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Bootchart is renamed to 'systemd-bootchart' and installed as
/usr/lib/systemd/systemd-bootchart. The configuration file
will reside in /etc/systemd/bootchart.conf.
Define KEEP_LA_FILES to keep them.
The hook is repeated because both install-exec-hook and
install-data-hook can install libraries and with parallel make
it's not possible to predict which one will run first.
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2013-January/008016.html
tl;dr: Libtool .la files are not very useful for linking linux
libraries.
Note that there are still some rome for cleanups. In particular,
the .la files are now installed, which we probably don't want; and
some of the macros in Makefile.am are likely redundan.
The variable assignment operator was introduced in make 3.82 and thus
breaks "make install" with older versions of make. Since "=" is optional
in make 3.82 it is safe to drop.
Python binary used in the she-bang line in installed
scripts can be set with ./configure PYTHON_BINARY=...
Defaults to the same path as python used during compilation.
Adding --version makes systemd-analyze behave consistently with the
rest of installed programs.
The lines in ./configure output are reordered to keep all yes/no lines
separate. I think that this makes the output clearer.
This also drops automatic selection of the rc local scripts
based on the local distro. Distributions now should specify the paths
of the rc-local and halt-local scripts on the configure command line.
Commit f934051c4d broke the build
because it made libsystemd-shared call sd_listen_fds() which is
defined in libsystemd-daemon.
This is a bit of a contortion because libsystemd-shared.la is a
noinst_LTLIBRARY, but libtool should do the right thing here and emit
DT_NEEDED on libsystemd-daemon.so for things that consume
libsystemd-shared.la.
The individual address block is a poor man's organizationally unique
identifier.
Perhaps we should change the udev key from ID_OUI_FROM_DATABASE to
something like ID_IEEE_VENDOR_FROM_DATABASE?
Suggested-by: Diego Elio Pettenò <flameeyes@flameeyes.eu>
This saves test output to individual .log files.
The driver is only used in /Makefile.am, not in
/docs/*udev/Makefile.am because the latter don't seem to work with
this driver. They don't produce much output anyway.
.gitignore is alphabetized, and .log files are added to it.
Generated files from /build-aux are removed from the list.
Currently, keymaps are provided only for the NP90X3A laptop. Samsung
introduced updated models, codenamed 900X3B, 900X3C, 900X4B, 900X4C,
which are currently not matched by udev rules. This patch includes the
newer modules in udev rules and move the samsung-n90x3a file defining
keys to a more generic samsung-series-9 file.
The patch was tested on a 900X4C laptop, and other people reported
that the rules also work for 900X3B and 900X3C ones.
TARGET_UBUNTU is effectively the same as TARGET_DEBIAN. Given the Ubuntu
is unlikely to use systemd anytime soon there's no point in keeping this
separate.
Distcheck would fail due to sysvinit dir being set,
but not sysvrcnd dir:
# ./configure --enable-gtk-doc --with-sysvrcd-path=/etc/rc.d
# --with-sysvinit-path=/etc/rc.d
# make distcheck
...
configure: error: *** You need both --with-sysvinit-path=PATH and
--with-sysvrcd-path=PATH to enable SysV compatibility support, or both
empty to disable it.
make: *** [distcheck] Error 1
This also allows sysvcompat support to be disabled from distcheck.
> Kay:
udev is early boot without /var. /var is entirely taboo for udev.
This partially reverts commit ee623f0d0c
(moving hwdb.bin is reverted, but the uninstall hook and cosmetic
changes remain).
The path doesn't change in the standard configuration.
Also, give full path to the journalctl binary in the hook,
since it might be installed outside of $PATH.
Also, add uninstall hook to remove the binary catalog.
More specifically this adds a number of macros that resolve to
directories for udev rules, hwdb entries, tmpfiles and sysctl.
Thsi also includes three new macros for rebuilding the hwbd/catalog
index when a package drops in new files
The hook would fail if preexisting journalctl doesn't support
--update-catalog. Also, the catalog would be updated before new
catalog files were installed. Both issues are fixed by moving to
INSTALL_DATA_HOOK instead of INSTALL_EXEC_HOOK, since the hook is now
executed after both journalctl and catalog files are installed.
I'm building systemd for an embedded system and we would prefer not having
to include the entire util-linux package just to get a libblkid whose
functionality we don't need.
The message catalog can be used to attach short help texts to log lines,
keyed by their MESSAGE_ID= fields. This is useful to help the
administrator understand the context and cause of a message, find
possible solutions and find further related documentation.
Since this is keyed off MESSAGE_ID= this will only work for native
journal messages.
The message catalog supports i18n, and is useful to augment english
language system messages with explanations in the local language.
This commit only includes short explanatory messages for a few example
message IDs, we'll add more complete documentation for the relevant
systemd messages later on.
A service that only sets the scheduling policy to round-robin
fails to be started. This is because the cpu_sched_priority is
initialized to 0 and is not adjusted when the policy is changed.
Clamp the cpu_sched_priority when the scheduler policy is set. Use
the current policy to validate the new priority.
Change the manual page to state that the given range only applies
to the real-time scheduling policies.
Add a testcase that verifies this change:
$ make test-sched-prio; ./test-sched-prio
[test/sched_idle_bad.service:6] CPU scheduling priority is out of range, ignoring: 1
[test/sched_rr_bad.service:7] CPU scheduling priority is out of range, ignoring: 0
[test/sched_rr_bad.service:8] CPU scheduling priority is out of range, ignoring: 100
The point is to allow the use of journald functions by other binaries.
Before, journald code was split into multiple files (journald-*.[ch]),
but all those files all required functions from journald.c. And
journald.c has its own main(). Now, it is possible to link against
those functions, e.g. from test binaries.
This constitutes a fix for https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=872638.
The patch does the following:
1. rename journald.h to journald-server.h and move corresponding code
to journald-server.c.
2. add journald-server.c and other journald-*.c parts to
libsystemd-journal-internal.
3. remove journald-syslog.c from test_journal_syslog_SOURCES, since
it is now contained in libsystemd-journal-internal.
There are no code changes, apart from the removal of a few static's,
to allow function calls between files.
This was premarily intended to support the LSB facility $httpd which is
only known by Fedora, and a bad idea since it lacks any real-life
usecase.
Similar, drop support for some other old Fedora-specific facilities.
Also, document the rules for introduction of new facilities, to clarify
the situation for the future.
Network file systems generally do not offer inotify() that would work
across the network. We hence cannot rely on inotify() exclusiely in
those case. Provide an API to determine these cases, and suggest doing
manual regular rechecks.
Note that this is not complete yet, as we need to rescan journal dirs on
network file systems explicitly to find new/removed files
When traversing entry array chains for a bisection or for retrieving an
item by index we previously always started at the beginning of the
chain. Since we tend to look at the same chains repeatedly, let's cache
where we have been the last time, and maybe we can skip ahead with this
the next time.
This turns most bisections and index lookups from O(log(n)*log(n)) into
O(log(n)). More importantly however, we seek around on disk much less,
which is good to reduce buffer cache and seek times on rotational disks.
'systemd-coredumpctl' will list available coredumps:
PID UID GID sig exe
32452 500 500 11 /home/zbyszek/systemd/build/journalctl
32666 500 500 11 /usr/lib64/valgrind/memcheck-amd64-linux
...
'systemd-coredumpctl dump PID' will write the coredump
to specified file or stdout.
The new 'unique' API allows listing all unique field values that a field
specified by a field name can take in all entries of the journal. This
allows answering queries such as "What units logged to the journal?",
"What hosts have logged into the journal?", "Which boot IDs have logged
into the journal?".
Ultimately this allows implementation of tools similar to lastlog based
on journal data.
Note that listing these field values will not work for journal files
created with older journald, as the field values are not indexed in
older files.
On systemd systems seasoned admins might be surprised to see that the
init scripts and log files are gone. To ease the transition let's place
some README files there, that hopefully help clearing up the situation.
Much like logind has a client in loginctl, and journald in journalctl
introduce timedatectl, to change the system time (incl. RTC), timezones
and related settings.
Valgrind says:
==29176== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
==29176== at 0x412A85: cunescape_length_with_prefix (util.c:1565)
==29176== by 0x40B351: dev_kmsg_record (journald-kmsg.c:301)
==29176== by 0x40B653: server_read_dev_kmsg (journald-kmsg.c:347)
==29176== by 0x40B701: server_flush_dev_kmsg (journald-kmsg.c:365)
==29176== by 0x409DE7: main (journald.c:1535)
No longer override the default kernel font if nothing is specified in
vconsole.conf.
The default kernel font[0] provides ISO-8859-1 and box characters. Users
of Arabic, Cyrilic or Hebrew must set a different font manually as these
character sets were provided by the old default font [1], but are not
any longer.
Rationale:
* it is counter-intuitive that an empty vconsole.conf file is different
from adding FONT="";
* the version of the default font shipped with Arch (which is the
upstream one) behaves very badly during early boot[2] (which should
admittedly be fixed in the font itself);
* the kernel already supplies a default font, it seems reasonable to
use that unless anything else is specified;
* This also avoids a needless slow call to setfont; and
* We don't want to work around problems in the kernel (in case the
compiled-in font is not acceptable for whatever reason).
[0]: <https://dev.archlinux.org/~tomegun/kernel.bdf>
[1]: <https://dev.archlinux.org/~tomegun/latarcyrheb.bdf>
[2]: <http://i.imgur.com/J2tM4.jpg>
As audit is pretty much just a special kind of logging we should treat
it similar, and manage the audit fd in a static variable.
This simplifies the audit fd sharing with the SELinux access checking
code quite a bit.
a) Instead of parsing the bus messages inside of selinux-access.c
simply pass everything pre-parsed in the functions
b) implement the access checking with a macro that resolves to nothing
on non-selinux builds
c) split out the selinux checks into their own sources
selinux-util.[ch]
d) this unifies the job creation code behind the D-Bus calls
Manager.StartUnit() and Unit.Start().
This minimal HTTP server can serve journal data via HTTP. Its primary
purpose is synchronization of journal data across the network. It serves
journal data in three formats:
text/plain: the text format known from /var/log/messages
application/json: the journal entries formatted as JSON
application/vnd.fdo.journal: the binary export format of the journal
The HTTP server also serves a small HTML5 app that makes use of the JSON
serialization to present the journal data to the user.
Examples:
This downloads the journal in text format:
# systemctl start systemd-journal-gatewayd.service
# wget http://localhost:19531/entries
Same for JSON:
# curl -H"Accept: application/json" http://localhost:19531/entries
Access via web browser:
$ firefox http://localhost:19531/
Instead of doing hand optimized fd bisect arrays just use plain old
hashmaps. Now I can understand my own code again. Yay!
As a side effect this should fix some bad memory accesses caused by
accesses after mmap(), introduced in 189.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1
This patch adds the ability to look at the calling process that is trying to
do dbus calls into systemd, then it checks with the SELinux policy to see if
the calling process is allowed to do the activity.
The basic idea is we want to allow NetworkManager_t to be able to start and
stop ntpd.service, but not necessarly mysqld.service.
Similarly we want to allow a root admin webadm_t that can only manage the
apache environment. systemctl enable httpd.service, systemctl disable
iptables.service bad.
To make this code cleaner, we really need to refactor the dbus-manager.c code.
This has just become a huge if-then-else blob, which makes doing the correct
check difficult.
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Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://www.enigmail.net/
iEYEARECAAYFAlBJBi8ACgkQrlYvE4MpobOzTwCdEUikbvRWUCwOb83KlVF0Nuy5
lRAAnjZZNuc19Z+aNxm3k3nwD4p/JYco
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All "btrfs" file systems will be registered with the kernel when they
show up.
Incomplete multi-device volumes will set SYSTEMD_READY=0, to prevent
access until the volume is complete and fully registered.
Systemd has a large (and growing) number of manpages. Sometimes it's
not immediately obvious, where to look for a directive. Especially,
when something is described in more than one place. Making sense of
all the settings should be easier with an index.
instead of having one simple per-file cache implement an more
comprehensive one that works for multiple files and can actually
maintain multiple maps per file and per object type.
This adds forward-secure authentication of journal files. This patch
includes key generation as well as tagging of journal files,
Verification of journal files will be added in a later patch.
Currently MIPS and ARM define syscall numbers for multiple ABI in one
<asm/unistd.h>. The #define statments for each syscall are formated as:
#define __NR_scname (BASE_OFFSET + sc_number)
Thus we need a more generic regular expression to match these in awk.
It's time to get rid of prefdm. Distributions which still want to use
this should maintain this downstream, but it's probably better to just
provide proper units for the various display managers, like Fedora is
doing this, for example:
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/DisplayManagerRework
This file is generated, so it should be referred to as
$(top_builddir)/src/gudev/gudevenumtypes.h. It could only appear in
$(top_srcdir) as a result of previous build in $(top_srcdir). Better
to just let automake add the prefix for us, so there's no need to
spell it out.
Remove the prefix from other source files too, $(top_srcdir) is the
default anyway.
$(MKDIR_P) is added where missing, and rules are standardized on one
form of $(MKDIR_P), to make it easier to spot when it is missing.
Single line $(MKDIR)&&command form is broken into two line form.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49459
For compilation in a separate build directory to work, when a file is
generated, the rule must include an explicit mkdir first, unless the
file is created at the top level. Even when building in a separate
build-dir, automake would normally create all directories as a side
result of creating the dependencies files. Therefore the bug was only
visible with -C (turning off dependency generation).
We want to keep things uniform, and hence treat udevd's man page like
any other in the repo. What matters is how users primarily interface
with a service, and that is not the binary path in /usr/lib/systemd but
the service name.
This reverts commit 6c1f3ba54a.
Instead of making systemd-udevd a so-link to systemd-udevd.service,
ship the real page as systemd-udevd to integrate better with distros
where udevd might be run standalone.
"make dist" can build a different tarball depending on the flags passed
to ./configure and the (optional) dependencies found on the system.
Move all append-to-EXTRA_DIST operations out of automake conditionals to
fix this.
Introduce a polkitpolicy_files so that the policy files built still
correctly depend on the automake conditionals, but the .in files that
get distributed do not.
make-man-index.py doesn't care about .html files, only .xml files, so
the source list was wrong. Also, $(XML_FILES) are specified without
prefix, so compilation in sepearate build-dir was broken:
GEN man/index.html
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "../make-man-index.py", line 24, in <module>
t = parse(p)
File "/usr/lib/python2.7/xml/etree/ElementTree.py", line 1183, in parse
tree.parse(source, parser)
File "/usr/lib/python2.7/xml/etree/ElementTree.py", line 647, in parse
source = open(source, "rb")
IOError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: 'man/systemd.xml'
All instances of "|| rm $@" are replaced with .DELETE_ON_ERROR, which
has a similar effect. One difference is that the return code is not
masked by rm return code.
.DELETE_ON_ERROR is GNU-Make specific, but -Wno-portability is already
defined, and it's unlikely that anyone would build systemd with a
shell not supporting .DELETE_ON_ERROR. If they did, then
.DELETE_ON_ERROR would be silently ignored, i.e. in the worst case a
garbage file wouldn't be deleted, which is not very serious.
sd-readahead.h is supposed to be a drop-in API, nothing people should
ever link to or could make use without also adding sd-readahead.c to
their sources. Hence, don't install this header file into INCLUDES, but
instead install it as DOCS.