To mimic MODEL_ID variable built for ATA and SCSI devices, add rules
to add MODEL_ID variable for NVMe devices.
TEST: Check on a system with NVMe device that MODEL_ID variable is
present:
udevadm info --query=all -n /dev/nvme0n1p1 | grep ID_MODEL
and
udevadm info --query=all -n /dev/nvme0n1p1 | grep ID_MODEL
return:
E: ID_MODEL=SAMSUNG...
We generally use the casing "Namespace" for the word, and that's visible
in a number of user-facing interfaces, including "RestrictNamespace=" or
"JoinsNamespaceOf=". Let's make sure to use the same casing internally
too.
As discussed in #7024
We should be careful when talking about "units" and "unit files". The
latter should be the concept on disk, and the former, the loaded version
of it. However, as a single unit file can result in multiple loaded
units (think templates), and a units can also exist with no unit file at
all (think .device units), we should be precise.
As symlinks are created on unit files rather than units (as symlinks are
an fs object, and unit files are too, but units are not), let's say so
here.
Some kernel modules may be loaded if the hardware does not exist
(usually when the hardware is hot-pluggable), while others fail with
ENODEV. Let's make those two cases more similar, and simply log
modules which cannot be loaded because of missing hardware without
failing systemd-modules-load.service.
For modules which don't exist, let's warn, but not fail the whole
service. I think a warning is appropriate because it's likely that
a typo was made.
More specifically, it should return > 0 only for conditions specified in
probe_flags. We only set KMOD_PROBE_APPLY_BLACKLIST in probe_flags, so the
code was correct, but add an assert to clarify this.