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Unfortunately, gcc keeps warning about those even when we use an
explicit (void) cast to indicate we are not interested in the result.
LLVM's clang does not have that issue and works fine with the casts.
GCC bug being tracked at:
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=66425
Until that GCC bug is fixed (and the version with the fix is in
many/most distributions) or we switch to LLVM as the default compiler,
it looks like we'll have to disable this warning by default...
Tested by building files known to present warnings about unused results
without the suppression, confirmed that the warnings were no longer
present with this patch applied.
This partially reverts commit 00c11bc53a ("build-sys: don't suppress irrelevant warnings").
Make the build sys error out on missing function prototypes, missing
variable declarations, implicit function declarations or forgotten return
statements.
None of these conditions are acceptable, and by making them hard errors, the
build bots can detect them earlier.
This way, development builds will not rely on gc-sections to
paper over cyclic link dependencies. Newly introduced broken
link requirements will immediatley fail.
Since we introduced AX_NORMALIZE_PATH, using --with-rootprefix=/ does
produce an empty string, but using --with-rootprefix= (empty) now
produces "." instead which is wrong.
Work around it until we can find a better solution for AX_NORMALIZE_PATH
upstream at autoconf-archive.
Bug: https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/54
Strip trailing slashes from options such as --with-rootprefix, so that building
with rootprefix="/" results in paths like "/lib" instead of "//lib".
Also handle paths such as "/usr/" gracefully.
Use m4/ax_normalize_path.m4 from the autoconf-archive project, which is now
included in our tree as per usual practices in using autoconf-archive macros.
Tested with the following configure options:
./configure \
--with-rootprefix=/ \
--with-rootlibdir=/lib64/ \
--prefix=/usr/ \
--libdir=/lib/ \
--with-bashcompletiondir=/bash-completion/completions/
(The "prefix" and "libdir" are already automatically normalized by Autoconf,
this command is testing the others.)
Compared the config.log and resulting trees (in particular man pages) to
confirm double slashes were not present in the latter.
Also tested that a configuration using default options is not affected and that
`make distcheck` still works as expected.
Previously we always ran distcheck with --disable-split-usr. This caused
test-path-util to fail with
Assertion 'fsck_exists("minix") == 0' failed at ../src/test/test-path-util.c:224, function test_fsck_exists(). Aborting.
as looking up fsck.minix would only look into DEFAULT_PATH_NORMAL, but on these
systems fsck is in /sbin/.
Introduce /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-sysv-install [--root=] <action> <name>
abstraction, replacing the direct calling of chkconfig. This allows
distributions to call their specific tools like update-rc.d without patching
systemd.
Ship systemd-sysv-install.SKELETON as an example for packagers how to implement
this.
Drop the --enable-chkconfig configure option.
Document this in README and point to it in NEWS.
Using the DIR macro breaks caching and has no benefit as it only offers
performance improvements when AS_FOR is used with a single element list.
Also --with-lds-dir= was broken as we never set have_efi_lds in this case.
Fix this and check if PATH actually contains the efi-lds file.
The build would fail later anyway, so it is better to bail
out early.
Also check for the second bios file only if the first one was not
found. I'm not sure which one is preferred. If the other one, the
order should be flipped.
gcc5 introduced this option (gcc4 silently ignores it, which is fine).
Given that gcc5 thinks 'unsigned char'/'unsigned short' is promoted to
'int' for var-args, stuff like this spits out warnings:
uint8_t x;
printf("%" PRIu8", x);
gcc5 promots 'x' to 'int', instead of 'unsigned int' and thus gets a
signedness-warnings as it expects an 'unsigned int'.
glibc states otherwise: unsigneds are always promoted to 'unsigned int'.
Until gcc and glibc figure this out, lets just ignore that warning (which
is totally useless in its current form).
We should prefer the unifont.hex file from the system, instead of our
own. Upstream has made a few releases since our version was included,
and we should follow upstream changes. But adding 2.6MB to our source
repo every time upstream releases is not nice.
The old "systemd-import" binary is now an internal tool. We still use it
as asynchronous backend for systemd-importd. Since the import tool might
require some IO and CPU resources (due to qcow2 explosion, and
decompression), and because we might want to run it with more minimal
priviliges we still keep it around as the worker binary to execute as
child process of importd.
machinectl now has verbs for pulling down images, cancelling them and
listing them.
We use PY_LOG_COMPILER in Makefile.am for running *.py tests, which requires
automake's parallel test runner. This has only been the default from 1.13 on.
As we only require automake 1.11, add it as an option explicitly.
With this change the import tool will now unpack qcow2 images into
normal raw disk images, suitable for usage with nspawn.
This allows has the benefit of also allowing importing Ubuntu Cloud
images for usage with nspawn.
This directory is not used by systemd.
Tested by running a full build, running `make install` and comparing the file
list in the target trees and making sure that `make distcheck` still works.
Do not use the dbus-1.pc pkgconfig settings to determine dbus directories. Use
directories relative to ${sysconfdir} and ${datadir} instead.
This approach was suggested by Simon McVittie in:
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2014-October/024388.html
Tested by building and installing systemd without the dbus-devel installed.
Without this patch, the dbus files and directories end up in the root of the
filesystem. With this patch, they end up in the same locations as previously
(assuming default ${sysconfdir} and ${datadir}) whether dbus-devel is present
or not. Also made sure that `make check` works without dbus-devel installed.
I figure "pull-dck" is not a good name, given that one could certainly
read the verb in a way that might be funny for 16year-olds. ;-)
Also, don't hardcode the index URL to use, make it runtime and configure
time configurable instead.
This is useful for exposing unsafe access to mmapped objects after
the context that they were mapped in was already moved.
For example:
journal_file_move_to_object(f1, OBJECT_DATA, p1, &o1);
journal_file_move_to_object(f2, OBJECT_DATA, p2, &o2);
t = o1->object.type; /* this usually works, but is unsafe */
There will be more debugging options later.
--enable-debug will enable them all.
--enable-debug=hashmap will enable only hashmap debugging.
Also rename the C #define to ENABLE_DEBUG_* pattern.
When dbus client connects to systemd-bus-proxyd through
Unix domain socket proxy takes client's smack label and sets for itself.
It is done before and independent of dropping privileges.
The reason of such soluton is fact that tests of access rights
performed by lsm may take place inside kernel, not only
in userspace of recipient of message.
The bus-proxyd needs CAP_MAC_ADMIN to manipulate its label.
In case of systemd running in system mode, CAP_MAC_ADMIN
should be added to CapabilityBoundingSet in service file of bus-proxyd.
In case of systemd running in user mode ('systemd --user')
it can be achieved by addition
Capabilities=cap_mac_admin=i and SecureBits=keep-caps
to user@.service file
and setting cap_mac_admin+ei on bus-proxyd binary.
Choose which system users defined in sysusers.d/systemd.conf and files
or directories in tmpfiles.d/systemd.conf, should be provided depending
on comile-time configuration.
Add support for compose files to idev-keyboard. This requires
libxkbcommon-0.5.0, which is pretty new, but should be fine.
We don't use the compose-files, yet. Further commits will put life into
them.
Introduce a new optional dependency on libxkbcommon for systemd-localed.
Whenever the x11 keymap settings are changed, use libxkbcommon to compile
the keymap. If the compilation fails, print a warning so users will get
notified.
On compilation failure, we still update the keymap settings for now. This
patch just introduces the xkbcommon infrastructure to have keymap
validation in place. We can later decide if/how we want to enforce this.
The option simply enables hashmap debugging by defining
ENABLE_HASHMAP_DEBUG.
I suggest developing new code with it enabled, to have the iterator checks.
linux/memfd.h was added linux 3.17, so it might not be widely
available for a while.
Also, check if memfd_create is defined, for the HAVE_LINUX_MEMFD_H
check to have a chance of succeeding.
Also, collapse all ifdefs for memfd-related stuff, because they
were all added together so there's no need to check separately.
The grdev layer provides graphics-device access via the
libsystemd-terminal library. It will be used by all terminal helpers to
actually access display hardware.
Like idev, the grdev layer is built around session objects. On each
session object you add/remove graphics devices as they appear and vanish.
Any device type can be supported via specific card-backends. The exported
grdev API hides any device details.
Graphics devices are represented by "cards". Those are hidden in the
session and any pipe-configuration is automatically applied. Out of those,
we configure displays which are then exported to the API user. Displays
are meant as lowest hardware entity available outside of grdev. The
underlying pipe configuration is fully hidden and not accessible from the
outside. The grdev tiling layer allows almost arbitrary setups out of
multiple pipes, but so far we only use a small subset of this. More will
follow.
A grdev-display is meant to represent real connected displays/monitors.
The upper level screen arrangements are user policy and not controlled by
grdev. Applications are free to apply any policy they want.
Real card-backends will follow in later patches.
Rather than forcing gcc to always produce colorized error messages
whether on tty or not, enable automatic colorization by ensuring
GCC_COLORS is set to a non-empty string.
Doing it this way removes the need for workarounds in ~/.emacs or
~/.vimrc for "M-x compile" or ":make", respectively, to work.
The idev-keyboard object provides keyboard devices to the idev interface.
It uses libxkbcommon to provide proper keymap support.
So far, the keyboard implementation is pretty straightforward with one
keyboard device per matching evdev element. We feed everything into the
system keymap and provide proper high-level keyboard events to the
application. Compose-features and IM need to be added later.
The evdev-element provides linux evdev interfaces as idev-elements. This
way, all real input hardware devices on linux can be used with the idev
interface.
We use libevdev to interface with the kernel. It's a simple wrapper
library around the kernel evdev API that takes care to resync devices
after kernel-queue overflows, which is a rather non-trivial task.
Furthermore, it's a well tested interface used by all other major input
users (Xorg, weston, libinput, ...).
Last but not least, it provides nice keycode to keyname lookup tables (and
vice versa), which is really nice for debugging input problems.
Make sure we format UTF-8 labels as IDNA when writing them to DNS
packets, and as native UTF-8 when writing them to mDNS or LLMNR packets.
When comparing or processing labels always consider native UTF-8 and
IDNA formats equivalent.
intltool is needed for nls _and_ polkit, thus the check needs to be
changed to do the test whenever one of them is enables.
Without this build fails when configured with
--disable-nls --enable-polkit
This commit introduces libsystemd-ui, a systemd-internal helper library
that will contain all the UI related functionality. It is going to be used
by systemd-welcomed, systemd-consoled, systemd-greeter and systemd-er.
Further use-cases may follow.
For now, this commit only adds terminal-page handling based on lines only.
Follow-up commits will add more functionality.
A new tool "systemd-firstboot" can be used either interactively on boot,
where it will query basic locale, timezone, hostname, root password
information and set it. Or it can be used non-interactively from the
command line when prepareing disk images for booting. When used
non-inertactively the tool can either copy settings from the host, or
take settings on the command line.
$ systemd-firstboot --root=/path/to/my/new/root --copy-locale --copy-root-password --hostname=waldi
The tool will be automatically invoked (interactively) now on first boot
if /etc is found unpopulated.
This also creates the infrastructure for generators to be notified via
an environment variable whether they are running on the first boot, or
not.
Add liblz4 as an optional dependency when requested with --enable-lz4,
and use it in preference to liblzma for journal blob and coredump
compression. To retain backwards compatibility, XZ is used to
decompress old blobs.
Things will function correctly only with lz4-119.
Based on the benchmarks found on the web, lz4 seems to be the best
choice for "quick" compressors atm.
For pkg-config status, see http://code.google.com/p/lz4/issues/detail?id=135.
IT_PROG_INTLTOOL makes configure fail if intltool is not present. If we can
not find intltool, then disable NLS (otherwise make in po/ fails since MSGFMT
will not be defined.)
Tested: Built it on a host without intltool.
$ ./configure --enable-nls
...
checking for intltool-merge... no
configure: error: --enable-nls requested but intltool not found
$ ./configure --disable-polkit
...
checking for intltool-merge... no
configure: WARNING: *** Disabling NLS support because intltool was not found
checking whether NLS is requested... no
...
$ make
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=79692
In particular, disable intltool when --disable-nls is passed to configure.
Tested: Built it on a host without intltool or gettext.
$ ./configure --disable-nls --disable-polkit
$ make
The recently added stacktrace support in 8d4e028f uses functions added
in elfutils 158. Check for one of the new functions to avoid attempting
to build against older versions.