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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.
This simplifies the upstream system code quite a bit. If downstream distributions want to maintain compatibility with their old configuration files, they are welcome to do so, but need to maintain this as patches downstream. The burden needs to be on the distributions to maintain differences here. Our suggestion however is to just convert the old configuration files on upgrade, as multiple distributions already do.
Adds is-failed to join is-active and is-enabled.
I grabbed this one from the todo list. Most of the functionality was
already there for is-active. I just needed to make check_one_unit take
the states to check for as an argument instead of the hardcoded
"active" and "reloading".
is-failed will return 1 if none of the units given are failed. This is
different from is-active which will return 3 if none of the units
given are active. It returns 3 with this comment:
/* According to LSB: "program is not running" */
As that does not make sense when looking for failed units I simply
chose 1 instead.
The configuration is taken from /proc/cmdline, aiming at emulating the
behavior of the kernel when no initramfs is used.
The supported options are: root=, rootfstype=, rootwait=, rootflags=,
ro, and rw. rootdelay= was dropped, as it is not really useful in a
systemd world, but could easily be added.
v2: fix comments by Lennart, and complain loudly if root= can not be found
Cc: Harald Hoyer <harald@redhat.com>
Cc: Dave Reisner <dreisner@archlinux.org>
If the path to init is not specified as an argumnt to systemctl, but
init= is given on the kernel commandline, use that.
This means the initrd does not need glue code to parse the kernel
commandline before passing on init= to systemctl.
Cc: Harald Hoyer <harald@redhat.com>
Cc: Dave Reisner <dreisner@archlinux.org>
For many usecases it is useful to store the chassis type somewhere, and
/etc/machine-info sounds like a good place. Ideally we could always
detect the chassis type from firmware, but frequently that's not
available and in many embedded devices probably entirely unrealistic.
This patch adds a configurable setting CHASSIS= to /etc/machine-info and
exposes this via hostnamectl/hostnamed. hostnamed will guess the chassis
type from DMI if nothing is set explicitly. I also added support for
detecting it from ACPI, which should be more useful as ACPI 5.0 actually
knows a "tablet" chassis type, which neither DMI nor previous ACPI
versions knew.
This also enables DMI-based and ACPI-based detection for non-x86 systems
as ACPI is apparently coming to ARM platforms soon.
I tried to minimize the vocabulary of chassis types understood and
added: desktop, laptop, server, tablet, handset. This is much less than
either APCI or DMI know. If we need more types later on we can easily
add them.