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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.
freep() has it's own definition, so I missed it in fd421c4adc.
Again, there is a small growth, but the compiler should be able to optimize it away:
-Dbuildtype=debug:
-rwxrwxr-x 1 zbyszek zbyszek 4106816 Feb 19 12:52 build/libsystemd.so.0.30.0
-rwxrwxr-x 1 zbyszek zbyszek 7492952 Feb 19 12:52 build/src/shared/libsystemd-shared-247.so
-rwxrwxr-x 1 zbyszek zbyszek 4472624 Feb 19 12:53 build/systemd
-rwxrwxr-x 1 zbyszek zbyszek 4107056 Feb 19 13:03 build/libsystemd.so.0.30.0
-rwxrwxr-x 1 zbyszek zbyszek 7493480 Feb 19 13:03 build/src/shared/libsystemd-shared-247.so
-rwxrwxr-x 1 zbyszek zbyszek 4472760 Feb 19 13:03 build/systemd
Fixes https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=31055.
--no-legend is replaced by --legend=no.
--quiet now implies --legend=no, but --legend=yes may be used to override that.
--quiet controls hints and warnings and such, and --legend controls just the
legends. I think it makes sense to allow both to controlled independently, in
particular --quiet --legend makes sense when using systemctl in a script to
provide some user-visible output.
Fixes#18560.
When a subshell is used ('make' or 'make all') the LOOPDEV environment
variable, which is used to store the opened loop device, is lost.
So the cleanup on trap/exit doesn't do anything, and the loop
device used to mount the test image is left around.
Avoid using a subshell to fix the issue.
With all the preparatory work in previous PRs, we can now call static destructors
repeatedly without issue. We need to do it here so that global variables allocated
during parsing are properly freed.
The source package in the apt cache might be older than the
packaging from salsa.debian.org/systemd-team/systemd so it might not
list all the current binary packages.
This is currently the case for systemd-timesyncd, so TEST-30 fails.
Simply grep the control file rather than using apt-cache when iterating
over the packages contents.
Similar to DHCPv4's UseHostname option, add a UseFQDN config option in
[DHCPv6] to set the system's transient hostname if the FQDN option is
set in the DHCPv6 response from the server.
Add 'reattach' verb to portablectl, and corresponding DBUS interface
to systemd-portabled.
Takes the same parameters as 'attach', but it will do a 'detach' (and
it will refuse to proceed if it cannot be done) first, matching on
the unversioned prefix of the new image. Eg:
portablectl reattach /tmp/foo_2.raw
will cause foo_1.raw to be detached, and foo_2.raw to be attached.
The key difference with a manual 'detach old' plus 'attach new' is that
the running units are not disturbed until after the attach completed,
and if --now is passed they are then restarted.
A 'detach' is not allowed normally if the units are running.
By using a restart-after-deploy method, 'reattach' allows for minimal
interruption of service and also for features that only work on restart
(eg: file descriptor store) to work as intended.
The DBUS interface returns two lists: first the removals from the detach
that were not immediately re-added in the attach, so that the caller
can stop the relevant units, and then the list of additions that are
either new or updates, so that the caller can restart/enable the
relevant units. portablectl already implements this with the existing
--now/--enable switches.
Binaries on the latest Arch Linux use `call` instructions instead of
`callq`, which breaks the ASan detection and eventually the image
building process (due to insufficient space).
Does what the name suggests. Obviously inspired by sudoers, but note that
our tools are not supposed to be installed suid, so there is no privilege
boundary to cross here.
There may be situations where a cgroup should be protected from killing
or deprioritized as a candidate. In FB oomd xattrs are used to bias oomd
away from supervisor cgroups and towards worker cgroups in container
tasks. On desktops this can be used to protect important units with
unpredictable resource consumption.
The patch allows systemd-oomd to understand 2 xattrs:
"user.oomd_avoid" and "user.oomd_omit". If systemd-oomd sees these
xattrs set to 1 on a candidate cgroup (i.e. while attempting to kill something)
AND the cgroup is owned by root, it will either deprioritize the cgroup as
a candidate (avoid) or remove it completely as a candidate (omit).
Usage is restricted to root owned cgroups to prevent situations where an
unprivileged user can set their own cgroups lower in the kill priority than
another user's (and prevent them from omitting their units from
systemd-oomd killing).
Since the test suite overhaul, the test units are now under
/usr/lib/systemd/tests/testdata/tetsuite-06.units with
system_u:object_r:lib_t context. This causes an AVC denial, since the
systemd unit files are expected to have the
system_u:object_r:systemd_unit_file_t context. Let's fix this by using a
custom file context definition.