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Let's make our units more robust to being added to an initrd:
1. systemd-boot-update only makes sense if sd-boot is available in /usr/
to copy into the ESP. This is generally not the case in initrds, and
even if it was, we shouldn't update the ESP from the initrd, but from
the host instead.
2. The rfkill services save/restore rfkill state, but that information
is only available once /var/ is mounted, which generally happens
after the initrd transition.
3. utmp management is partly in /var/, and legacy anyway, hence don't
bother with it in the initrd.
These are all services that valid to be run in the initrd, so let's
make sure they have the appropriate dependencies on
initrd-switch-root.target so that they are stopped when we're about
to switch root.
We don't need two (and half) templating systems anymore, yay!
I'm keeping the changes minimal, to make the diff manageable. Some enhancements
due to a better templating system might be possible in the future.
For handling of '## ' — see the next commit.
Previously, setting this option by default was problematic due to
SELinux (as this would also prohibit the transition from PID1's label to
the service's label). However, this restriction has since been lifted,
hence let's start making use of this universally in our services.
On SELinux system this change should be synchronized with a policy
update that ensures that NNP-ful transitions from init_t to service
labels is permitted.
An while we are at it: sort the settings in the unit files this touches.
This might increase the size of the change in this case, but hopefully
should result in stabler patches later on.
Fixes: #1219
With this rework we introduce systemd-rfkill.service as singleton that
is activated via systemd-rfkill.socket that listens on /dev/rfkill. That
way, we get notified each time a new rfkill device shows up or changes
state, in which case we restore and save its current setting to disk.
This is nicer than the previous logic, as this means we save/restore
state even of rfkill devices that are around only intermittently, and
save/restore the state even if the system is shutdown abruptly instead
of cleanly.
This implements what I suggested in #1019 and obsoletes it.