The assumption that the initial job is the job with id==1 is incorrect.
Some jobs may be enqueued before the job that starts the default unit as
in this example:
-.mount changed dead -> mounted
Trying to enqueue job quotacheck.service/start/fail
Installed new job quotacheck.service/start as 1
Installed new job systemd-stdout-syslog-bridge.socket/start as 2
Enqueued job quotacheck.service/start as 1
Trying to enqueue job quotaon.service/start/fail
Installed new job quotaon.service/start as 5
Enqueued job quotaon.service/start as 5
Activating default unit: default.target
Trying to enqueue job graphical.target/start/replace
This fixes a bug where displaying of boot status messages was turned off
too early.
Immediately after forking off a process change the comm name and argv[0]
to "(foobar)" where "foobar" is the basename of the path we are about to
execute.
This should be useful when charting boot progress.
This patch adds WatchdogTimestamp[Monotonic] to the systemd service
D-Bus API. The timestamp is updated to the current time when the
service calls 'sd_nofity("WATCHDOG=1\n")'.
Using a timestamp instead of an 'alive' flag has two advantages:
1. No timeout is needed to define when a service is no longer alive.
This simplifies both configuration (no timeout value) and
implementation (no timeout event).
2. It is more robust. A 'dead' service might not be detected should
systemd 'forget' to reset an 'alive' flag. It is much less likely
to get a valid new timestamp if a service died.
Apparently the perfomance price for compression is to steep to apply it
for all objects >= 64 and < 512 in size, as measured by Arjan Van De
Ven, hence increase the threshold to 512 which yields better results.
We need to tell the X server to grab the keyboards
and mice associated with a hotplugged seat, so that
it doesn't have the ability to control the kernel
vt consoles.
When systemd starts, plymouth may be already displaying progress
graphically. Do not switch the console to text mode at that time.
All other users of reset_terminal_fd() do the switch as before.
This avoids a graphical glitch with plymouth, especially visible with
vesafb, but could be also seen as a sub-second blink with radeon.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=785548
Tom Gundersen noticed a regression where comment=systemd.automount in
fstab no longer prevented the adding of the After=foo.mount dependency
into local-fs.target. He bisected it to commit 9ddc4a26.
It turns out that clearing the default_dependencies flag is necessary
after all, in order to avoid complementing of Wants= with After= in the
target unit. We still want to add the dependencies on quota units and
umount.target though.
In preparation for https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=655380 we
decided it's better to include the multi-seat X wrapper in systemd,
rather than gdm. (Side effect: this makes this accessible for other
DMs)
This is a stop-gap for now, until X gins proper multi-seat graphics
support at which point this code will go away without replacement.
Hi,
during the builds for Fedora/s390x I've found that systemd v38 fails to
build on big-endian platforms.
...
make[2]: Entering directory `/root/systemd'
CC src/journal/libsystemd_journal_la-sd-journal.lo
src/journal/sd-journal.c: In function 'init_location':
src/journal/sd-journal.c:69:22: error: incompatible types when
initializing type 'long unsigned int' using type 'sd_id128_t'
src/journal/sd-journal.c:69:20: error: incompatible types when assigning
to type 'sd_id128_t' from type 'long unsigned int'
make[2]: *** [src/journal/libsystemd_journal_la-sd-journal.lo] Error 1
I see the problem in using le64toh() on the 16 bytes boot_id structure
in init_location()
Please see
http://s390.koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/taskinfo?taskID=544375 for a
full build log and attachment for a proposed fix.
With regards
Dan
Albert Strasheim reported a socket unit with Accept=yes was failing
sometimes.
getpeername() returns ENOTCONN if the connection was killed by TCP RST.
The socket unit must not fail when it happens.
Reproducer available at:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=783344
Since the addition of ControlGroupPersistent, systemd is trivially
killed by "systemctl status any.service".
bus_property_append_bool must not be used for a tri-state int.
Also, should it really "b", or do we want the tri-state nature to be seen?
For now just comment out the buggy DBus property.