Christian Hesse [Wed, 8 Jul 2026 17:37:38 +0000 (19:37 +0200)]
journal-remote: do not create /var/log/journal/remote
This handling with tmpfiles was dropped in 29444df23bea21c15a3284ad8acfe2f008e5dbae. So let's stop the build system
to create that directory. Actually it is create by the service just
fine, including correct access mode.
Michal Sekletar [Tue, 30 Jun 2026 13:19:27 +0000 (15:19 +0200)]
socket-util: fix socket_xattr_supported() in initramfs
Don't test xattr support on socket created in filesystem. This doesn't
work in initramfs when /tmp doesn't have tmpfs mounted inside as
initramfs doesn't have xattr support. Setting socket xattr falls back to
parent directory xattr handlers when we work with FS based socket.
Let's test sockfs based socket instead so that the check is generic and
works in all environments.
resolved: honour per-link DNSOverTLS=yes for certificate verification
dnstls_stream_connect_tls() reads the manager-wide dns_over_tls_mode
field directly, so when the global mode was 'no' or 'opportunistic' but
a link was configured with strict DNSOverTLS=yes, the DoT connection
was established without SSL_VERIFY_PEER or hostname/IP checks.
Use dns_server_get_dns_over_tls_mode() which honours the per-link
override.
When a rate limit is armed, for example via StartLimitInterval=, and the
machine is suspended, the rate limit's "clock" is suspended as well,
since the elapse checks use CLOCK_MONOTONIC. This then causes unexpected
situations where a rate limit armed via StartLimitInterval=1h, followed
by a 10 hour suspend, would elapse after 11 hours total.
Let's avoid this by switching the rate limits to CLOCK_BOOTTIME, which
works the same as CLOCK_MONOTONIC, but accounts for the time spent in
suspend as well.
There's one slight concern when it comes to upgrade path - the old
"begin" value of the rate limit is stored as CLOCK_MONOTONIC, but after
upgrading systemd and serializing/deserializing the state it will be
suddenly compared against now(CLOCK_BOOTTIME), which might cause some
rate limits to elapse "prematurely". But this is just a one-time thing,
after which the rate limit timers should re-assess themselves.
fsck_mode_from_string() and fsck_repair_from_string() return -EINVAL
on a bad value. Store the result in a local variable first, and only
update the global state on success.
Otherwise an invalid value is logged as ignored, but still leaves a
negative enum value behind. In the fsck.repair case that makes
fsck_repair_option_to_string() return NULL and truncates the fsck
command line.
bootctl: Fix prepend when installing systemd-boot for the first time
In commit 38433a6d06ef ("bootctl: rework bootctl-install.c in preparation of varlinkification"),
the `first` argument of install_boot_option() was reworked to use the
new InstallContext struct/InstallOperation. `first` was intended to
indicate if we were on the install path, so the check should be
== INSTALL_NEW, not != INSTALL_NEW.
Fixes: 38433a6d06ef ("bootctl: rework bootctl-install.c in preparation of varlinkification")
measure-smbios: bound type 1 length before zeroing wake-up type
The structure length comes from the firmware SMBIOS table and the only
bound before the fixed-offset wake_up_type write was an assert(), which
is a no-op in release sd-boot builds.
Whether the field is present is governed by the formatted-area length
header->length, not the total size which also covers the trailing string
set. A too-short record (an old SMBIOS 2.0 one, or a crafted 6-byte
header) makes the offset-24 write land past the xmemdup() copy; a record
with a short formatted area but long string set instead gets a stable
string byte zeroed in the copy. Key the guard off header->length and the
field offset, matching get_smbios_table(), and measure such records
as-is. Zero only the part of the field that lies within the formatted
area, and collapse the two measure_smbios_raw() call sites by selecting
what to measure via a pointer.
Signed-off-by: Syed Mohammed Nayyar <jmestwa@gmail.com>
Lars Sjöstrom [Thu, 2 Jul 2026 08:08:03 +0000 (10:08 +0200)]
core: support stdio fd passing in io.systemd.Unit.StartTransient
Add StandardInputFileDescriptor, StandardOutputFileDescriptor and
StandardErrorFileDescriptor to the Service context of the Varlink
StartTransient() method. Each carries the push-order index of a file descriptor
passed along with the method call (via SCM_RIGHTS), and connects it to the
transient service's standard input/output/error. This is the Varlink equivalent
of the StandardInputFileDescriptor= / StandardOutputFileDescriptor= /
StandardErrorFileDescriptor= D-Bus transient properties behind
"systemd-run --pipe", which had no Varlink counterpart.
The manager Varlink server now enables SD_VARLINK_SERVER_ALLOW_FD_PASSING_INPUT
so clients may attach descriptors to their method calls, matching other
fd-accepting Varlink services (mountfsd, networkd, vmspawn, ...). The indices are
resolved with sd_varlink_peek_dup_fd() after the polkit authorization check and
stored on the Service exactly like the D-Bus path
(bus_set_transient_exec_context_fd()): the fds land in stdin_fd/stdout_fd/
stderr_fd and exec_context.stdio_as_fds is set, so the existing exec-invoke
plumbing wires them to the spawned process unchanged. Unsuitable fds (bad
index, wrong access mode) are rejected as InvalidParameter, other resolution
failures propagate as raw errnos.
Add coverage to TEST-74-AUX-UTILS.varlinkctl-unit.sh, passing regular files as
the stdout/stderr fds and asserting the unit's output lands on them.
sysinstall: Disable timeout for connection with repart
The repart connection was timeing out when fetching candidate devices.
Therfore disable the timeout and keep the connection open till the user
disconnects.
Commit edea370222 (portable: remove drop-in configs even if the main unit file does not exist)
taught detach to handle leftover .service.d directories
after the main unit symlink was removed.
portable_get_state_internal() still had the same blind
spot: it only considered regular unit entries, so portablectl
is-attached could report detached while a portable drop-in directory was still present.
Handle those drop-in-only entries like detach does, preserve
the existing unit-file based enabled checks when the
main unit file is still present, and add TEST-29 coverage.
sbsign: write unaligned signature size into WIN_CERTIFICATE header
The inclusion of padding bytes in the signature size can lead to the signature
being rejected by strict PKCS7 parsers. Meanwhile, according to [1], the parser
of the WIN_CERTIFICATE structure is expected to round up the value of dwLength
to an 8-byte multiple. This also matches the behaviour of the sbsign tool from
sbsigntools.
Once link_tmpfile_at() succeeds, the target path
has been published. Avoid unlinking it on later
close or parent fsync failures when COPY_REPLACE
was used, as that can remove the replaced target.
meson: build .standalone versions of the report binaries
The goal is to be allow the use of those binaries on systemd with older
systemd. The report stuff is generally independent of the running systemd
version.
When built with -Dinstall-tests=true -Dstandalone-binaries=true
-Dbuildtype=release -Db_lto=true, gcc-16.1.1-2.fc44.x86_64, the sizes
are quite reasonable:
We have two concepts: a list of files that should be extracted from an
intermediate build artifact to be used in a later build artifact, and for a
given artifact, a list "donors". The first list was called "extract", because
it is passed to the .extract_objects() meson function, and the second was
called "objects", because that is the meson parameter to specify pre-built
objects files (6350d2dbd97746440b9c8303ddc140ffda568732). But this naming is
confusing: we don't care about the 'extract' step, this is something internal
to the build machinery. And 'objects' is a very generic term.
Let's use 'export' for the stuff that is "exported" for other binaries to use,
and 'import' to say where to import from. Those terms are symmetrical and the
association between them should be intuitive. (If you think the terms are
actually assymetrical, there are precedents for confusing the import with the
import sources. E.g. in modern English, turkeys are called so because they were
imported from the Americas and guineafowls were imported from Africa via
Türkiye and all that foreign stuff is alike.)
* 45c16dd369 Use uniform format for %rhel conditionals
* 034fa693f2 Print the build status also in %build
* 3cc7e03365 Restore definitions of helper macros
* 2382c910b7 Disable the standalone report yet again
* 2d6fd95c70 Restore explicit requires for Centos Stream 9 and 10
* 521ab0fb09 test: skip the integration test suite on Fedora ELN (for now)
* 453447b79b rpminspect: ignore test-coredump-stacktrace in annocheck
* 9d4edaa576 test: work around a kernel bug in virtio/vsock
* c53b2fb307 test: cap the number of parallel tests
* 9bd26bb71f Fix ntpvendor for ELN
* de7b685908 Disable reqs for dlopen'ed libraries on CentOS
* 4830641844 Move portabled to systemd-container subpackage
* 893fcd9978 Add missing conditionalization and more debugging
* c783e74791 split-files: improve error message
* ee2dff42d6 Add systemd-report-standalone
* 9c87a3f8ad Load libssl.so.4 rather than libssl.so.3
* 714b0799d2 Version 261.1
* 054158500a Update to load openssl-4 rather than openssl-3
* 5a3e750ef8 Version 261
* 4faee7ab7d Version 261~rc4
* 8ff635a921 Rebuilt for openssl 4.0
* 0064f73d97 Rebuilt for openssl 4.0
* 14a9aac87e Use dlopen notes again
* 720fa8259a Do not check ownership of /var/lib/systemd/timesync/ in rpm -V
* 06bd9926f2 Version 261~rc3
* 6ddbd499e8 Drop unused tree build dependency
* bd81a14bfc Version 261~rc2
Michael Vogt [Thu, 2 Jul 2026 13:27:06 +0000 (15:27 +0200)]
journalctl: add follow mode to the varlink method
This commit implements `journalctl -f` like behavior for the
varlink API of journalctl. It is used via:
```
$ varlinkctl call -E \
/run/systemd/io.systemd.JournalAccess \
io.systemd.JournalAccess.GetEntries '{"follow": true, "limit": 10}'
```
This gives the last 10 message and then it keeps the connection
open and output each new log line that matches the set filters.
The code is modeled after `journalctl -f`. It seems there is little
to extract into shared code here so I left it for now.
resolve: anchor the service browser from mDNS maintenance queries
mdns_maintenance_query() takes a ref on the browser's varlink link but
never installs itself as that link's userdata. dns_query_free() then
unconditionally runs sd_varlink_set_userdata(varlink_request, NULL),
so freeing any maintenance query wipes the browse query's registration
on the shared sb->link slot, disabling the abort paths in
vl_on_disconnect() and dns_service_browser_free(). The maintenance
query also never takes a reference on the DnsServiceBrowser, so a client
disconnect could free the browser while a maintenance query was still
in flight, leaving the per-service schedule_event timer and the raw
service->service_browser back-pointer dangling (use-after-free on the
next timer tick or query completion).
Take a service_browser_request reference instead, matching the browse
query path. dns_query_free() already drops it. The browser now outlives
its in-flight maintenance queries.
link_request_sr_iov_vfs() queued each request with a raw SRIOV* as
userdata and a NULL free_func, so the request did not own the object.
The SRIOV is owned by link->network->sr_iov_by_section, which is freed
by network_free() on reload while the RTM_SETLINK reply may still be in
flight (the floating netlink slot keeps the request alive but does not
keep the userdata alive). A later reply, or the 25s netlink timeout,
then dispatches sr_iov_handler() which reads the freed SRIOV.
udev: clear event back-pointer when freeing a worker
worker_free() did not clear worker->event->worker, leaving an event
that was still attached to a worker pointing at freed memory once the
worker was gone. manager_free() frees the workers (hashmap_free())
before it walks manager->events to process them, and event_free() then
writes event->worker->event = NULL into the already-freed worker.
Clear the back-pointer in worker_free(), mirroring event_free() which
already clears the worker's pointer. The link used to be torn down by
the event_free(worker->event) call in worker_free(), which was dropped
when events became reference counted.
The Event and Worker definitions move to udev-manager.h (next to
Manager) so the unit test can construct and free a bound worker/event
pair.
sd-bus: drop half-registered vtable members on failure
add_object_vtable_internal() inserts BusVTableMember entries into the
global vtable_methods/vtable_properties sets as it walks the vtable, but
only sets node_vtable.node (which gates the disconnect-time cleanup)
after the loop. A failure mid-loop thus left the already-inserted
members behind, dangling once the slot's interface string and the node's
path were freed, so a later registration reading those keys hit a
use-after-free. Remove this slot's members on the fail path.
The test asserts the failed registration leaves no member behind.
sd-bus: re-check match_callbacks_modified in the argNhas value loop
The CAN_HASH branch of bus_match_run() that iterates the array values of
an argNhas= match dispatches a callback per value but, unlike the leaf
and manual-iteration branches, does not re-check bus->match_callbacks_modified
afterwards. A callback that adds or removes a match (freeing the node)
would then have the next hashmap_get(node->compare.children, ...) read
freed memory. Add the same check the sibling branches already have.
sd-netlink: disconnect the slot on async/match error paths
netlink_slot_allocate() links the slot into nl->slots and takes an nl
reference, but sd_netlink_call_async() and netlink_add_match_internal()
hold it in a _cleanup_free_, so an error after allocation frees the slot
with a bare free()
network: initialize dot_servers before CLEANUP_ARRAY
If dns_resolvers_to_dot_addrs() fails (e.g. OOM) it returns without
assigning *ret_addrs, so the CLEANUP_ARRAY() cleanup would free an
uninitialized dot_servers pointer on the error return.
udev: track remaining buffer size across $links devlinks
FORMAT_SUBST_LINKS passes the same 'l' (remaining size) to strpcpy for
each devlink and discards the returned remaining value, so the cursor
advances while the bound stays at the full size, overflowing dest.
Capture the return value.
hashmap: honor the value destructor in set_ensure_consume()
Sets store their element in the key slot but use a value destructor
(DEFINE_HASH_OPS_WITH_VALUE_DESTRUCTOR). On the reject/duplicate path
set_ensure_consume() only checked free_key and otherwise called free().
The tag-match loop emits 6 instructions per tag into a fixed 512-entry
stack array without a bounds check (unlike the subsystem loop below),
so enough tags overflow the stack. Refuse with -E2BIG instead.
Paul Meyer [Fri, 3 Jul 2026 13:52:10 +0000 (15:52 +0200)]
vmspawn: allow opt-in Secure Boot firmware for coco
CoCo firmware is stateless, so Secure Boot keys cannot be enrolled at
runtime: it only enforces Secure Boot with keys baked in at build time,
refusing unsigned images from the first boot. The default exclusion of
the enrolled-keys firmware feature hence keeps unsigned images bootable,
but it also makes firmware discovery fail on distros that only ship
SNP/TDX firmware with pre-enrolled keys (e.g. Fedora's TDVF). Drop the
rejection of --secure-boot=yes with --coco= and instead treat it as an
opt-in to such firmware, by lifting the enrolled-keys exclusion.
While at it, reject --efi-nvram-template= and an explicit
--efi-nvram-state= path with --coco=, which were silently ignored, as
stateless firmware has no NVRAM to instantiate or persist.
Paul Meyer [Thu, 2 Jul 2026 16:04:36 +0000 (18:04 +0200)]
vmspawn: verify selected fw matches requirements
Carry the firmware descriptor's feature list in OvmfConfig, and verify
that firmware selected via an explicit --firmware= descriptor declares
the amd-sev-snp/intel-tdx feature, is stateless, and is in raw format,
the same constraints automatic discovery already imposes. This replaces
the cached supports_sb boolean with a generic feature lookup.
Paul Meyer [Thu, 2 Jul 2026 14:22:36 +0000 (16:22 +0200)]
vmspawn: select coco firmware via fw descriptors
Instead of requiring --firmware= to point at a raw .fd image for
--coco=sev-snp/tdx, pick a suitable firmware automatically from the
QEMU firmware descriptors, requiring the amd-sev-snp/intel-tdx feature.
CoCo firmware is stateless (it carries no NVRAM template), so teach
find_ovmf_config() to select stateless raw-format firmware via new
flags. --firmware= now uniformly takes a firmware descriptor path.
hwdb: map mic-mute key on Logitech K950 (Bluetooth)
The mic-mute key on the Logitech K950 keyboard (046D:B388, Bluetooth)
emits BTN_0 (scancode 0x100e1) instead of a usable key, so it does
nothing under GNOME/KDE. Map it to KEY_MICMUTE, its intended function.
Translations update from [Fedora
Weblate](https://translate.fedoraproject.org) for
[systemd/main](https://translate.fedoraproject.org/projects/systemd/main/).
For some reason claude refuses to review
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/42651.
Let's see if we can make it work by splitting up the big PR into smaller
ones. So here's the first one with 5 commits that should be relatively
easy to review and get merged early.
Luca Boccassi [Fri, 26 Jun 2026 22:12:54 +0000 (23:12 +0100)]
boot: require a minimum PE optional header size in verify_pe()
verify_pe() only checked SizeOfOptionalHeader against a SIZE_MAX wrap (a
clause that, given SizeOfOptionalHeader is a uint16_t, can never reject
anything) and never read NumberOfRvaAndSizes. But pe_kernel_info(),
pe_kernel_check_nx_compat() and pe_kernel_check_no_relocation() then read
SizeOfImage, AddressOfEntryPoint, DllCharacteristics and the base
relocation data directory entry from the optional header.
Require SizeOfOptionalHeader to be large enough to contain everything down
to the base relocation data directory entry, and require the image to
declare that many data directory entries.
Luca Boccassi [Fri, 26 Jun 2026 21:17:28 +0000 (22:17 +0100)]
boot: restore parent loaded image when initrd registration fails
linux_exec() patches the stub's own EFI_LOADED_IMAGE_PROTOCOL to point
at the loaded inner kernel, and restores the saved original only after
the entry point returns. The initrd_register() failure path returns
without restoring, leaving the firmware's protocol pointing to freed
data.
Luca Boccassi [Fri, 26 Jun 2026 21:10:20 +0000 (22:10 +0100)]
boot: restore RW/RO memory attributes on every error
linux_exec() marks code sections RO+X for W^X and reverts them to RW+NX
in a loop just before returning, because EDK2 requires freed buffers to
be writable and non-executable or FreePages() crashes. Not every error
path is currently covered. Switch to a _cleanup_ helper so that every
return path is covered.
Luca Boccassi [Fri, 26 Jun 2026 20:58:57 +0000 (21:58 +0100)]
boot: check PE section against SizeOfImage
pe_locate_sections_internal() stores each matching section's VirtualSize
and VirtualAddress into PeSectionVector.memory_size/memory_offset with
only SIZE_MAX overflow guards, never checking them against the image's
SizeOfImage.
Wire up the image's SizeOfImage down to pe_locate_sections_internal()
and skip any section whose in-memory section does not fit within it.
Luca Boccassi [Fri, 26 Jun 2026 19:12:36 +0000 (20:12 +0100)]
boot: bound PE section VirtualSize before zeroing the inner kernel
The inner-kernel section loader checks VirtualAddress + SizeOfRawData
against kernel_size_in_memory (for the memcpy), but the memzero right
after it clears up to VirtualAddress + VirtualSize, and VirtualSize is
only constrained to be >= SizeOfRawData.
Reject a VirtualAddress + VirtualSize that overflows or exceeds
kernel_size_in_memory, mirroring the existing SizeOfRawData checks.
Luca Boccassi [Fri, 26 Jun 2026 18:57:23 +0000 (19:57 +0100)]
boot: reject inner kernel entry point outside the image
pe_kernel_info() returned AddressOfEntryPoint (and the .compat section
entry_point) straight from the PE header with no check against
SizeOfImage. Since cab9c7b5a4 the stub calls the inner kernel directly
as ImageBase + entry_point, and only EFI_SIZE_TO_PAGES(SizeOfImage) pages
are allocated for it.
Luca Boccassi [Fri, 26 Jun 2026 18:41:31 +0000 (19:41 +0100)]
boot: don't unquote an empty value in line_get_key_value()
de0da85d41b switched the unquote check to strchr8(QUOTES, value[0]),
which is not equivalent to the old explicit comparison for an empty
value: strchr8(), like strchr(3), returns a pointer to the haystack's
terminating NUL when the needle is '\0', so strchr8(QUOTES, '\0') is
non-NULL. For a line whose separator is the last byte (e.g. "ID=") the
split leaves value[0] == '\0' and line[linelen - 1] == '\0' too, so both
conjuncts hold and value++ steps one byte past the value's terminator.
Luca Boccassi [Fri, 26 Jun 2026 16:29:31 +0000 (17:29 +0100)]
boot: initialize return parameters on zero-length EFI variable read
When a variable exists but is empty, the initial size-query
GetVariable() in efivar_get_raw_full() returns EFI_SUCCESS instead of
EFI_BUFFER_TOO_SMALL: the zero-length payload already "fits" the
zero-length query buffer. The helper returns success, but does not
initialize the return parameters.
Handle a couple of corner cases by checking the return size.
Luca Boccassi [Fri, 26 Jun 2026 16:21:52 +0000 (17:21 +0100)]
boot: make device_path_next_node() robust against malformed zero-length nodes
device_path_next_node() advances by the current node's Length field,
which per the EFI device path protocol includes the 4-byte node header;
a well-formed node is therefore at least sizeof(EFI_DEVICE_PATH) bytes
long. A malformed node with Length < sizeof(EFI_DEVICE_PATH), in
particular Length == 0, makes the helper return its input pointer
unchanged.
Allow graphical installers to use system sysinstall. This will be used
by gnome-setup to install GNOME OS and ideally installers of other
distributions talk to the same varlink interface.
tree-wide: check if necessary cflags dependencies are set
This makes each `foo_cflags` dependency define a `SYSTEMD_CFLAGS_MARKER_FOO`
macro, and checks if the macro is set when headers provided by external
libraries are included.
With this, we can fail fast at compile time if necessary `_cflags`
dependencies are omitted in meson.build. Missing dependencies found by this
mechanism have been added across the tree.
Julian Sparber [Fri, 26 Jun 2026 16:48:23 +0000 (18:48 +0200)]
sysinstall: Add varlink interface
Allow graphical installers to use system sysinstall.
This will be used by gnome-setup to install GNOME OS and ideally installers
of other distributions talk to the same varlink interface.
Julian Sparber [Thu, 25 Jun 2026 16:33:49 +0000 (18:33 +0200)]
sysinstall: Look for valid kernel image before installing
Instead of failing the installation after creating the partitions and
doing almost the entire installation, and then failing if we don't have
a kernel image. Look for it before we start doing modifications to the disk.
This way we tell the user as soon as possible that we can't install the
OS because of the missing kernel image.
include: do not override kernel headers with libaudit headers
Overriding <linux/audit.h> to implicitly include <libaudit.h> turns out to
be problematic. Because <linux/audit.h> is pulled in by various other kernel
headers, any source file including those kernel headers indirectly ends up
depending on <libaudit.h>, even if the executable or library being built
does not require libaudit at all.
Let's drop the override header and include <libaudit.h> only where explicitly
needed. This also moves the fallback definitions of AUDIT_SERVICE_* and
MAX_AUDIT_MESSAGE_LENGTH to libaudit-util.h.
Luca Boccassi [Fri, 26 Jun 2026 16:15:38 +0000 (17:15 +0100)]
boot: reject GPT headers with SizeOfPartitionEntry below the minimum
Commit 0cf5f816f22c replaced the original lower-bound check
if (h->SizeOfPartitionEntry < sizeof(EFI_PARTITION_ENTRY))
return false;
with a multiple-of check
if ((h->SizeOfPartitionEntry % sizeof(EFI_PARTITION_ENTRY)) != 0)
return false;
to additionally require the entry size to be a multiple of 128. The
modulo test is however also satisfied by SizeOfPartitionEntry == 0, so a
GPT header advertising a zero entry size now passes verify_gpt().
Restore the lower bound in addition to the multiple-of check, so the
entry size must be at least sizeof(EFI_PARTITION_ENTRY) and a multiple of
it (128 bytes).
File names containing backslashes cannot be checked out on Windows,
are not handled properly by build systems such as buck, and are awkward
to work with in general, so store the \x2d slice units under sanitized
file names, and rename them to the real unit name on install via a new
optional "name" key in the units list.
The fuzz-unit-file corpus sample is renamed as well; its file name is
not meaningful to the fuzzer, and dropping the backslash means it is no
longer skipped by the meson workaround for
https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1564, so it runs as a
regression test again.
calendarspec: warn on weekday/date conflict in systemd-analyze and systemd-run
When a fixed date (e.g. 2027-01-01) is paired with a weekday constraint
(e.g. Thu) that does not match, the timer silently never elapses.
Add calendar_spec_from_string_full(..., warn_on_weekday_mismatch) so
user-facing tools can opt in to a log_warning() at parse time:
- systemd-analyze calendar: uses _full(true)
- systemd-run --on-calendar: uses _full(true)
- .timer OnCalendar=: uses log_syntax() with file/line context
Add test_calendar_spec_weekday_conflict(): forks a child with stderr
captured in a memfd via pidref_safe_fork_full(), verifies the warning
is emitted for conflicting specs and suppressed for valid ones.
test: ignore fails when the formatted timezone differs from the current one
When formatting a timestamp the C API takes into account historical data
from tzdata, so it returns a date strings with a historically-correct
timezone abbreviation. However, tzname[] doesn't do this and it returns
the most recent abbreviation for the given zone.
For example, according to tzdata America/Cancun switched from EST/EDT to
CST/CDT on 1998-08-02:
Zone America/Cancun -5:47:04 - LMT 1922 Jan 1 6:00u
-6:00 - CST 1981 Dec 26 2:00
-5:00 - EST 1983 Jan 4 0:00
-6:00 Mexico C%sT 1997 Oct 26 2:00
-5:00 Mexico E%sT 1998 Aug 2 2:00
-6:00 Mexico C%sT 2015 Feb 1 2:00
-5:00 - EST
So, formatting a timestamp from this time will yield a string with the
EDT timezone:
$ TZ=America/Cancun date -d "@902035565"
Sun Aug 2 01:26:05 EDT 1998
But using tzname[] (or strptime %z) shows the most recent data, where
America/Cancun uses EST (and doesn't use DST anymore, hence
tzname[1]=CDT that glibc remembers from the previous zone epoch):
$ TZ=America/Cancun ./tz
{EST, CDT}
This means that when we parse the formatted timestamp back we don't use
the historical timezone data, so we might end up with a different
offset:
TZ=America/Cancun, tzname[0]=EST, tzname[1]=CDT
@902035565603993 → Sun 1998-08-02 01:26:05 EDT → @902039165000000 → Sun 1998-08-02 01:26:05 CDT
src/test/test-time-util.c:452: Assertion failed: Expected "ignore" to be true
Aborted (core dumped) build-local/test-time-util
Instead of adding exceptions for every single timezone that switched
between different offsets in the past, let's address this a bit more
generally and skip the check if the parsed timezone doesn't match any of
the current timezones - this still keeps the check that the time
difference in such case is exactly one hour, so its effect should be
limited mostly to DST-related changes.
bootctl: expose --esp-path/--boot-path/--make-entry-directory via Varlink (#42838)
The Install/Unlink/Link/LinkAuto Varlink methods always auto-discover
the ESP and XBOOTLDR partitions and Install always runs
make-entry-directory in auto mode, so IPC callers cannot match what the
CLI verbs do with `--esp-path`, `--boot-path` and
`--make-entry-directory`. Add optional `espPath`, `xbootldrPath` and
`makeEntryDirectory` parameters that feed into the same code paths the
CLI already uses.
Allow systemd to be built as as single statically-linked binary (#42820)
The idea is that we can build a container by building a single-binary
systemd:
```console
$ meson setup build-static --default-library=static --prefer-static --auto-features=disabled -Dbuild-static=true -Dsystemd-multicall-binary=true && ninja -C build-static systemd
$ mkdir /var/tmp/container/usr/lib -p
$ cp build-static/systemd /var/tmp/container/usr/lib/
$ echo 'ID=quick' >/var/tmp/container/usr/lib/os-release
$ systemd-nspawn --restrict-address-families=af_unix --register=no --private-users=managed -D /var/tmp/container/ /usr/lib/systemd
░ Spawning container container on /var/tmp/container.
░ Press Ctrl-] three times within 1s to kill container; two times followed by r
░ to reboot container; two times followed by p to poweroff container.
Selected user namespace base 1855193088 and range 65536.
systemd 262~devel running in system mode (-PAM -AUDIT +SELINUX -APPARMOR +IMA +IPE +SMACK -SECCOMP -GCRYPT +GNUTLS +OPENSSL -ACL +BLKID +CURL -ELFUTILS -FIDO2 +IDN2 +KMOD +LIBCRYPTSETUP +LIBCRYPTSETUP_PLUGINS +LIBFDISK +PCRE2 -PWQUALITY +P11KIT +QRENCODE +TPM2 -BZIP2 -LZ4 +XZ +ZLIB +ZSTD -BPF_FRAMEWORK -BTF -XKBCOMMON +UTMP -LIBARCHIVE)
Detected virtualization systemd-nspawn.
Detected architecture x86-64.
Detected first boot.
Welcome to Linux!
Initializing machine ID from container UUID.
Failed to open netlink, ignoring: Address family not supported by protocol
Applying preset policy.
Populated /etc with preset unit settings.
Unit default.target not found.
Falling back to graphical.target.
Mount unit not supported, skipping *MountsFor= dependencies.
Queued start job for default target graphical.target.
[ OK ] Reached target sysinit.target.
[ OK ] Reached target basic.target.
System is tainted: unmerged-bin:var-run-bad
[ OK ] Reached target multi-user.target.
[ OK ] Reached target graphical.target.
Startup finished in 61ms.
```
The container can be reloaded with SIGTERM, powered off with SIGRTMIN+4,
etc. SIGRTMIN+5 should cause a reboot but it currently fails:
```
...
Rebooting.
Container container is being rebooted.
Failed to attach root directory: Invalid argument
Failed to receive mount namespace fd from outer child: Input/output error
```
It's a bug … somewhere, but probably not caused by the linking changes
being done here.
tpm2: cache NvPCR NV space exhaustion via flag files in /run/
When we run out of NV index space while allocating an NvPCR, the
situation will unlikely improve until (at least) reboot. Retrying the
(doomed) Esys_NV_DefineSpace call on every subsequent allocation attempt
is wasteful (and very slow), so remember the exhaustion in a flag file
under /run/ and fail early next time.
We use two separate flag files, one for orderly and one for non-orderly
NvPCRs, since the two draw on different TPM resources (RAM-backed vs.
NVRAM-backed): exhaustion of one doesn't imply exhaustion of the other.
The files live in /run/, hence are cleared on reboot, which is
potentially is when NV space might become available again.
tpm2: optionally disable TPMA_NV_ORDERLY for NvPCRs
NVIndexes in TPMs can operate in two modes:
1. Backed by TPM RAM. In this case they are only written to NVRAM on an
orderly TPM shutdown when the system goes down. (TPMA_NV_ORDERLY flag
is on)
2. Backed by TPM NVRAM. In this case the nvindex value is written to NVRAM
on every write, and things are not delayed until orderly shutdown.
Normally mode 1 sounds like the obvious choice for NvPCRs, which reset
to zero anyway at boot. However, things are more complicated since
real-life TPMs tend to have a lot less RAM than NVRAM (both are
constrained but RAM even more than NVRAM). Hence there's value in using
NVRAM right-away. However, writing to NVRAM all the time means wearing
it out (since NVRAM is more vulnerable to that).
So far we unconditionally went for mode 1, but ran into space
constraints of RAM due to that.
Let's improve things a bit, and use orderly mode for NvPCRs we expect to
write many times, and non-orderly mode for those we expect to write only
a small, fixed number of times at boot, and not anymore during runtime.
Right now, this is only the "hardware" NvPCR, which measures hw identity
at boot.
Hopefully, this stretches available resources a bit further.
This also makes sure if the flag was set differently on allocation as
we'd set now, we accept it and won't complain, to make upgrades safe.
dongshengyuan [Wed, 24 Jun 2026 11:57:04 +0000 (19:57 +0800)]
pcrextend,tpm2-util,tpm2-setup: gracefully skip NvPCR when TPM NV space is exhausted
Map TPM2_RC_NV_SPACE to -ENOBUFS in tpm2_define_nvpcr_nv_index() rather
than -ENOSPC, giving it a dedicated errno distinct from the -ENOSPC that
write_string_file_at() can return when /run is full — a different failure
that occurs after the NV index is already allocated on the TPM.
In extend_nvpcr_now(), propagate -ENOBUFS as-is so callers can handle it
in a nicer fashion. In vl_method_extend(), map it to the new varlink error
io.systemd.PCRExtend.NvPCRSpaceExhausted. In run(), handle -ENOBUFS
explicitly under --graceful and print an appropriate message. Update
tpm2-setup.c accordingly.
import: Trust subkeys included in signature (#41860)
- import: Trust subkeys included in signature
With gpg sub keys one can rotate signing keys while having a stable
trust anchor. So far one still had to ship the sub key out of band but
a newer gpg has the option to include the sub key in the signature and
import it automatically. This is safe if we only allow importing a sub
key signed by the top key we already have in the key ring.
Add the --auto-key-import argument to gpg to import subkeys but also
set --import-options=merge-only,import-clean to restrict what we import
to only be sub keys signed by the top key we have in the keyring and
discard any irrelevant parts.
- import: Support env var to override gpg keyring
By default there is a fixed keyring in /usr or /etc. But when running
systemd-pull unprivileged in the user context or with a custom transfer
definition as in systemd-sysupdate --definitions=./... (e.g., for local
ParticleOS updates) it is limiting to require that all keys have to be
part of the OS keyring or otherwise no verification can be used. Also,
for testing it is valuable to point it at a different keyring.
Add a SYSTEMD_OPENPGP_KEYRING env var where the omission or empty
assignment sticks to the current behavior of the global OS keyrings but
a keyring path given will take precedence. While an env var can leak
down the process tree and is more difficult to secure for being the
trust anchor the advantage is that one can directly specify it in the
service unit as drop-in instead of having to patch the command
invocation. Anyway it's a niche use case and thus not part of the man
page.