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In the documentation, using the term "managed" for both the RA flag and
the DHCPv6 mode is confusing because the mode is referred to as
"solicit" both in the official DHCPv6 documentation (see RFC 8415) and
in the WithoutRA option.
Furthermore, calling the other RA flag "other information" or "other
address configuration" is confusing because its official name is simply
"other configuration" (see RFC 4861 and RFC 5175) and it isn't used to
assign IP addresses.
Rewrite the documentation for DHCPv6Client and WithoutRA to make it
clear that getting the "managed" RA flag triggers the same kind of DHCP
request as WithoutRA=solicit, whereas getting the "other configuration"
RA flag triggers the same kind of DHCP request as
WithoutRA=information-request.
It doesn't really care about the hash value passed (which is processed
by systemd-veritysetup-generator), but it does care about the fact that
it is set (and mounts the DM nodes /dev/mapper/usr + /dev/mapper/root in
that case).
I don't know why this didn't occur to me earlier, but of course, it
*has* to be this data.
(This replaces some German prose about Berlin, that i guess only very
few people will get. With the new blob I think we have a much broader
chance of delivering smiles.)
Let's merge the footnote with the overall explanation of where systemd
parses its options from and reword the section a bit to hopefully make
things a bit more clear.
The gist of the description is moved from systemd.resource-control
to systemd-oomd man page. Cross-references to OOMPolicy, memory.oom.group,
oomctl, ManagedOOMSwap and ManagedOOMMemoryPressure are added in all
places.
The descriptions are also more down-to-earth: instead of talking
about "taking action" let's just say "kill". We *might* add configuration
for different actions in the future, but we're not there yet, so let's
just describe what we do now.
We use authenticated encryption, and that deserves mention. This in
particular relevant as the fact they are authenticated makes the
credentials useful as initrd parameterization items.
This is supposed to be useful when generating credentials for immutable
initrd environments, where it is is relevant to support credentials even
on systems lacking a TPM2 chip.
With this, if `systemd-creds encrypt --with-key=auto-initrd` is used a
credential will be encrypted/signed with the TPM2 if it is available and
recognized by the firmware. Otherwise it will be encrypted/signed with
the fixed empty key, thus providing no confidentiality or authenticity.
The idea is that distributions use this mode to generically create
credentials that are as locked down as possible on the specific
platform.
We got documentation for sd-device for the first time with
b51f4eaf7b, so let's celebrate by adding a
landing page that also explains the relationship with libudev.
%R is already used in service manager specifier expansion (cgroup root),
hence use a different char, that was so far not used.
Follow-up for: 6ceb0a4094
Previously, systemd-analyze verify would return 0 even if warnings
were raised during analysis of the specified units or their
dependencies. With 3cc3dc7, verify was changed to return 1 when
warnings were raised.
This commit changes the default mode to _RECURSIVE_ERRORS_INVALID
so that verify returns zero again by default when warnings are
raised.
If we have two or more devices that share the same slot but they are
also multifunction then it is OK to use the slot information even if it
is the same for all of them. Name conflict will be avoided because we
will append function number and form names like, ens1f1, ens1f2...
In --help output, change "$0" → "kernel-install". We generally don't include
the full path in --help output, and let's not do this here either.
kernel-install is now in build/ directly, not in the subdirectory.