--empower gives full privileges to a non-root user. Currently this
includes all capabilities but we leave the option open to add more
privileges via this option in the future.
Why is this useful? When running privileged development or debugging
commands from your home directory (think bpftrace, strace and such),
you want any files written by these tools to be owned by your current
user, and not by the root user. run0 --empower will allow you to run
all privileged operations (assuming the tools check for capabilities
and not UIDs), while any files written by the tools will still be owned
by the current user.
The DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS and DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS parameters have
an interesting syntax thats useful to complete. Let's include a
completion definition for these parameters.
--no-hostname is one of the switches I use very often. In particular,
when looking at CI logs, the hostname is almost never interesting.
-H is not yet used in journalctl, because journal operates locally, but
will want it if display of remote journals is implemented. Use -W.
Both kernel-core and kernel-uki-virt call kernel-install upon removal. Need an additional argument to avoid complete removal for both traditional kernel and UKI.
Signed-off-by: Li Tian <litian@redhat.com>
The zsh completions only complete one type argument, even though multiple
args are allowed. But the same issue occurs with other completions, e.g.
for options. I don't know how to solve this.
Prefixes would be nice, but they appear to be very buggy.
A few examples:
- `udevadm test-builtin net_setup_link /sys<TAB><TAB>`: `/sysblock/`
- `udevadm test-builtin net_setup_link /sys/<TAB><TAB>`: `/sys/bin/`
- `journalctl /dev<TAB>`: `/dev//dev/`
[1] says:
> Since 0.60.0 the name argument is optional and defaults to the basename of
> the first output
We specify >= 0.62 as the supported version, so drop the duplicate name in all cases
where it is the same as outputs[0], i.e. almost all cases.
[1] https://mesonbuild.com/Reference-manual_functions.html#custom_target
This is useful when the previous invocation is unexpectedly killed.
Otherwise, if systemd-nspawn is killed forcibly, then unix-export
directory is not cleared and unmounted, and the subsequent invocation
will fail. E.g.
===
[ 18.895515] TEST-13-NSPAWN.sh[645]: + machinectl start long-running
[ 18.945703] systemd-nspawn[1387]: Mount point '/run/systemd/nspawn/unix-export/long-running' exists already, refusing.
[ 18.949236] systemd[1]: systemd-nspawn@long-running.service: Failed with result 'exit-code'.
[ 18.949743] systemd[1]: Failed to start systemd-nspawn@long-running.service.
===
Currently homed scans /home/ via inotify for new .home + .homedir/
popping up to register as local users. Let's also add an explicit way to
request this form of "adoption": a bus call that takes a path and that
makes a home dir activatable locally.
(Usecase: you cross boot between two systems – let's say your traditional
fedora and your ParticleOS – and want to use the same homedir from both:
simply mount the /home dir from the other somewhere, and then hit
"homectl adopt /somewhere/lennart.home" and you have the user locally
too).