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If there is a lot of initscripts and dependencies between them we might
end generating After= (and similar) lines which are longer then LINE_MAX
and thus rejected by parser in systemd.
Fixes#2099
* Use $ROOTLIBDIR/systemd always
* Don't pass $ROOTLIBDIR/systemd as the first argument:
$ cat /proc/1/cmdline
/lib/systemd/systemd/lib/systemd/systemd...
This uses temporary configuration in /run and temporary veth devices, and does
not write anything on disk or change any system configuration; but it assumes
(and checks at the beginning) that networkd is not currently running.
This can be run on a normal installation, in QEMU, nspawn, or LXC.
As this requires root privileges, this is not integrated into "make check".
Fixes backward/forward incompatibility errors on spawning.
For example:
$ sudo make run
...
Failed to register machine: Cannot set property TasksMax, or unknown
property.
$ ../../systemd-nspawn --version
systemd 228
$ systemd-nspawn --version
systemd 225
Sempaphore containers are not booted with systemd, so machined is not
available, which makes nspawn bail. Just skip nspawn tests in such
environments.
[ -d /run/systemd/system ] is esentially what sd_booted(3) is doing,
but on Ubuntu 15.05, without 'systemd-container' installed, we also
need to check for the presence of the systemd-machined binary.
Fixes:
systemd-testsuite systemd[34]: PAM _pam_load_conf_file: unable to open /etc/pam.d/system-auth
systemd-testsuite systemd[34]: PAM _pam_load_conf_file: unable to open /etc/pam.d/system-auth
systemd-testsuite systemd[34]: user@0.service: Failed at step PAM spawning /lib/systemd/systemd: Operation not permitted
...
on Debian, Ubuntu
Fixes:
systemd-testsuite login[31]: cannot open login definitions /etc/login.defs [No such file or directory]
systemd-testsuite systemd[1]: Received SIGCHLD from PID 31 (login).
systemd-testsuite systemd[1]: Child 31 (login) died (code=exited, status=1/FAILURE)
systemd-testsuite systemd[1]: console-getty.service: Child 31 belongs to console-getty.service
systemd-testsuite systemd[1]: console-getty.service: Main process exited, code=exited, status=1/FAILURE
systemd-testsuite systemd[1]: console-getty.service: Changed running -> dead
on Debian/Ubuntu
Useful on other distros
libpam_modules installs modules into /lib/$(dpkg-architecture -qDEB_HOST_MULTIARCH)/security
on Debian
Fixes:
systemd-testsuite login[36]: PAM unable to dlopen(pam_group.so): /lib/security/pam_group.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
systemd-testsuite login[36]: PAM adding faulty module: pam_group.so
systemd-testsuite login[36]: PAM unable to dlopen(pam_limits.so): /lib/security/pam_limits.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
systemd-testsuite login[36]: PAM adding faulty module: pam_limits.so
...
etc
Fixes:
systemd[39]: systemd-exit.service: Executing: /bin/kill -s 58 29
systemd[39]: systemd-exit.service: Failed at step EXEC spawning /bin/kill: No such file or directory
systemd[29]: Received SIGCHLD from PID 39 ((kill)).
systemd[29]: Child 39 ((kill)) died (code=exited, status=203/EXEC)
Check the base case, plus erasing the list, listing the same variable
name more than once and when variables are absent from the manager
execution environment.
Confirmed that `sudo ./test-execute` passes and that modifying the test
cases (or the values of the set variables in test-execute.c) is enough
to make the test cases fail.
* remove journal flushing (systemd-journal-flush.service runs journalctl --flush on boot)
* use sh -c and PATH instead of @SYSTEMCTL@ expansion
* remove unnecessary semicolons etc
In most cases, systemd requires escaping $ (for systemd variable
substitution) and % (for specifiers) by doubling them. This was somewhat
of an issue in tests like exec-environment*.service where systemd was
doing the substitutions and we were not really checking that those were
available in the actual environment of the command. Fix that.
Expressions such as `exit $(test ...)` are incorrect. They only work
because $(test ...) will produce no output, so the command will become a
bare "exit" which will exit with the status of the latest executed
command which turns out to be the test... The direct approach is simply
calling "test" as the last command, for which the shell will propagate
the exit status.
One situation where this was breaking tests was on `exit $(test ...) &&
$(test ...) && $(test ...)` where the second and third tests were not
really executing, since the first command is actually `exit` so && was
doing nothing there. Fixed it by just using `test ... && test ... &&
test ...` as it was initially intended.
Pass -x to all shell executions for them to produce useful debugging
output to stderr. Consequently, removed most of the explicit `echo`s
that are no longer needed.
Mark all units as Type=oneshot explicitly.
Also made sure all shell variables are properly quoted.
v2: Added an explicit LC_ALL=C to ionice invocations since some locales
(such as French) will add a space before the colon in the output.
Tested by running `sudo ./test-execute` and confirming all tests enabled
on my system (essentially all of them except for the s390 one) passed.
Tweaked the variables or options or expected values and confirmed the
tests do indeed fail when the values are not exactly the expected ones.
v2: Also tested with `LANG=fr_FR.UTF-8 sudo ./test-execute` to confirm
it still works in a different locale.
The basic setup for the well-known system and session buses is
now done in read-only files in ${datadir} (normally /usr/share).
See the NEWS entry for 1.9.18 for details.
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/dbus/dbus/tree/NEWS