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The kernel will not be changed to support this, so drop the code. Listening
for all RTM_NEWLINK messages and filtering on name is reliable, so it is not
a problem.
Compute the 'secs' field as seconds since start of lease acquisition
procedure. Start off with a value of zero and increase it only for
each resent DHCP discover message. See the discussion before and
after http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/dhcwg/current/msg05836.html
and Section 3.1 of RFC 2131.
In trying to track down a stupid linker bug, I noticed a bunch of
memset() calls that should be using memzero() to make it more "obvious"
that the options are correct (i.e. 0 is not the length, but the data to
set). So fix up all current calls to memset(foo, 0, length) to
memzero(foo, length).
When creating a new link, the kernel will not inform us about the new ifindex
in its ack. We have to listen for newly created devices and deduce the new
ifindex by matching on the ifname.
We used to do this by waiting for a new device from libudev, but that is asking
for trouble, as udev will happily rename the device before handing it to us.
Listen on rtnl instead, the chance of the name being changed before reaching us
is much smaller (if not nil).
Kernel patch in the works to make this unneccessary.
These connections are never torn down, even when the DHCP specifications say that
they should be. This is useful/necessary when the rootfs (or another critical fs)
is mounted over this network connection, and dataloss would result if the connection
is lost.
This option defaults to off, but our initrd generator (TBD) will enable it when
applicable.
Given that we now have KillMode=mixed where SIGTERM might kill a smaller
set than SIGKILL we need to make sure to always go explicitly throught
the SIGKILL state to get the right end result.
This should fix some race with terminating systemd --user, where the
system systemd instance might race against the user systemd instance
when sending SIGTERM.
This reverts commit 28c758de94
but makes job_coldplug smarter.
In (v1) I changed the job start timestamp to be always set, so the
start time can be reported in the cylon eye message. The bug was that
when deserializing jobs, they would be ignored if their start
timestamp was unset which was synonymous with no timeout. But after
the change, jobs would have a start timestamp set despite having no
timeout. After deserialization they would be considered immediately
expired. Fix this by checking if the timeout is not zero when
considering jobs for expiration.
Current glibc implementation is safe. Kernel does this atomically,
and write is actually implemented through writev. So if write is
async-signal-safe, than writev pretty much must be too.