IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO GET AN ACCOUNT, please write an
email to Administrator. User accounts are meant only to access repo
and report issues and/or generate pull requests.
This is a purpose-specific Git hosting for
BaseALT
projects. Thank you for your understanding!
Только зарегистрированные пользователи имеют доступ к сервису!
Для получения аккаунта, обратитесь к администратору.
Logs constantly show
systemd-journald[395]: Failed to set file attributes: Inappropriate ioctl for device
This is because ext4 does not support FS_NOCOW_FL.
[zj: fold into one conditional as suggested on the ML and
fix (preexisting) r/errno confusion in error message.]
After some reconsideration, we decided to move the binary protocol
back to 64-bit wide UIDs and GIDs. After all, it should be possible
to redefine [gu]id_t to uint64_t and things should continue to
work. As we want to avoid such data types in kdbus.h, let's move
back to 64-bit values and be safe.
In sd-bus, we have to do a translation between uint64_t and gid_t
now for supplementary gids.
Some inline comments have also been updated in kdbus upstream.
Otherwise every daemon reload prints out warnings like:
systemd[1]: Unit type .busname is not supported on this system.
systemd[1]: Unit type .swap is not supported on this system.
This fixes "machinectl login" on systems configured with --disable-kdbus.
The error was:
machinectl login foo
Failed to get machine PTY: Input/output error
This change introduces a new state "tentative" for device units. Device
units are considered "plugged" when udev announced them, "dead" when
they are not available in the kernel, and "tentative" when they are
referenced in /proc/self/mountinfo or /proc/swaps but not (yet)
announced via udev.
This should fix a race when device nodes (like loop devices) are created
and immediately mounted. Previously, systemd might end up seeing the
mount unit before the device, and would thus pull down the mount because
its BindTo dependency on the device would not be fulfilled.
Fixes the warning below.
src/shared/condition.c: In function ‘condition_new’:
src/shared/condition.c:47:27: warning: logical not is only applied to the left hand side of comparison [-Wlogical-not-parentheses]
assert(!parameter == (type == CONDITION_NULL));
^
src/shared/macro.h:42:44: note: in definition of macro ‘_unlikely_’
#define _unlikely_(x) (__builtin_expect(!!(x),0))
^
src/shared/macro.h:226:22: note: in expansion of macro ‘assert_se’
#define assert(expr) assert_se(expr)
^
src/shared/condition.c:47:9: note: in expansion of macro ‘assert’
assert(!parameter == (type == CONDITION_NULL));
^
Introduce BindCarrier= to indicate the set of links that determine if
the current link should be brought UP or DOWN.
[tomegun: add a bit to commit message]
By notifying the clients when this property is changed it's possible to
allow "system health monitor" tools to get transitions like
running<->degraded. This is an alternative to send changes on the
SystemState property since the latter is more difficult to derive.
I'm trying to track down a relatively recent change in systemd
which broke OSTree; see https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743891
Systemd started to stop sysroot.mount, and this patch should help
me debug why at least.
While we're here, "break" on the first unit we find that will
deactivate, as there's no point in further iteration.
When the pool size limit is altered with "machinectl set-limit", then
not only set the subvolume quota of the /var/lib/machine subvolume, but
also resize the backing loop file and the btrfs file system on it
dynamically.
When running in user mode unmounting of mount units when a device
vanishes is unlikely to work, and even if it would work is already done
by PID 1 anyway. HEnce, when creating implicit dependencies between
mount units and their backing devices, created a Wants= type dependency
in --user mode, but leave a BindsTo= dependency in --system mode.
Commit 668c965af "journal: skipping of exhausted journal files is bad if
direction changed" fixed a correctness issue, but it also significantly
limited the cases where the optimization that skips exhausted journal
files could apply.
As a result, some journalctl queries are much slower in v219 than in v218.
(e.g. queries where a "--since" cutoff should have quickly eliminated
older journal files from consideration, but didn't.)
If already in the initial iteration find_location_with_matches() finds
no entry, the journal file's location is not updated. This is fine,
except that:
- We must update at least f->last_direction. The optimization relies on
it. Let's separate that from journal_file_save_location() and update
it immediately after the direction checks.
- The optimization was conditional on "f->current_offset > 0", but it
would always be 0 in this scenario. This check is unnecessary for the
optimization.