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sysusers: insist that root group is 0

In https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=2156900 sysusers was reporting a
conflict between the following lines:
  u root 0:0 "Super User" /root /bin/bash
  u root    0     "Super User" /root

The problem is that those configurations are indeed not equivalent. If group 0
exists with a different name, the first line would just create the user, but the
second line would create a 'root' group with a different GID. The second
behaviour seems definitely wrong. (Or at least more confusing in practice than
the first one. The system is in a strange shape, but the second approach takes
an additional step than is worse than doing nothing.)

When this line was initially added, we didn't have the uid:gid functionality for
'u', so we didn't think about this too much. But now we do, so we should use it.

$ build/systemd-sysusers --root=/var/tmp/inst7 --inline 'g foobar 0'
Creating group 'foobar' with GID 0.

$ build/systemd-sysusers --root=/var/tmp/inst7 --inline 'u root 0 "Zuper zuper"'
src/sysusers/sysusers.c:1365: Creating group 'root' with GID 999.
src/sysusers/sysusers.c:1115: Suggested user ID 0 for root already used.
src/sysusers/sysusers.c:1183: Creating user 'root' (Zuper zuper) with UID 999 and GID 999.

vs.

$ build/systemd-sysusers --root=/var/tmp/inst7 --inline 'u root 0:0 "Zuper zuper"'
src/sysusers/sysusers.c:1183: Creating user 'root' (Zuper zuper) with UID 0 and GID 0.
This commit is contained in:
Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek 2023-01-31 17:04:10 +01:00 committed by Luca Boccassi
parent a0d613ec43
commit 49bb7fe5f8

View File

@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
# (at your option) any later version.
# The superuser
u root 0 "Super User" /root
u root 0:0 "Super User" /root
# The nobody user/group for NFS file systems
g {{NOBODY_GROUP_NAME}} 65534 - -