This changes the default .network files we ship for nspawn containers to set
EmitLLDP=customer-bridge in order to allow propagation of the LLDP packets
across bridges. This is useful so that "networkctl status" shows all peers
connected to a virtual container network, collecting this data via LLDP. This
is safe since the default configuration for these interfaces does not bridge
these links to external interfaces, but relies on IP routing for this.
This allows selecting the propagation level of emitted LLDP packets
(specifically: the destination MAC address of the packets). This is useful
because it allows generating LLDP packets that optionally cross certain types
of bridges.
See 802.11ab-2009, Table 7-1 for details.
This adds a new concept of network "zones", which are little more than bridge
devices that are automatically managed by nspawn: when the first container
referencing a bridge is started, the bridge device is created, when the last
container referencing it is removed the bridge device is removed again. Besides
this logic --network-zone= is pretty much identical to --network-bridge=.
The usecase for this is to make it easy to run multiple related containers
(think MySQL in one and Apache in another) in a common, named virtual Ethernet
broadcast zone, that only exists as long as one of them is running, and fully
automatically managed otherwise.
In this test /etc/fstab is replaced by -.mount unit. This causes
systemd-remount-fs.service to not remount / rw, which in turn causes various
failures becuase /var is not writable. In particular
systemd-tmpfiles-setup.service reports many failures. This is something
to possibly fix on its own (see https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/791);
in the meanwhile let's fix this test so that it doesn't fail, since the
point of the test is to check aliases on mount units, and not a ro root.
systemd-udev generated an insane amount of log output at debug level.
It would break TEST-02-CRYPTSETUP by filling the overflowing the disk
(which seems to be a bug in itself!).
WARNING: Image format was not specified for
'/var/tmp/systemd-test.tGi3od/rootdisk.img' and probing guessed raw.
Automatically detecting the format is dangerous for raw images, write
operations on block 0 will be restricted. Specify the 'raw' format
explicitly to remove the restrictions.
Also use unsafe caching mode, we don't care about data integrity here.