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systemctl would print 'CPUQuotaPerSecUSec=(null)' for no limit. This
does not look right.
Since USEC_INFINITY is one of the valid values, format_timespan()
could return NULL, and we should wrap every use of it in strna() or
similar. But most callers didn't do that, and it seems more robust to
return a string ("infinity") that makes sense most of the time, even
if in some places the result will not be grammatically correct.
Phenomenon: parameters configured in /etc/fstab for swap units are
ignored. E.g. pri= settings have no effect when systemd starts swap
units. What is even more confusing, .swap units for the name used in
/etc/fstab initially show proper values for Priority=, but after
starting them, they are re-initalized from /proc/swaps and show the -1
value from /proc/swaps.
Change swap units to follow the original configured unit. This way
proper settings are used when starting the swap.
Previous code would only return correct results when discard
was the last option.
While at it, avoid incorrect behaviour for (invalid) 'pri' option
not followed by '=...', and also do not return -1 as the error code.
In the conversion to sd-event loop, handling of normal files got
broken. We do not want to perform non-blocking reads on them, but
simply do read() in a loop. Install a statically-enabled "source"
to do that.
This PMIC is found on TI AM335x based boards like the beaglebone and
beaglebone black.
root@beaglebone-white:~# udevadm info -a /dev/input/event0
Udevadm info starts with the device specified by the devpath and then
walks up the chain of parent devices. It prints for every device
found, all possible attributes in the udev rules key format.
A rule to match, can be composed by the attributes of the device
and the attributes from one single parent device.
looking at device
'/devices/ocp.3/44e0b000.i2c/i2c-0/0-0024/input/input0/event0':
KERNEL=="event0"
SUBSYSTEM=="input"
DRIVER==""
looking at parent device
'/devices/ocp.3/44e0b000.i2c/i2c-0/0-0024/input/input0':
KERNELS=="input0"
SUBSYSTEMS=="input"
DRIVERS==""
ATTRS{name}=="tps65217_pwr_but"
ATTRS{phys}==""
ATTRS{uniq}==""
ATTRS{properties}=="0"
looking at parent device '/devices/ocp.3/44e0b000.i2c/i2c-0/0-0024':
KERNELS=="0-0024"
SUBSYSTEMS=="i2c"
DRIVERS=="tps65217"
ATTRS{name}=="tps65217"
looking at parent device '/devices/ocp.3/44e0b000.i2c/i2c-0':
KERNELS=="i2c-0"
SUBSYSTEMS=="i2c"
DRIVERS==""
ATTRS{name}=="OMAP I2C adapter"
looking at parent device '/devices/ocp.3/44e0b000.i2c':
KERNELS=="44e0b000.i2c"
SUBSYSTEMS=="platform"
DRIVERS=="omap_i2c"
looking at parent device '/devices/ocp.3':
KERNELS=="ocp.3"
SUBSYSTEMS=="platform"
DRIVERS==""
removed pointless index sort of bootids.
use `compadd -a' to add each array, instead of expanding possibly hundreds of words needlessly.
optional completion of -b
If one has a config like:
d /tmp 1777 root root -
X /tmp/important_mount
All files below /tmp/important_mount will be deleted as the
/tmp/important_mount item will spuriously inherit a max age of 0
from /tmp.
/tmp has a max age of 0 but age_set is (of course) false.
This affects also the PrivateTmp feature of systemd.
All tmp files of such services will be deleted unconditionally
and can cause service failures and data loss.
Fix this by checking ->age_set in the IGNORE_DIRECTORY_PATH logic.
After recent changes the number was always reported as 0, because
the accounting was done server_destroy(), called after the message was
already printed. But even before this change, the counts were wrong
because seqnum start at 0 only for newly created journal files, so when
appending to existing files, the calculated count was wrong anyway.
Also do some variable renaming for consistency and disable some low-level
debug messages.