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This should address TODO item "new dependency type to "group" services
in a target". Semantic of new dependency is as follows. Once configured
it creates dependency which will cause that all dependent units get
stopped if unit they all depend on is stopped or restarted. Usual use
case would be configuring PartOf=some.target in template unit file
and WantedBy=some.target in [Install] section and enabling desired
number of instances. In this case starting one instance won't pull in
target but stopping or starting target(in case of WantedBy is properly
configured) will cause stop/start of all instances.
glibc/glib both use "out of memory" consistantly so maybe we should
consider that instead of this.
Eliminates one string out of a number of binaries. Also fixes extra newline
in udev/scsi_id
There is no point in clearing the bits of a "struct stat" when the very
next statement just calls stat or fstat to fill in that same memory.
[zj: two more places]
It made no sense, and since we are documenting the bus calls now and
want to include them in our stability promise we really should get it
cleaned up sooner, not later.
#pragma once has been "un-deprecated" in gcc since 3.3, and is widely supported
in other compilers.
I've been using and maintaining (rebasing) this patch for a while now, as
it annoyed me to see #ifndef fooblahfoo, etc all over the place,
almost arrogant about the annoyance of having to define all these names to
perform a commen but neccicary functionality, when a completely superior
alternative exists.
I havn't sent it till now, cause its kindof a style change, and it is bad
voodoo to mess with style that has been established by more established
editors. So feel free to lambast me as a crazy bafoon.
v2 - preserve externally used headers
When an automatic restart is already queued, then make subsequent start
jobs wait until the restart can be handled (i.e. after the holdhoff
time), instead of simply fail.
systemd --version mirrors systemctl --version:
$ ./systemd --version
systemd 186
other
+PAM +LIBWRAP +AUDIT +SELINUX +IMA +SYSVINIT -LIBCRYPTSETUP
This information can be retrieved by other means (systemctl, etc.),
but it's easier for a newbie if 'systemd --version' says something
useful. And 'systemd --help' is already there, so let's complement
that with '--version'.
These printf specifiers allow us to refer to $HOME and $USER
in unit files. These are particularly helpful in instanced
units that have "User=" set, and in systemd --user domains.
The specifiers will return the pw_name and pw_dir fields
if the unit file has a User= field.
If the unit file does not have a User= field, the value
substituted is either $USER or $HOME from the environment,
or, if unset, the values from pw_name or pw_dir.
This patch is somewhat after Ran Benita's original patch,
which didn't get merged. I've split up the 2 specifiers
and extended them to do what is logically expected from
these specifiers.
Note that expansion is done at `start` time, not after
the units are parsed. Using `systemctl show` will just
show the specifiers.
<koen> | ./src/shared/unit-name.h:29:23: error: redefinition of typedef 'UnitType'
<koen> | ./src/core/unit.h:30:23: note: previous declaration of 'UnitType' was here
all other dependencies are in 3rd person. Change BindTo= accordingly to
BindsTo=.
Of course, the dependency is widely used, hence we parse the old name
too for compatibility.
If accessing an automount point triggers more changes to
/proc/self/mountinfo than just to add the directly wanted mount, these
changes can lead to spurious -ENODEV notifications on the automount unit
causing the request to fail when in fact the mount will be setup right
afterwards.
The MeeGo distribution is still a supported distribution, but
will probably not see an updated version of systemd anymore.
Most of the development is focussing on Tizen now, and the
generic support for building --with-distro=other is more than
adequate enough.
This patch removes the support as a custom configuration build
target in systemd. People who are still building this for
the MeeGo distribution should build as "other" distro.
sd_notify() should work for daemons that chroot() as part of their
initilization, hence it's a good idea to use an abstract namespace
socket which is not affected by chroot.
Having information from /proc/self/mountinfo is sufficient to consider a
mount unit loaded.
When there's no mountinfo, the loading of the fragment for the mount
unit is not optional. No extra dependency links must be added when the
loading fails.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=835848
This adds a timeout if the TTY cannot be acquired and makes sure we
always output the question to the console, never to the TTY of the
respective service.
With misconfigured mysql, which uses Restart=always, the following two
messages would loop indefinitely and the "systemctl start" would never
finish:
Job pending for unit, delaying automatic restart.
mysqld.service holdoff time over, scheduling restart.
In service_enter_dead() always set the state to SERVICE_FAILED/DEAD first
before setting SERVICE_AUTO_RESTART. This is to allow running jobs to
complete. OnFailure will be also triggered at this point, so there's no
need to do it again from service_stop() (where it was added in commit
f0c7b229).
Note that OnFailure units should better trigger only after giving up
auto-restarting, but that's for another patch to solve.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=832039
The rule is that units that encapsulate our own code are prefixed with
"systemd-". Since the fsck units invoke our own code, hence add the
missing prefix. Since a long long time the fsck units didn't invoke the
naked fsck binaries anymore, and it is unlikely that this well ever
change. On the opposite: the code in systemd-fsck will probably get more
complex over time to handle fsck progress to plymouth forwarding.
Same for quotacheck (but not quotaon!)
Names= is a source of errors, simply because alias names specified like
this only become relevant after a unit has been loaded but cannot be
used to load a unit.
Let's get rid of the confusion and drop this field. To establish alias
names peope should use symlinks, which have the the benefit of being
useful as key to load a unit, even though they are not taken into
account if unit names are listed but they haven't been explicitly
referenced before.
People should use systemd.pc if anything at all to determine these
directories, and people should not assume that the bus fields are part
of the supported API, so let's just drop this.
This option never made much sense. It was originally intended to make
sure that the usual startup output of sysv scripts goes to the terminal.
However, since SysV scripts started from a terminal would not output to
that terminal, but rather /dev/console this effect was more often than
not actually taking place. Nowadays systemd has much nicer boot time
status output than SysV which makes the sysv output redundant. Finally,
all output of services goes to the journal anyway, and is not lost.
Hence, let's drop this option, and simplify things a bit.
This makes sure that
systemctl status /home
is implicitly translated to:
systemctl status /home.mount
Similar, /dev/foobar becomes dev-foobar.device.
Also, all characters that cannot be part of a unit name are implicitly
escaped.
As described in
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50184
the journal currently doesn't set fields such as _SYSTEMD_UNIT
properly for messages coming from processes that have already
terminated. This means among other things that "systemctl status" may
not show some of the output of services that wrote messages just
before they exited.
This patch fixes this by having processes that log to the journal
write their unit identifier to journald when the connection to
/run/systemd/journal/stdout is opened. Journald stores the unit ID
and uses it to fill in _SYSTEMD_UNIT when it cannot be obtained
normally (i.e. from the cgroup). To prevent impersonating another
unit, this information is only used when the caller is root.
This doesn't fix the general problem of getting metadata about
messages from terminated processes (which requires some kernel
support), but it allows "systemctl status" and similar queries to do
the Right Thing for units that log via stdout/stderr.
Let's try to standardize a bit the RPM macros used for
installing/uninstalling services.
This only covers the non-SysV compat bits, since that tends to vary
widely between the various distros.
Usage:
Add %{?systemd_requires} to the header of the spec file. And then:
%post
%systemd_post foobar.service
%preun
%systemd_preun foobar.service
%postun
%systemd_postun foobar.service
And, instead of the latter, in case the service shall be restarted on updates:
%postun
%systemd_postun_restart foobar.service
Command systemctl stop foo.service, will print error message, when
foo.service is unknown to systemd, i.e. there is no unit file loaded for
this service.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=732874
NotifySocket= is hardly useful, people should use $NOTIFY_SOCKET if
anything.
RunningAs= suggests people had a choice of running user mode as PID 1 or
vice versa, so remove this too.
This moves FsckPassNo= and SysVStartPriority= into its own
"Compatibility Options" section in the man page to clarify that these
options are not useful for anything but establishing a limited amount of
compatibility.
Also stop exposing these options on the bus.
This also ensures that caps dropped from the bounding set are also
dropped from the inheritable set, to be extra-secure. Usually that should
change very little though as the inheritable set is empty for all our uses
anyway.
We want to avoid a deadlock when a service has ExecStartPre= programs
that wait for the job queue to run empty because of Type=idle, but which
themselves keep the queue non-empty because START_PRE was considered
ACTIVATING and hence the job not complete. With this patch we alter the
state translation table so that it is impossible ever to wait for
Type=idle unit, hence removing the deadlock.
Previously generated units were always placed at the end of the search
path. With this change there will be three unit dirs instead of one, to
place generated entries at the beginning, in the middle and at the end
of the search path:
beginning: for units that need to override all configuration, regardless
of user or vendor. Example use: system-update-generator uses this to
temporarily redirect default.target.
middle: for units that need to override vendor configuration, but not
vendor configuration. Example use: /etc/fstab should override vendor
supplied configuration (think /tmp), but should not override native user
configuration.
end: does not override anything but is available as well. Possible usage
might be to convert D-Bus bus service files to native units but allowing
vendor supplied native units to win.
UnitPath= is also writable via native units and may be used by generators
to clarify from which file a unit is generated. This patch also hooks up
the cryptsetup and fstab generators to set UnitPath= accordingly.
When service_stop() handles a service in the SERVICE_AUTO_RESTART state,
it calls service_set_state() to transition it to the SERVICE_DEAD state.
However if the service failed, it should transition it to SERVICE_FAILED
instead, which will trigger its OnFailure units. To achieve this, we now
call service_enter_dead() in place of service_set_state(), which will
transition the service to either SERVICE_DEAD or SERVICE_FAILED as is
appropriate.
Also, some misleading comments are adjusted: service_stop() is not only
called on a user request, but also during an automatic restart in order
to handle dependencies.
Fixes: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45511
If systemd serializes from a switch_root, it adds "--switchedroot" to
the systemd in the real root.
If "--switchedroot" is found, then we do not skip all the stuff, which
is skipped for normal rexecs.
The PAM helper thread needs to capture the death signal from the
parent, but is prohibited from doing so since when the child dies
as normal user, the kernel won't allow it to send a TERM to the
PAM helper thread which is running as root.
This causes the PAM threads to never exit, accumulating after
user sessions exit.
There is however really no need to keep the PAM threads running as
root, so, we can just setresuid() to the same user as defined in the
unit file for the parent thread (User=). This makes the TERM signal
arrive as normal. In case setresuid() fails, we ignore the error, so
we at least fall back to the current behaviour.
This should help making the boot process a bit easier to explore and
understand for the administrator. The simple idea is that "systemctl
status" now shows a link to documentation alongside the other status and
decriptionary information of a service.
This patch adds the necessary fields to all our shipped units if we have
proper documentation for them.
We need to be able to show the properties even of inactive units.
systemctl loads the unit before getting its properties, but this is racy
as the garbage collector may kick in right after the loading.
Fix it by always loading the unit before handling a message for it.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=814966#c6
Instead of generic "Starting..." and "Started" messages for all unit use
type-dependent messages. For example, mounts will announce "Mounting..."
and "Mounted".
Add status messages to units of types that used to be entirely silent
(automounts, sockets, targets, devices). For unit types whose jobs are
instantaneous, report only the job completion, not the starting event.
Socket units with non-instantaneous jobs are rare (Exec*= is not used
often in socket units), so I chose not to print the starting messages
for them either.
This will hopefully give people better understanding of the boot.
The alignment of the "[ OK ]" and "[FAILED]" status marks to the right
side of the terminal makes it difficult to link them with the messages
on the left if your console is wide.
I considered the options:
1. Align them to the 80th column regardless of the console width.
Disadvantage - either:
- truncating messages needlessly, not using available space; or
- If the message is long, write the mark over it. => ugly
2. Write them to the 80th column for short messages,
and further to the right for longer ones.
Disadvantage:
- jagged look
3. Write the marks on the left, before the message.
Disadvantage:
- Breaks tradition from RHL.
Advantages:
+ slightly simpler code
+ Will annoy holy-traditionalists.
I chose option 3.
BTW, Debian now uses similar marks on the left with its makefile-style
boot.
Special values of the "status" argument to status_vprintf are:
NULL - no status mark, no message indentation
"" - no status mark, message indented as if the mark was there
The red "[ABORT]" for a dependency failure is too scary.
It suggests a crash. And it suggests a problem with the unit itself.
Change it to a yellow "[DEPEND]" message. The color communicates the
level of seriousness better.
The pointer to the end of the string was not advanced after adding
the "cgroups-missing" taint. If "local-hwclock" was detected too,
it would overwrite the previous string.
With 'e' always pointing to the end of the string, removing the last
delimiter is easier.
The kernel will only notify us of cgroups running empty if no subcgroups
exist anymore. Hence make sure we don't leave our own control/ subcgroup
around longer than necessary.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=818381
RequiresMountsFor= is a shortcut for adding requires and after
dependencies to all mount units neeed for the specified paths.
This solves a couple of issues regarding dep loop cycles for encrypted
swap.
Two of our current job types are special:
JOB_TRY_RESTART, JOB_RELOAD_OR_START.
They differ from other job types by being sensitive to the unit active state.
They perform some action when the unit is active and some other action
otherwise. This raises a question: when exactly should the unit state be
checked to make the decision?
Currently the unit state is checked when the job becomes runnable. It's more
sensible to check the state immediately when the job is added by the user.
When the user types "systemctl try-restart foo.service", he really intends
to restart the service if it's running right now. If it isn't running right
now, the restart is pointless.
Consider the example (from Bugzilla[1]):
sleep.service takes some time to start.
hello.service has After=sleep.service.
Both services get started. Two jobs will appear:
hello.service/start waiting
sleep.service/start running
Then someone runs "systemctl try-restart hello.service".
Currently the try-restart operation will block and wait for
sleep.service/start to complete.
The correct result is to complete the try-restart operation immediately
with success, because hello.service is not running. The two original
jobs must not be disturbed by this.
To fix this we introduce two new concepts:
- a new job type: JOB_NOP
A JOB_NOP job does not do anything to the unit. It does not pull in any
dependencies. It is always immediately runnable. When installed to a unit,
it sits in a special slot (u->nop_job) where it never conflicts with
the installed job (u->job) of a different type. It never merges with jobs
of other types, but it can merge into an already installed JOB_NOP job.
- "collapsing" of job types
When a job of one of the two special types is added, the state of the unit
is checked immediately and the job type changes:
JOB_TRY_RESTART -> JOB_RESTART or JOB_NOP
JOB_RELOAD_OR_START -> JOB_RELOAD or JOB_START
Should a job type JOB_RELOAD_OR_START appear later during job merging, it
collapses immediately afterwards.
Collapsing actually makes some things simpler, because there are now fewer
job types that are allowed in the transaction.
[1] Fixes: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=753586
Type=idle is much like Type=simple, however between the fork() and the
exec() in the child we wait until PID 1 informs us that no jobs are
left.
This is mostly a cosmetic fix to make gettys appear only after all boot
output is finished and complete.
Note that this does not impact the normal job logic as we do not delay
the completion of any jobs. We just delay the invocation of the actual
binary, and only for services that otherwise would be of Type=simple.
The ability to set MountAuto=no and SwapAuto=no was useful during the
adoption phase of systemd, so that distributions could stick to their
classic mount scripts a bit longer. It is about time to get rid of it
now.
Jobs were not preserved correctly over a daemon-reload operation.
A systemctl process waiting for a job completion received a job removal
signal. The job itself changed its id. The job timeout started ticking all
over again.
This fixes the deficiencies.
Recursion is unnecessary, because we're deleting all transaction jobs
anyway. And the recursive deletion produces debug messages that are
pointless in transaction abort.
A transaction can be acyclic, but when it's added to installed jobs,
a cycle may result.
transaction_verify_order_one() attempts to detect these cases, but it
fails because the installed jobs often have the exact generation number
that makes them look as if they were walked already.
Fix it by resetting the generation numbers of all installed jobs before
detecting cycles.
An alternative fix could be to add the generation counter to the
Manager and use it instead of starting always from 1 in
transaction_activate(). But I prefer not having to worry about it
wrapping around.
The functions looked complicated with the nested loops with breaks,
continues, and "while (again)".
Here using goto actually makes them easier to understand.
Also correcting the comment about redundant jobs.
While having a Requires= dependency between units, the dependency is started
automatically on "systemctl start", but it's not started on "systemctl
restart".
JOB_RESTART jobs did not pull the dependencies for starting into the
transaction.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=802770
Note that the other bug noted in comment #2 has been fixed already by avoiding
the deletion of anchor jobs.
Previously transactions could reference installed jobs. It made some issues
difficult to fix.
This sets new rules for jobs:
A job cannot be both a member of a transaction and installed. When jobs are
created, they are linked to a transaction. The whole transaction is constructed
(with merging of jobs within, etc.). When it's complete, all the jobs are
unlinked from it one by one and let to install themselves. It is during the
installation when merging with previously installed jobs (from older
transactions) is contemplated.
Merging with installed jobs has different rules than merging within a
transaction:
- An installed conflicting job gets cancelled. It cannot be simply deleted,
because someone might be waiting for its completion on DBus.
- An installed, but still waiting, job can be safely merged into.
- An installed and running job can be tricky. For some job types it is safe to
just merge. For the other types we merge anyway, but put the job back into
JOB_WAITING to allow it to run again. This may be suboptimal, but it is not
currently possible to have more than one installed job for a unit.
Note this also fixes a bug where the anchor job could be deleted during merging
within the transaction.
Do not attempt to optimize away the job creation by refering to installed jobs.
We do not want to disturb installed jobs until commiting the transaction.
(A later patch to job merging will make the separation of transaction jobs and
installed jobs complete.)
manager.c takes care of the main loop, unit management, signal handling, ...
transaction.c computes transactions.
After split:
manager.c: 65 KB
transaction.c: 40 KB
This makes it obvious that transactions are short-lived. They are created in
manager_add_job() and destroyed after the application of jobs.
It also prepares for a split of the transaction code to a new source.
Split the uninstallation of the job from job_free() into a separate function.
Adjust the callers.
job_free() now only works on unlinked and uninstalled jobs. This enforces clear
thinking about job lifetimes.
job_free() is IMO too helpful when it unlinks the job from the transaction.
The callers should ensure the job is already unlinked before freeing.
The added assertions check if anyone gets it wrong.
Previously, we were brutally and onconditionally killing all processes
in a service's cgroup before starting the service anew, in order to
ensure that StartPre lines cannot be misused to spawn long-running
processes.
On logind-less systems this has the effect that restarting sshd
necessarily calls all active ssh sessions, which is usually not
desirable.
With this patch control processes for a service are placed in a
sub-cgroup called "control/". When starting a service anew we simply
kill this cgroup, but not the main cgroup, in order to avoid killing any
long-running non-control processes from previous runs.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=805942
We shouldn't print a status message on the console if we skipped a unit
due to a condition. Hence make unit_start() return -ENOEXEC in such a
case which is mapped to JOB_SKIPPED which results in no console message.
We finally got the OK from all contributors with non-trivial commits to
relicense systemd from GPL2+ to LGPL2.1+.
Some udev bits continue to be GPL2+ for now, but we are looking into
relicensing them too, to allow free copy/paste of all code within
systemd.
The bits that used to be MIT continue to be MIT.
The big benefit of the relicensing is that closed source code may now
link against libsystemd-login.so and friends.