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Section "Description" didn't actually say what systemd does. And we had a giant
"Concepts" section that actually described units types and other details about
them. So let's move the basic description of functionality to "Description" and
rename the following section to "Units".
The link to the Original Design Document is moved to "See Also", it is of
historical interest mostly at this point.
The only actual change is that when talking about API filesystems, /dev is also
mentioned. (I think /sys+/proc+/dev are the canonical set and should be always
listed on one breath.)
It has been mentioned in IPv4Forwarding= and IPv6Forwarding=,
but let's also explain in the settings who imply these settings.
Follow-up for 3976c43092 and
485f5148b3.
For run0 (as opposed to systemd-run in general), connecting to
the system bus (of localhost or container) as a different user
than root and then trying to elevate privilege from that
makes little sense:
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/32997#issuecomment-2127992973
The @ syntax is mostly useful when connecting to the user bus,
which is not a use case for run0. Hence, let's remove the example.
The syntax will be properly refused in #32999.
- mention that /run/machine-id is used if exist.
- mention system.machine_id credential,
- credential, VM uuid, and container uuid are not read when --root=
is specified or running in a chroot environment.
Fixes https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/28514.
Quoting https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/28514#issuecomment-1831781486:
> Whenever PAM is enabled for a service, we set up the PAM session and then
> fork off a process whose only job is to eventually close the PAM session when
> the service dies. That services we run with service privileges, both to
> minimize attack surface and because we want to use PR_SET_DEATHSIG to be get
> a notification via signal whenever the main process dies. But that only works
> if we have the same credentials as that main process.
>
> Now, if pam_systemd runs inside the PAM stack (which it normally does) it's
> session close hook will ask logind to synchronously end the session via a bus
> call. Currently that call is not accessible to unprivileged clients. And
> that's the part we need to relax: allow users to end their own sessions.
The check is implemented in a way that allows the kill if the sender is in
the target session.
I found 'sudo systemctl --user -M "zbyszek@" is-system-running' to
be a convenient reproducer.
Before:
May 16 16:25:26 x1c systemd[1]: run-u24754.service: Deactivated successfully.
May 16 16:25:26 x1c dbus-broker[1489]: A security policy denied :1.24757 to send method call /org/freedesktop/login1:org.freedesktop.login1.Manager.ReleaseSession to org.freedesktop.login1.
May 16 16:25:26 x1c (sd-pam)[3036470]: pam_systemd(login:session): Failed to release session: Access denied
May 16 16:25:26 x1c systemd[1]: Stopping session-114.scope...
May 16 16:25:26 x1c systemd[1]: session-114.scope: Deactivated successfully.
May 16 16:25:26 x1c systemd[1]: Stopped session-114.scope.
May 16 16:25:26 x1c systemd[1]: session-c151.scope: Deactivated successfully.
May 16 16:25:26 x1c systemd-logind[1513]: Session c151 logged out. Waiting for processes to exit.
May 16 16:25:26 x1c systemd-logind[1513]: Removed session c151.
After:
May 16 17:02:15 x1c systemd[1]: run-u24770.service: Deactivated successfully.
May 16 17:02:15 x1c systemd[1]: Stopping session-115.scope...
May 16 17:02:15 x1c systemd[1]: session-c153.scope: Deactivated successfully.
May 16 17:02:15 x1c systemd[1]: session-115.scope: Deactivated successfully.
May 16 17:02:15 x1c systemd[1]: Stopped session-115.scope.
May 16 17:02:15 x1c systemd-logind[1513]: Session c153 logged out. Waiting for processes to exit.
May 16 17:02:15 x1c systemd-logind[1513]: Removed session c153.
Edit: this seems to also fix https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/8598.
It seems that with the call to ReleaseSession, we wait for the pam session
close hooks to finish. I inserted a 'sleep(10)' after the call to ReleaseSession
in pam_systemd, and things block on that, nothing is killed prematurely.
Prompted by #32895
Rather than ordering with each power operation targets,
ordering against shutdown.target which is a valid
synchronization point. This has no effect if soft-reboot
is being performed.
A fixed name is too rigid, let's give users the ability to define
custom drop-in names which at the same time also allows defining
multiple dropins per unit.
We use ~ as the separator because:
- ':' is not allowed in credential names
- '=' is used to separate credential from value in mkosi's --credential
argument.
- '-' is commonly used in filenames
- '@' already has meaning as the unit template specifier which might be
confusing when adding dropins for template units
Like much English text, the systemd documentation uses "may not" in the
sense of both "will possibly not" and "is forbidden to". In many cases
this is OK because the context makes it clear, but in others I felt it
was possible to read the "is forbidden to" sense by mistake: in
particular, I tripped over "the target file may not exist" in
systemd.unit(5) before realizing the correct interpretation.
Use "might not" or "may choose not to" in these cases to make it clear
which sense we mean.
This commit adds the new varlink interface io.systemd.Machine at
/run/systemd/machine/io.systemd.Machine with a single method Register
It supports all combinations of RegisterMachine[WithSSH,WithNetwork] all
under the same method.
Also adds three properties:
- VsockCid: the VSOCK CID of the VM
- SshAddress: the address of the VM in a format SSH can connect to
- SshPrivateKeyPath: the path to the SSH private key to use to connect
to the VM.
GetMachineSSHInfo is essentially a convenience method to query both the
SshAddress and SshPrivateKeyPath properties at once.
In the majority of cases, this is caused by
sleep_supported() returning error. Hence it's
very likely that it would fail again, so
the fallback is not really useful. Instead,
honor the --force option for these verbs.
The systemd-confext use case description was mentioning an OSConfig
project which won't say much to users. Also, it's good to call out that
systemd-confext provides a reliable way to manage configuration because
in contrast to other tools it will remove all old configuration files.
According to the documentation in systemd.resource-control(5),
resource-control options may be used in mount, scope, service,
slice, socket and swap units.
While e.g. systemd.service(5) includes that information,
documentation for some other units does not.
The most problematic example is systemd.slice(5).
Its documentation states a slice unit may only contain [Install]
and [Unit] sections, while actually it may contain also a [Slice]
section with options from systemd.resource-control(5).
units/user/app.slice is an example of a slice unit having a [Slice]
section.
TEST-26-SYSTEMCTL is racy as we call systemctl is-active immediately
after systemctl kill. Let's implement --wait for systemctl kill and
use it in TEST-26-SYSTEMCTL to avoid the race.
In mkosi CI, we want persistent journals when running interactively
and runtime journals when running in CI, so let's add a credential
that allows us to configure which one to use.
Required for integration tests to power off on PID 1 crashes. We
deprecate systemd.crash_reboot and related options by removing them
from the documentation but still parsing them.
LinkLocalAddressing accepts a boolean. This can be seen by looking at
`link_local_address_family_from_strong(cont char *s)` in
`src/network/netword-util.c#L102-108` which falls back to
`address_family_from_string`, defined two lines above (L100)
using `DEFINE_STRING_TABLE_LOOKUP_WITH_BOOLEAN`.
Also: rename Handover → Handoff. I think it makes it clearer that this
is not really about handing over any resources, but that the executor is
out off the game from that point on.
With 1df4b21abd we started to default to
enrolling into the LUKS device backing the root fs if none was specified
(and no wipe operation is used). This changes to look for /var/ instead.
On most systems /var/ is going to be on the root fs, hence this change
is with little effect.
However, on systems where / and /var/ is separate it makes more sense to
default to /var/ because that's where the persistent and variable data
is placed (i.e. where LUKS should be used) while / doesn't really have
to be variable, could as well be immutable, or ephemeral. Hence /var/
should be a safer default.
Or to say this differently: I think it makes sense to support systems
with /var/ being on / well. I also think it makes sense to support
systems with them being separate, and /var/ being variable and
persistent. But any other kind of system I find much less interesting to
support, and in that case people should just specify the device name.
Also, while we are at it, tighten the checks a bit, insist on a dm-crypt
+ LUKS superblock before continuing.
And finally, let's print a short message indicating the device we
operate on.
The log files defined using file:, append: or truncate: inherit the owner and other privileges from the effective user running systemd.
The log files are NOT created using the "User", "Group" or "UMask" defined in the service.
When starting a container with --user, the new uid will be resolved and switched to
only in the inner child, at the end of the setup, by spawning getent. But the
credentials are set up in the outer child, long before the user is resolvable,
and the directories/files are made only readable by root and read-only, which
means they cannot be changed later and made visible to the user.
When this particular combination is specified, it is obvious the caller wants
the single-process container to be able to use credentials, so make them world
readable only in that specific case.
Fixes https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/31794
Enable the exec_fd logic for Type=notify* services too, and change it
to send a timestamp instead of a '1' byte. Record the timestamp in a
new ExecMainHandoverTimestamp property so that users can track accurately
when control is handed over from systemd to the service payload, so
that latency and startup performance can be trivially and accurately
tracked and attributed.
When an IO event source owns relevant fd, replacing with a new fd leaks
the previously assigned fd.
===
sd_event_add_io(event, &s, fd, ...);
sd_event_source_set_io_fd_own(s, true);
sd_event_source_set_io_fd(s, new_fd); <-- The previous fd is not closed.
sd_event_source_unref(s); <-- new_fd is closed as expected.
===
Without the change, valgrind reports the leak:
==998589==
==998589== FILE DESCRIPTORS: 4 open (3 std) at exit.
==998589== Open file descriptor 4:
==998589== at 0x4F119AB: pipe2 (in /usr/lib64/libc.so.6)
==998589== by 0x408830: test_sd_event_source_set_io_fd (test-event.c:862)
==998589== by 0x403302: run_test_table (tests.h:171)
==998589== by 0x408E31: main (test-event.c:935)
==998589==
==998589==
==998589== HEAP SUMMARY:
==998589== in use at exit: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
==998589== total heap usage: 33,305 allocs, 33,305 frees, 1,283,581 bytes allocated
==998589==
==998589== All heap blocks were freed -- no leaks are possible
==998589==
==998589== For lists of detected and suppressed errors, rerun with: -s
==998589== ERROR SUMMARY: 0 errors from 0 contexts (suppressed: 0 from 0)
Follow-ups for 74c4231ce5.
Previously, the path is obtained from the fd, but it is closed in
sd_event_loop() to unpin the filesystem.
So, let's save the path when the event source is created, and make
sd_event_source_get_inotify_path() simply read it.