On 3 March 2017 at 20:58, Lennart Poettering <mzerq...@0pointer.de> wrote:
> On Fri, 03.03.17 12:34, Daurnimator (q...@daurnimator.com) wrote:
>
>> I'm trying to set up a centos 7 container with machinectl.
>> I've tried to run:
>>
>> machinectl pull-raw --
I'm trying to set up a centos 7 container with machinectl.
I've tried to run:
machinectl pull-raw --verify=no
http://cloud.centos.org/centos/7/images/CentOS-7-x86_64-GenericCloud-1701.raw.tar.gz
This downloads the image, but then dies with:
File overly large, refusing
Failed to retrieve image
8 05:59:39 daurnimator@daurn-vultr /etc/systemd/network $ cat tor.network
[Match]
Name=lo
[Network]
DNS=127.0.0.2
Domains=~onion
02-08 06:00:23 daurnimator@daurn-vultr /etc/systemd/network $ dig
@127.0.0.2 frxleqtzgvwkv7oz.onion
; <<>> DiG 9.11.0-P2 <<>> @127.0.0.2 frxleqtzgvwkv7oz.
On 8 September 2015 at 16:16, Daniel Spannbauer wrote:
> Can I test the system without rebooting it to
> find ordering cycles?
Try `systemd-analyze verify myfile.someunit`
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On 21 August 2015 at 19:57, Dominick Grift dac.overr...@gmail.com wrote:
i think it kind of sucks that systemctl --user list-units can be used to
determine who is currently logged in.
You can see with `loginctl list-users` too
I once tried to prevent getting a list of users, but it's hard... I
On 23 July 2015 at 23:17, Anne Mulhern amulh...@redhat.com wrote:
Hi!
We all know that using the journald native API it is possible to enrich the
log
entry data w/ key/value pairs, although this facility is Linux only.
The set of key/value pairs which a message may log to the journal can
On 23 July 2015 at 04:41, Lennart Poettering lenn...@poettering.net wrote:
Maybe we can change the manager core to propagate Reload() calls
for unit type that do not support it natively to other units listed in
PropagateReloadsTo= and then become a NOP.
Or in other words: invoking reload on a
On 7 July 2015 at 03:54, David Herrmann dh.herrm...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi
We intend to release v222 tomorrow. If anyone has open issues that
need to be in that release, please speak up. Right now, the release
consists almost exclusively of bug-fixes, and we want to get those
into
On 7 July 2015 at 12:50, Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek zbys...@in.waw.pl wrote:
Do you intend to publish release tarballs somewhere or should we get one from
https://github.com/systemd/python-systemd/releases ?
I was hoping that the signed tags and tarballs created by github would
be enough. I
On 18 Jun 2015 3:51 am, Lennart Poettering lenn...@poettering.net wrote:
On Wed, 17.06.15 19:48, Igor Bukanov (i...@mir2.org) wrote:
On 17 June 2015 at 15:27, Lennart Poettering lenn...@poettering.net
wrote:
To hook up local name service
clients people should use the nss-resolve NSS
On 9 June 2015 at 20:36, Lennart Poettering lenn...@poettering.net wrote:
On Wed, 03.06.15 16:31, Daurnimator (q...@daurnimator.com) wrote:
On 3 June 2015 at 16:01, Lennart Poettering lenn...@poettering.net wrote:
On Wed, 03.06.15 15:40, Daurnimator (q...@daurnimator.com) wrote:
I
On 3 June 2015 at 16:01, Lennart Poettering lenn...@poettering.net wrote:
On Wed, 03.06.15 15:40, Daurnimator (q...@daurnimator.com) wrote:
I was playing around with nss, and found that my loopback interface ip
doesn't appear from nss-myhostname.
Rather, my other ones do.
Furthermore, unless
I was playing around with nss, and found that my loopback interface ip
doesn't appear from nss-myhostname.
Rather, my other ones do.
Furthermore, unless I request IPv4, link-local IPv6 addresses are
returned. Is this expected?
$ uname -n
daurn-m3800
$ getent hosts daurn-m3800
On 28 May 2015 at 09:58, Filipe Brandenburger filbran...@google.com wrote:
Though I'm not sure whether taking a strftime format as a command line
argument is really a good idea... But I'll defer that to other
reviewers.
From working with lua, I recall that accepting arbitary strftime
format
On 8 May 2015 at 01:46, Pavel Odvody podv...@redhat.com wrote:
- To access the V2 registry we need to send a special User-Agent
docker/1.6.0
Is this really required?
Can we request they change something server side?
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On 13 April 2015 at 07:12, Cameron Norman camerontnor...@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, Apr 10, 2015 at 5:17 AM, Tomasz Bursztyka
tomasz.burszt...@linux.intel.com wrote:
Hi,
[snip]
As a notice, this is nothing new. Such standalone daemon has been already
done by the past, pacrunner.
On 27 March 2015 at 13:32, Kai Hendry hen...@webconverger.com wrote:
It's still getting stuck with Type=simple.
http://s.natalian.org/2015-03-27/simple.png
Isn't there a better way to debug than running journalctl -u service
-f in parallel?
The frustrating thing is that the SAME service
---
TODO| 2 --
man/tmpfiles.d.xml | 2 ++
src/tmpfiles/tmpfiles.c | 24 ++--
3 files changed, 12 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-)
diff --git a/TODO b/TODO
index 60efaaf..4d5e2b6 100644
--- a/TODO
+++ b/TODO
@@ -226,8 +226,6 @@ Features:
*
On 6 March 2015 at 14:38, Daurnimator q...@daurnimator.com wrote:
sd_journal_query_unique() finds unique *field names*.
Not journal entries.
Apologies, I described this incorrectly.
sd_journal_query_unique() takes a field name, and allows you to
iterate over all different values that field has
---
TODO| 2 --
man/tmpfiles.d.xml | 2 ++
src/tmpfiles/tmpfiles.c | 21 +++--
3 files changed, 9 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-)
diff --git a/TODO b/TODO
index 60efaaf..4d5e2b6 100644
--- a/TODO
+++ b/TODO
@@ -226,8 +226,6 @@ Features:
* exponential
On 6 March 2015 at 16:13, Chris Morgan chmor...@gmail.com wrote:
So is SD_JOURNAL_FOREACH_BACKWARDS the fastest way to find the newest
journal entry with a given field? journalctl seems a ton faster than
my c application is when I search for a given field that is not
present. And by search I'm
On 6 March 2015 at 14:25, Chris Morgan chmor...@gmail.com wrote:
I was using a journal iterator to search from the newest journal entry
backwards for a matching field, using SD_JOURNAL_FOREACH_BACKWARDS.
This appears to be pretty slow but journalctl is really fast. I went
looking and found
AFAIK, all the pull-* commands do is download into /var/lib/machines.
You could easily enough just copy things into there yourself.
Or even less work: don't copy them in there at all, and pass your image
directly to systemd-nspawn (which is what machinectl uses)
See:
On 20 October 2014 15:11, Lennart Poettering lenn...@poettering.net wrote:
On Wed, 15.10.14 01:58, Michal Sekletar (msekl...@kemper.freedesktop.org)
wrote:
-mycon = context_str(bcon);
+mycon = strdup(context_str(bcon));
This looks wrong!
I meanm what is mycon? a string
contract; why not perform next's functionality inside
of seek_head?
Thanks for the work around.
I just commited an example script:
https://github.com/daurnimator/lua-systemd/blob/master/examples/tail_logs.lua
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systemd-devel
Hi All,
I was trying to write a program that tailed the journal, but found that
sd_journal_seek_tail() didn't work as expected.
That is: that it would seek to the last/most recent thing in the journal,
and I could tail things from there.
I whipped up a quick demonstration program, that shows
On 22 September 2014 11:33, Daniel P. Berrange berra...@redhat.com wrote:
The current '--output FORMAT' argument defines a number of
common output formats, but there are some useful cases it
does cover. In particular when reading application logs it
is often desirable to display the code file
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