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Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Daniel Buch
d6bc8348d5 readahead: wipe out readahead 2014-09-25 16:39:18 +02:00
Lennart Poettering
7caa86ac4d man: document systemd-update-done.service 2014-07-01 00:16:48 +02:00
Lennart Poettering
b63bb8a724 units: drop RefuseManualStart= from a couple of update services
The only update service we really need to guard like this is
systemd-tmpfiles-setup.service since if invoked manually might create
/var/run/nologin and thus blocking the user from login. The other
services are pretty much idempotent and don't suffer by this problem,
hence let's simplify them.
2014-06-16 12:25:49 +02:00
Lennart Poettering
a55654d598 core: add new ConditionNeedsUpdate= unit condition
This new condition allows checking whether /etc or /var are out-of-date
relative to /usr. This is the counterpart for the update flag managed by
systemd-update-done.service. Services that want to be started once after
/usr got updated should use:

        [Unit]
        ConditionNeedsUpdate=/etc
        Before=systemd-update-done.service

This makes sure that they are only run if /etc is out-of-date relative
to /usr. And that it will be executed after systemd-update-done.service
which is responsible for marking /etc up-to-date relative to the current
/usr.

ConditionNeedsUpdate= will also checks whether /etc is actually
writable, and not trigger if it isn't, since no update is possible then.
2014-06-13 13:26:32 +02:00
Lennart Poettering
8ea48dfcd3 update-done: add minimal tool to manage system updates for /etc and /var, if /usr has changed
In order to support offline updates to /usr, we need to be able to run
certain tasks on next boot-up to bring /etc and /var in line with the
updated /usr. Hence, let's devise a mechanism how we can detect whether
/etc or /var are not up-to-date with /usr anymore: we keep "touch
files" in /etc/.updated and /var/.updated that are mtime-compared with
/usr. This means:

Whenever the vendor OS tree in /usr is updated, and any services that
shall be executed at next boot shall be triggered, it is sufficient to
update the mtime of /usr itself. At next boot, if /etc/.updated and/or
/var/.updated is older than than /usr (or missing), we know we have to
run the update tools once. After that is completed we need to update the
mtime of these files to the one of /usr, to keep track that we made the
necessary updates, and won't repeat them on next reboot.

A subsequent commit adds a new ConditionNeedsUpdate= condition that
allows checking on boot whether /etc or /var are outdated and need
updating.

This is an early step to allow booting up with an empty /etc, with
automatic rebuilding of the necessary cache files or user databases
therein, as well as supporting later updates of /usr that then propagate
to /etc and /var again.
2014-06-13 13:26:32 +02:00