Health checks are a way to monitor a service and make sure it stays
healthy.
If a service is not healthy, it will be automatically restarted after
running the unhealthy() function to clean up.
You can now schedule a shutdown for a certain time or a cpecific number
of minutes into the future.
When a shutdown is running, you can now cancel it with ^c from the
keyboard or by running "openrc-shutdown -c" from another shell.
Fix the comparison between respawn_count and respawn_max so that
respawn_max = 1 will allow for one respawn. Since respawn_count is
incremented before the comparison, use a 'greater than' comparison
so that respawn will be triggered when respawn_count is equal to
respawn_max.
Fixes: https://github.com/OpenRC/openrc/issues/247
Fixes: https://github.com/OpenRC/openrc/issues/248
Use errno != EACCES to fix false-positive for non-root users
with grsecurity kernels.
Fixes: 37e2944272 ("librc: Add check for crashed state")
This fixes#237
This test to find if we could see pid 1 was being used inconsistently in
rc-status and mark_service_crashed to decide whether we could test to
see if the daemon for the service was crashed, and it was not part of
the librc library.
I am removing it from the executables because of inconsistent usage. I
will add it to the library if it is needed there.
If pidfile does not exist when we are stopping the daemon, assume it is
already stopped, and report success.
hostapd is an example of a daemon which removes its pidfile when it is
exiting. If this daemon terminates prematurely, that is, without s-s-d
involvement, then openrc fails to restart it, because s-s-d "stop"
command fails when pidfile is missing.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 646274
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/646274
This is our own version of asprintf(). This original code was written by
Mike Frysinger, and I was able to modify it to use our memory helper
functions.
We need a version of this code because it is not available on glibc at
least without defining _GNU_SOURCE, and I would rather not do that.
This is the first step in improving string handling in OpenRC for #207.
This is related to #195.
This is an attempt to shorten the window for the first two issues
discussed by using a file descriptor which does not follow symbolic
links and using the fchmod and fchown calls instead of chown and chmod.
with.
rc_deptree_update_needed would return early as soon as it found
any file newer than the existing dependency cache. Unfortunately,
the first file found may not be the newest one there; so the
clock skew workaround in rc-misc:_rc_deptree_load would be given
a timestamp that was still too old.
This fix forces a full scan of all relevant files, so as to
ensure that we return a timestamp that will allow the clock skew
fix to operate. The runtime cost is no worse than the case where
the cache is up to date (ie. we must check every possible file).
This fixes#161.
Ignore namespaces if there are errors reading either the pid namespace
for the current process or the process we aare testing.
This fixes https://github.com/openrc/openrc/issues/180.
- Harden against dying by handling all signals that would terminate the
program and adding --reexec support
- factor the supervisor into its own function
- fix test for whether we are already running
Prior to this change, we were logging unexpected terminations of daemons
we were supervising at the info level. This change moves the logs to
warnings.
The service binary was just a synonym for rc-service, so use rc-service
instead of service. If you want a "service" binary, it should be
something that can determine which service manager you are running and
run the appropriate service manager commands.
rc-selinux.c: In function ‘selinux_setup’:
rc-selinux.c:361:9: warning: assignment discards ‘const’ qualifier from pointer target type [-Wdiscarded-qualifiers]
curr_t = context_type_get(curr_con);
^
The --retry option for supervise-daemon defines how the supervisor will
attempt to stop the child process it is monitoring. It is defined when
the supervisor is started since stopping the supervisor just sends a
signal to the active supervisor.
This fixes#160.
How to reproduce 1-byte overflow:
```
$ FEATURES=-test CFLAGS="-fsanitize=address -O0 -ggdb3" emerge -1 openrc
=================================================================
==1==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: stack-buffer-overflow on address 0x7fff0efd8710
at pc 0x000000402076 bp 0x7fff0efd7d50 sp 0x7fff0efd7d40
WRITE of size 1 at 0x7fff0efd8710 thread T0
#0 0x402075 (/sbin/openrc-init+0x402075)
#1 0x3cf6e2070f in __libc_start_main (/lib64/libc.so.6+0x3cf6e2070f)
#2 0x4013b8 (/sbin/openrc-init+0x4013b8)
Address 0x7fff0efd8710 is located in stack of thread T0 at offset 2432 in frame
#0 0x401cfb (/sbin/openrc-init+0x401cfb)
This frame has 3 object(s):
[32, 160) 'signals'
[192, 344) 'sa'
[384, 2432) 'buf' <== Memory access at offset 2432 overflows this variable
HINT: this may be a false positive if your program uses some custom stack unwind mechanism or swapcontext
(longjmp and C++ exceptions *are* supported)
SUMMARY: AddressSanitizer: stack-buffer-overflow ??:0 ??
```
The problem here is in the code handling reads from 'init.ctl':
```
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
...
char buf[2048];
for (;;) {
/* This will block until a command is sent down the pipe... */
fifo = fopen(RC_INIT_FIFO, "r");
count = fread(buf, 1, 2048, fifo);
buf[count] = 0;
...
}
```
`buf[count] = 0;` writes outside the buffer when `fread()` returns non-truncated read.
This fixes#138.
Only close the log if we successfully opened it.
Reported-by: Brian Evans <grknight@gentoo.org>
Tested-by: Brian Evans <grknight@gentoo.org>
Signed-off-by: Sergei Trofimovich <slyfox@gentoo.org>
This creates --respawn-delay, --respawn-max and --respawn-period. It was
suggested that it would be easier to follow if the options were
separated.
This is for #126.
Allow limiting the number of times supervise-daemon will attempt to respawn a
daemon once it has died to prevent infinite respawning. Also, set a
reasonable default limit (10 times in a 5 second period).
This is for issue #126.
openrc-init.c and openrc-shutdown.c are based on code which was written by
James Hammons <jlhamm@acm.org>, so I would like to publically
thank him for his work.
Since deptree2dot and the perl requirement are completely optional, we
can move this tool to the support folder. This gives the user the option
of using it if they have perl installed, and means we do not have an
optional runtime dependency on perl.
Documentation for this tool has also been added to the support folder.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 600742
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=600742
This path should not be hard coded in the open call.
Linux prior to 2.4.19 did not have /proc/self/mounts, so for now I'm
making this value /proc/mounts everywhere, but that may change to
/proc/self/mounts on linux; I'm not sure we should care about <2.4.19.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 604646
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=604646
This reverts commit 8b4fc05ff2.
The original commit did not explain why this feature was disabled, and I
now have a request to enable it.
This fixes#24.
The original auto detection of Docker containers assumed the presence of
a container environment variable. However, Docker-1.12 does not
implement this, and I'm not sure which versions of docker implemented
it.
The new test is for the presence of a file named .dockerenv in the
root directory.
These warnings were inserted in verbose only mode in OpenRC-0.13.A
Now, we are making them more visible in preparation for removing these
compatibility binaries in the future.
The whitelist of environment variables we pass to service scripts
included several unnecessary variables.
The default whitelist now includes EERROR_QUIET, EINFO_QUIET,
IN_BACKGROUND and IN_HOTPLUG.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 569542
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=569542
In the past, OpenRC was a hybrid of a centralized and file-scope
license/copyright structure.
I followed the instructions from the Software Freedom Law Center [1] to
convert to a Centralized structure where possible, for easier future
maintenance.
[1] https://softwarefreedom.org/resources/2012/ManagingCopyrightInformation.html
These functions replace rc_sys so that we can detect containers and vms
separately.
Also, we copy file_regex() to rc-misc.c and open it to all operating
systems.
In src/rc/_usage.c, we were using bootlevel as the variable to hold the
return value of rc_sys.
This changes the variable name to systype because this function returns
a system type, not a runlevel.
These functions were never meant to be used outside of OpenRC, and they
were added when we thought we were going to do away with the automatic
detection of subsystems. Since the autodetection is not going away, we
can combine these functions into rc_sys.
The want dependency is similar to the use dependency. If a service
script, for example called service1, adds "want service2" to its depend
function, OpenRC will attempt to start service2, if it exists on the
system, when service1 is started.
However, service1 will start regardless of the status of
service2.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 406021
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=406021
Rename the rc_conf_override function to describe its purpose better,
drop one conditional compile by making it available everywhere, and move
the call to it after the optional rc.conf.d directory is processed.
This makes it possible to override settings in rc.conf by adding a
directory @SYSCONFDIR@/rc.conf.d and putting files in this directory.
The files will be processed in lexical order, and the last setting in
these files will be used.
On Linux, the --netdev and --nonetdev switches were not working. They
were both returning false. After this change, they operate based on the
presence or abscence of the _netdev option in mount options.
All of the dependency type lists had the types_ prefix in their names;
this has been changed to deptypes_ to make them more self documenting.
Along the same lines, the setup_types function was renamed
setup_deptypes.
If a service has the same name as the runlevel it is in, openrc will
crash on changing to such runlevel. It goes in a recursive madness and
eventually gets a SEGV while in snprintf (don't know why).
This fixes two errors:
1. ls_dir stats files not with full path -> stat always returns != 0
2. ls_dir adds files to list if stat failed
This fixes#53.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 537304
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=537304
If selinux is disabled, then stub methods will be provided instead of
calling the real methods. This removes some warnings about unused
parameters which used to be covered up with #ifdef HAVE_SELINUX.
Signed-off-by: Jason Zaman <jason@perfinion.com>
The previous fix to --test (PR #34) prevented reading one too many
arguments when --exec -or --name was not specified, but created a
regression where the last argument would not print if either of those
arguments was specified. This corrects the issue.
Fixes#41.
This is another security fix. If you use chown() or chmod() on a
symbolic link, it affects the referenced file, not the symbolic link
itself.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 540006
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=540006
Do not change permissions on the target if it is a file and has multiple
hard links. This is necessary because a hard link can be an attack
vector to gain privilege escalation.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 540006
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=540006
runscript used to dlopen() runscript_selinux.so. This adds equivalent
functionality directly in to runscript instead. It authenticates with
either PAM or shadow and optionally has a dep on audit.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 517450
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=517450