That file contains a bunch of entries of which only some are related to SysV.
The rest are just "traditional APIs" that need to stay. In particular,
/var/lock a.k.a. /run/lock is used by many programs (LVM, iscsi, alsactl).
Similarly, the README about /var/log is something that should stay as long as
we have people migrating from older systems or using the copiuos documentation
that mentions /var/log/messages.txt on the Internet.
/var/lock/subsys is only used by sysvinit, and our code to support /forcefsck,
/fastboot, and /forcequotacheck is conditionalized on HAVE_SYSV_COMPAT, so
conditionalize those here on HAVE_SYSV_COMPAT too.
(This excludes any dirs that contain resources placed there by the user)
(I also didn't bother marking resources belonging to components that are
really not optional for us)
Let's move copying out the PCR signature/key into its own tmpfiles
snippet.
And then let's add support for copying out the profile + os-release
information systemd-stub now places in the invoked initrd.
That way these four pieces of information are available even after the
initrd→host transition.
On distros like SUSE where ssh config dropins in /usr are supported, there's no
need for a symlink in /etc/ssh/ssh_config.d/ that points to the dropin
installed somewhere in /usr (that is not reachable by ssh).
To make it easy to have a workable ssh-generator on various distros,
let's optionally generate the ssh privsep dir via tmpfiles.d/ drop-in.
This enables the concept with a path of /run/sshd/ as default. This is
the path Debian/Ubuntu uses, and means that we just work on those
distros. Debian/Ubuntu is the only distro (apparently?) that puts the
privsep dir under /run/, hence always needs the dir to be created
manually. Other distros don't need it that much, because they place the
dir in /usr/ (fedora, best choice!) or /var/ (others, not ideal, because
still mutable).
Also adds a longer explanation about this in NEWS, in the hope that
distro maintaines read that and maybe start cleaning this up.
Alternative to: #31543
Then, this introduces systemd-networkd-persistent-storage.service.
systemd-networkd.service is an early starting service. So, at the time
it is started, the persistent storage for the service may not be ready,
and we cannot use StateDirectory=systemd/network in
systemd-networkd.service.
The newly added systemd-networkd-persistent-storage.service creates the
state directory for networkd, and notify systemd-networkd that the
directory is usable.
20-systemd-ssh-generator.conf expands SSHCONFDIR, which is bogus when we
build with -Dsshconfdir=no. Similarly, avoid expanding SSHDCONFDIR in
20-systemd-userdb.conf when building with -Dsshconfdir=no.
Follow-up 6c7fc5d5f2.
This adds a tiny binary that is hooked into SSH client config via
ProxyCommand and which simply connects to an AF_UNIX or AF_VSOCK socket
of choice.
The syntax is as simple as this:
ssh unix/some/path # (this connects to AF_UNIX socket /some/path)
or:
ssh vsock/4711
I used "/" as separator of the protocol ID and the value since ":" is
already taken by SSH itself when doing sftp. And "@" is already taken
for separating the user name.
sshd now supports config file drop-ins, hence let's install one to hook
up "userdb ssh-authorized-keys", so that things just work.
We put the drop-in relatively early, so that other drop-ins generally
will override this.
Ideally sshd would support such drop-ins in /usr/ rather than /etc/, but
let's take what we can get. It's not that sshd's upstream was
particularly open to weird ideas from Linux people.
We have two mechanisms that remove old coredumps: systemd-coredump has
parameters based on disk use / remaining disk free, and systemd-tmpfiles does
cleanup based on time. The first mechanism should prevent us from using too much
disk space in case something is crashing continuously or there are very large
core files.
The limit of 3 days makes it likely that the core file will be gone by the time
the admin looks at the issue. E.g. if something crashes on Friday, the coredump
would likely be gone before people are back on Monday to look at it.
This reverts commit 33b91308c2.
The commit b42482af90 dropped
'--exclude-prefix=/dev' from systemd-tmpfiles-setup.service. So, the
possibly later invocation of the service changes the permission set by
udevd.
As commmented in the head of this file, settings should be consistent
with udev rules. Only missing entry here is vfio. Let's re-add the
entry for the device.
Addresses https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/28681#issuecomment-1666949888.
This setting allows services to run in an ephemeral copy of the root
directory or root image. To make sure the ephemeral copies are always
cleaned up, we add a tmpfiles snippet to unconditionally clean up
/var/lib/systemd/ephemeral. To prevent in use ephemeral copies from
being cleaned up by tmpfiles, we use the newly added COPY_LOCK_BSD
and BTRFS_SNAPSHOT_LOCK_BSD flags to take a BSD lock on the ephemeral
copies which instruct tmpfiles to not touch those ephemeral copies as
long as the BSD lock is held.
In b6033b7060 support was added to create
{/etc|/run}/credstore{|.encrypted} via tmpfiles.d with perms 0000. These
perms are so restrictive that not even root can access them unless it
has CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE capability. This is creates the dirs at boot time
In 24039e1207 support was added to create
/etc/credstore with perm 0700 from meson.build at build time.
This patch makes unifies the two parts:
1. creates both /etc/credstore *and* /etc/credstore.encrypted in both
places (the build system still won't create them in /run/, since
that's pointless since not shipped, and the runtime won't create the
dirs below /usr/lib/, since that's not generically writable anyway).
2. Both at runtime and at build time we'll create the dirs with mode
0700. This is easier for packaging tools to handle since they
generally react pretty negatively on dirs they can't enumerate.
I'm not sure what "suffix" was meant by this comment, but the file has the usual suffix.
The file was added with the current name back in c4708f1323.
Maybe an earlier version of the patch did something different.
Allow defining the default keymap to be used by
vconsole-setup through a build option. A template
vconsole.conf also gets populated by tmpfiles if
it doesn't exist.
This adds a tmpfiles.d/ snippet for LoadCredential= style credentials
directories in /etc/ and /run/.
This is done primarily to ensure that the access modes for the dirs are
set up properly, in the most restrictive ways. Specifically these are
set to 0000, so that CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE is necessary to enumerate and read
the credentials, and being UID=0 is not sufficient to do so.
This creates /etc/credstore/, but leaves /run/credstore/ absent if
missing, for now. Thinking is: the latter being non-persistent is
created by software usually, not manually by users, and hence more
likely right. But dunno, we might want to revisit this sooner or later.
This is ultimately an exercise to advertise the LoadCredential= concept
a bit, and do so in a reasonably secure way, underlining the safety of
the concept.
On a read-only filesystem creating /root/.ssh might fail, but that's ok.
Do not fail the run, as this is only needed to add the credential, which
is a separate step.
(s) is just ugly with a vibe of DOS. In most cases just using the normal plural
form is more natural and gramatically correct.
There are some log_debug() statements left, and texts in foreign licenses or
headers. Those are not touched on purpose.
With this, I can now easily do:
systemd-nspawn --load-credential=ssh.authorized_keys.root:/home/lennart/.ssh/authorized_keys --image=… --boot
To boot into an image with my SSH key copied in. Yay!
Now that sd-stub will place the PCR signature and its public key in
the initrd's /.extra/ directory, let's copy it from there into /run/
from userspace. This is done because /.extra/ is on the initrd's tmpfs
which will be emptied during the initrd → host transition. Since we want
these two files to survive we'll copy them – if they exist – into /run/
where they will survive the transition.
Thus, with this last change the files will have safely propagated from
their PE sections into files in /run/ where userspace can find them
The paths in /run/ happen to be the exact ones that
systemd-cryptenroll/systemd-cryptsetup/systemd-creds look for them.
Many distributions ship systemd-networkd as a separate file so we
need to be able to ship the tmpfiles networkd entries as part of
that separate networkd package. Let's split the networkd entries
into a separate file to make that possible.
GIT_VERSION is not available as a config.h variable, because it's rendered
into version.h during builds. Let's rework jinja2 rendering to also
parse version.h. No functional change, the new variable is so far unused.
I guess this will make partial rebuilds a bit slower, but it's useful
to be able to use the full version string.
This adds /etc/locale.conf to the set of configuration files
populated by tmpfiles.d factory /etc handling.
In particular, the build-time locale configuration in systemd is
now wired to a /usr factory file, and installed to the system.
On boot, if other locale customization tools did not write
/etc/locale.conf on the system, the factory default file gets
copied to /etc by systemd-tmpfiles.
This is done in order to avoid skews between different system
components when no locale settings are configured. At that point,
systemd can safely act as the fallback owner of /etc/locale.conf.
This mirrors what was done in 564761fcae
for sysusers.d. If we allow separating resolved sysusers config
in a subpackage, we should do the same for the symlink that is
only useful when resolved is installed.
Related to #21317.
When using "capture : true" in custom_target()s the mode of the source
file is not preserved when the generated file is not installed and so
needs to be tweaked manually. Switch from output capture to creating the
target file and copy the permissions from the input file.
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
See libxtrans commit 0794b1b712a90b40e2b019c9edc6f96874493c52. The code
to generate this socket was removed 5 years ago and even before it was
conditional on #define TEST_t. There is no reference to that #define in
either the X server nor libX11's git history, or in any of the current
libX*.
Let's assume this is well and truly obsolete.
Ubuntu Bionic 18.04 has 0.45, so it was below the previously required
minimum version already. Focal 20.04 has 0.53.2. Let's require that
and use various features that are available.
This moves the /var/log/README content out of /var and into the
docs location, replacing the previous file with a symlink
created through a tmpfiles.d entry.
Recent meson versions include the directory name in the target name,
so there is no conflict for files with the same name in different
directories. But at least with meson-0.49.2 in buster we have conflict
with sysusers.d/systemd.conf.
HAVE_SMACK_RUN_LABEL was dropped back in 348b44372f,
so one line in etc.conf was not rendered as expected ;(
Checking if names are defined is paying for itself!
/dev/vhost-net is a host accelerator for virtio net devices. It has been
long available and used, thus should be safe to all KVM users.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>