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systemd/meson_options.txt

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meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
# -*- mode: meson -*-
# SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('version-tag', type : 'string',
description : 'set the extended version string (defaults to project version)')
option('shared-lib-tag', type : 'string',
description : 'override the private shared library version tag (defaults to project version)')
option('vcs-tag', type : 'boolean', value : true,
description : 'append current git commit to version output when git information is available')
option('mode', type : 'combo', choices : ['developer', 'release'],
description : 'autoenable features suitable for systemd development/release builds')
option('split-usr', type : 'combo', choices : ['auto', 'true', 'false'], deprecated: true,
description : '''This option is deprecated and will be removed in a future release''')
option('split-bin', type : 'combo', choices : ['auto', 'true', 'false'],
description : '''sbin is not a symlink to bin''')
option('rootlibdir', type : 'string', deprecated: true,
description : '''This option is deprecated and will be removed in a future release''')
option('rootprefix', type : 'string', deprecated: true,
description : '''This option is deprecated and will be removed in a future release''')
option('link-udev-shared', type : 'boolean',
description : 'link systemd-udevd and its helpers to libsystemd-shared.so')
option('link-systemctl-shared', type: 'boolean',
description : 'link systemctl against libsystemd-shared.so')
option('link-networkd-shared', type: 'boolean',
description : 'link systemd-networkd and its helpers to libsystemd-shared.so')
option('link-timesyncd-shared', type: 'boolean',
description : 'link systemd-timesyncd and its helpers to libsystemd-shared.so')
option('link-journalctl-shared', type: 'boolean',
description : 'link journalctl against libsystemd-shared.so')
option('link-boot-shared', type: 'boolean',
description : 'link bootctl and systemd-bless-boot against libsystemd-shared.so')
option('link-portabled-shared', type: 'boolean',
description : 'link systemd-portabled and its helpers to libsystemd-shared.so')
manager: optionally, do a full preset on first boot A compile time option is added to select behaviour: by default UNIT_FILE_PRESET_ENABLE_ONLY is still used, but the intent is to change to UNIT_FILE_PRESET_FULL at some point in the future. Distros that want to opt-in can use the config option to change the behaviour. (The option is just a boolean: it would be possible to make it multi-valued, and allow full, enable-only, disable-only, none. But so far nobody has asked for this, and it's better not to complicate things needlessly.) With the configuration option flipped, instead of only doing enablements, perform a full preset on first boot. The reason is that although `/etc/machine-id` might be missing, there may be other files provisioned in `/etc` (in fact, this use case is mentioned in `log_execution_mode`). Some of those possible files include enablement symlinks even if presets dictate it should be disabled. Such a seemingly contradictory situation occurs in {RHEL,Fedora} CoreOS, where we ship `/etc` as if `preset-all` were called. However, we want to allow users to disable default-enabled services via Ignition, which does this by creating preset dropins before switchroot. (For why we do `preset-all` at compose time, see: https://github.com/coreos/fedora-coreos-config/pull/77). For example, the composed FCOS image has a `enable zincati.service` preset and an enablement for that in `/etc`, while at boot time when we switch root, there may be a `disable zincati.service` preset with higher precedence. In that case, we want systemd to disable the service. This is essentially a revert of 304b3079a203. It seems like systemd *used* to do this, but it was changed to try to make the container workflow a bit faster. Resolves: https://github.com/coreos/fedora-coreos-tracker/issues/392 Co-authored-by: Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek <zbyszek@in.waw.pl>
2020-03-23 16:25:19 +00:00
option('first-boot-full-preset', type: 'boolean', value: false,
description : 'during first boot, do full preset-all (default will be changed to true later)')
option('static-libsystemd', type : 'combo',
choices : ['false', 'true', 'pic', 'no-pic'],
description : '''install a static library for libsystemd''')
option('static-libudev', type : 'combo',
choices : ['false', 'true', 'pic', 'no-pic'],
description : 'install a static library for libudev')
option('standalone-binaries', type : 'boolean', value : false,
description : 'also build standalone versions of supported binaries')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('sysvinit-path', type : 'string', value : '/etc/init.d',
description : 'the directory where the SysV init scripts are located')
option('sysvrcnd-path', type : 'string', value : '/etc/rc.d',
description : 'the base directory for SysV rcN.d directories')
option('rc-local', type : 'string',
value : '/etc/rc.local')
option('initrd', type : 'boolean',
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description : 'install services for use when running systemd in initrd')
option('compat-mutable-uid-boundaries', type : 'boolean', value : false,
description : 'look at uid boundaries in /etc/login.defs for compatibility')
option('nscd', type : 'boolean',
description : 'build support for flushing of the nscd caches')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('quotaon-path', type : 'string', description : 'path to quotaon')
option('quotacheck-path', type : 'string', description : 'path to quotacheck')
option('kmod-path', type : 'string', description : 'path to kmod')
option('kexec-path', type : 'string', description : 'path to kexec')
option('sulogin-path', type : 'string', description : 'path to sulogin')
option('mount-path', type : 'string', description : 'path to mount')
option('umount-path', type : 'string', description : 'path to umount')
option('loadkeys-path', type : 'string', description : 'path to loadkeys')
option('setfont-path', type : 'string', description : 'path to setfont')
option('nologin-path', type : 'string', description : 'path to nologin')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('debug-shell', type : 'string', value : '/bin/sh',
description : 'path to debug shell binary')
option('debug-tty', type : 'string', value : '/dev/tty9',
description : 'specify the tty device for debug shell')
2019-06-28 18:06:11 +00:00
option('debug-extra', type : 'array', choices : ['hashmap', 'mmap-cache', 'siphash'], value : [],
description : 'enable extra debugging')
option('memory-accounting-default', type : 'boolean',
description : 'enable MemoryAccounting= by default')
option('bump-proc-sys-fs-file-max', type : 'boolean',
description : 'bump /proc/sys/fs/file-max to LONG_MAX')
option('bump-proc-sys-fs-nr-open', type : 'boolean',
description : 'bump /proc/sys/fs/nr_open to INT_MAX')
option('log-trace', type : 'boolean', value : false,
description : 'enable low level debug logging')
option('user-path', type : 'string',
description : '$PATH to use for user sessions')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('utmp', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for utmp/wtmp log handling')
option('hibernate', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for hibernation')
option('ldconfig', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for dynamic linker cache creation')
option('resolve', type : 'boolean',
description : 'systemd-resolved stack')
option('efi', type : 'boolean',
description : 'enable EFI support')
option('tpm', type : 'boolean',
2017-04-24 23:28:04 +00:00
description : 'TPM should be used to log events and extend the registers')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('environment-d', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for environment.d')
option('binfmt', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for custom binary formats')
option('repart', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'install the systemd-repart tool')
option('sysupdate', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'install the systemd-sysupdate tool')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('coredump', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the coredump handler')
pstore: Tool to archive contents of pstore This patch introduces the systemd pstore service which will archive the contents of the Linux persistent storage filesystem, pstore, to other storage, thus preserving the existing information contained in the pstore, and clearing pstore storage for future error events. Linux provides a persistent storage file system, pstore[1], that can store error records when the kernel dies (or reboots or powers-off). These records in turn can be referenced to debug kernel problems (currently the kernel stuffs the tail of the dmesg, which also contains a stack backtrace, into pstore). The pstore file system supports a variety of backends that map onto persistent storage, such as the ACPI ERST[2, Section 18.5 Error Serialization] and UEFI variables[3 Appendix N Common Platform Error Record]. The pstore backends typically offer a relatively small amount of persistent storage, e.g. 64KiB, which can quickly fill up and thus prevent subsequent kernel crashes from recording errors. Thus there is a need to monitor and extract the pstore contents so that future kernel problems can also record information in the pstore. The pstore service is independent of the kdump service. In cloud environments specifically, host and guest filesystems are on remote filesystems (eg. iSCSI or NFS), thus kdump relies [implicitly and/or explicitly] upon proper operation of networking software *and* hardware *and* infrastructure. Thus it may not be possible to capture a kernel coredump to a file since writes over the network may not be possible. The pstore backend, on the other hand, is completely local and provides a path to store error records which will survive a reboot and aid in post-mortem debugging. Usage Notes: This tool moves files from /sys/fs/pstore into /var/lib/systemd/pstore. To enable kernel recording of error records into pstore, one must either pass crash_kexec_post_notifiers[4] to the kernel command line or enable via 'echo Y > /sys/module/kernel/parameters/crash_kexec_post_notifiers'. This option invokes the recording of errors into pstore *before* an attempt to kexec/kdump on a kernel crash. Optionally, to record reboots and shutdowns in the pstore, one can either pass the printk.always_kmsg_dump[4] to the kernel command line or enable via 'echo Y > /sys/module/printk/parameters/always_kmsg_dump'. This option enables code on the shutdown path to record information via pstore. This pstore service is a oneshot service. When run, the service invokes systemd-pstore which is a tool that performs the following: - reads the pstore.conf configuration file - collects the lists of files in the pstore (eg. /sys/fs/pstore) - for certain file types (eg. dmesg) a handler is invoked - for all other files, the file is moved from pstore - In the case of dmesg handler, final processing occurs as such: - files processed in reverse lexigraphical order to faciliate reconstruction of original dmesg - the filename is examined to determine which dmesg it is a part - the file is appended to the reconstructed dmesg For example, the following pstore contents: root@vm356:~# ls -al /sys/fs/pstore total 0 drwxr-x--- 2 root root 0 May 9 09:50 . drwxr-xr-x 7 root root 0 May 9 09:50 .. -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1610 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337601001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1778 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337602001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1726 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337603001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1746 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337604001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1686 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337605001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1690 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337606001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1775 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337607001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1811 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337608001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1817 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337609001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1795 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337710001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1770 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337711001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1796 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337712001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1787 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337713001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1808 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337714001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 1754 May 9 09:49 dmesg-efi-155741337715001 results in the following: root@vm356:~# ls -al /var/lib/systemd/pstore/155741337/ total 92 drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 May 9 09:50 . drwxr-xr-x 4 root root 40 May 9 09:50 .. -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1610 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337601001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1778 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337602001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1726 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337603001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1746 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337604001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1686 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337605001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1690 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337606001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1775 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337607001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1811 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337608001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1817 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337609001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1795 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337710001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1770 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337711001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1796 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337712001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1787 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337713001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1808 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337714001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1754 May 9 09:50 dmesg-efi-155741337715001 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 26754 May 9 09:50 dmesg.txt where dmesg.txt is reconstructed from the group of related dmesg-efi-155741337* files. Configuration file: The pstore.conf configuration file has four settings, described below. - Storage : one of "none", "external", or "journal". With "none", this tool leaves the contents of pstore untouched. With "external", the contents of the pstore are moved into the /var/lib/systemd/pstore, as well as logged into the journal. With "journal", the contents of the pstore are recorded only in the systemd journal. The default is "external". - Unlink : is a boolean. When "true", the default, then files in the pstore are removed once processed. When "false", processing of the pstore occurs normally, but the pstore files remain. References: [1] "Persistent storage for a kernel's dying breath", March 23, 2011. https://lwn.net/Articles/434821/ [2] "Advanced Configuration and Power Interface Specification", version 6.2, May 2017. https://www.uefi.org/sites/default/files/resources/ACPI_6_2.pdf [3] "Unified Extensible Firmware Interface Specification", version 2.8, March 2019. https://uefi.org/sites/default/files/resources/UEFI_Spec_2_8_final.pdf [4] "The kernel’s command-line parameters", https://static.lwn.net/kerneldoc/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.html
2019-05-16 13:59:01 +00:00
option('pstore', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the pstore archival tool')
option('oomd', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the userspace oom killer')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('logind', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the systemd-logind stack')
option('hostnamed', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the systemd-hostnamed stack')
option('localed', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the systemd-localed stack')
option('machined', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the systemd-machined stack')
option('portabled', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the systemd-portabled stack')
option('sysext', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the systemd-sysext stack')
option('mountfsd', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the systemd-mountfsd stack')
option('userdb', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the systemd-userdbd stack')
option('homed', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'install the systemd-homed stack')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('networkd', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the systemd-networkd stack')
option('default-network', type : 'boolean', value : false,
description : 'install default .network files')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('timedated', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the systemd-timedated daemon')
option('timesyncd', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the systemd-timesyncd daemon')
option('remote', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'support for "journal over the network"')
option('create-log-dirs', type : 'boolean',
description : 'create /var/log/journal{,/remote}')
option('nsresourced', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the systemd-nsresourced stack')
option('nss-myhostname', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install nss-myhostname module')
option('nss-mymachines', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'install nss-mymachines module')
option('nss-resolve', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'install nss-resolve module')
option('nss-systemd', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install nss-systemd module')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('firstboot', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for firstboot mechanism')
option('randomseed', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for restoring random seed')
option('backlight', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for restoring backlight state')
option('vconsole', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for vconsole configuration')
option('vmspawn', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'install the systemd-vmspawn tool')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('quotacheck', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for the quotacheck tools')
option('sysusers', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for the sysusers configuration')
storagetm: add new systemd-storagetm component This implements a "storage target mode", similar to what MacOS provides since a long time as "Target Disk Mode": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Target_Disk_Mode This implementation is relatively simple: 1. a new generic target "storage-target-mode.target" is added, which when booted into defines the target mode. 2. a small tool and service "systemd-storagetm.service" is added which exposes a specific device or all devices as NVMe-TCP devices over the network. NVMe-TCP appears to be hot shit right now how to expose block devices over the network. And it's really simple to set up via configs, hence our code is relatively short and neat. The idea is that systemd-storagetm.target can be extended sooner or later, for example to expose block devices also as USB mass storage devices and similar, in case the system has "dual mode" USB controller that can also work as device, not just as host. (And people could also plug in sharing as NBD, iSCSI, whatever they want.) How to use this? Boot into your system with a kernel cmdline of "rd.systemd.unit=storage-target-mode.target ip=link-local", and you'll see on screen the precise "nvme connect" command line to make the relevant block devices available locally on some other machine. This all requires that the target mode stuff is included in the initrd of course. And the system will the stay in the initrd forever. Why bother? Primarily three use-cases: 1. Debug a broken system: with very few dependencies during boot get access to the raw block device of a broken machine. 2. Migrate from system to another system, by dd'ing the old to the new directly. 3. Installing an OS remotely on some device (for example via Thunderbolt networking) (And there might be more, for example the ability to boot from a laptop's disk on another system) Limitations: 1. There's no authentication/encryption. Hence: use this on local links only. 2. NVMe target mode on Linux supports r/w operation only. Ideally, we'd have a read-only mode, for security reasons, and default to it. Future love: 1. We should have another mode, where we simply expose the homed LUKS home dirs like that. 2. Some lightweight hookup with plymouth, to display a (shortened) version of the info we write to the console. To test all this, just run: mkosi --kernel-command-line-extra="rd.systemd.unit=storage-target-mode.target" qemu
2023-10-27 12:25:49 +00:00
option('storagetm', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for Storage Target Mode')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('tmpfiles', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for tmpfiles.d')
option('importd', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'install the systemd-importd daemon')
option('hwdb', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for the hardware database')
option('rfkill', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for the rfkill tools')
option('xdg-autostart', type : 'boolean',
description : 'install the xdg-autostart-generator and unit')
option('man', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
value : 'disabled',
description : 'build and install man pages')
option('html', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
value : 'disabled',
description : 'build and install html pages')
meson: Add option to disable translations This speeds up the meson install step by half a second which, given the trivial changes required to add this option, makes it worth the effort to support this. Before: ``` ‣ Running build script... [1/418] Generating version.h with a custom command Installing /root/build/po/be.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/be/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/be@latin.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/be@latin/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/bg.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/bg/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/ca.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/ca/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/cs.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/cs/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/da.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/da/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/de.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/de/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/el.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/el/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/es.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/es/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/fr.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/fr/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/gl.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/gl/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/hr.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/hr/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/hu.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/hu/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/id.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/id/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/it.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/it/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/ja.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/ja/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/ko.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/ko/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/lt.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/lt/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/pl.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/pl/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/pt_BR.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/pt_BR/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/ro.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/ro/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/ru.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/ru/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/sk.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/sk/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/sr.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/sr/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/sv.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/sv/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/tr.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/tr/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/uk.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/uk/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/zh_CN.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/zh_CN/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/zh_TW.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/zh_TW/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo Installing /root/build/po/pa.gmo to /root/dest/usr/share/locale/pa/LC_MESSAGES/systemd.mo real 0m1.467s user 0m1.064s sys 0m0.392s ``` After (with translations disabled): ``` ‣ Running build script... [1/418] Generating version.h with a custom command real 0m0.925s user 0m0.622s sys 0m0.301s ```
2021-01-09 18:59:56 +00:00
option('translations', type : 'boolean', value : true,
description : 'build and install translations')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('certificate-root', type : 'string', value : '/etc/ssl',
description : 'the prefix for TLS certificates')
option('dbuspolicydir', type : 'string',
description : 'D-Bus policy directory')
option('dbussessionservicedir', type : 'string',
description : 'D-Bus session service directory')
option('dbussystemservicedir', type : 'string',
description : 'D-Bus system service directory')
2021-12-26 01:30:28 +00:00
option('dbus-interfaces-dir', type : 'string',
description : 'export D-Bus introspection XML as standalone files')
option('default-timeout-sec', type : 'integer', value : 90,
description : 'default timeout for system unit start/stop')
option('default-user-timeout-sec', type : 'integer', value : 90,
description : 'default timeout for user unit start/stop')
option('pkgconfigdatadir', type : 'string', value : '',
description : 'directory for arch-independent pkg-config files')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('pkgconfiglibdir', type : 'string', value : '',
description : 'directory for standard pkg-config files')
option('xinitrcdir', type : 'string', value : '',
description : 'directory for xinitrc files')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('rpmmacrosdir', type : 'string', value : 'lib/rpm/macros.d',
description : 'directory for rpm macros ["no" disables]')
option('update-helper-user-timeout-sec', type : 'integer', value : 15,
description : 'timeout for user manager package operations')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('pamlibdir', type : 'string',
description : 'directory for PAM modules')
option('pamconfdir', type : 'string',
description : 'directory for PAM configuration ["no" disables]')
option('sshconfdir', type : 'string',
description : 'directory for SSH client configuration ["no" disables]')
option('sshdconfdir', type : 'string',
description : 'directory for SSH server configuration ["no" disables]')
option('sshdprivsepdir', type : 'string',
description : 'directory for SSH privilege separation ["no" disables]', value : '/run/sshd')
option('libcryptsetup-plugins-dir', type : 'string',
description : 'directory for libcryptsetup plugins')
option('docdir', type : 'string',
description : 'documentation directory')
option('install-sysconfdir', type : 'combo', choices : ['true', 'no-samples', 'false'], value : 'true',
meson: add build option for install path of main config files This allows distros to install configuration file templates in /usr/lib/systemd for example. Currently we install "empty" config files in /etc/systemd/. They serve two purposes: - The file contains commented-out values that show the default settings. - It is easier to edit the right file if it is already there, the user doesn't have to type in the path correctly, and the basic file structure is already in place so it's easier to edit. Things that have happened since this approach was put in place: - We started supporting drop-ins for config files, and drop-ins are the recommended way to create local configuration overrides. - We have systemd-analyze cat-config which takes care of iterating over all possible locations (/etc, /run, /usr, /usr/local) and figuring out the right file. - Because of the first two points, systemd-analyze cat-config is much better, because it takes care of finding all the drop-ins and figuring out the precedence. Looking at files manually is still possible of course, but not very convenient. The disadvantages of the current approach with "empty" files in /etc: - We clutter up /etc so it's harder to see what the local configuration actually is. - If a user edits the file, package updates will not override the file (e.g. systemd.rpm uses %config(noreplace). This means that the "documented defaults" will become stale over time, if the user ever edits the main config file. Thus, I think that it's reasonable to: - Install the main config file to /usr/lib so that it serves as reference for syntax and option names and default values and is properly updated on package upgrades. - Recommend to users to always use drop-ins for configuration and systemd-analyze cat-config to view the documentation. This setting makes this change opt-in. Fixes #18420. [zjs: add more text to the description]
2023-08-21 10:37:00 +00:00
description : 'install configuration files and directories')
option('configfiledir', type : 'string', value : '',
description : 'directory for configuration files')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('fallback-hostname', type : 'string', value : 'localhost',
description : 'the hostname used if none configured')
option('default-hierarchy', type : 'combo',
choices : ['legacy', 'hybrid', 'unified'], deprecated : true,
description : '''This option is deprecated and will be removed in a future release''')
2021-09-28 08:12:36 +00:00
option('extra-net-naming-schemes', type : 'string',
description : 'comma-separated list of extra net.naming_scheme= definitions')
option('default-net-naming-scheme', type : 'string', value : 'latest',
description : 'default net.naming_scheme= value')
option('status-unit-format-default', type : 'combo',
choices : ['auto', 'description', 'name', 'combined'],
description : 'use unit name or description in messages by default')
option('time-epoch', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'time epoch for time clients')
option('clock-valid-range-usec-max', type : 'integer', value : 473364000000000, # 15 years
description : 'maximum value in microseconds for the difference between RTC and epoch, exceeding which is considered an RTC error ["0" disables]')
option('default-user-shell', type : 'string', value : '/bin/bash',
description : 'default interactive shell')
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
option('system-alloc-uid-min', type : 'integer', value : 0,
description : 'minimum system UID used when allocating')
option('system-alloc-gid-min', type : 'integer', value : 0,
description : 'minimum system GID used when allocating')
option('system-uid-max', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'maximum system UID')
option('system-gid-max', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'maximum system GID')
option('dynamic-uid-min', type : 'integer', value : 0x0000EF00,
description : 'minimum dynamic UID')
option('dynamic-uid-max', type : 'integer', value : 0x0000FFEF,
description : 'maximum dynamic UID')
option('container-uid-base-min', type : 'integer', value : 0x00080000,
description : 'minimum container UID base')
option('container-uid-base-max', type : 'integer', value : 0x6FFF0000,
description : 'maximum container UID base')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('adm-group', type : 'boolean',
description : 'the ACL for adm group should be added')
option('wheel-group', type : 'boolean',
description : 'the ACL for wheel group should be added')
option('nobody-user', type : 'string',
description : 'The name of the nobody user (the one with UID 65534)',
value : 'nobody')
option('nobody-group', type : 'string',
description : 'The name of the nobody group (the one with GID 65534)',
value : 'nobody')
option('adm-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "adm" group')
option('audio-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "audio" group')
option('cdrom-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "cdrom" group')
option('dialout-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "dialout" group')
option('disk-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "disk" group')
option('input-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "input" group')
option('kmem-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "kmem" group')
option('kvm-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "kvm" group')
option('lp-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "lp" group')
option('render-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "render" group')
option('sgx-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "sgx" group')
option('tape-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "tape" group')
option('tty-gid', type : 'integer', value : 5,
description : 'the numeric GID of the "tty" group')
option('users-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "users" group')
option('utmp-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "utmp" group')
option('video-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "video" group')
option('wheel-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the "wheel" group')
option('systemd-journal-gid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the systemd-journal group')
option('systemd-network-uid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the systemd-network user')
option('systemd-resolve-uid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the systemd-resolve user')
option('systemd-timesync-uid', type : 'integer', value : 0,
meson: allow "soft-static" allocations for uids and gids in the initrd The general idea with users and groups created through sysusers is that an appropriate number is picked when the allocation is made. The number that is selected will be different on each system based on the order of creation of users, installed packages, etc. Since system users and groups are not shared between installations, this generally is not an issue. But it becomes a problem for initrd: some file systems are shared between the initrd and the host (/run and /dev are probably the only ones that matter). If the allocations are different in the host and the initrd, and files survive switch-root, they will have wrong ownership. This makes the gids build-time-configurable for all groups and users where state may survive the switch from initrd to the host. In particular, all "hardware access" groups are like this: files in /dev will be owned by them. Eventually the new udev would change ownership, but there would be a momemnt where the files were owned by the wrong group. The allocations are "soft-static" in the language of Fedora packaging guidelines: the uid/gid will be used if possible, but we'll fall back to a different one. TTY_GID is the exception, because the number is used directly. Similarly, the possibility to configure "soft-static" uids is added for daemons which may usefully run in the initramfs: systemd-network (lease information and interface state is serialized to /run), systemd-resolve (stub files and interface state), systemd-timesync (/run/systemd/timesync). Journal files are owned by the group systemd-journal, and acls are granted for wheel and adm. systemd-oom and systemd-coredump are excluded from this patch: I assume that oomd is not useful in the initrd, and coredump leaves no state (it only creates a pipe in /run?). The defaults are not changed: if nothing is configured, dynamic allocation will be used. I looked at a Debian system, and the numbers are all different than on Fedora. For Fedora, see the list of uids and gids at https://pagure.io/setup/blob/master/f/uidgid. In particular, systemd-network and systemd-resolve got soft-static numbers to make it easy to transition from a non-host-specific initrd to a host system already a few years back (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1102002). I also requested static allocations for sgx, input, render in https://pagure.io/packaging-committee/issue/1078, https://pagure.io/setup/pull-request/27.
2021-05-23 20:00:22 +00:00
description : 'soft-static allocation for the systemd-timesync user')
option('dev-kvm-mode', type : 'string', value : '0666',
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : '/dev/kvm access mode')
option('group-render-mode', type : 'string', value : '0666',
description : 'Access mode for devices owned by render group (e.g. /dev/dri/renderD*, /dev/kfd).')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('default-kill-user-processes', type : 'boolean',
description : 'the default value for KillUserProcesses= setting')
option('gshadow', type : 'boolean',
description : 'support for shadow group')
option('default-locale', type : 'string', value : 'C.UTF-8',
description : 'default locale used when /etc/locale.conf does not exist')
option('nspawn-locale', type : 'string', value : 'C.UTF-8',
description : 'default locale used by systemd-nspawn when executing commands in a container')
option('default-keymap', type : 'string', value : 'us',
description : 'default keymap used when populating /etc/vconsole.conf')
option('localegen-path', type : 'string', value : '',
description : 'absolute path to the locale-gen binary in case the system is using locale-gen')
option('service-watchdog', type : 'string', value : '3min',
description : 'default watchdog setting for systemd services')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('default-dnssec', type : 'combo',
description : 'default DNSSEC mode',
choices : ['yes', 'allow-downgrade', 'no'],
value : 'allow-downgrade')
option('default-dns-over-tls', type : 'combo',
description : 'default DNS-over-TLS mode',
choices : ['yes', 'opportunistic', 'no'],
value : 'no')
option('default-mdns', type : 'combo',
choices : ['yes', 'resolve', 'no'],
description : 'default MulticastDNS mode',
value : 'yes')
option('default-llmnr', type : 'combo',
choices : ['yes', 'resolve', 'no'],
description : 'default LLMNR mode',
value : 'yes')
option('dns-over-tls', type : 'combo', choices : ['auto', 'gnutls', 'openssl', 'true', 'false'],
description : 'DNS-over-TLS support')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('dns-servers', type : 'string',
description : 'space-separated list of default DNS servers',
value : '1.1.1.1#cloudflare-dns.com 8.8.8.8#dns.google 1.0.0.1#cloudflare-dns.com 8.8.4.4#dns.google 2606:4700:4700::1111#cloudflare-dns.com 2001:4860:4860::8888#dns.google 2606:4700:4700::1001#cloudflare-dns.com 2001:4860:4860::8844#dns.google')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('ntp-servers', type : 'string',
description : 'space-separated list of default NTP servers',
value : 'time1.google.com time2.google.com time3.google.com time4.google.com')
option('support-url', type : 'string',
description : 'the support URL to show in catalog entries included in systemd',
value : 'https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel')
option('www-target', type : 'string',
description : 'the address and dir to upload docs too',
value : 'www.freedesktop.org:/srv/www.freedesktop.org/www/software/systemd')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('seccomp', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'SECCOMP support')
option('selinux', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'SELinux support')
option('apparmor', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'AppArmor support')
option('smack', type : 'boolean',
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'SMACK support')
option('smack-run-label', type : 'string',
description : 'run systemd --system itself with a specific SMACK label')
option('smack-default-process-label', type : 'string',
description : 'default SMACK label for executed processes')
option('polkit', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'polkit support')
2017-04-13 23:45:05 +00:00
option('ima', type : 'boolean',
description : 'IMA support')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('acl', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'libacl support')
option('audit', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'libaudit support')
option('blkid', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'libblkid support')
option('fdisk', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'libfdisk support')
option('kmod', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'support for loadable modules')
option('xenctrl', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'support for Xen kexec')
option('pam', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'PAM support')
option('passwdqc', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'libpasswdqc support')
option('pwquality', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'libpwquality support')
option('microhttpd', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'libµhttpd support')
option('libcryptsetup', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'libcryptsetup support')
option('libcryptsetup-plugins', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'libcryptsetup LUKS2 external token handlers support (plugins)')
option('libcurl', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'libcurl support')
2017-06-16 13:16:28 +00:00
option('idn', type : 'boolean',
description : 'use IDN when printing hostnames')
option('libidn2', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'libidn2 support')
option('libidn', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'libidn support')
option('libiptc', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'libiptc support')
option('qrencode', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'libqrencode support')
option('gcrypt', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'gcrypt support')
option('gnutls', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'gnutls support')
option('openssl', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'openssl support')
option('cryptolib', type : 'combo', choices : ['auto', 'openssl', 'gcrypt'],
description : 'whether to use openssl or gcrypt where both are supported')
option('p11kit', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
2019-11-05 10:49:27 +00:00
description : 'p11kit support')
option('libfido2', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'FIDO2 support')
option('tpm2', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'TPM2 support')
option('elfutils', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'elfutils support')
option('zlib', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'zlib compression support')
option('bzip2', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'bzip2 compression support')
option('xz', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'xz compression support')
option('lz4', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
description : 'lz4 compression support')
option('zstd', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'zstd compression support')
option('default-compression', type : 'combo', choices : ['auto', 'zstd', 'lz4', 'xz'], value: 'auto',
description : 'default compression algorithm')
option('xkbcommon', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
2017-04-13 23:37:14 +00:00
description : 'xkbcommon keymap support')
option('pcre2', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
2018-01-12 04:47:17 +00:00
description : 'regexp matching support using pcre2')
option('glib', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'libglib support (for tests only)')
option('dbus', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'libdbus support (for tests only)')
option('libarchive', type : 'feature',
description : 'libarchive support')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('bootloader', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'sd-boot/stub and userspace tools')
option('sbat-distro', type : 'string', value : 'auto',
description : 'SBAT distribution ID, e.g. fedora, or auto for autodetection')
option('sbat-distro-generation', type : 'integer', value : 1,
description : 'SBAT distribution generation')
option('sbat-distro-summary', type : 'string',
description : 'SBAT distribution summary, e.g. Fedora')
option('sbat-distro-pkgname', type : 'string',
description : 'SBAT distribution package name, e.g. systemd')
option('sbat-distro-version', type : 'string',
description : 'SBAT distribution package version, e.g. 248-7.fc34')
option('sbat-distro-url', type : 'string',
description : 'SBAT distribution URL, e.g. https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/systemd')
option('efi-color-normal', type : 'string', value : 'lightgray,black',
description : 'general boot loader color in "foreground,background" form, see constants from eficon.h')
option('efi-color-entry', type : 'string', value : 'lightgray,black',
description : 'boot loader color for entries')
option('efi-color-highlight', type : 'string', value : 'black,lightgray',
description : 'boot loader color for selected entries')
option('efi-color-edit', type : 'string', value : 'black,lightgray',
description : 'boot loader color for option line edit')
meson: build systemd using meson It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010! ... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out 345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is cool and shiny, let's use it. This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique. - rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated. - rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and repetitive, but there's lots of them. - it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full" compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled. - busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose. Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the autoconf install, except for .la files. It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options. I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary deps. meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason. The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet. v2: - use get_pkgconfig_variable - use sh not bash - use add_project_arguments v3: - drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo v4: - use find_library('bz2') - add TTY_GID definition - define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__ - use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute v5: - replace all declare_dependency's with [] - add more conf.get guards around optional components v6: - drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson - use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the hand-rolled checks. - fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name - use the right .sym file for pam_systemd - rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic. v7: - use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D - rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir ("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake) - wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1 - use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under split-usr==true. v8: - use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;) - add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it v9: - indentation v10: - fix check for qrencode and libaudit v11: - unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident. In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs. In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin), but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path. C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576. - call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity. - sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
2017-04-05 03:03:47 +00:00
option('bashcompletiondir', type : 'string',
description : 'directory for bash completion scripts ["no" disables]')
option('zshcompletiondir', type : 'string',
description : 'directory for zsh completion scripts ["no" disables]')
option('tests', type : 'combo', choices : ['true', 'unsafe', 'false'],
description : 'enable extra tests with =unsafe')
option('slow-tests', type : 'boolean', value : false,
description : 'run the slow tests by default')
option('fuzz-tests', type : 'boolean', value : false,
description : 'run the fuzzer regression tests by default (with sanitizers)')
option('install-tests', type : 'boolean', value : false,
description : 'install test executables')
option('log-message-verification', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'do fake printf() calls to verify format strings')
option('integration-tests', type : 'boolean', value : false,
description : 'run the integration tests')
option('ok-color', type : 'combo',
choices : ['black', 'red', 'green', 'yellow', 'blue', 'magenta', 'cyan',
2018-03-02 08:09:29 +00:00
'white', 'highlight-black', 'highlight-red', 'highlight-green',
'highlight-yellow', 'highlight-blue', 'highlight-magenta',
'highlight-cyan', 'highlight-white'],
value : 'green',
description: 'color of the "OK" status message')
option('urlify', type : 'boolean', value : true,
description : 'enable pager Hyperlink ANSI sequence support')
option('fexecve', type : 'boolean', value : false,
description : 'use fexecve() to spawn children')
option('oss-fuzz', type : 'boolean', value : false,
description : 'build against oss-fuzz')
option('llvm-fuzz', type : 'boolean', value : false,
description : 'build against LLVM libFuzzer')
option('kernel-install', type: 'boolean', value: true,
description : 'install kernel-install and associated files')
option('ukify', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'install ukify')
option('analyze', type: 'boolean', value: true,
description : 'install systemd-analyze')
option('bpf-compiler', type : 'combo', choices : ['clang', 'gcc'],
description : 'compiler used to build BPF programs')
option('bpf-framework', type : 'feature', deprecated : { 'true' : 'enabled', 'false' : 'disabled' },
description : 'build BPF programs from source code in restricted C')
option('vmlinux-h', type : 'combo', choices : ['auto', 'provided', 'generated', 'disabled'],
description : 'which vmlinux.h to use')
option('vmlinux-h-path', type : 'string', value : '',
description : 'path to vmlinux.h to use')
option('default-mountfsd-trusted-directories', type : 'boolean', value: false,
description : 'controls whether mountfsd should apply a relaxed policy on DDIs in system DDI directories')