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Since bb28e68477 parsing failures of
certain unit file settings will result in load failures of units. This
introduces a new load state "bad-setting" that is entered in precisely
this case.
With this addition error messages on bad settings should be a lot more
explicit, as we don't have to show some generic "errno" error in that
case, but can explicitly say that a bad setting is at fault.
Internally this unit load state is entered as soon as any configuration
loader call returns ENOEXEC. Hence: config parser calls should return
ENOEXEC now for such essential unit file settings. Turns out, they
generally already do.
Fixes: #9107
These states should never be visible to the outside, as they are used
only internally while loading unit. Hence let's drop them from the
documentation.
This adds a function sd_bus_slot_set_destroy_callback() to set a function
which can free userdata or perform other cleanups.
sd_bus_slot_get_destory_callback() queries the callback, and is included
for completeness.
Without something like this, for floating asynchronous callbacks, which might
be called or not, depending on the sequence of events, it's hard to perform
resource cleanup. The alternative would be to always perform the cleanup from
the caller too, but that requires more coordination and keeping of some shared
state. It's nicer to keep the cleanup contained between the callback and the
function that requests the callback.
The only difference is that functions are not individually listed by name,
but that seems completely pointless, since all functions that are documented
are always exported, so the generic text tells the user all she or he needs
to know.
Fedora 28 is out already, let's advertise it. While at it, drop "container"
from "f28container" — it's a subdirectory under /var/lib/machines, it's pretty
obvious that's it a container.
To make the switch easier in the future, define the number as an entity.
This "netdevsim" as implied by the name is a tool for network developers and is a simulator.
This simulated networking device is used for testing various networking APIs and at this time
is particularly focused on testing hardware offloading related interfaces.
'systemctl disable --runtime' would disable a unit, but only if it was enabled
with '--runtime', and silently do nothing if the unit was enabled persistently.
And similarly 'systemctl disable' would do nothing if the unit was enabled in
/run. This just doesn't seem useful.
This pathch changes enable/disable and mask/unmask to be asymmetrical. enable
and mask create symlinks in /etc or /run, depending on whether --runtime was
specified. disable and unmask remove symlinks from both locations. --runtime
cannot be specified for the disable and unmask verbs.
The advantage is that 'disable' now means that the unit is disabled, period.
And similarly for 'unmask', all masks are removed.
Similarly for preset and preset-all, they now cannot be called with --runtime,
and are asymmetrical: when they enable a unit, symlinks are created in /etc.
When they disable a unit, all symlinks are nuked.
$ systemctl --root=/ enable bluetooth
Created symlink /etc/systemd/system/dbus-org.bluez.service → /usr/lib/systemd/system/bluetooth.service.
Created symlink /etc/systemd/system/bluetooth.target.wants/bluetooth.service → /usr/lib/systemd/system/bluetooth.service.
$ systemctl --root=/ --runtime enable bluetooth
Created symlink /run/systemd/system/dbus-org.bluez.service → /usr/lib/systemd/system/bluetooth.service.
Created symlink /run/systemd/system/bluetooth.target.wants/bluetooth.service → /usr/lib/systemd/system/bluetooth.service.
$ systemctl --root=/ disable bluetooth
Removed /run/systemd/system/bluetooth.target.wants/bluetooth.service.
Removed /run/systemd/system/dbus-org.bluez.service.
Removed /etc/systemd/system/bluetooth.target.wants/bluetooth.service.
Removed /etc/systemd/system/dbus-org.bluez.service.
$ systemctl --root=/ disable --runtime bluetooth
--runtime cannot be used with disable
$ systemctl --root=/ mask --runtime bluetooth
Created symlink /run/systemd/system/bluetooth.service → /dev/null.
$ systemctl --root=/ mask bluetooth
Created symlink /etc/systemd/system/bluetooth.service → /dev/null.
$ systemctl --root=/ unmask bluetooth
Removed /run/systemd/system/bluetooth.service.
Removed /etc/systemd/system/bluetooth.service.
$ systemctl --root=/ unmask --runtime bluetooth
--runtime cannot be used with unmask
$ systemctl --root=/ --runtime enable bluetooth
Created symlink /run/systemd/system/dbus-org.bluez.service → /usr/lib/systemd/system/bluetooth.service.
Created symlink /run/systemd/system/bluetooth.target.wants/bluetooth.service → /usr/lib/systemd/system/bluetooth.service.
$ systemctl --root=/ enable bluetooth
Created symlink /etc/systemd/system/dbus-org.bluez.service → /usr/lib/systemd/system/bluetooth.service.
Created symlink /etc/systemd/system/bluetooth.target.wants/bluetooth.service → /usr/lib/systemd/system/bluetooth.service.
$ systemctl --root=/ preset bluetooth
Removed /run/systemd/system/bluetooth.target.wants/bluetooth.service.
Removed /run/systemd/system/dbus-org.bluez.service.
Removed /etc/systemd/system/bluetooth.target.wants/bluetooth.service.
Removed /etc/systemd/system/dbus-org.bluez.service.
$ systemctl --root=/ preset --runtime bluetooth
--runtime cannot be used with preset
$ systemctl preset-all --runtime
--runtime cannot be used with preset-all
This rewords the section, explicitly distuingishing the cases of clients
that only want a continious log stream (which can simply treat
SD_JOURNAL_INVALIDATE the same way as SD_JOURNAL_APPEND) and those which
want to represent on screen the full state of the log data on disk.
This is an alternative to a part of PR #9060, but keeps an explanation
of the destinction of handling depending on the type of client.
Fixes: #8963
We currently return -ENOMEDIUM when /etc/machine-id is empty, and -EINVAL when
it is all zeros. But -EINVAL is also used for invalid args. The distinction
between empty and all-zero is not very important, let's use the same return
code.
Also document -ENOENT and -ENOMEDIUM since they can be a bit surprising.
This corresponds nicely with the specifiers we already pass for
/var/lib, /var/cache, /run and so on.
This is particular useful to update the test-path service files to
operate without guessable files, thus allowing multiple parallel
test-path invocations to pass without issues (the idea is to set $TMPDIR
early on in the test to some private directory, and then only use the
new %T or %V specifier to refer to it).
Usually, we order our settings in our unit files in a logical order,
grouping related settings together, and putting more relevant stuff
first, instead of following a strictly alphabetical order.
For specifiers I think it makes sense to follow an alphabetical order
however, since they literally are just characters, and hence I think the
concept of alphabetical ordering is much more commanding for them. Also,
since specifiers are usually not used in combination, but mostly used
indepdently of each other I think it's not that important to group
similar ones together.
No other changes except the reordering.