/etc/systemd/sleep.conf gains four new switches:
AllowSuspend=, AllowHibernation=, AllowSuspendThenHibernate=, AllowHybridSleep=.
Disabling specific modes was already possible by masking suspend.target,
hibernate.target, suspend-then-hibernate.target, or hybrid-sleep.target.
But this is not convenient for distributions, which want to set some defaults
based on what they want to support. Having those available as configuration
makes it easy to put a config file in /usr/lib/systemd/sleep.conf.d/ that
overrides the defaults and gives instructions how to undo that override.
Comes with tests.
Also add direct test for $SYSTEMD_PROC_CMDLINE.
In test-proc-cmdline, "true" was masquerading as PROC_CMDLINE_STRIP_RD_PREFIX,
fix that. Also, reorder functions to match call order.
With this change almost all log messages that are suppressed through
--quiet are not actually suppressed anymore, but simply downgraded to
LOG_DEBUG. Previously we did it this way for some log messages and fully
suppressed them for others. With this it's pretty much systematic.
Inspired by #10122.
If for any reason local-fs.target fails at startup while a password is
requested by systemd-cryptsetup@.service, we end up with the emergency shell
competing with systemd-ask-password-console.service for the console.
This patch makes sure that:
- systemd-ask-password-console.service is stopped before entering in emergency
mode so it won't make any access to the console while the emergency shell is
running.
- systemd-ask-password-console.path is also stopped so any attempts to restart
systemd-cryptsetup in the emergency shell won't restart
systemd-ask-password-console.service and kill the emergency shell.
- systemd-ask-password-wall.path is stopped so
systemd-ask-password-wall.service won't be started as this service pulls
the default dependencies in.
Fixes: #10131
Allows configuring the watchdog signal (with a default of SIGABRT).
This allows an alternative to SIGABRT when coredumps are not desirable.
Appropriate references to SIGABRT or aborting were renamed to reflect
more liberal watchdog signals.
Closes#8658
Start with route set to NULL should there be no route created. Remove
the explicit route_free as the _cleanup_ will take care of that after
the continue;.
This is an implementation that covers making errors encountered when writing
file content optionally fatal. If this is something that folks would want I'll
add handling of this for all the other directives. I'd appreciate suggestions
on how this might better be structured as well (use of a goto fail or such) as
I'm not super happy with the approach.
Let's change utf16_to_utf8() prototype to refer to utf16 chars with char16_t rather than void
Let's not cast away a "const" needlessly.
Let's add a few comments.
Let's fix the calculations of the buffer size to allocate, and how long
to run the loop in case of uneven byte numbers
Let's fix an indentation issue.
Let's avoid yoda comparisons.
Let's drop unnecessary ().
Let's make sure we convert 16bit values to 32bit before shifting them by
10bit to the left, to avoid overflows.
Let's avoid comparisons between signed literals and unsigned variables,
in particular if the literals are outside of the minimum range C
requires for "int".
Let's avoid a few casts in the function. Also, let's drop the "const"
when returning the string, for similar reasons as strchr() and friends
drop it: so that we don't add a const if the user passes in a non-const
string.
Yes, there are still a lot of users of bzip2, but it's fallen out of
favour after LZMA/xz, which can compress a lot more and often
decompresses faster than bzip2 too.
We use strtoul() which returns an "unsigned long", but then assign this
to int or unsigned in, i.e. drop 32bit silently on 64bit systems. Let's
clean this up a bit, and retain the right types.