Kay Sievers [Sun, 21 Dec 2008 12:01:40 +0000 (13:01 +0100)]
rules: more changes toward Ubuntu rules merge
specialix_rioctl: no kernel name symlink
specialix_sxctl: no kernel name symlink
bus/usb: 0644 -> 0664
ppdev: lp
dri: 0666 -> 0660
js: no kernel name symlink
Ryan Thomas [Tue, 9 Dec 2008 00:10:03 +0000 (19:10 -0500)]
rules: add rules for AoE devices
In the interest of standardizing udev rules, please consider the
following patch that adds udev rules for the ATA over Ethernet character
and block devices. The aoe module has been a long-time member of the
kernel and needs inclusion in the standard udev rules.
Kay Sievers [Sat, 6 Dec 2008 03:03:08 +0000 (04:03 +0100)]
make: do not delete autotools generated file with distclean
[...] running the command
`make maintainer-clean' should not delete `configure' even if
`configure' can be remade using a rule in the Makefile. More
generally, `make maintainer-clean' should not delete anything that
needs to exist in order to run `configure' and then begin to build
the program. This is the only exception; `maintainer-clean' should
delete everything else that can be rebuilt.
Kay Sievers [Wed, 3 Dec 2008 00:32:00 +0000 (01:32 +0100)]
rules: fix isdn rules
On Tue, Dec 2, 2008 at 21:07, Matthias Schwarzott <zzam@gentoo.org> wrote:
> It seems that the rules related to capi devices are not correct:
>
> KERNEL=="capi", NAME="capi20", SYMLINK+="isdn/capi20"
> KERNEL=="capi*", NAME="capi/%n"
>
> Changing the second rule to match only on KERNEL=="capi[0-9]*" is reported to
> make it work.
> So I can only guess that the problem is the second rule overwriting the NAME
> set by the first one.
Kay Sievers [Fri, 21 Nov 2008 06:26:44 +0000 (07:26 +0100)]
volume_id: clear probing result before probing and do not probe a second time, if not needed
On Thu, Nov 20, 2008 at 14:17, Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com> wrote:
> I see the patch (volume_id_probe_filesystem()) and a few things come
> to mind:
>
> - shouldn't be the relevant parts (label, uuid, version, ...) of
> the "struct volume_id" zeroized when you found a signature and
> before you call the next probing function?
>
> - it seems as overkill to use two for()s and probe two times for all
> filesystems. What about to store the first result and re-use it?
>
> - .. or at least never use the second for() when the fist for() found
> nothing ;-)
Sergey Vlasov [Fri, 14 Nov 2008 21:34:43 +0000 (00:34 +0300)]
udevadm: fix option parsing breakage with klibc
The klibc implementation of getopt_long() behaves slightly different
from the glibc one - in particular, it treats the change of the option
string argument between invocations as start of parsing a different
command line, and resets its state. However, the udevadm code
expected getopt_long() invocations in subcommands to continue parsing
the rest of command line after initial options has been parsed at the
top level; with klibc this broke, causing all udevadm subcommands to
stop recognizing their options.
Instead of relying on the glibc behavior, reset the getopt_long()
state properly before invoking the subcommand handler: move argv to
point to the subcommand name, decrease argc appropriately, and set
optind = 0. This also fixes a minor bug visible with glibc - without
setting optind = 0 all getopt_long() calls in subcommand handlers were
behaving as if "+" was specified as the first character of the option
string (which disables option reordering), because that state was set
by the first getopt_long() call at the top level, and was not reset
when parsing subcommand options.
Kay Sievers [Thu, 13 Nov 2008 18:34:41 +0000 (19:34 +0100)]
volume_id: always check for all filesystem types and skip conflicting results
We probe for all known filesystems to find conflicting signatures. If
we find multiple matching signatures and one of the detected filesystem
types claims that it can not co-exist with any other filesystem type,
we do not return a probing result.
We can not afford to mount a volume with the wrong filesystem code and
possibly corrupt it. Linux ssytems have the problem of dozens of possible
filesystem types, and volumes with left-over signatures from former
filesystem types. Invalid signature need to be removed from the volume
to make the filesystem detection successful.
We do not want to read that many bytes from probed floppies, skip volumes
smaller than a usual floppy disk.
Kay Sievers [Fri, 7 Nov 2008 14:59:58 +0000 (15:59 +0100)]
convert debug string arrays to functions
On Fri, Nov 7, 2008 at 13:07, Matthias Schwarzott <zzam@gentoo.org> wrote:
> I managed to let udev-131 segfault at startup.
>
> I configured it like this:
> CFLAGS="-Wall -ggdb" ./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc --exec-prefix=
>
> Running it in gdb shows it segfaults at udev-rules.c:831
>
> (gdb) run
> Starting program: /tmp/udev-131/udev/udevd
>
> Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
> 0x0804ea06 in get_key (udev=0x9175008, line=0xafcdc8f0, key=0xafcdc5d8,
> op=0xafcdc5d0, value=0xafcdc5d4)
> at udev-rules.c:831
> 831 dbg(udev, "%s '%s'-'%s'\n", operation_str[*op], *key, *value);
If compiled without optimization, the dbg() macro dereferences variables
which are not available. Convert the string array to a function, which just
returns NULL if compiled without DEBUG.