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With an intentional mistake:
../src/login/logind-dbus.c: In function ‘bus_manager_log_shutdown’:
../src/login/logind-dbus.c:1542:39: error: format ‘%s’ expects a matching ‘char *’ argument [-Werror=format=]
1542 | LOG_MESSAGE("%s %s", message),
| ^~~~~~~
No need to involve a trivial shell script for this.
We could call the compiler directly, but test() expects arguments
to be passed separately and cc.cmd_array() can contain arguments
itself. Using env is easier than manually slicing the array because
meson has no builtins for that.
A compile time option is added to select behaviour: by default
UNIT_FILE_PRESET_ENABLE_ONLY is still used, but the intent is to change to
UNIT_FILE_PRESET_FULL at some point in the future. Distros that want to
opt-in can use the config option to change the behaviour.
(The option is just a boolean: it would be possible to make it multi-valued,
and allow full, enable-only, disable-only, none. But so far nobody has asked
for this, and it's better not to complicate things needlessly.)
With the configuration option flipped, instead of only doing enablements,
perform a full preset on first boot. The reason is that although
`/etc/machine-id` might be missing, there may be other files provisioned in
`/etc` (in fact, this use case is mentioned in `log_execution_mode`). Some of
those possible files include enablement symlinks even if presets dictate it
should be disabled.
Such a seemingly contradictory situation occurs in {RHEL,Fedora} CoreOS,
where we ship `/etc` as if `preset-all` were called. However, we want to
allow users to disable default-enabled services via Ignition, which does
this by creating preset dropins before switchroot. (For why we do
`preset-all` at compose time, see:
https://github.com/coreos/fedora-coreos-config/pull/77).
For example, the composed FCOS image has a `enable zincati.service`
preset and an enablement for that in `/etc`, while at boot time when we
switch root, there may be a `disable zincati.service` preset with higher
precedence. In that case, we want systemd to disable the service.
This is essentially a revert of 304b3079a2. It seems like systemd
*used* to do this, but it was changed to try to make the container
workflow a bit faster.
Resolves: https://github.com/coreos/fedora-coreos-tracker/issues/392
Co-authored-by: Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek <zbyszek@in.waw.pl>
People (and build systems) sometimes set flags through -Dc_args=… or $CFLAGS.
Let's catch this common case too. meson will set c_args from $CFLAGS, so we
only need to check the former.
Allows to 'meson install --tags systemd-boot --no-rebuild' to install only the EFI
binaries, skipping the rest, for a very quick build:
$ ninja src/boot/efi/linuxx64.efi.stub
[21/21] Generating src/boot/efi/linuxx64.efi.stub with a custom command
$ ninja src/boot/efi/systemd-bootx64.efi
[10/10] Generating src/boot/efi/systemd-bootx64.efi with a custom command
$ DESTDIR=/tmp/foo meson install --tags systemd-boot --no-rebuild
Installing src/boot/efi/systemd-bootx64.efi to /tmp/foo/usr/lib/systemd/boot/efi
Requires Meson 0.60 to be used, prints a warning for unknown keyword
in earlier versions, but there's no failure
https://mesonbuild.com/Installing.html#installation-tags
The compression helpers are used both in journal code and in coredump
code, and there's a good chance we'll use them later for other stuff.
Let's hence move them into src/basic/, to make them a proper internal
API we can use from everywhere where that's desirable. (pstore might be
a candidate, for example)
No real code changes, just some moving around, build system
rearrangements, and stripping of journal-def.h inclusion.
Suggested by Daniele Nicolodi:
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/23160#discussion_r855853716
This is possible only if the macro is never used in #if, but only in C code.
This means that all places that use #if have to be refactored into C, but we
reduce the duplication a bit, and C is nicer to read than preprocessor
conditionals.
Follow-up for da13d2ca07. Instead of having
separate definitions of the bitmask flags, just define DEFAULT_COMPRESSION_FOO=0|1
directly.
(It *should* be possible to do this more simply, but the problem is that
anything that is used in #if cannot refer to C constants or enums. This is the
simplest I could come up with that preserves the property that we don't use #ifdef.)
The return value from compress_blob() is changed to propagate the error instead
of always returning -EOPNOTSUPP. The callers don't care about the specific error
value. compress_blob_*() are changed to return the compression method on success, so
that compress_blob() can be simplified. compress_stream_*() and compress_stream() are
changed in the same way for consistency, even though the callers do not currently use
this information (outside of tests).
Follow-up for cd3c6322db
journal-def.h should be self-contained too, as it represents the journal object ABI.
Duplicate the enums, as they also need to be in config.h for it to be self-contained,
and enums are not available to the preprocessor. Use an assert to ensure they don't
diverge.
Compression and decompression are controlled by the same build flag,
so if one wants to use, say, LZ4 to compress, ZSTD has to be disabled,
which means one loses the ability to read zstd-compressed journals.
Add a default-compression meson option, that allows to select any of
the available compression algorithms as the default.
To make sure we don't miss any _exit() calls let's move the
coverage-related tweaks into a separate header file and include it
explicitly on the compiler command line using -include when a coverage
build is requested.
Follow-up to c6552ad381.
In --help output, change "$0" → "kernel-install". We generally don't include
the full path in --help output, and let's not do this here either.
kernel-install is now in build/ directly, not in the subdirectory.
GIT_VERSION is not available as a config.h variable, because it's rendered
into version.h during builds. Let's rework jinja2 rendering to also
parse version.h. No functional change, the new variable is so far unused.
I guess this will make partial rebuilds a bit slower, but it's useful
to be able to use the full version string.
This is very similar to (and directly based on) the test for --help. I think
it's nice to do this: the test is very quick, but it'll catch cases where we
forgot to hook up the option, or forgot to exit after printing --version, and
it'll also increase our test coverage a bit.
This test has overlap with test-install-root, but it tests things at a
different level, so I think it's useful to add. It immediately shows various
bugs which will be fixed in later patches.
Defaults to /bin/bash, no changes in the default configuration
The fallback shell for non-root users is as-specified,
and the interactive shell for nspawn sessions is started as
exec(default-user-shell, "-" + basename(default-user-shell), ...)
before falling through to bash and sh
mostly to make sure that systemd is buildable without some dependencies
but other than that it should make it easier to build it with MSan without
having to compile all the dependencies with MSan.
ERROR:
Cannot use target systemd as a generator because it is built for the
host machine and no exe wrapper is defined or needs_exe_wrapper is
true. You might want to set `native: true` instead to build it for
the build machine.
The script was probably not used for a very long time. It is currently
passed systemd_boot.so as boot loader, which cannot work. The test
entries it creates are all pointing at non-existant efi/linux binaries,
which means they would not even show up in the menu if the created image
were actually booted. There is also nothing that actually tries to run
the image in the first place.
If we end up creating a proper systemd-boot test suite, it would be
better to start from scratch. In the meantime, mkosi already covers
the bare minimum with a simple bootup test.
Currently, running "meson build" followed by "meson test -C build"
will result in many failed tests due to missing dependencies. This
commit adds the missing dependencies to make sure no tests fail.
The whole point of systemd-stdio-bridge is to be executed on "foreign" systems
where the path might be different, so we use $PATH to find the binary everywhere.
to make it easier to fuzz code that uses external libraries like libelf/libdw.
The dependencies are skipped on OSS-Fuzz because they aren't available
at runtime if they aren't linked statically. This restriction can safely
be lifted when the fuzzers are built locally with all the dependencies
installed. As far as I know there is at least one fuzz target in the systemd
repository that can benefit from this: https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/11018
Meson would generate the following compile test:
#define crypt_set_metadata_size meson_disable_define_of_crypt_set_metadata_size
#include <limits.h>
#undef crypt_set_metadata_size
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C"
#endif
char crypt_set_metadata_size (void);
#if defined __stub_crypt_set_metadata_size || defined __stub___crypt_set_metadata_size
fail fail fail this function is not going to work
#endif
int main(void) {
return crypt_set_metadata_size ();
}
This works fine when the identifier being queried is an actual function. But
crypt_token_max() is an inline function, so getting the address would fail,
leading to a false negative result. Complation would fail because the function
would be defined twice.
With this patch, the check is changed to include the header:
#include <libcryptsetup.h>
#include <limits.h>
#if defined __stub_crypt_set_metadata_size || defined __stub___crypt_set_metadata_size
fail fail fail this function is not going to work
#endif
int main(void) {
void *a = (void*) &crypt_set_metadata_size;
long long b = (long long) a;
return (int) b;
}
which seems to work correctly.
This should simplify overriding the program locations as the binary
names should now not change if cross compiling.
It's likely any attempts at autodetecting these in cross environments will
be brittle at best so lets just disable it.
We have /usr/lib/systemd/libsystemd-{shared,core}-nnn.so. With this
path the 'nnn' part can be changed to something different. The idea
is that during a package build this will be set to the package version.
This way during in-place upgrades with the same major version both
the new and old libraries can cooexit. This should fix the issue
when systemd programs are called during package upgrades and fail
to exec because the expect different symbols in the library they
are linked to.
This should fix https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1906010.
The scheme is very similar to libsystemd-shared.so: instead of building a
static library, we build a shared library from the same objects and link the
two users to it. Both systemd and systemd-analyze consist mostly of the fairly
big code in libcore, so we save a bit on the installation:
(-0g, no strip)
-rwxr-xr-x 5238864 Dec 14 12:52 /var/tmp/inst1/usr/lib/systemd/systemd
-rwxr-xr-x 5399600 Dec 14 12:52 /var/tmp/inst1/usr/bin/systemd-analyze
-rwxr-xr-x 244912 Dec 14 13:17 /var/tmp/inst2/usr/lib/systemd/systemd
-rwxr-xr-x 461224 Dec 14 13:17 /var/tmp/inst2/usr/bin/systemd-analyze
-rwxr-xr-x 5271568 Dec 14 13:17 /var/tmp/inst2/usr/lib/systemd/libsystemd-core-250.so
(-0g, strip)
-rwxr-xr-x 2522080 Dec 14 13:19 /var/tmp/inst1/usr/lib/systemd/systemd
-rwxr-xr-x 2604160 Dec 14 13:19 /var/tmp/inst1/usr/bin/systemd-analyze
-rwxr-xr-x 113304 Dec 14 13:19 /var/tmp/inst2/usr/lib/systemd/systemd
-rwxr-xr-x 207656 Dec 14 13:19 /var/tmp/inst2/usr/bin/systemd-analyze
-rwxr-xr-x 2648520 Dec 14 13:19 /var/tmp/inst2/usr/lib/systemd/libsystemd-core-250.so
So for systemd itself we grow a bit (2522080 → 2648520+113304=2761824), but
overall we save. The most is saved on all the test files that link to libcore,
if they are installed, because there's 15 of them:
$ du -s /var/tmp/inst?
220096 /var/tmp/inst1
122960 /var/tmp/inst2
I also considered making systemd-analyze a symlink to /usr/lib/systemd/systemd
and turning systemd into a multicall binary. We did something like this with
udevd and udevadm. But that solution doesn't fit well in this case.
systemd-analyze has a bunch of functionality that is not used in systemd,
so the systemd binary would need to grow quite a bit. And we're likely to
add new types of verification or introspection features in analyze, and this
baggage would only grow. In addition, there are the test binaries which also
benefit from this.
This patch changes busctl capture to generate pcapng format
instead of the legacy pcap format files. It includes basic
meta-data in the file and still uses microsecond time
resolution. In future, more things can be added such as
high resolution timestams, statistics, etc.
PCAP Next Generation capture file format is what tshark uses
and is in process of being standardized in IETF. It is also
readable with libpcap.
$ capinfos /tmp/new.pcapng
File name: /tmp/new.pcapng
File type: Wireshark/... - pcapng
File encapsulation: D-Bus
File timestamp precision: microseconds (6)
Packet size limit: file hdr: (not set)
Packet size limit: inferred: 4096 bytes
Number of packets: 22
File size: 21kB
Data size: 20kB
Capture duration: 0.005694 seconds
First packet time: 2021-12-11 11:57:42.788374
Last packet time: 2021-12-11 11:57:42.794068
Data byte rate: 3,671kBps
Data bit rate: 29Mbps
Average packet size: 950.27 bytes
Average packet rate: 3,863 packets/s
SHA256: b85ed8b094af60c64aa6d9db4a91404e841736d36b9e662d707db9e4096148f1
RIPEMD160: 81f9bac7ec0ec5cd1d55ede136a5c90413894e3a
SHA1: 8400822ef724b934d6000f5b7604b9e6e91be011
Strict time order: True
Capture oper-sys: Linux 5.14.0-0.bpo.2-amd64
Capture application: systemd 250 (250-rc2-33-gdc79ae2+)
Number of interfaces in file: 1
Interface #0 info:
Encapsulation = D-Bus (146 - dbus)
Capture length = 4096
Time precision = microseconds (6)
Time ticks per second = 1000000
Number of stat entries = 0
Number of packets = 22
Previously, when -Ddns-over-tls=false, libopenssl was missing in the
dependency of resolved.
Also, this drops libgpg_error when it is not necessary.
Replaces #21878.
This adds /etc/locale.conf to the set of configuration files
populated by tmpfiles.d factory /etc handling.
In particular, the build-time locale configuration in systemd is
now wired to a /usr factory file, and installed to the system.
On boot, if other locale customization tools did not write
/etc/locale.conf on the system, the factory default file gets
copied to /etc by systemd-tmpfiles.
This is done in order to avoid skews between different system
components when no locale settings are configured. At that point,
systemd can safely act as the fallback owner of /etc/locale.conf.
afl-clang and hufzz-clang try to instrument the code and the
underlying compilers don't like it. It should probably be
fixed in both afl and honggfuzz eventually but until then
let's just use "raw" clang to build bpf-skeletons.
It's a follow-up to https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/21607
341890de86 made "bootctl install" create
ESP\MID, in preparation of cf73f65089 that
followed it and created 00-entry-directory.install to make ESP\MID\KVER
if ESP\MID existed ‒ this meant that "bootctl install" followed by
"kernel-install $(uname -r) /boot/vml*$(uname -r) /boot/ini*$(uname -r)"
actually installed the kernel correctly.
Later, 31e57550b5 reverted the first
commit, meaning, that now running those two commands first installs
sd-boot, but then does nothing. Everything appears to work right,
nothing errors out, but no changes are actually done. To the untrained
eye (all of them), even running with -v appears to work:
all the hooks are run, as is depmod, but, again, nothing happens.
This is horrible. Nothing in either manpage suggests what to do
(nor should it, really), but the user is left with a bootloader that
appears fully funxional, since nothing suggests a failure in the output,
but with an unbootable machine, /no way to boot it/, even if they drop
to an EFI shell, since the boot bundle isn't present on the ESP,
and no real recourse even if they boot into a recovery system,
apart from installing like GRUB or whatever.
00- is purely instrumentation for 90-,
and separating one from the other has led to downstream dissatisfaxion
(indeed, the last mentioned commit cited cited exactly that as the
reversion reason), while creating $ENTRY_DIR_ABS is only required
for bootloaders using the BLS, and shouldn't itself toggle anything.
To that end, introduce an /{e,l}/k/install.conf file that allows
overriding the detected layout, and detect it as "bls" if
$BOOT_ROOT/$MACHINE_ID ($ENTRY_DIR_ABS/..) exists, otherwise "other" ‒
if a user wishes to select a different bootloader,
like GRUB, they (or, indeed, the postinst script) can specify
layout=grub. This disables 90- and $ENTRY_DIR_ABS manipulation.
The way that the cryptsetup plugins were built was unnecessarilly complicated.
We would build three static libraries that would then be linked into dynamic
libraries. No need to do this.
While at it, let's use a convenience library to avoid compiling the shared code
more than once.
We want the output .so files to be located in the main build directory,
like with all consumable build artifacts, so we need to maintain the split
between src/cryptsetup/cryptsetup-token/meson.build and the main meson.build
file.
AFAICT, the build artifacts are the same: exported and undefined symbols are
identical. There is a tiny difference in size, but I think it might be caused
by a different build directory name.
Use a 'convenience library' to do the compilation once and then link the
objects into all the files that need it. Those files are small, so this probably
doesn't matter too much for speed, but has the advantage that we don't get the
same error four times if something goes wrong.
The library is conditionalized in the same way importd itself, because we
cannot build it without the deps.
Build option "link-boot-shared" to build a statically linked bootctl and
systemd-bless-boot by using
-Dlink-boot-shared=false
on systems with full systemd stack except bootctl and systemd-bless-boot,
such as CentOS/RHEL 9.
This is a soft disable. Passing `dbus-interfaces-dir` build option
will with path or 'yes' enable exports again even when cross
compiling. (maybe your environment will allow to execute
cross compiled binaries)
Currently, all the logic related to writing journal files lives in
journal-file.c which is part of libsystemd (sd-journal). Because it's
part of libsystemd, we can't depend on any code from src/shared.
To allow using code from src/shared when writing journal files, let's
gradually move the write related logic from journal-file.c to
journald-file.c in src/journal. This directory is not part of libsystemd
and as such can use code from src/shared.
We can safely remove any journal write related logic from libsystemd as
it's not used by any public APIs in libsystemd.
This commit introduces the new file along with the JournaldFile struct
which wraps an instance of JournalFile. The goal is to gradually move
more functions from journal-file.c and fields from JournalFile to
journald-file.c and JournaldFile respectively.
This commit also modifies all call sites that write journal files to
use JournaldFile instead of JournalFile. All sd-journal tests that
write journal files are moved to src/journal so they can make use of
journald-file.c.
Because the deferred closes logic is only used by journald, we move it
out of journal-file.c as well. In journal_file_open(), we would wait for
any remaining deferred closes for the file we're about to open to complete
before continuing if the file was not newly created. In journald_file_open(),
we call this logic unconditionally since it stands that if a file is newly
created, it can't have any outstanding deferred closes.
No changes in behavior are introduced aside from the earlier execution
of waiting for any deferred closes to complete when opening a new journal
file.
In 9cf75222f2 the conf.get() statements for `bpf-framework` and
`valgrind` were dropped, which causes the respective features to always
show as disabled (since they don't follow the "standard" naming scheme
with HAVE_/ENABLE_ prefixes).
It could work, but it doesn't make much sense. If we already have openssl as
the cryptolib that provides the necessary support, let's not bring in another
library. Disallowing this simplifies things and reduces our support matrix.
This allows resolved and importd to be built without libgcrypt.
Note that we now say either 'cryptographic library' or 'cryptolib'.
Co-authored-by: Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek <zbyszek@in.waw.pl>
This is heavily based on Kevin Kuehler's work, but the logic is also
significantly changed: instead of a straighforward port to openssl, both
versions of the code are kept, and at compile time we pick one or the other.
The code is purposefully kept "dumb" — the idea is that the libgcrypt codepaths
are only temporary and will be removed after everybody upgrades to openssl 3.
Thus, a separate abstraction layer is not introduced. Instead, very simple
ifdefs are used to select one or the other. If we added an abstraction layer,
we'd have to remove it again afterwards, and it don't think it makes sense to
do that for a temporary solution.
Co-authored-by: Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek <zbyszek@in.waw.pl>
# Conflicts:
# meson.build