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Let's clean up the function naming scheme and put the object they
operate on first in the name, the way OO programming usually does it.
Also, let's make sure can properly destroy half-initialized Manager
objects.
- the even source should not be freed before the fd for it is closed
- read() returns an ssize_t and we need to handle it as such
- properly handle errors from read()
- reuse on_plymouth_disconnect() whenever we disconnect from plymouth,
and rename it plymouth_disconnect hence()
The udev-settle guarantees that udevd is no longer processing any of the
events casued by udev-trigger. The way this works is that it sends a
synchronous PING to udevd after udev-trigger has ran, and when that returns
it knows that udevd has started processing the events from udev-trigger.
udev-settle will then wait for the event queue to empty before returning.
However, there was a race here, as we would only update the /run state at
the beginning of the event loop, before reading out new events and before
processing the ping.
That means that if the first uevent arrived in the same event-loop iteration
as the PING, we would return the ping before updating the queue state in /run
(which would happen on the next iteration).
The race window here is tiny (as the /run state would probably get updated
before udev-settle got a chance to read /run), but still a possibility.
Fix the problem by updating the /run state as the last step before returning
the PING.
We must still update it at the beginning of the loop as well, otherwise we
risk being stuck in poll() with a stale state in /run.
Reported-by: Daniel Drake <drake@endlessm.com>
XKB errors aren't *that* important.
Coverity complained that the same action is taken in multiple
branches, which is semi-valid, so is fixed too (CID #1256582).
The input data would have to be borked, so this is unlikely to happen,
but since we have a nice helper function to do it properly... why not?
CID #1261390.
This is needed to interoperate firstboot and sysusers. The former one is started
first, and it writes only /etc/shadow when it is told to set the root password.
It's better to relax checks here than to duplicate functionality in firstboot.
Because the order of coldplugging is not defined, we can reference a
not-yet-coldplugged unit and read its state while it has not yet been
set to a meaningful value.
This way, already active units may get started again.
We fix this by deferring such actions until all units have been at
least somehow coldplugged.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=88401
I observe that upon loading of framebuffer drivers, I do not get the
desired system font, but the kernel-level defaults (usually
lib/fonts/font_8x16.c, but your mileage may vary depending on kernel
config and boot options).
The fbcon driver may be loaded at a time way before the first
framebuffer device is active, such that the vconsole setup helper
runs too early.
The existing rule is non-fitting. The going live of the fbcon kernel
component does not indicate the proper time at which to load the
visuals, which really ought to be done when a new vtcon object comes
into existence. (The font table is a per-vtcon property.)
This introduces 'HoldoffTimeoutSec' to logind.conf to make
IGNORE_LID_SWITCH_{SUSPEND,STARTUP}_USEC configurable.
Background: If an external monitor is connected, or if the system is
docked, we want to ignore LID events. This is required to support setups
where a laptop is used with external peripherals while the LID is closed.
However, this requires us to probe all hot-plugged devices before reacting
to LID events. But with modern buses like USB, the standards do not impose
any timeout on the slots, so we have no chance to know whether a given
slot is used or not. Hence, after resume and startup, we have to wait a
fixed timeout to give the kernel a chance to probe devices. Our timeout
has always been generous enough to support even the slowest devices.
However, a lot of people didn't use these features and wanted to disable
the hold-off timer. Now we provide a knob to do that.
Commit 3f93da987 accidentally dropped the "return 0" after detection of a
duplicate line. Put it back, to get back the documented and intended "first
match wins" behaviour.
https://launchpad.net/bugs/1428540