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https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/5215#issuecomment-277156262
libseccomp does not allow you to add architectures to a filter that
doesn't match the byte ordering of the architectures already added to
the filter (it would be a mess, not to mention largely pointless) and
since systemd attempts to add an ABI before removing the default native
ABI, you will always fail on Power (either due to ppc or ppc64le). The
fix is to remove the native ABI before adding a new ABI so you don't run
into problems with byte ordering.
You would likely see the same failure on a MIPS system.
Thanks @pcmoore!
Gcc7 is smarter about detecting unused functions and detects those two functions
which are unused in tests. But gperf generates them for us, so let's instead of removing
tell gcc that we know they might be unused in the test code.
In file included from ../src/test/test-af-list.c:29:0:
./src/basic/af-from-name.h:140:1: warning: ‘lookup_af’ defined but not used [-Wunused-function]
lookup_af (register const char *str, register size_t len)
^~~~~~~~~
In file included from ../src/test/test-arphrd-list.c:29:0:
./src/basic/arphrd-from-name.h:125:1: warning: ‘lookup_arphrd’ defined but not used [-Wunused-function]
lookup_arphrd (register const char *str, register size_t len)
^~~~~~~~~~~~~
systemd-mount --unmount /some/path
systemd-mount --umount /some/path
systemd-mount -u /some/path
systemd-unmount /some/path
all do the same thing that one could expect from the name.
This reworks systemd-run so that in --pty mode we watch the unit state
the way we do it in --wait mode. Whenever we notice that the service is
in failed or inactive state finish right-away, but first write all
unwritten characters we can read from the master TTY device.
This makes sure that when the TTY service fails before it opens the
slave PTY device we properly notice that and exit early, so that borked
start parameters result in immediate systemd-run failure. Previously,
we'd not notice this at all, as a PTY slave that never was opened won't
result in POLLHUP events, and we'd hence simply keep reading from it
forever.
In essence, --pty now enables the same unit watching logic that --wait
enables. However, unless --wait is specified we won#t show the final
summary, hence the effective difference should be pretty minimal.
Fixes: #3915
If the PTY forwarder is still around our TTY will have borked settings,
regarding newlines, hence explicitly close it before showing the
summary, so that it looks pretty.
If a callback of an event source returns an error, then the event source
might already be half-destroyed, if the callback dropped all refs.
Hence, don't assume that the type is still valid, and save it before we
issue the callback.
The 'Sessions' property for both org.freedesktop.login1.User and
org.freedesktop.login1.Seat is marked as EmitsChangedSignal(false).
Trying to emit a change signal that includes the 'Sessions' property
leads to the signal not being sent at all.
Fixes#5210.
D-Bus is inherently racy when a function returns an object path for a
newly allocated object the client shall watch: as the object already
exists before the client can subscribe to it, it might lose messages
from it.
Let's fix this, by explicitly querying unit properties right after
subscribing to its property changes.
Fixes: #4920
usec_t is always 64bit, which means it can cover quite a number of
years. However, 4 digit year display and glibc limitations around time_t
limit what we can actually parse and format. Let's make this explicit,
so that we never end up formatting dates we can#t parse and vice versa.
Note that this is really just about formatting/parsing. Internal
calculations with times outside of the formattable range are not
affected.
Passing a year such as 1960 to mktime() will result in a negative return
value. This is quite confusing, as the man page claims that on failure
the call will return -1...
Given that our own usec_t type is unsigned, and we can't express times
before 1970 hence, let's consider all negative times returned by
mktime() as invalid, regardless if just -1, or anything else negative.
There's no point in updating exec_target for each binary we try to
execute, if we override it right-away anyway... Let's just do this once,
and include all binaries we try each time.
Follow-up for 1a68e1e543.
"systemctl show -pUnknown <service>" used to exit with '0' even if the property
passed by '-p' doesn't exist. But since commit 3dced37b7c (v231+),
it exits with a failure status.
"systemctl show" is supposed to be scriptable and therefore its behavior is
supposed to be stable.
This patch restores the old behavior on which a couple of scripts already rely
now.
Also when the requested property doesn't exist, it always logs it at the debug
level since this part of the code is only used by the show command.
Fixes: #5118
The general rule is:
- code in shared/ should take an "original_root" argument (possibly NULL)
and pass it along down to chase_symlinks
- code in core/ should always use specify original_root==NULL, since we
don't support running the manager from non-root directory
- code in systemctl and other tools should pass arg_root.
For any code that is called from tools which support --root, chase_symlinks
must be used to look up paths.
The following are all equivalent:
--unit foo.service bar.service
--unit=foo.service bar.service
--unit=foo.service --unit=bar.service
foo.service bar.service --unit
Similarly for --user-unit.
The only case that doesn't work well is when --unit and --user-unit are mixed:
--unit=foo.service --user-unit=bar.service
We'll treat both names as user units. I think this is OK.
$ systemd-cgls -u systemd-journald.service machine.slice
I opted for a "global" switch, instead of modifying the behaviour of just one
argument. It seem to be a more useful setting, since usually one will want to
query one or more units, and not mix unit names with paths.
Closes#5156.
show_cgroup_get_root_and_warn is renamed to show_cgroup_get_path_and_warn
because it now optionally allows querying a non-root path.
This removes duplicated code and teaches cgtop to combine
-M with a root prefix:
$ systemd-cgtop -M myprecious /system.slice
...
76ec966f0e changed the code from ESHUTDOWN to ERFKILL, but missed one
spot in bus-common-errors.c. Fix that.
The code in transaction.c was checking for ERFKILL, but I'm not sure if this
mismatch had any effect, i.e. if there were any code paths in which the wrong
code actually made difference.
Also add comments when ESHUTDOWN is used in the journal code, so it's easy to
distinguish those cases when grepping. Standarize on the same capitalization.
(There's also a bunch of uses in sd-bus.c, but that's clearly different.)
'systemctl --failed' is an extremely common operation and it's nice to have
a shortcut for it.
Revert "man: don't document systemctl --failed" and add the option back to
systemctl's help and shell completion scripts.
This reverts commit 036359ba8d.
If "3", "5", "systemd.unit=", or similar are present on the kernel command line,
the system will not enter into offline update. This behaviour is in line with the
general logic that configuration on the kernel command line has higher priority
than the configuration on disk, but is rather surprising. Emit a warning to help
users diagnose the situation.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1405439#c4