Switches from the forking service type to simple by running haveged in
the foreground. Also restricts the execution environment a bit (these
are inspired by the Debian service file).
See #18319 for details. Starting network-online.target manually does not
work as it hangs indefinitely.
Additionally, don't treat avahi and dhcpcd special and sync their systemd units
with the respective upstream suggestion.
Systemd upstream provides targets for networking. This also includes a target network-online.target.
In this PR I remove / replace most occurrences since some of them were even wrong and could delay startup.
Radicale can run as a foreground service and will then emits logging and
errors on the standard output. This helps the logging end up in the
systemd journal.
This partially reverts commit ab9537ca22.
From the manpage of systemd-nspawn(1):
Note that systemd-nspawn will mount file systems private to the
container to /dev, /run and similar.
Testing this in a shell turns out:
$ sudo systemd-nspawn --bind-ro=/nix/store "$(readlink "$(which ls)")" /proc
Spawning container aszlig on /home/aszlig.
Press ^] three times within 1s to kill container.
/etc/localtime does not point into /usr/share/zoneinfo/, not updating
container timezone.
1 execdomains kpageflags stat
acpi fb loadavg swaps
asound filesystems locks sys
buddyinfo fs meminfo sysrq-trigger
bus interrupts misc sysvipc
cgroups iomem modules thread-self
cmdline ioports mounts timer_list
config.gz irq mtrr timer_stats
consoles kallsyms net tty
cpuinfo kcore pagetypeinfo uptime
crypto key-users partitions version
devices keys scsi vmallocinfo
diskstats kmsg self vmstat
dma kpagecgroup slabinfo zoneinfo
driver kpagecount softirqs
Container aszlig exited successfully.
So the test on whether PID 1 exists in /proc is enough, because if we
use PID namespaces there actually _is_ a PID 1 (as shown above) and the
special file systems are already mounted. A test on the $containers
variable actually mounts them twice.
This unbreaks NixOS containers and I've tested this against the
containers-imperative NixOS test.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @rickynils, @shlevy, @edolstra
Follow-up to the following commits:
abdc5961c3cdf9f5893ea1e91ba08ff5089f53a4: Fix starting the firewall
e090701e2d09aec3e8866ab9a8e53c37973ffeb4: Order before sysinit
Solely use sysinit.target here instead of multi-user.target because we
want to make sure that the iptables rules are applied *before* any
socket units are started.
The reason I've dropped the wantedBy on multi-user.target is that
sysinit.target is already a part of the dependency chain of
multi-user.target.
To make sure that this holds true, I've added a small test case to
ensure that during switch of the configuration the firewall.service is
considered as well.
Tested using the firewall NixOS test.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @edolstra
Probably as a result of 992c514a20, it
was not being started anymore.
My understanding of systemd.special(7) (section "Special passive
system units") is that the firewall should want network-pre.target,
rather than the other way around (not very intuitive...). This in
itself does not cause the firewall to be wanted, which is why the
wanted-by relationship with multi-user.target is necessary.
http://hydra.nixos.org/build/39965589