s390x will define both s390x and s390, so exec-personality-s390.service is ran
in both cases but fails on s390x, as the personality returned is s390x.
Split the test and check specifically for s390x.
We want to retain *some* of the full paths in order to test more code paths.
But the default should be to use the command name only. This makes the tests
less visually cluttered.
The read-only bit is flipped after setting up all the mounts, so that
bind mounts can be added. Remove the early config, and add a unit
test.
Fixes https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/30372
When starting a service with a non-root user and a SystemCallFilter and
other settings (like ProtectClock), the no_new_privs flag should not be set.
Also, test that CapabilityBoundingSet behaves correctly, since we need
to preserve some capabilities to do the seccomp filter and restore the
ones set by the service before executing.
This reverts commits
- 9ae3624889
"test-execute: add tests for credentials directory with mount namespace"↲
- 94fe4cf255
"core: do not leak mount for credentials directory if mount namespace is enabled",
- 7241b9cd72
"core/credential: make setup_credentials() return path to credentials directory",
- fbaf3b23ae
"core: set $CREDENTIALS_DIRECTORY only when we set up credentials"
Before the commits, credentials directory set up on ExecStart= was kept
on e.g. ExecStop=. But, with the changes, if a service requests a
private mount namespace, the credentials directory is discarded after
ExecStart= is finished.
Let's revert the change, and find better way later.
Addresses the post-merge comment
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/28787#issuecomment-1690614202.
This adds support for the new XDG_STATE_HOME env var that was added to
the xdg basedir spec. Previously, because the basedir spec didn't know
the concept we'd alias the backing dir for StateDirectory= to the one
for ConfigurationDirectory= when runnin in --user mode. With this change
we'll make separate. This brings us various benefits, such as proper
"systemctl clean" support, where we can clear service state separately
from service configuration, now in user mode too.
This does not come without complications: retaining compatibility with
older setups is difficult, because we cannot possibly identitfy which
files in existing populated config dirs are actually "state" and which
one are true" configuration.
Hence let's deal with this pragmatically: if we detect that a service
that has both dirs configured only has the configuration dir existing,
then symlink the state dir to the configuration dir to retain
compatibility.
This is not great, but it's the only somewhat reasonable way out I can
see.
Fixes: #25739
Before this, tests are split into two categories, system and user, but
both are running in fully privileged environment. Hence, unprivileged
user scope was mostly not covered by the test.
Let's run all tests in both system and user scopes, and drop capabilities
when Manager is running in user scope.
This also makes the host environment protected more from the test run.
(The one case that is left unchanged is '< <(subcommand)'.)
This way, the style with no gap was already dominant. This way, the reader
immediately knows that ' < ' is a comparison operator and ' << ' is a shift.
In a few cases, replace custom EOF replacement by just EOF. There is no point
in using someting like "_EOL" unless "EOF" appears in the text.
In my understanding user group "3" (aka "sys") is kept for historical reasons
but not really useful these days. That's probably explained why this group
isn't defined on openSUSE.
Hence let's drop reference to this user group, this shouldn't lessen the
revelance of the test since SupplementaryGroups= is still tested with 2 other
groups.
/bin/sh as a shell is punishing. There is no good reason to make
the occasional root login unpleasant.
Since /bin/sh is usually /bin/bash in compat mode, i.e. if one is
available, the other will be too, /bin/bash is almost as good as a default.
But to avoid a regression in the situation where /bin/bash (or
DEFAULT_USER_SHELL) is not installed, we check with access() and fall back
to /bin/sh. This should make this change in behaviour less risky.
(FWIW, e.g. Fedora/RHEL use /bin/bash as default for root.)
This is a follow-up of sorts for 53350c7bba,
which added the default-user-shell option, but most likely with the idea
of using /bin/bash less ;)
Fixes#24369.
test-execute checks that only /var/lib/private/waldo is writable, but there are
some filesystems that are always writable and excluded. Add /sys/devices/system/cpu
which is created by lxcfs.
Fixes https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/23263