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m4 is required to build the test SELinux module:
```
[ 31.321789] sh[483]: /bin/sh: line 1: m4: command not found
[ 31.882668] sh[488]: Compiling targeted systemd_test module
[ 32.120862] sh[492]: /bin/sh: line 1: m4: command not found
[ 32.159897] sh[458]: make: *** [/usr/share/selinux/devel/include/Makefile:156: tmp/systemd_test.mod] Error 127
```
I wanted to use jinja2 templating here too, but it's hard to get right:
custom_target() strips the executable bit by default (unlike configure_file
apparently). custom_target() has install_mode setting, but it was only added
in meson-0.47, so it can't be used while we support 0.46. And without the
executable bit the test is not invoked properly. For example, "root-unittests"
in the debian package calls test-* after installation, so the executable bit
there is necessary. It would be possible to adjust the file mode after the
fact, but it would make things more complicated.
So let's use the native meson substitutions here. We don't need anything more
fancy.
m4 was hugely popular in the past, because autotools, automake, flex, bison and
many other things used it. But nowadays it much less popular, and might not even
be installed in the buildroot. (m4 is small, so it doesn't make a big difference.)
(FWIW, Fedora dropped make from the buildroot now,
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/Remove_make_from_BuildRoot. I think it's
reasonable to assume that m4 will be dropped at some point too.)
The main reason to drop m4 is that the syntax is not very nice, and we should
minimize the number of different syntaxes that we use. We still have two
(configure_file() with @FOO@ and jinja2 templates with {{foo}} and the
pythonesque conditional expressions), but at least we don't need m4 (with
m4_dnl and `quotes').
Printing stdout and stderr from a failed test makes it harder to
interpret what the specific problem was; instead let's print out
the lines in order as we got them when the test was run
Also save failed test output to file if ARTIFACT_DIRECTORY is defined
Meson 0.58 has gotten quite bad with emitting a message every time
a quoted command is used:
Program /home/zbyszek/src/systemd-work/tools/meson-make-symlink.sh found: YES (/home/zbyszek/src/systemd-work/tools/meson-make-symlink.sh)
Program sh found: YES (/usr/bin/sh)
Program sh found: YES (/usr/bin/sh)
Program sh found: YES (/usr/bin/sh)
Program sh found: YES (/usr/bin/sh)
Program sh found: YES (/usr/bin/sh)
Program sh found: YES (/usr/bin/sh)
Program xsltproc found: YES (/usr/bin/xsltproc)
Configuring custom-entities.ent using configuration
Message: Skipping bootctl.1 because ENABLE_EFI is false
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Message: Skipping journal-remote.conf.5 because HAVE_MICROHTTPD is false
Message: Skipping journal-upload.conf.5 because HAVE_MICROHTTPD is false
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Message: Skipping loader.conf.5 because ENABLE_EFI is false
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
Program ln found: YES (/usr/bin/ln)
...
Let's suffer one message only for each command. Hopefully we can silence
even this when https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/8642 is
resolved.
This fixes an issue introduced by the commit 954c77c251.
For some reasons, setting default ACL on $TESTDIR makes TEST-29-PORTABLE
fail. Let's drop the default ACL, and set ACL on saved results instead.
Fixes#19519.
Fixes https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=33881.
Not only we would duplicate unknown input on the stack, we would do it
over and over. So let's first check that the input has reasonable length,
but also allocate just one fixed size buffer.
"systemd-testsuite" gets in the way when grepping for "testsuite-*.sh".
Also, the name doesn't matter for anything, so let's just use something
very short to save space.
When editing this function in 7bf20e48bd, I couldn't
decide whether to initialize ret at the top and only reset it on success, or
whether to assign a value in each branch. In the end I did neither ;( So if the
test finished without creating any of the result files, we would echo a
message, but return "success".
But there was bigger confusion with /failed: some tests create it empty, some
don't. I think we may want to do away pre-creation of /failed completely, and
assume the test failed unless /testok is found. But I'm leaving that for later
rework. For now let's just make sure we report return success only if /testok
or /skipped is found.
This commit applies the filtering imposed by LogLevelMax on a unit's
processes to messages logged by PID1 about the unit as well.
The target use case for this feature is a service that runs on a timer
many times an hour, where the system administrator decides that writing
a generic success message to the journal every few minutes or seconds
adds no diagnostic value and isn't worth the clutter or disk I/O.
Basically the same scenario as in
a33e2692e1, where `awk` exits as soon
as it finds a match, thus sending SIGPIPE to `ldd` if it's not fast
enough. That, in combination with `set -o pipefail` causes random &
unexpected fails, like:
```
No journal files were found.
-rw-r----- 1 root root 16777216 Apr 30 10:31
/var/tmp/TEST-01-BASIC_sanitizers-nspawn/system.journal
TEST-01-BASIC RUN: Basic systemd setup [OK]
systemd is not linked against the ASan DSO
gcc does this by default, for clang compile with -shared-libasan
make: *** [Makefile:2: clean-again] Error 1
make: Leaving directory '/build/test/TEST-01-BASIC'
```
Now, RoutesToDNS= and RoutesToNTP= are enabled by default on DHCPv4
client. So, if DHCP server picks up DNS or NTP servers from uplink,
then the routes may break CI environment.
Hopefully fixes#19463.
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/19316 failed with:
[1065/1670] Linking target systemd-hwdb
--- command ---
14:28:29 /root/src/test/hwdb-test.sh
--- stdout ---
./systemd-hwdb does not exist, please build first
I'm not sure what is going on here… In principle meson says that tests may be
called from any directory, but in practice is was always the build directory.
So far we were relying on systemd-hwdb being present in '.', and this worked.
Either way, it's nicer to pass the exact path, so let's do that.
This allows to limit units to machines that run on a certain firmware
type. For device tree defined machines checking against the machine's
compatible is also possible.
Specifying the test number manually is tedious and prone to errors (as
recently proven). Since we have all the necessary data to work out the
test number, let's do it automagically.
We want to use the result in a shell pipeline hence use -P mode (pipe
mode) instead of -t mode (interactive tty mode) for systemd-run.
This shouldn't change much about the test, but is slightly more correct
(and quicker).
We have to invoke the tests as superuser, and not being able to read
the journal as the invoking user is annoying. I don't think there are
any security considerations here, since the invoking user can already
put arbitrary code in the Makefile and test scripts which get executed
with root privileges.
The logic to query test state was rather complex. I don't quite grok the point
of ret=$((ret+1))… But afaics, the precise result was always ignored by the
caller anyway.
We would remove stuff only if successful, so repeated invocations would
trivially fail.
Also drop "-f", so that if we expect to remove something, it must be there.
oomd works way better with swap, so let's make the test less flaky by
configuring a swap device for it. This also allows us to drop the ugly
`cat`s from the load-generating script.
Cover the case where a service is recovered out of reloading state via
a restart Restart= configuration.
Signed-off-by: Peter Morrow <pemorrow@linux.microsoft.com>
This code was partially broken, since the firmware directory was
undefined. Also, some of the parts were a dead code, since they relied
on code from the original dracut test suite.
`command -v <bin> | grep ...` can under certain conditions cause the
`command` to exit with SIGPIPE, which in combination with `set -o
pipefail` means that the tests sometimes randomly die during setup.
Let's avoid using pipes in such cases.
This breaks some existing loops which previously ignored if the piped
program exited with EC >0. Rewrite them to mitigate this (and also make
them more robust in some cases).
The test appears to be occasionally failing. It uses systemd-run to echo
'hello world' into a namespaced journal and then uses journalctl to look for it,
but it doesn't wait.
In the failed runs it can't find it, but the automated journal dump shows
the message at the end.
Use --wait to avoid races.
'! grep -v' does *not* test that there are no matching lines.
Instead, it checks that whether there are any non-matching lines.
And of course, for the test to fail, '! grep' cannot be part of
an expression with &&.
We were grepping for 'hello world', and in the namespace we would
match on 'hello world', and outside, on 'echo "hello world"'. When
the condition check was fixed, the test gave a false positive.
We were invoking 'systemd-run bash', but the test invoked by bash
was not effective. When the result of that check is propagated, the
outer command fails.
create_fifo() was added in a2fc2f8dd3, and
would always ignore failure. The test was trying to fail in this case, but
we actually don't fail, which seems to be correct. We didn't notice before
because the test was ineffective.
To make things consistent, generally log at warning level, but don't propagate
the error. For symlinks, log at debug level, as before.
For 'e', failure is not propagated now. The test is adjusted to match.
I think warning is appropriate in most cases: we do not expect a device node to
be replaced by a different device node or even a non-device file. This would
most likely be an error somewhere. An exception is made for symlinks, which are
mismatched on purpose, for example /etc/resolv.conf. With this patch, we don't
get any warnings with the any of the 74 tmpfiles.d files, which suggests that
increasing the warning levels will not cause too many unexpected warnings. If
it turns out that there are valid cases where people have expected mismatches
for non-symlink types, we can always decrease the log levels again.
Quoting of values differs between distros: Fedora doesn't quote the ID_
fields, but CentOS does.
Adjust the test checks to account for this.
Fixes#19242
"! test ..." does not cause the script to fail, even with set -e.
IIUC, bash treats this command as part of an expression line, as it
would if 'test ... && ...' was used. Failing expression lines do not
terminate the script.
This fixes the obvious cases by changing '! test' → 'test !'.
Then the inversion happens internally in test and bash will propagate
the failure.
Add an --extension parameter to portablectl, and new DBUS methods
to attach/detach/reattach/inspect.
Allows to append separate images on top of the root directory (os-release
will be searched in there) and mount the images using an overlay-like
setup (unit files will be searched in there) using the new ExtensionImages
service option.
When trying to calculate the next firing of 'Sun *-*-* 01:00:00', we'd fall
into an infinite loop, because mktime() moves us "backwards":
Before this patch:
tm_within_bounds: good=0 2021-03-29 01:00:00 → 2021-03-29 00:00:00
tm_within_bounds: good=0 2021-03-29 01:00:00 → 2021-03-29 00:00:00
tm_within_bounds: good=0 2021-03-29 01:00:00 → 2021-03-29 00:00:00
...
We rely on mktime() normalizing the time. The man page does not say that it'll
move the time forward, but our algorithm relies on this. So let's catch this
case explicitly.
With this patch:
$ TZ=Europe/Dublin faketime 2021-03-21 build/systemd-analyze calendar --iterations=5 'Sun *-*-* 01:00:00'
Normalized form: Sun *-*-* 01:00:00
Next elapse: Sun 2021-03-21 01:00:00 GMT
(in UTC): Sun 2021-03-21 01:00:00 UTC
From now: 59min left
Iter. #2: Sun 2021-04-04 01:00:00 IST
(in UTC): Sun 2021-04-04 00:00:00 UTC
From now: 1 weeks 6 days left <---- note the 2 week jump here
Iter. #3: Sun 2021-04-11 01:00:00 IST
(in UTC): Sun 2021-04-11 00:00:00 UTC
From now: 2 weeks 6 days left
Iter. #4: Sun 2021-04-18 01:00:00 IST
(in UTC): Sun 2021-04-18 00:00:00 UTC
From now: 3 weeks 6 days left
Iter. #5: Sun 2021-04-25 01:00:00 IST
(in UTC): Sun 2021-04-25 00:00:00 UTC
From now: 1 months 4 days left
Fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1941335.
otherwise udev complains about the file being world-writable:
systemd-udevd[228]: Configuration file /etc/udev/rules.d/00-set-LD_PRELOAD.rules is marked world-writable. Please remove world writability permission bits. Proceeding anyway.
Fixes: systemd/systemd-centos-ci#354
When running TEST-22 under ASan, there's a chain of events which causes
`stat` to output an extraneous ASan error message, causing following
fail:
```
+ test -d /tmp/d/1
++ stat -c %U:%G:%a /tmp/d/1
==82==ASan runtime does not come first in initial library list; you should either link runtime to your application or manually preload it with LD_PRELOAD.
+ test = daemon:daemon:755
.//usr/lib/systemd/tests/testdata/units/testsuite-22.02.sh: line 24: test: =: unary operator expected
```
This is caused by `stat` calling nss which in Arch's configuration calls
the nss-systemd module, that pulls in libasan which causes the $LD_PRELOAD
error message, since `stat` is an uninstrumented binary.
The $LD_PRELOAD variable is explicitly unset for all testsuite-* services
since it causes various issues when calling uninstrumented libraries, so
setting it globally is not an option. Another option would be to set
$LD_PRELOAD for each `stat` call, but that would unnecessarily clutter
the test code.
This test would normally get stuck when trying to mount the verity image
due to:
systemd-udevd[299]: dm-0: '/usr/sbin/dmsetup udevflags 6293812'(err) '==371==ASan runtime does not come first in initial library list; you should either link runtime to your application or manually preload it with LD_PRELOAD.'
systemd-udevd[299]: dm-0: Process '/usr/sbin/dmsetup udevflags 6293812' failed with exit code 1
...
systemd-udevd[299]: dm-0: '/usr/sbin/dmsetup udevcomplete 6293812'(err) '==372==ASan runtime does not come first in initial library list; you should either link runtime to your application or manually preload it with LD_PRELOAD.'
systemd-udevd[299]: dm-0: Process '/usr/sbin/dmsetup udevcomplete 6293812' failed with exit code 1.
systemd-udevd[299]: dm-0: Command "/usr/sbin/dmsetup udevcomplete 6293812" returned 1 (error), ignoring.
so let's add a simple udev rule which sets $LD_PRELOAD for the block
subsystem.
Also, install the ASan library along with necessary dependencies into
the verity minimal image, to get rid of the annoying (yet harmless)
errors about missing library from $LD_LIBRARY.
The fuzzer seems to have no trouble with this sample. It seems that the
problem reported in the bug is not caused by the match parsing code. But
let's add the sample just in case.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1935084
This fuzzer is based on test-bus-match. Even the initial corpus is
derived entirely from it.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1935084 shows an crash
in bus_match_parse(). I checked the coverage stats on oss-fuzz, and
sadly existing fuzzing did not cover this code at all.
When running integration tests under sanitizers D-Bus fails to
shutdown cleanly, causing unnecessary noise in the logs:
```
dbus-daemon[272]: ==272==LeakSanitizer has encountered a fatal error.
dbus-daemon[272]: ==272==HINT: For debugging, try setting environment variable LSAN_OPTIONS=verbosity=1:log_threads=1
dbus-daemon[272]: ==272==HINT: LeakSanitizer does not work under ptrace (strace, gdb, etc)
```
Since we're not "sanitizing" D-Bus anyway let's disable LSan's at_exit
check for the dbus.service to get rid of this error.