The original documentation for these variables did not give an example
of what to do if the service had a name that had illegal characters in
it, so this commit adds an example. There was no bug report; this was
suggested by Tobias Klausmann.
Checkpath was printing the path it was working with unless it was
correcting the owner. In this case, it was printing "checkpath", which
is not very useful.
Reported-by: <devurandom@gmx.net>
X-Gentoo-Bug: 439014
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=439014
Previously, we were setting the quiet flag before the command line was
parsed. Since the flag is only used once, we can just read the
environment variable which is set by the parsing process.
Reported-by: <devurandom@gmx.net>
X-Gentoo-Bug: 439010
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=439010
Some types of interfaces do not have a carrier, so it doesn't make sense
to automatically wait for one.
Reported-by: <rose@rz.uni-potsdam.de>
X-Gentoo-Bug: 438970
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=438970
systemd allows the final arg in tmpfiles to contain spaces. Using the read()
call to set the variables includes all trailing components in $arg so it
doesn't get cut off.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Gregory <andrew.gregory.8@gmail.com>
'[ -n "$arg" ] && _w' causes _f/_F to return the failure from the test when
$arg is empty. Inverting the test causes the test and _f/_F to return success.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Gregory <andrew.gregory.8@gmail.com>
There were references in the devfs script to mdev, udev and
udev-mount. These all provide the virtuals dev and dev-mount; that is
how we should refer to them.
I believe in the discussion I had with Tony and Robin about this, we
were going to change the "use" line to "need". However, after thinking
that over, I'm not comfortable doing so because someone could be running
a static /dev with no device manager.
Reported-by: <tokiclover@gmail.com>
X-Gentoo-Bug: 438932
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=438932
When the test suite is being run, we need our local directories in PATH
and LD_LIBRARY_PATH before the system directories. This makes sure we
run our tests using the currently built tree.
We should use the "command" shell builtin to execute a binary from
within the wrapper with the same name. Hard coding the path to the
binary makes our test suite fail.
If sysfs is not available, you might still be able to create bond
interfaces, but only in very specific configurations, and you must have
the ifenslave binary instead to call ioctls.
Signed-off-by: Robin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org>
If the kernel is NFS-booting, it is critical that we don't down the
slave interfaces when we activate the bond. To do so will break the root
filesystem when networking is temporarily lost.
Reported-by: Walter <walter@pratyeka.org>
X-Gentoo-Bug: 428604
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=428604
Signed-off-by: Robin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org>
The 'dev' argument is only optional for ethX devices, for others it is
mandatory, so we should always include it.
Also tweak when promisc mode is applied to bridges.
Patches submitted by Denis Kaganovich <mahatma@bspu.unibel.by>.
X-Gentoo-Bug: #431204
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=431204
Signed-off-by: Robin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org>
Fix checkpath so that it only changes the owner/group if -o is on the
command line.
Reported-by: <flameeyes@gentoo.org>
X-Gentoo-Bug: 437560
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=437560
runlevels/Makefile currently uses ${PREFIX} when creating the initial
runlevel symlinks, but the init files are installed to ${INITDIR},
which results in broken symlinks if ${SYSCONFDIR} is set to something
other than ${PREFIX}/etc
Signed-off-by: Andrew Gregory <andrew.gregory.8@gmail.com>
Gentoo adds a "-k" option to the reboot command in inittab. This is a
Gentoo-specific option, so it is being removed.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Gregory <andrew.gregory.8@gmail.com>
This is needed because the network script uses this variable in the
depend() function but it wasn't exported when this was run.
Reported-by: <aaly90@gmail.com>
Now that the tmpfiles.d code is more tested, actually call it from
init.d. It assumes that /run is already available when it runs.
Please note it runs TWICE.
- During sysinit, ideally just after /dev/shm is created, but before
udev has started. After udev is also acceptable, but not ideal.
- During boot, ideally just after localmount has completed.
Signed-off-by: Robin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org>
Using the new dev-mount virtual, with udev-mount included until new udev
version is rolled out, we run devfs earlier now, before udev/mdev.
It only needs (u)dev-mount before it, so that /dev is mounted.
This opens the way for tmpfiles.d, which needs to be sandwiched in the
middle.
Signed-off-by: Robin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org>
net.* and module loading require sysfs now, and if udev is not in use,
it is not always loaded early enough, esp for net.lo. Force it to come
up during sysinit instead.
Signed-off-by: Robin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org>
Urandom should not run in lxc containers since it is provided by the
host.
Reported-by: <walter@pratyeka.org>
X-Gentoo-Bug: 436270
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: http://bugs.gentoo.org/436270
By design, restart is hard coded to run stop followed by start along
with all of the pre/post functions associated with them. Restart doesn't
need its own pre/post functions since it is possible to make any
function in an init script behave differently for a restart command by
testing against the RC_CMD environment variable.
The Gentoo developer manual covers how to handle restarts in init
scripts, but this was not officially covered in OpenRc's Documentation.
This commit adds an example to the runscript man page that shows how
this works.
On prefix systems, RC_SVCDIR was being defined based on the host
operating system. This is not correct because there will not be a /run
directory in a prefix.
This commit moves RC_SVCDIR on prefix systems to the same location as on
non-Linux systems.
Since nfs and nfs4 file systems require extra daemons to be running on
the client to function properly, netmount should not try to handle these
file systems.
Reported-by: <devurandom@gmx.net>
X-Gentoo-Bug: 427996
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=427996