Links like http://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.socket.html
are changed to http://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.socket.html#Accept=.
This implementation is quick & dirty, and misses various corner
cases. A fairly important one is that when a few directives share the
same anchor (which happens when multiple directives are described in
the same paragraph), generated links for everything except the first
one link to an invalid anchor. Another shortcoming is that the
formatting does not use the proper generateID machinery, so the anchor
name could be wrong in some cases. But it seems to work for a large
percentage of links, so seems to be an improvement in usability. When
the anchor is missing, we land at the top of the page, which is the
same as before. If the anchor were to point to different spot, this
would be more confusing... Not sure if that ever happens. Anyway, the
user should be able to recover from landing on the wrong place in the
page.
(Mostly) fixes https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/1956.
This completes the set of man pages for sd-event and contains some minor
other fixes for other man pages too.
The sd_event_set_name(3) man page is renamed to
sd_event_source_set_description(3), which is the correct name of the
concept today.
We already have a state RUNNING and EXITING when we dispatch regular and
exit callbacks. Let's introduce a new state called PREPARING that is
active while we invoke preparation callbacks. This way we have a state
each for all three kinds of event handlers.
The states are currently not documented, hence let's add a new state to
the end, before we start documenting this.
Let's make _ref() calls happy when NULL is passed to them, and simply
return NULL without any assertion logic. This makes them nicely
symmetric to the _unref() calls which also are happy to take NULL and
become NOPs then.
Commit 933f9caee changed the returned result of siphash24_finalize() from
little-endian to native. Follow suit in test-siphash24 and drop the endianess
conversion there as well, so that this succeeds on big-endian machines again.
Fixes#1946.
See https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4861#section-4.2. Some routers (dnsmasq) will send packets
from global addresses, which would break the default route setup, so ignore those.
This is also what the kernel does.
Previously, we'd always generate a packet on the wire, even for names
that are within our local zone. Shortcut this, and always check the
local zone first. This should minimize generated traffic and improve
security.
Instead of taking a DnsQuestion object (i.e. an array of keys) only take
a single key. This simplifies things a bit, and as DNS/LLMNR require a
single question per query message was unnecessary anyway.
This mimics a similar change that was done a while ago for the dns cache
logic.