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This adds a testsuite unit to run systemd-networkd-tests.py. This is
mkosi only for now as python is not available in the images set up
by the bash framework. We give the test a lower priority as it takes
a while to run so we want to start it as soon as possible.
On Debian/Ubuntu, the unit is named tgt.service instead of tgtd.service,
so let's make sure we take that into account.
On CentOS, tgtd.service is not available, so let's skip the test if we
can't find the service.
Let's remove the unneeded NotifyAccess=all and start the socket
and service in the test itself instead of via the service unit. This
makes the test unit identical to the other test units which will allow
us to autogenerate it in a later commit.
Having these named differently than the test itself mostly creates
unecessary confusion and makes writing logic against the tests harder
so let's rename the testsuite-xx units and scripts to just use the
test name itself.
Let's make this behave more like all the rest of the meson stuff.
This also is the first step to making it a bit more flexible so we
can define integration tests in different ways as will be seen in
the next commits.
We don't support this for any other tests either so let's drop the
support for running TEST-01-BASIC without installing as well to make
the upcoming commit easier to implement.
Currently, on soft-reboot, /run/credentials/@system is unmounted
because it has DefaultDependencies=yes and as such will have
Conflicts=umount.target and Before=umount.target. Let's make sure
credential mounts survive soft-reboot by implying DefaultDependencies=no
for credential mounts.
A fixed name is too rigid, let's give users the ability to define
custom drop-in names which at the same time also allows defining
multiple dropins per unit.
We use ~ as the separator because:
- ':' is not allowed in credential names
- '=' is used to separate credential from value in mkosi's --credential
argument.
- '-' is commonly used in filenames
- '@' already has meaning as the unit template specifier which might be
confusing when adding dropins for template units
Otherwise, at this stage, the interface may be in e.g. initialized or
pending state, and the drop-in file introduced by the previous command
may not be registered to the state file for the interface.
Fixes#32685.
We already changed logs-filtering.service to sleep 2 seconds before
exiting to combat flakyness, let's do the same for the delegated
cgroup filtering payload.
Fixes#32696 (hopefully)
Let's run mkfs on the file we create instead of the loop device and
let's use udevadm wait --settle to wait for udev to settle before
doing anything with the loop device
Fixes#32680 (hopefully)
Currently test-aux-scope.service can get killed by the test before
it's had a chance to setup its signal handler. Make it Type=notify
to fix the race.
Fixes#32670 (hopefully)
Some integration tests take much more time than others, let's add
a test param that can be used to configure this and integrate it
with the slow-tests meson option.
Direct kernel boot results in much faster boot times so let's use
it by default.
We disable it for tests that need to reboot because +-50% of the
time, doing a reboot when using direct kernel boot causes qemu to
hang on reboot. Until we figure that out, let's use UEFI for the
tests that need to reboot.
For some reason this fails on ext4 with "No space left on device".
Until we figure out why, let's skip the test on ext4 (which is reported
as ext2/ext3 by stat).
This module is builtin on ubuntu causing the test to fail. Let's
use just dummy instead. I tried replacing it with scsi_debug but
that caused issues with modprobe complaining it could not remove
scsi_debug because it was in use.
When root authorized keys are provided by mkosi they are not
newline-terminated so appending a public key to the file results
in a corrupt key, so just to be safe we add an empty line.
Depending on host configuration this may or may not be included (e.g.
on mkosi we get a result without an ifindex field). Let's strip it from
the resolved reply to avoid failing the test.
When we want to get an interactive shell in a test that fails because
of a race condition, we might need to run the test a few times with
--repeat before it fails. However, currently, when -i is used, the VM
needs to be shut down manually each time before the next run can start.
Let's always shut down the VM if the test succeeds so that --repeat can
be used with -i to run the test until it fails and then get an interactive
shell in the VM.
If we set it to '0' if integration tests are not enabled then we can't
enable them from the command line since environment from meson takes
priority over environment variables from the command line.
We also rename the related variables to avoid conflicts with the
existing integration_tests variable.
Let's use the new follow_symlinks flag instead on newer meson to.
We also switch back to copying symlinks instead of following them
and add an exclude for 25-default.link which becomes dangling when
installed and recreate it manually instead.
Other distributions may be able to install selinux
but they are not expected to use it.
The distribution is tested rather than whether selinux is enabled
because it is expected to work on CentOS and Fedora
and we want it to fail noisily.
We have e.g. 25-default.link in test-network/ which becomes a broken
symlink when installed so let's not copy the symlinks but follow them
instead so they don't become broken.
TEST-26-SYSTEMCTL is racy as we call systemctl is-active immediately
after systemctl kill. Let's implement --wait for systemctl kill and
use it in TEST-26-SYSTEMCTL to avoid the race.
On OpenSUSE the systemd-hostnamed does not fail and is unloaded which
causes reset-failed to fail. So let's ignore any errors from reset-failed
to make the test more robust.
The rootfs only has 64K UIDs available when booting with virtiofs,
whereas the nspawn tests want to use user namespace which require
more than 64K UIDs.
Let's use oneshot services as we don't need long running services
for the tests we're doing. Let's also increase the sleeps a little
as the current values weren't sufficient when running the test locally
on my machine with mkosi.
If 3 lock messages get sent when going to sleep
then we can falsely assume we have woken up if we only assume we have at least two
so checking we have more than we did before sleeping addresses that issue.
Recent lcov started complaining loudly about unknown lines in gperf
files:
...
Found gcov version: 13.2.1
Using intermediate gcov format
Recording 'internal' directories:
...
Finished processing 1634 GCNO files
Apply filtering..
Message summary:
1 error message:
range: 1
28 warning messages:
gcov: 27
usage: 1
geninfo: ERROR: (range) unknown line '33' in /build/src/home/homed-gperf.gperf: there are only 22 lines in the file.
Use 'geninfo --filter range' to remove out-of-range lines.
(use "geninfo --ignore-errors range ..." to bypass this error)
Since we drop the coverage of built files from the final report anyway,
let's do it also when capturing both initial and real coverage to avoid
this error.
If we're not debugging tests, there's no point in persisting the journal,
so let's use the volatile journal storage mode in that case to avoid doing
unnecessary work.
We don't disable journal storage alltogether since various tests check
that stuff is written to the journal.
Required for integration tests to power off on PID 1 crashes. We
deprecate systemd.crash_reboot and related options by removing them
from the documentation but still parsing them.
OpenSUSE images seem to be unhappy with either how they are built
or what they are being asked to do.
The listed device-mapper failure is just one of the strange errors,
I have also seen it fail to propagate cgroup properties into new cgroups
that were previously guaranteed to exist.
This commit adds definitions to build the minimal_0 and minimal_1
images with mkosi and includes them into the system image. We also
move the building of the various app-xxx and similar images that are
extremely minimal into the tests itself by moving the related logic
from install_verity_minimal() into a new function
install_extension_images() in util.sh. Because the mkosi /usr is
read-only, we now place the extension images in /tmp instead of
/usr/share.
Co-authored-by: Richard Maw <richard.maw@codethink.co.uk>
Co-authored-by: sam-leonard-ct <sam.leonard@codethink.co.uk>
Otherwise we lose valuable logging from systemd-executor when things
go wrong since it can only log to the journal and not to the console
in these cases.
We cannot mark a test suite as excluded by default in meson. Instead,
let's require that SYSTEMD_INTEGRATION_TESTS=1 and skip any integration
test if it's not set. This is effectively the same as excluding it by
default. If the integration-test option is enabled, we'll set the
environment variable by default, just like we do with SYSTEMD_SLOW_TESTS
and the slow-tests meson option.
Also: rename Handover → Handoff. I think it makes it clearer that this
is not really about handing over any resources, but that the executor is
out off the game from that point on.
If an assert in systemd fails it can't shut down normally.
By default it freezes. For interactive runs we want the crash shell
to enable further debugging, but during test runs we want it to exit
without having to wait for the test timeout.
By deactivating the crash shell, enabling reboot, and configuring qemu
so that it shuts down instead of rebooting we can shut down instead.
Because by default UEFI will enroll keys and then reboot
we also have to set --qemu-firmware-variables=custom
so it doesn't need to auto-enroll.
Because mkosi has to handle not receiving an EXIT_STATUS notification
it falls back to the exit code of qemu, which in the case of reboot
would be 0, we also override the success exit status to 123
and check that we got that as an exit code from mkosi.
- Stop using logging module since the default output formatting is
pretty bad. Prefer print() for now.
- Log less, logging the full mkosi command line is rather verbose,
especially when it contains multi-line dropins.
- Streamline the journalctl command we output for debugging failed
tests.
- Don't force usage of the disk image format.
- Don't force running without unit tests.
- Don't force disabling RuntimeBuildSources.
- Update documentation to streamline the command for running a single
test and remove sudo as it's not required anymore.
- Improve the console output by having the test unit's output logged
to both the journal and the console.
- Disable journal console log forwarding as we have journal forwarding
as a better alternative.
- Delete existing journal file before running test.
- Delete journal files of succeeded tests to reduce disk usage.
- Rename system_mkosi target to just mkosi
- Pass in mkosi source directory explicitly to accomodate arbitrary
build directory locations.
- Add test interactive debugging if stdout is connected to a tty
- Stop explicitly using the 'system' image since it'll likely be
dropped soon.
- Only forward journal if we're not running in debugging mode.
- Stop using testsuite.target and instead just add the necessary
extras to the main testsuite unit via the credential dropin.
- Override type to idle so test output is not interleaved with
status output.
- Don't build mkosi target by default
- Always add the mkosi target if mkosi is found
- Remove dependency of the integration tests on the mkosi target
as otherwise the image is always built, even though we configure
it to not be built by default.
- Move mkosi output, cache and build directory into build/ so that
invocations from meson and regular invocations share the same
directories.
- Various aesthetic cleanups.
Currently, A large amount of unit test output is logged directly
to the console instead of to the per test log file as any subprocesses
executed by a test manager will detect that stderr is not connected
to the journal and log directly to /dev/console instead.
To solve this issue, let's make sure all tests are connected directly
to the journal by running them with systemd-run. We also simplify the
entire test script by getting rid of the custom queue and replicating
it with xargs instead. By using bash's function export feature, we can
make our run_test() function available to the bash subprocess spawned
by xargs.
Once a test is finished, we read its logs from the journal and put them
in the appropriate file if needed.
When starting a container with --user, the new uid will be resolved and switched to
only in the inner child, at the end of the setup, by spawning getent. But the
credentials are set up in the outer child, long before the user is resolvable,
and the directories/files are made only readable by root and read-only, which
means they cannot be changed later and made visible to the user.
When this particular combination is specified, it is obvious the caller wants
the single-process container to be able to use credentials, so make them world
readable only in that specific case.
Fixes https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/31794
The qemu seabios firmware disables serial console line wrapping. Let's
make sure we re-enable it again when we reset a terminal to some sane
defaults.
To avoid potentially blocking on writing to the terminal, we put it
in nonblocking mode and add a timeout of 50ms.
Enable the exec_fd logic for Type=notify* services too, and change it
to send a timestamp instead of a '1' byte. Record the timestamp in a
new ExecMainHandoverTimestamp property so that users can track accurately
when control is handed over from systemd to the service payload, so
that latency and startup performance can be trivially and accurately
tracked and attributed.
Resolve at attach/detach/inspect time, so that the image is pinned and requires
re-attaching on update, given files are extracted from it so just passing
img.v/ to RootImage= is not enough to get a portable image updated
I was bitten several times by testing things only with --root flag, so this
commit prepares the existing test cases to run on / too. This required the test
cases to clean up after themselves, thus I have put each test case in a
separate subshell and used traps to do the cleanups.
I needed to change the hierarchy used by the test extension to /opt, because
unmounting /usr often failed with EBUSY.
Let's rework the test a bit, namely:
- condense the code a bit
- drop unnecessary braces around variables
- drop unnecessary explanations around `touch` calls
- drop/rename functions to make the code more self-explanatory
- simplify cleanup a bit
- create R/O bind mounts directly (supported since util-linux 2.27)
Previously, 'udevadm control' only checked the number of the arguments.
So, if only `--timeout` is specified, it spuriously did nothing and succeeded.
This makes the command request at least one control command.
This requires a Coverity license, so the usefulness of the instructions
is somewhat limited, but at least I won't have to re-discover everything
from scratch when I need to debug something Coverity-related again in the
future.
The sender must be the first-hop router of the destination. Previously,
we only accepted Redirect messages whose sender is the current default
router with the highest priority.
See RFC 4861 section 8.1 for more details.
Fixes#31981.
Setting MTU announced in RA message to routes is problematic, as the
value may be larger than the device MTU (IFLA_MTU), and in such case the
route cannot be used.
These two properties are now set per-interface, and gracefully handled
such invalid cases. Hence not necessary to set them to each route.
Follow-up for #32195.
Unfortunately bfd30e8af6 is not enough and the test fails, that still
occasionally occur, don't provide enough information to see what's
wrong. Let's rework the test a little to improve this, namely:
- redirect curl's output into a temporary file instead of piping it
directly into the "check" expression; that way we can simply dump
the temporary file when the test fails, providing potentially
crucial information. We don't want to always dump everything to
stdout, as some of the tests request an entire system journal (note
that shell redirection instead of `curl -o file` is used
intentionally, so the output file is always nuked first)
- by dropping the pipes in curl commands we can re-enable pipefail
- also, split some very long commands to multiple lines to (slightly)
improve readability
Follow-up for bfd30e8af6.
The logs from TEST-69 still contain a lot of unnecessary shell
metacharacters, so to make the output more readable let's just set
TERM=dumb, instead of having to strip everything semi-manually. Also,
move the related --background= tweak to TEST-69, since it's relevant
only for that particular test.
Follow-up for 8d4bfd38ed.
The timeout on sd-resolved's side is 5-10s (UDP or TCP), but dig's
default timeout is 5s. Let's give sd-resolved enough time to timeout
before either giving up or checking if it served stale data on dig's
side.
Resolves: #31639
I collected a couple of fails in this particular test, but without any
output they're impossible to debug. Let's make this slightly less
annoying and let curl show an error (if any) even in silent mode.
This patch uncovers that curl has been (silently) complaining about not
being able to write to the output destination, because `grep -q`
short-circuits on the first match and doesn't bother reading the rest,
so replace `grep -q` with `grep ... >/dev/null` to force grep to always
read the whole thing from curl.
If we fail to mount the encrypted /var during boot we're left with
nothing to debug, so let's do the same thing we do for TEST-08-INITRD
and forward journal to the console.
s390x will define both s390x and s390, so exec-personality-s390.service is ran
in both cases but fails on s390x, as the personality returned is s390x.
Split the test and check specifically for s390x.
We stick to debug logging because in some cases network-generator
will fall back to trying another parsing function if one fails, so
if we return an error it's not necessarily a failure.
gcrypt is used only for journal sealing operations in libsystemd, so it
can be made into a dlopen dependency that is used only on demand. This
allows to reduce the footprint of libsystemd in the most common cases.
Keep systemd-pull and systemd-resolved with normal linking, as they are
executables, and usually built with OpenSSL support anyway.
Prep work for running the integration tests with meson, which requires
tests to exit with 77 to indicate they are skipped.
Note this only deals with the easy cases where there's only tests. The
hard ones where there's subtests of which only some are skipped are left
for another PR.
With plain QEMU on a saturated AWS region we might just barely miss the
timeout window, causing unexpected test fails:
[ 688.681324] systemd-nspawn[1332]: [ OK ] Finished systemd-user-sessions.service.
[ 689.451267] systemd-nspawn[1332]: [ OK ] Started console-getty.service.
[ 689.572874] systemd-nspawn[1332]: [ OK ] Reached target getty.target.
[ 693.634609] testsuite-74.sh[1223]: + at_exit
[ 693.634609] testsuite-74.sh[1223]: + rm -fv -- /tmp/test-dump /tmp/test-usr-dump /tmp/make-dump
[ 693.838395] testsuite-74.sh[1502]: removed '/tmp/test-dump'
[ 693.838395] testsuite-74.sh[1502]: removed '/tmp/test-usr-dump'
[ 693.838395] testsuite-74.sh[1502]: removed '/tmp/make-dump'
[ 693.951114] testsuite-74.sh[670]: + echo 'Subtest /usr/lib/systemd/tests/testdata/units/testsuite-74.coredump.sh failed'
[ 693.951114] testsuite-74.sh[670]: Subtest /usr/lib/systemd/tests/testdata/units/testsuite-74.coredump.sh failed
[ 693.951114] testsuite-74.sh[670]: + return 1
[ 694.659094] systemd[1]: testsuite-74.service: Main process exited, code=exited, status=1/FAILURE
[ 694.719563] systemd[1]: testsuite-74.service: Failed with result 'exit-code'.
[ 694.882069] systemd[1]: Failed to start testsuite-74.service.
[ 695.574445] systemd[1]: Reached target testsuite.target.
[ 696.174844] systemd[1]: Starting end.service...
[ 699.509408] systemd-nspawn[1332]:
[ 699.509408] systemd-nspawn[1332]: CentOS Stream 9
[ 699.509408] systemd-nspawn[1332]: Kernel 5.14.0-432.el9.x86_64 on an x86_64 (pts/0)
[ 699.509408] systemd-nspawn[1332]:
Also, move the rest of container the setup for the user xattrs test into
the condition, since doing it without the actual test is pretty
pointless.
Same reason as the reload, reexec is disruptive and it requires the
same privileges, so if somebody wants to limit reloads, they'll also
want to limit reexecs, so use the same setting.
Previously, 'udevadm test' performs not only processing udev rules,
but made several destructive change on the system; updating udev
database, device node permission, devlinks, network interface
properties, and so on.
Similary, 'udevadm test-builtin' may perform something destructive,
especially by 'keyboard', 'kmod', and 'net_setup_link' builtins.
Let's make these commands and test executables not change device
configurations.
When listing images they are inspected one by one, so in case of a
portable with extensions they always resulted as not found.
Allow a partial match when listing, so that we can find the appropriate
unit that an image belongs to, and list the correct state as attached.
Currently app_1.0.raw is refused if it contains extension-release.d/extension-release.app,
which stops one from using versioned images without using the force flag to disable
the check. Relax it so that only the actual name, and not the version, is compared, like
it already happens in other places.
This fixes a race condition crash in homed that would happen in the
following sequence of events:
1. Client 1 takes a ref on the home area
2. Client 1 calls some method via dbus
3. Client 2 calls Release()
In homed, the Release() would check if a ref is still held (in this
case: yes it is) and returns an error. Except that is done through a
code-path that asserts that no operations are ongoing. In this case,
it's valid to have an ongoing operation, and so the assertion fails
causing homed to crash.
When sd-run connects to D-Bus rather than the private socket, it will
generate the transient unit name using the bus ID assigned by the D-Bus
broker/daemon. The issue is that this ID is only unique per D-Bus run,
if the broker/daemon restarts it starts again from 1, and it's a simple
incremental counter for each client.
So if a transient unit run-u6.service starts and fails, and it is not
collected (default on failure), and the system soft-reboots, any new
transient unit might conflict as the counter will restart:
Failed to start transient service unit: Unit run-u6.service was already loaded or has a fragment file.
Get the soft-reboot counter, and if it's greater than zero, append it
to the autogenerated unit name to avoid clashes.
losetup in util-linux 2.40 started reporting lost loop devices [0] and
it has an unfortunate side-effect where it reports lost devices even in
containers, which then makes the loop device check "falsely" pass [1].
Let's just check for /dev/loop-control explicitly to "work around" this.
[0] a6ca0456cc
[1] https://github.com/util-linux/util-linux/issues/2824
Today listen file descriptors created by socket unit don't get passed to
commands in Exec{Start,Stop}{Pre,Post}= socket options.
This prevents ExecXYZ= commands from accessing the created socket FDs to do
any kind of system setup which involves the socket but is not covered by
existing socket unit options.
One concrete example is to insert a socket FD into a BPF map capable of
holding socket references, such as BPF sockmap/sockhash [1] or
reuseport_sockarray [2]. Or, similarly, send the file descriptor with
SCM_RIGHTS to another process, which has access to a BPF map for storing
sockets.
To unblock this use case, pass ListenXYZ= file descriptors to ExecXYZ=
commands as listen FDs [4]. As an exception, ExecStartPre= command does not
inherit any file descriptors because it gets invoked before the listen FDs
are created.
This new behavior can potentially break existing configurations. Commands
invoked from ExecXYZ= might not expect to inherit file descriptors through
sd_listen_fds protocol.
To prevent breakage, add a new socket unit parameter,
PassFileDescriptorsToExec=, to control whether ExecXYZ= programs inherit
listen FDs.
[1] https://docs.kernel.org/bpf/map_sockmap.html
[2] https://lore.kernel.org/r/20180808075917.3009181-1-kafai@fb.com
[3] https://man.archlinux.org/man/socket.7#SO_INCOMING_CPU
[4] https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/latest/sd_listen_fds.html
Drop connections and caches and reload config from files, to allow
for low-interruptions updates, and hook up to the usual SIGHUP and
ExecReload=. Mark servers and services configured directly via D-Bus
so that they can be kept around, and only the configuration file
settings are dropped and reloaded.
Fixes https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/17503
Fixes https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/20604
This patch fixes an issue where, when not specifiying either at least one
`SocketBindAllow` or `SocketBindDeny` rule, behavior for the bind syscall
filtering would be unexpected.
For example, when trying to bind to a port with only "SocketBindDeny=any"
given, the syscall would succeed:
> systemd-run -t -p "SocketBindDeny=any" nc -l 8080
Expected with this set of rules (also in accordance with the documentation)
would be an Operation not permitted error.
This behavior occurs because a default initialized socket_bind_rule struct
matches what "any" represents. When creating the bpf list all elements get
default initialized, as such represeting "any". Seemingly it is necressarry
to set the size of the map to at least one, as such if no allow rule is
given default initialization and minimal map size cause one any allow rule
to be in the map, causing the behavior observed above.
This patch solves this by introducing a new "match nothing" magic stored in
the rule's address family and setting such a rule as the first one if no
rule is given, making sure that default initialized rule structs are never
used.
Resolves#30556
Rate limiting authentication attempts in the test can cause somewhat
sporadic test failures: adding a test case might suddenly cause future
test cases to fail because of too many authentication attempts too
quickly
We're not trying to test the rate-limiting, we're trying to test the
functionality of homed. So we effectively disable rate-limiting on all
the home areas we create
This makes it possible to update a home record (and blob directory) of a
home area that's either completely absent (i.e. on a USB stick that's
unplugged) or just inaccessible due to lack of authentication
This bypasses authentication (i.e. user_record_authenticate) if the
volume key was loaded from the keyring and no secret section is
provided.
This also changes Update() and Resize() to always try and load the
volume key from the keyring. This makes the secret section optional for
these methods while still letting them function (as long as the home
area is active)
Private images are not reused, they are unique to tests, so delete them
as they take a lot of disk space, and we are starting to run in /var/tmp
space issues on the Ubuntu CI
Naming is always a matter of preference, and the old name would certainly work,
but I think the new one has the following advantages:
- A verb is better than a noun.
- The name more similar to "the competition", i.e. 'sudo', 'pkexec', 'runas',
'doas', which generally include an action verb.
- The connection between 'systemd-run' and 'run0' is more obvious.
There has been no release yet with the old name, so we can rename without
caring for backwards compatibility.
Currently, if a unit file is enabled from outside of the search path,
and that unit has an alias, then the symlink ends up pointing outside of
the search path too. For example:
$ cat /tmp/a.service
[Service]
ExecStart=sleep infinity
[Install]
Alias=b.service
WantedBy=multi-user.target
$ systemctl enable /tmp/a.service
Created symlink /etc/systemd/system/a.service → /tmp/a.service.
Created symlink /etc/systemd/system/b.service → /tmp/a.service.
Created symlink /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/a.service → /tmp/a.service.
This then means the alias is treated as a separate unit:
$ systemctl start a.service
$ sudo systemctl status a
● a.service
Loaded: loaded (/etc/systemd/system/a.service; enabled; preset: enabled)
Active: active (running) since Fri 2024-03-15 15:17:49 EDT; 9s ago
Main PID: 769593 (sleep)
Tasks: 1 (limit: 18898)
Memory: 220.0K
CPU: 5ms
CGroup: /system.slice/a.service
└─769593 sleep infinity
Mar 15 15:17:49 six systemd[1]: Started a.service.
$ sudo systemctl status b
○ b.service
Loaded: loaded (/etc/systemd/system/b.service; alias)
Active: inactive (dead)
To fix this, make sure the alias uses a target that is inside the search
path. Since the unit file itself is outside of the search path, a
symlink inside the search path will have been created already. Hence,
just point the alias symlink to that recently created symlink.
This also drop the support of /run/systemd/netif/persistent-storage-ready,
as the file is anyway removed when networkd is stopped.
Let's use $SYSTEMD_NETWORK_PERSISTENT_STORAGE_READY=1 instead on testing.
If both $ARTIFACT_DIRECTORY and $SPLIT_TEST_LOGS are set, split the
output from each test into a separate log file, so we don't have to load
one ginormous log file when checking the results.
In automated QA environments there may be tests that are known to fail,
and being able to skip them is useful to remove known failures from the
test log.
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@arm.com>
When reading test logs manually it is a lot easier when the tests are
sorted by name rather than by disk order.
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@arm.com>
dig question with DNSSEC on will now be proxied upstream, i.e. to the
test knot server. This leads to different results, but the result isn't
tha tinteresting since we don't want to test knot, but resolved. Hence
comment this test.
There seems to be something wrong with the test though, as the upstream
server refused recursion, but if so it is not suitable as an upstream
server really, as resolved can only be client to a recursive resolver.
sulogin from the latest util-linux started falling back to vt102 instead
of linux, which makes screen sad (because we install only the linux
terminfo into the test image) and expect trips over the unexpected
warning. Let's just explicitly set TERM=linux before invoking screen to
avoid this.
+ make -C TEST-69-SHUTDOWN setup run
...
INFO:test-shutdown:log in and start screen
root
root
Last login: Sun Mar 3 13:19:31 from 18.191.105.60
-bash-5.2# screen
screen
Cannot find terminfo entry for 'vt102'.
-bash-5.2# ERROR:test-shutdown:Timeout exceeded.
Otherwise, even if the interface is available, the requested config may
not be applied to the interface yet.
This also merges multiple tests for RPS setting. Hopefully the
performance of the test is improved.
`c->cpu_sched_reset_on_fork` is serialized using
`exec-context-cpu-sched-reset-on-fork` and
`exec-context-cpu-scheduling-reset-on-fork`. Let's keep only the second one, to
serialize the value only if `cpu_sched_set` is true.
By default socat open a separate r/w channel for each specified address,
and terminates the connection after .5s from receiving EOF on _either_
side. And since one side of that connection is an empty stdin, we reach
that EOF pretty quickly. Let's avoid this by using socat in
"reversed unidirectional" mode, where the first address is used only for
writing, and the second one is used only for reading.
Addresses:
- https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/31500
- https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/31493
Follow-up for 3456c89ac2.
This reverts commit 5e8ff010a1.
This broke all the URLs, we can't have that. (And actually, we probably don't
_want_ to make the change either. It's nicer to have all the pages in one
directory, so one doesn't have to figure out to which collection the page
belongs.)
This deprecates IPForward= setting, which unconditionally controled
the global setting, even though it is a setting in .network file.
Instead, this introduces new IPv4Forwarding= and IPv6Forwarding=
settings both in .network and networkd.conf.
If these settings are specified in a .network file, then the
per-interface forwarding setting will be configured.
If specified in networkd.conf, then the global IP forwarding setting will
be configured.
Closes#30648.
The follow-up commit will refactor some code in systemd-sysext, so add some
tests to make sure that things didn't break. The tests will be later extended
with cases for new features added.
This is inspired by one of our internal tests that does pretty much the
same thing. However, it is slightly more convoluted than I'd like it to
be, since I really don't want to duplicate the list of our units in
another place, so we need to, somehow, pass the list from the meson file
to the test script. I originally envisioned this to be a part of the
unit test suite, but this doesn't work for unit files with absolute
paths to binaries, as we'd have to install the build first (maybe using
a chroot would work?).
It doesn't check man pages (since they might not be installed on the
test machine) and also skip recursive dependencies (as that would trip
over issues in files that are not under our direct control), but it
should still cover typos and such.
There are currently two units for which the check had to be disabled -
syslog.socket, as the corresponding syslog.service might not be
installed, and rc-local.service as that's a compat API and the necessary
/etc/rc.d/rc.local file may not (and most likely won't be) present.
Follow-ups for e1634bb832.
- Allow to call the method without "name" and "type".
- Allow to specify SD_RESOLVE_NO_TXT and SD_RESOLVE_NO_ADDRESS.
- Allow to provide multiple services, and fix memory leak.
- Rearrange the return value format.
- Encode TXT field with octescape() to make the field matches with the
io.systemd.Resolve.Monitor interface.
Fixes#31371.
Follow-up for 4d8b0f0f7a
After the mentioned commit, when the ExecCommand executable is missing,
and failure will be ignored by manager, we exit with EXIT_SUCCESS at executor
side too. The behavior however contradicts systemd.service(5), which states:
> If the executable path is prefixed with "-", an exit code of the command
> normally considered a failure (i.e. non-zero exit status or abnormal exit
> due to signal is _recorded_, but has no further effect and is considered
> equivalent to success.
and thus makes debugging unexpected failures harder. Therefore, let's still
exit with EXIT_EXEC, but just skip LOG_ERR level log.
There's something very wrong going on when using btrfs for the test
images, namely:
- there's a significant performance hit, i.e. the Arch Linux run is
~20% slower, in the coverage run the situation is even worse
- intermittent boot failures
- intermittent "No space left on device" errors (even though there's
enough free space)
Since debugging this might take a while, let's temporarily revert back
to ext4 to make the CI stable again.
This reverts commit 7eb7e3ec4f.
Forward journal to console, since we won't have any journal from initrd
and shutdown/exit initrd phases. Also, mention
systemd.journald.max_level_console=debug that is very handy for
debugging initrd shenanigans, but don't use it by default since it
sends a _lot_ of stuff to the serial console, which slows down the test
a lot.