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The barrier_wait_next_twice* test-cases run:
Parent: Child:
set_alarm(10) sleep_for(1);
... set_alarm(1);
sleep_for(2) ...
Therefore, the parent exits after 2+ periods, the client's alarm fires
after 2+ periods. This race turns out to be lost by the child on other
machines, so avoid it by increasing the parent's sleep-interval to 4. This
way, the client has 2 periods to run the barrier test, which is far more
than enough.
Some events take longer than the default 30 seconds. Killing those
events will leave the machine halfway configured.
Add a commandline option '--event-timeout' to handle these cases.
Avoid using msecs in favor of usec_t. This is more consistent with the
other parts of systemd and avoids the confusion between msec and usec. We
always use usecs, end of story.
This allows the sockets to be bound to a specific address before it is configured,
also enable SO_REUSEADDR to allow multiple DHCP clients to run at the same time.
Set SYSLOG_FACILITY field for kernel log messages too. Setting only
SYSLOG_IDENTIFIER="kernel" is not sufficient and tools reading journal
maybe confused by missing SYSLOG_FACILITY field for kernel log messages.
This fixes the issue noted by Zbigniew in most cases.
if a unit's name is enclosed in single quotes completion still
will not happen after the first `\'.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=78388
Require exact matches in all cases instead of treating strings
starting with 't' ('f') as true (false).
This is required for config_parse_protect_system to parse ProtectSystem=full
correctly: it uses parse_boolean and only tries a more specific parsing
function if that did not return a valid result. Thus "full" was treated as
"false" before.
We can not reliably manage any notion of local time. Every daylight
saving time change or time zone change by traveling will make the
time jump, and the local time might jump backwards which creates
unsolvable problems with file timestamps.
We will no longer tell the kernel our local time zone and leave
everything set to UTC. This will effectively turn FAT timestamps
into UTC timestamps.
If and only if the machine is configured to read the RTC in local
time mode, the kernel's time zone will be configured, but
systemd-timesysnc will disable the kernel's system time to RTC
syncing. In this mode, the RTC will not be managed, and external
tools like Windows bootups are expected to manage the RTC's time.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=81538
I think that it is better to return good results slightly more slowly,
than partial quickly. Also reading from disk seems fast enough. Even
the delay on first try with completely cold cache is acceptable.
This is just for bash, 'cause zsh was already doing this.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=790768
There is a small number of the places in sources where we don't check
asprintf() return code and assume that after error the function
returns NULL pointer via the first argument. That's wrong, after
error the content of pointer is undefined.
Without this, secondary addresses would get deleted when the primary one is. This is not
the desired behavior when one would like to transition from one address to another in the
same subnet (such as when a new IP address is given over DHCP).
In networkd, when given a new IP over DHCP we will add it, without explicitly removing the
old one first (and hence never have a window without an IP address configured). Assuming the
addresses are in the same subnet, that means that the old address is the primary and the new
address is the secondary one. Once the old address expires, the kernel will drop it. With the
old behavior this means that both addresses would be lost, which is clearly not what we want.
With the new behavior, only the old address is lost, and the new one is promoted to primary.
Reported by Michael Olbrich <m.olbrich@pengutronix.de>
This is necessary for non-ipv4ll hosts to communicate with ipv4ll-only hosts on the same link. Defaults
to being enabled, but can be opted out.
See: <http://avahi.org/wiki/AvahiAutoipd#Routes>