what it says, so clamp it
to the right minimum.
systemd-udev-trigger.service by default triggeres all devices regardless
of whether they were already recognized by systemd-udevd.
There are machines (especially in embedded environments) where
systemd-udev-trigger.service is configured to run at a later stage of
the boot sequence, which can lead to quite a lot of devices being
triggered although they were already recognized by systemd-udevd.
Re-triggering a lot of devices is a relatively expensive operation and
therefore should be avoided if unnecessary.
Therefore this patch introduces --initialized-nomatch, which filters out
devices that are already present in the udev database. For consistance
reasons --initialized-match is implemented as well, which filters out devices
that are *not* already present in the udev database.
Replaces #19949.
This addresses the comment by Lennart
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/22662#discussion_r829799863:
> /sys/subsystem is preparation for a future that never came.
> And given that the main proponent of this left Linux kernel
> development (Kay), I doubt this will ever come. So maybe we
> should start dropping references to /sys/subsystem/ given it's
> unlikely to materialize anytime soon.
and devices are sorted when the iteration started.
Previously, devices added by udev_enumerate_add_syspath() ->
device_enumerator_add_device() are not sorted. This fixes the issue.