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incapdns.net returns NXDOMAIN for the SOA of the zone itself but is not a
terminal. This is against the specs, but we really should be able to deal with
this.
Previously, when verifying whether an NXDOMAIN response for a SOA/NS lookup is
rightfully unsigned we'd issue a SOA lookup for the parent's domain, to derive
the state from that. If the parent SOA would get an NXDOMAIN, we'd continue
upwards, until we hit a signed top-level domain, which suggests that the domain
actually exists.
With this change whenver we need to authenticate an NXDOMAIN SOA reply, we'll
request the DS RR for the zone first, and use for validation, since that this
must be from the parent's zone, not the incorrect lower zone.
Fixes: #2894
Port the progagation logic to the generic Unit->trigger_notify() callback logic
in the unit vtable, that is called for a unit not only when the triggered unit
of it changes state but also when a job for that unit finishes. This, firstly
allows us to make the code a bit cleaner and more generic, but more
importantly, allows us to notice correctly when a mount job fails, and
propagate that back to autofs client processes.
Fixes: #2181
And let's make it more accurate: if we have acquire the list of unit drop-ins,
then let's do a full comparison against the old list we already have, and if
things differ in any way, we know we have to reload.
This makes sure we detect changes to drop-in directories in more cases.
This fixes fall-out from 6d10d308c6cd16528ef58fa4f5822aef936862d3.
Until that commit, do determine whether a daemon reload was required we compare
the mtime of the main unit file we loaded with the mtime of it on disk for
equality, but for drop-ins we only stored the newest mtime of all of them and
then did a "newer-than" comparison. This was brokeni with the above commit,
when all checks where changed to be for equality.
With this change all checks are now done as "newer-than", fixing the drop-in
mtime case. Strictly speaking this will not detect a number of changes that the
code before above commit detected, but given that the mtime is unlikely to go
backwards, and this is just intended to be a helpful hint anyway, this looks OK
in order to keep things simple.
Fixes: #3123
Let's move the enforcement of the per-unit start limit from unit.c into the
type-specific files again. For unit types that know a concept of "result" codes
this allows us to hook up the start limit condition to it with an explicit
result code. Also, this makes sure that the state checks in clal like
service_start() may be done before the start limit is checked, as the start
limit really should be checked last, right before everything has been verified
to be in order.
The generic start limit logic is left in unit.c, but the invocation of it is
moved into the per-type files, in the various xyz_start() functions, so that
they may place the check at the right location.
Note that this change drops the enforcement entirely from device, slice, target
and scope units, since these unit types generally may not fail activation, or
may only be activated a single time. This is also documented now.
Note that restores the "start-limit-hit" result code that existed before
6bf0f408e4833152197fb38fb10a9989c89f3a59 already in the service code. However,
it's not introduced for all units that have a result code concept.
Fixes#3166.
If we remove a directory image (i.e. not a btrfs snapshot) then things might
get quite expensive, hence run this asynchronous in a forked off process, too.
Fall back to a normal copy operation when the backing file system isn't btrfs,
and hence doesn't support cheap snapshotting. Of course, this will be slow, but
given that the execution is asynchronous now, this should be OK.
Fixes: #1308
When recursively copying a directory tree, fix up the file times after having
created all contents in it, so that our changes don't end up altering any of
the directory times.
Let's make sigkill_wait() take a normal pid_t, and add sigkill_waitp() that
takes a pointer (which is useful for usage in _cleanup_), following the usual
logic we have for this.
Cloning an image can be slow, if the image is not on a btrfs subvolume, hence
let's make sure we do this asynchronously in a child process, so that machined
isn't blocked as long as we process the client request.
This adds a new, generic "Operation" object to machined, that is used to track
these kind of background processes.
This is inspired by the MachineOperation object that already exists to make
copy operations asynchronous. A later patch will rework the MachineOperation
logic to use the generic Operation instead.
A downside is that a warning about missing [Install] is printed:
$ systemctl --root=/ enable mnt-test.mount
[/etc/systemd/system/mnt-test.mount:5] Aliases are not allowed for mount units, ignoring.
The unit files have no installation config (WantedBy, RequiredBy, Also, Alias
settings in the [Install] section, and DefaultInstance for template units).
This means they are not meant to be enabled using systemctl.
Possible reasons for having this kind of units are:
1) A unit may be statically enabled by being symlinked from another unit's
.wants/ or .requires/ directory.
2) A unit's purpose may be to act as a helper for some other unit which has
a requirement dependency on it.
3) A unit may be started when needed via activation (socket, path, timer,
D-Bus, udev, scripted systemctl call, ...).
4) In case of template units, the unit is meant to be enabled with some
instance name specified.
That's a bit misleading, but I don't see an easy way to fix this. But
the situation is similar for many other parsing errors, so maybe that's
OK.
This tests to make sure that preset patterns are checked in the order
they were declared. Both "prefix-1.service" and "prefix-2.service" match
against two rules: their exact name (which enables the service) and
"prefix-*.service" (which disables the service). Because of the
ordering, only "prefix-1.service" should be enabled.
Header files were organized in a way where the includer would add various
typedefs used by the includee before including it, resulting in a tangled
web of dependencies between files.
Replace this with the following logic:
networkd.h
/ \
networkd-link.h \
networkd-ipv4ll.h--\__\
networkd-fdb.h \
networkd-network.h netword-netdev-*.h
networkd-route.h \
networkd-netdev.h
If a pointer to a structure defined in a different header file is needed,
use a typedef line instead of including the whole header.
The concept of merging units exists so that we can create Unit objects for a
number of names early, and then load them only later, possibly merging units
which then turn out to be symlinked to other names. This of course only makes
sense for unit types where multiple names per unit are supported. For all
others, let's refuse the merge operation early.
We always call one after the other anyway, and this way service_set_socket_fd()
and service_close_socket_fd() nicely match each other as one undoes the effect
of the other.