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If XDG_RUNTIME_DIR contains a character like ":" (for instance if it's
formed from an X11 display name), then it isn't valid to substitute
it into a D-Bus address without escaping.
http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60499
This allows switch-root to work correctly if a unit is active both before and
after the switch-root, but its dependencies change. Before the patch, any
dependencies added to active units by switch-root will not be pulled, in
particular filesystems configured in /etc/fstab would not be activated if
local-fs.target was active in the initrd.
It is not clear to me if there is a bug in the REPLACE handling, or if it is
working as expected and that we really want to use ISOLATE instead as this patch
does.
this addresses the bug at:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59311https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=895299
hostnamectl is supposed to allow a range of special characters for
the 'pretty' hostname:
$ hostnamectl set-hostname --pretty "Nathaniels Desktop !@#$%"
..however, it rejects apostrophes, double quotes, and backslashes.
The manual for hostnamectl suggests that this should be allowed.
It makes sense to reject \0, \n, etc. pretty_string_is_safe() is
the same as string_is_safe(), but allows more special characters.
Previously all journal files were owned by "adm". In order to allow
specific users to read the journal files without granting it access to
the full "adm" powers, introduce a new specific group for this.
"systemd-journal" has to be created by the packaging scripts manually at
installation time. It's a good idea to assign a static UID/GID to this
group, since /var/log/journal might be shared across machines via NFS.
This commit also grants read access to the journal files by default to
members of the "wheel" and "adm" groups via file system ACLs, since
these "almost-root" groups should be able to see what's going on on the
system. These ACLs are created by "make install". Packagers probably
need to duplicate this logic in their postinst scripts.
This also adds documentation how to grant access to the journal to
additional users or groups via fs ACLs.
Previously for cases like "su" or "sudo" where a session is attempted to
be created from within an existing one we used the audit session ID to
detect this and in such a case we simple returned the session data of
the original session a second time.
With this change we will now use the cgroup path of the calling path to
determine the old session, i.e. we only rely on our own session
identification scheme, instead of audits.
We will continue to keep the audit session ID and ours in sync however,
to avoid unnecessary confusion.
Harald encountered division by zero in manager_print_jobs_in_progress.
Clearly we had the watch enabled when we shouldn't - there were no
running jobs in m->jobs, only waiting ones. This is either a deadlock,
or maybe some of them would be detected as runnable in the next dispatch
of the run queue. In any case we mustn't crash.
Fix it by starting and stopping the watch based on n_running_jobs
instead of the number of all jobs.
When watches are installed from the bottom, it is always possible
to race, and miss a file creation event. The race can be avoided
if a watch is first established for a parent directory, and then for
the file in the directory. If the file is created in the time between,
the watch on the parent directory will fire.
Some messages (mostly at debug level) are added to help diagnose
pidfile issues.
Should fix https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=917075.
use readlink -m instead of -f since we might be building in a minimal
chroot where those directories do not actually exist and readlink -f
would return an empty string.