Rename sd_rtnl to sd_netlink to prepare for further netlink-protocol support. Anything rtnl specific still uses the sd_rtnl prefix, but the generic parts (including the bus and message objects) are now called sd_netlink.
In 5a8bcb674f, IPForwarding was introduced
to set forwarding flags on interfaces in .network files. networkd sets
forwarding options regardless of the previous setting, even if it was
set by e.g. sysctl. This commit creates a new option for IPForwarding,
"kernel", that preserves the sysctl settings rather than always setting
them.
See https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=89509 for the initial
bug report.
-ENOSYS is returned from kmod_module_probe_insert_module() if a module isn't
available, not -ENOENT. Don't spit out a warning in that case unless the
warn_if_unavailable flag is set.
Also factor out the condition into an own variable for better readability.
ima_write_policy() expects data to be written as one or more
rules, no more than PAGE_SIZE at a time. Easiest way to ensure
that we are not splitting rules is to read and write one line at
a time.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1226948
Keep leading whitespace for compatibility with older syslog
implementations. Also useful when piping formatted output to the
`logger` command. Keep removing trailing whitespace.
Tested with `pstree | logger` and checking that the output of
`journalctl | tail` included aligned and formatted output.
Confirmed that all test cases still pass as expected.
DBus-spec defines two different pattern matchings:
1) Path and namespace prefix matching. In this case, A matches B either
if both are equal, or if B is fully included in the namespace of A.
In other words, A has to be a prefix of B, but end with a separator
character (or the following character in B must be one).
This is used for path_namespace= and arg0namespace=
2) The other pattern matching is used for arg0path= which does a two-way
matching. That is, A must be a prefix of B, or B a prefix of A.
Furthermore, the prefix must end with a separator.
Fix the sd-bus helpers to reflect that. The 'simple_' and 'complex_'
prefixes don't make any sense now, but.. eh..
Make sure we actually verify our match-rules are executed properly. Right
now all we test is the bloom-matches, which are non-reliable as they leave
through false-positives.
DBus spec clearly defines arg0path= to be a two-way matching. That is,
either the matcher or the matchee can be a prefix of the other to match.
This is not possible to implement with bloom-filters. Instead, we'd have
to add a separate filter for each prefix. This is non-trivial, though.
Hence, just skip the match for now and match locally.
Lets look at an example where we add arg0="/foo/bar/waldo" to a
bloom-filter. The following strings are added:
"arg0:/foo/bar/waldo"
"arg0-slash-prefix:/foo/bar"
"arg0-slash-prefix:/foo"
Two problems arise:
1) If we match on "arg0path=/foo/bar/waldo", the dbus-spec explicitly
states that equal strings are also considered prefixes. However, in the
bloom-match, we can only provide a single match-filter. Therefore, we have
to add "arg0-slash-prefix:/foo/bar/waldo" there, but this never occured in
the bloom-mask of the message.
Hence, this patch makes sure bloom_add_prefixes() adds the full path as
prefix, too.
2) If we match on "arg0path=/foo/", the dbus-spec states that arg0path
does prefix-matching with the trailing slash _included_, unlike
path_namespace= matches, which does *not* include them. This is
inconsistent, but we have to support the specs. Therefore, we must add
prefixes with _and_ without trailing separators.
Hence, this patch makes sure bloom_add_prefixes() adds all prefixes with
the trailing slash included.
The final set of strings added therefore is:
"arg0:/foo/bar/waldo"
"arg0-slash-prefix:/foo/bar/waldo"
"arg0-slash-prefix:/foo/bar/"
"arg0-slash-prefix:/foo/bar"
"arg0-slash-prefix:/foo/"
"arg0-slash-prefix:/foo"
"arg0-slash-prefix:/"
previously hostname_is_valid was used to validate domain names, which
would silently drop perfectly valid dns names that were longer than a
single dns label.
Otherwise, if the socket is constantly busy we will never return to the
event loop, but we really need to to dispatch other (possibly more
high-priority) events too. Hence, return after dispatching one message
to the event handler, and rely on the event loop calling us back
right-away.
Fixes#125