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The theme color is used on android to style the chrome
browser-ui with a color that suits the webpage.
Use the dark brand color instead of a random default blue color
in order to fit to the rest of the color scheme.
h1 font weight is defined to be 100 but no font-face
definition for weight 100 is included.
The browser will use the nearest available font-weight
instead. As that is 400, we do specify it explicitly now.
The SBAT section was included in a special section in the EFI code, but
the contents weren't directly visible in any way. Let's add a "test" that
prints them for visual inspection.
If there's some external linter for this format, we could hook it up in the
future.
From https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/NetworkTarget/.
I changed the order in the page, but didn't change the text too much. Now the
discussion of the different targets is at the top, and they are ordered like
during boot (network-pre.target first, then network.target, and
network-online.target last). The parts about LSB and $network are pushed down a
bit. I think it is still useful to have them, but not as the main entry point
into the discussion. I tried to clean up the grammar and wording a bit.
One meanigful change is that we now don't say that network-online.target means
interfaces are up and IP addresses have been assigned. In other places we were
saying that the actual implementation is provided by
NetworkManager-wait-online.service, so the actual meaning is not under our
control. The text is changed to say "usually".
The last paragraph is new, I think it's good to say that
"dnf-makecache.service" is fine to use "network-online.target".
This fixes a spurious warning from the manager running in user mode:
systemd[1668]: Reached target sockets.target.
systemd[1669]: Failed to create BPF map: Operation not permitted
systemd[1669]: Finished systemd-tmpfiles-setup.service.
systemd[1669]: Listening on dbus.socket.
systemd[1669]: Reached target sockets.target.
systemd[1669]: Reached target basic.target.
systemd[1]: Started user@6.service.
Fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=2084955.
rpms can be installed in two different modes: into a chroot, where the system
is not running, and onto a live system. In the first mode, where should create
all changes that are "permanent", and in the second mode, all changes which are
"permanent" but also those which only affect the running system. Thus, changes
like new modprobe rules, tmpfiles rules, binfmt rules, udev rules, etc., are
guarded by 'test -d "/run/systemd/system"' which is the official way to check
if systemd is running, so that they are *not* executed when installed into a
chroot. But the same logic does not apply to sysusers, hwdb, and the journal
catalog: all those files can and should result in changes being performed
immediately to the system. This makes the creation of immutable images possible
(because there are no permanent changes to executed after a reboot), and allows
other packages to depend on the the effect of those changes.
Thus, the guard to check if we're not in a chroot is dropped from triggers for
sysusers, hwdb, and the journal catalog. This means that those triggers will
execute, and no subsequent work is needed. systemd-sysusers.service,
systemd-journal-catalog-update.service, and systemd-hwdb-update.service.in all
have ConditionNeedsUpdate= so they they generally won't be invoked after a
reboot. (systemd.rpm does not touch /usr to trigger the condition, because the
%transfiletriggers make that unnecessary.)
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=2085481
This device implements the phone mute HID usage as a toggle switch,
where 1 indicates muted, and 0 indicates unmuted. However, for a key
event 1 indicates that the key has been pressed and 0 indicates it has
been released. This mismatch causes issues, so prevent key events from
being generated for this HID usage.
"left from <something>" is not correct. "left <something>" would be the
usual form, but "left master interface" is not clear at all. So reword
those messages totally.
Follow-up for 3881fd406b13746336c6c654fd2f68261161fd8a.
The original issue oss-fuzz#10734 (https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=10734)
is that just the file size is too large, and not a issue in functions
tested by the fuzzer. It is not necessary to include the testcase.
Follow-up for c4f883b78e5ffd326a82eaf18e01a9e4e243db58.
Fixes#23390.
Even if we use meson >= 0.55, using path() does not produce any error or
warning if the required version is below 0.55.
Let's convert path() with full_path() when we requires meson >= 0.55.
Setting with number is deprecated:
```
meson.build:1008: DEPRECATION: configuration_data.set10 with number. the `set10` method should only be used with booleans
```
Passing potentially arbitrary data into a shellscript is potentially
very broken if you do not correctly quote it for use. This quoting must
be done as part of the interpretation of the data itself, e.g. python's
shlex.quote; simply formatting it into a string with double quotes is
NOT sufficient.
An alternative is to communicate the data reliably via argv to the shell
process, and allow the shell to internally handle it via `"$1"`, which
is quote-safe and will expand the data from argv as a single tokenized
word.
This fixes a minor bug introduced by 10af8bb24b39a815079f6bf31b449c6e5aaa2adf.
Before the commit, the interface group was set only when Group= is explicitly
specified, otherwise the interface group was kept. However, after the commit,
we need to specify Group= with an empty string to keep the current interface
group.