IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO GET AN ACCOUNT, please write an
email to Administrator. User accounts are meant only to access repo
and report issues and/or generate pull requests.
This is a purpose-specific Git hosting for
BaseALT
projects. Thank you for your understanding!
Только зарегистрированные пользователи имеют доступ к сервису!
Для получения аккаунта, обратитесь к администратору.
When calling the build commands from another directory than the toplevel:
mkdir build
cd build
../configure [...]
... the compilation fails with the following error:
GEN man/systemd.directives.xml
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "../tools/make-directive-index.py", line 313, in make_page
_extract_directives(directive_groups, formatting, page)
File "../tools/make-directive-index.py", line 191, in _extract_directives
t = xml_parse(page)
File "/home/martin/upstream/systemd/tools/xml_helper.py", line 30, in xml_parse
doc = tree.parse(page, _parser)
File "lxml.etree.pyx", line 3301, in lxml.etree.parse (src/lxml/lxml.etree.c:72453)
File "parser.pxi", line 1791, in lxml.etree._parseDocument (src/lxml/lxml.etree.c:105915)
File "parser.pxi", line 1817, in lxml.etree._parseDocumentFromURL (src/lxml/lxml.etree.c:106214)
File "parser.pxi", line 1721, in lxml.etree._parseDocFromFile (src/lxml/lxml.etree.c:105213)
File "parser.pxi", line 1122, in lxml.etree._BaseParser._parseDocFromFile (src/lxml/lxml.etree.c:100163)
File "parser.pxi", line 580, in lxml.etree._ParserContext._handleParseResultDoc (src/lxml/lxml.etree.c:94286)
File "parser.pxi", line 690, in lxml.etree._handleParseResult (src/lxml/lxml.etree.c:95722)
File "parser.pxi", line 618, in lxml.etree._raiseParseError (src/lxml/lxml.etree.c:94754)
OSError: Error reading file 'man/bootup.xml': failed to load external entity "man/bootup.xml"
That is because the file names in the XML_FILES array are not relative
to $(top_srcdir), and hence ../tools/make-directive-index.py is called
with non-existant arguments.
To fix this, call patsubst when generating SOURCE_XML_FILES from
NON_INDEX_XML_FILES.
./configure --enable/disable-kdbus can be used to set the default
behavior regarding kdbus.
If no kdbus kernel support is available, dbus-dameon will be used.
With --enable-kdbus, the kernel command line option "kdbus=0" can
be used to disable kdbus.
With --disable-kdbus, the kernel command line option "kdbus=1" is
required to enable kdbus support.
Remove old temporary snapshots, but only at boot. Ideally we'd have
"self-destroying" btrfs snapshots that go away if the last last
reference to it does. To mimic a scheme like this at least remove the
old snapshots on fresh boots, where we know they cannot be referenced
anymore. Note that we actually remove all temporary files in
/var/lib/machines/ at boot, which should be safe since the directory has
defined semantics. In the root directory (where systemd-nspawn
--ephemeral places snapshots) we are more strict, to avoid removing
unrelated temporary files.
This also splits out nspawn/container related tmpfiles bits into a new
tmpfiles snippet to systemd-nspawn.conf
Rename sd_rtnl to sd_netlink to prepare for further netlink-protocol support. Anything rtnl specific still uses the sd_rtnl prefix, but the generic parts (including the bus and message objects) are now called sd_netlink.
Currently, the following command sequence fails:
make distclean
./autogen.sh c
make distcheck
That's because the command invoked to build man/systemd.directives.xml needs
man/custom-entities.ent to function, which itself isn't a dependency.
The $(filter-out $<,$^) logic used to filter out everything from the
prerequisites except for the first word, which doesn't work anymore
now. Use $(SOURCE_XML_FILES) instead.
Unconditionally dist org.freedesktop.{import1,machine1}.policy.in, like all the
other *.policy.in files. This avoids missing policy files in the tarball.
Spotted by "make distcheck" failure with --disable-importd.
This way, development builds will not rely on gc-sections to
paper over cyclic link dependencies. Newly introduced broken
link requirements will immediatley fail.
Stop to pretend that we can split selinux related code from other.
We have too many cross-references and it breaks all the time and
I am no longer willing to maintain that mess for no real benefit.
We currently have cyclic dependencies which are only resolved on
machines with gc-sections toolchains. We need a simpler and at the
same time more strict model to manage our convenienc libraries and
linking.
The first thing to give up is the "optimization" of not linking
libselinux for a very few tools. If that is an issue, please fix
the mess that libselinux creates in selinux itself, and do not ask
consumers to work around it.
This reverts commit 6096d9cc. As discussed on the mailing list, we
should accept some formal incorrectness in the dependency here, and
not rebuild the man pages every time Makefile.am changes - xsltproc
is simply too expensive.
Instead, let's move man/custom-entities.ent from DISTCLEANFILES to
CLEANFILES, so a 'make clean' is sufficient to actually make changes
in Makefile.am efficient for the contents of the man pages.
Previously we always ran distcheck with --disable-split-usr. This caused
test-path-util to fail with
Assertion 'fsck_exists("minix") == 0' failed at ../src/test/test-path-util.c:224, function test_fsck_exists(). Aborting.
as looking up fsck.minix would only look into DEFAULT_PATH_NORMAL, but on these
systems fsck is in /sbin/.
There is nothing like systemd_verify_* in Makefile.am. The bug has
been invisible because automake uses the default CFLAGS when component
CFLAGS are undefined.
Consistently move EXTRA_DIST out of conditional blocks. This would have
produced incomplete dist tarballs when being run in a built tree with not
every feature enabled, which can cause broken dist tarballs.
When Makefile.am is modified, make sure custom-entities.ent is rebuilt.
After all, $(substitutions) is defined there, so changes of that variable
must be reflected in the resulting file.
Introduce /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-sysv-install [--root=] <action> <name>
abstraction, replacing the direct calling of chkconfig. This allows
distributions to call their specific tools like update-rc.d without patching
systemd.
Ship systemd-sysv-install.SKELETON as an example for packagers how to implement
this.
Drop the --enable-chkconfig configure option.
Document this in README and point to it in NEWS.
Export the MOUNT_PATH and UMOUNT_PATH variables as XML entities and use them in
the systemctl.1 manpage instead of hardcoding the path in /usr/bin.
Tested:
- Ran ./configure ac_cv_path_MOUNT_PATH=/bin/mount (same for umount) and
rebuilt the manpages, confirmed that the correct path was in man/systemctl.1
- Rebuilt man/systemd.directives.xml and the man pages derived from it,
confirmed that the correct paths were there as well.
With the v221 release these APIs should be public, stable APIs, hence
let's install their headers by default now, and add their symbols to the
.sym file.
The daemon requires the busname unit to operate (on kdbus systems),
since it contains the policy that allows it to acquire its service
name.
This fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=90287
Continuing the general trend of splitting up util.[ch]. I specifically
want to reuse this code in https://github.com/GNOME/libglnx and
having it split up will make future copy-pasting easier.
For a longer discussion see this:
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2015-April/030175.html
This introduces /run/systemd/fsck.progress as a simply
AF_UNIX/SOCK_STREAM socket. If it exists and is connectable we'll
connect fsck's -c switch with it. If external programs want to get
progress data they should hence listen on this socket and will get
all they need via that socket. To get information about the connecting
fsck client they should use SO_PEERCRED.
Unless /run/systemd/fsck.progress is around and connectable this change
reverts back to v219 behaviour where we'd forward fsck output to
/dev/console on our own.
Not that all functionality has been ported over to logind, the old
implementation can be removed. There goes one of the oldest parts of
the systemd code base.
Add a timer to print UTMP wall messages so that it repeatedly informs users
about a scheduled shutdown:
* every 1 minute with less than 10 minutes to go
* every 15 minutes with less than 60 minutes to go
* every 30 minutes with less than 180 minutes (3 hours) to go
* every 60 minutes if more than that to go
This functionality only active if the .EnableWallMessages DBus property
is set to true. Also, a custom string can be added to the wall message,
set through the WallMessagePrefix property.
<audit-1400> is replaced by AVC, etc.
A fallback mechanism is provided for unlisted event types.
Occasionally new types are added to the kernel, but not too often.
Add a simple "test", which simply prints the mapping.
The original idea of systemd.pc was to contain arch-independent system
and systemd information. By exposing libdir as part of the fields (added
in eb39a6239c), it started to carry
arch-dependent data, thus breaking multilib systems. It was then moved
to pkgconfiglibdir to deal with this (in
aec432c613), but actually the right
approach is to simply not include libdir in the .pc file at all.
THis patch hence more or less reverts both commits again, and moves the
.pc file back into pkgconfigdatadir.
As alternative for querying the systems primary libdir there's now
"systemd-path system-library-arch", hence a more correct alternative
exists for querying this variable from the .pc file.
Aarch64 and ARM32 lack an EFI capable objcopy, so use the ldflags + -O
binary trick gnu-efi and the Red Hat shimloader are using.
(David: rebase to systemd-git and added EFI_ prefixes)
Parse properties in the form
EVDEV_ABS_00="<min>:<max>:<res>:<fuzz>:<flat>"
and apply them to the kernel device. Future processes that open that device
will see the updated EV_ABS range.
This is particularly useful for touchpads that don't provide a resolution in
the kernel driver but can be fixed up through hwdb entries (e.g. bcm5974).
All values in the property are optional, e.g. a string of "::45" is valid to
set the resolution to 45.
The order intentionally orders resolution before fuzz and flat despite it
being the last element in the absinfo struct. The use-case for setting
fuzz/flat is almost non-existent, resolution is probably the most common case
we'll need.
To avoid multiple hwdb invocations for the same device, replace the
hwdb "keyboard:" prefix with "evdev:" and drop the separate 60-keyboard.rules
file. The new 60-evdev.rules is called for all event nodes
anyway, we don't need a separate rules file and second callout to the hwdb
builtin.
OrderedSet implements a Set-like structure, but maintains insertion
ordered. It is hence to Set what OrderedHashmap is for Hashmap.
Internally, this is only a wrapper around OrderedHashmap for now, but
this could one day be improved and be added to hashmap.c natively.
This provides equivalent functionality to libudev-device, but in the
systemd style. The public API only caters to creating sd_device objects
from for devices that already exist in /sys, there is no support for
listening for monitoring events or creating devices received over
the udev netlink protocol.
The private API contains the necessary functionality to make sd-device
a drop-in replacement for libudev-device, but which we would not
otherwise want to export.
We planned to support (the conceptually broken) daylight saving
time/local time features in the kernel, SCSI, networking, FAT
filesystem, but it turned out to be a race we cannot win and do
not want to get involved. Systemd should not fiddle with daylight
saving time or parse timezone information itself.
Leave everything to glibc or tools like date(1) and do not make any
promises or raise expectations that systemd should handle anything
like this.
Everything that is generated can be assumed to belong to CLEANFILES,
which means that the original file has to be in EXTRA_DIST. Simplify
the rules by generating as in $subject.
We have less lists to adjust manually, and 'make clean' actually
removes more stuff that before.
This also adds "machinectl import-raw" and "machinectl import-tar" to
wrap these new bus calls.
THe commands basically do for local files that "machinectl pull-raw" and
friends do for remote files.