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This breaks the same vendor/product ID with the German keyboard layout. As this
is a hack around some weird keyboard driver bug, let's revert until this is
understood better.
See https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/1243
This reverts commit a2aa71a954.
The size of the allocated array for received file descriptors was
incorrectly calculated. This did not matter when a single file
descriptor was received, but for more descriptors the allocation was
insufficient.
When a NXDATA or a NODATA response is received for an alias it may
include CNAME records from the redirect chain. We should cache the
response for each of these names to avoid needless roundtrips in
the future.
It is not sufficient to do the negative caching only for the
canonical name, as the included redirection chain is not guaranteed
to be complete. In fact, only the final CNAME record from the chain
is guaranteed to be included.
We take care not to cache entries that redirects outside the current
zone, as the SOA will then not be valid.
CNAME records are special in the way they are treated by DNS servers,
and our cache should mimic that behavior: In case a domain name has an
alias, its CNAME record is returned in place of any other.
Our cache was not doing this despite caching the CNAME records, this
entailed needless lookups to re-resolve the CNAME.
It's nicer if the assertion failure message from a bad use of xsprintf
actually mentions xsprintf instead of the expression the macro is
implemented as.
The assert_message_se macro was added in the previous commit as an
internal helper, but it can also be used for customizing assertion
failure messages like in this case.
Example:
char buf[10];
xsprintf(buf, "This is a %s message.\n", "long");
Before:
Assertion '(size_t) snprintf(buf, ELEMENTSOF(buf), "This is a %s
message.\n", "long") < ELEMENTSOF(buf)' failed at foo.c:6, function
main(). Aborting.
After:
Assertion 'xsprintf: buf[] must be big enough' failed at foo.c:6,
function main(). Aborting.
Add a new config directive called NetClass= to CGroup enabled units.
Allowed values are positive numbers for fix assignments and "auto" for
picking a free value automatically, for which we need to keep track of
dynamically assigned net class IDs of units. Introduce a hash table for
this, and also record the last ID that was given out, so the allocator
can start its search for the next 'hole' from there. This could
eventually be optimized with something like an irb.
The class IDs up to 65536 are considered reserved and won't be
assigned automatically by systemd. This barrier can be made a config
directive in the future.
Values set in unit files are stored in the CGroupContext of the
unit and considered read-only. The actually assigned number (which
may have been chosen dynamically) is stored in the unit itself and
is guaranteed to remain stable as long as the unit is active.
In the CGroup controller, set the configured CGroup net class to
net_cls.classid. Multiple unit may share the same net class ID,
and those which do are linked together.
Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the X1 carbon 3rd gen model.
BugLink: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1200717
The current implementation directly monitor /proc/self/mountinfo and
/run/mount/utab files. It's really not optimal because utab file is
private libmount stuff without any official guaranteed semantic.
The libmount since v2.26 provides API to monitor mount kernel &
userspace changes and since v2.27 the monitor is usable for
non-root users too.
This patch replaces the current implementation with libmount based
solution.
Signed-off-by: Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com>
Let's make sure that we follow the same codepaths when adjusting a
cgroup property via the dbus SetProperty() call, and when we execute the
StartupCPUShares= effect.
Let's stop using the "unsigned long" type for weights/shares, and let's
just use uint64_t for this, as that's what we expose on the bus.
Unify parsers, and always validate the range for these fields.
Correct the default blockio weight to 500, since that's what the kernel
actually uses.
When parsing the weight/shares settings from unit files accept the empty
string as a way to reset the weight/shares value. When getting it via
the bus, uniformly map (uint64_t) -1 to unset.
Open up StartupCPUShares= and StartupBlockIOWeight= to transient units.
Some java packages puts a symlink to init.d and its content is pointing
to latest java installation (because you can have multiple javas on you
machine).
On rhel-based distributions you can use alternatives --initscript
instread of symlink, but this is not usable for other distributions.