systemd 231-9 source package in Ubuntu
Changelog
systemd (231-9) unstable; urgency=medium
* pid1: process zero-length notification messages again.
Just remove the assertion, the "n" value was not used anyway. This fixes
a local DoS due to unprocessed/unclosed fds which got introduced by the
previous fix. (Closes: #839171) (LP: #1628687)
* pid1: Robustify manager_dispatch_notify_fd()
* test/networkd-test.py: Add missing writeConfig() helper function.
-- Martin Pitt <email address hidden> Thu, 29 Sep 2016 23:39:24 +0200
Upload details
- Uploaded by:
- Martin Pitt on 2016-09-29
- Uploaded to:
- Yakkety
- Original maintainer:
- pkg-systemd-maintainers
- Architectures:
- linux-any
- Section:
- admin
- Urgency:
- Medium Urgency
See full publishing history Publishing
| Series | Published | Component | Section |
|---|
Downloads
| File | Size | SHA-256 Checksum |
|---|---|---|
| systemd_231.orig.tar.gz | 4.2 MiB | 899733ad6c157cedbb89aec4efe3bc824dcfd65a1d6f6bebc7b043f7924e39b4 |
| systemd_231-9.debian.tar.xz | 144.4 KiB | 897a8f83bc5115e6e99ed1585884ca3c7257ea380837808b009c8ec4a7f55330 |
| systemd_231-9.dsc | 4.3 KiB | ebf590224c04e075f882a07fef3837119bc58b852f5c59bd3d6965516ea22e6e |
Available diffs
- diff from 231-7 (in Debian) to 231-9 (11.9 KiB)
- diff from 231-8 to 231-9 (4.5 KiB)
Binary packages built by this source
- libnss-myhostname: nss module providing fallback resolution for the current hostname
This package contains a plugin for the Name Service Switch, providing host
name resolution for the locally configured system hostname as returned by
gethostname(2). It returns all locally configured public IP addresses or -- if
none are configured, the IPv4 address 127.0.1.1 (which is on the local
loopback) and the IPv6 address ::1 (which is the local host).
.
A lot of software relies on that the local host name is resolvable. This
package provides an alternative to the fragile and error-prone manual editing
of /etc/hosts.
.
Installing this package automatically adds myhostname to /etc/nsswitch.conf.
- libnss-myhostname-dbgsym: debug symbols for package libnss-myhostname
This package contains a plugin for the Name Service Switch, providing host
name resolution for the locally configured system hostname as returned by
gethostname(2). It returns all locally configured public IP addresses or -- if
none are configured, the IPv4 address 127.0.1.1 (which is on the local
loopback) and the IPv6 address ::1 (which is the local host).
.
A lot of software relies on that the local host name is resolvable. This
package provides an alternative to the fragile and error-prone manual editing
of /etc/hosts.
.
Installing this package automatically adds myhostname to /etc/nsswitch.conf.
- libnss-mymachines: nss module to resolve hostnames for local container instances
nss-mymachines is a plugin for the GNU Name Service Switch (NSS) functionality
of the GNU C Library (glibc) providing hostname resolution for local containers
that are registered with systemd-machined. service( 8). The container names are
resolved to IP addresses of the specific container, ordered by their scope.
.
Installing this package automatically adds mymachines to /etc/nsswitch.conf.
- libnss-mymachines-dbgsym: debug symbols for package libnss-mymachines
nss-mymachines is a plugin for the GNU Name Service Switch (NSS) functionality
of the GNU C Library (glibc) providing hostname resolution for local containers
that are registered with systemd-machined. service( 8). The container names are
resolved to IP addresses of the specific container, ordered by their scope.
.
Installing this package automatically adds mymachines to /etc/nsswitch.conf.
- libnss-resolve: nss module to resolve names via systemd-resolved
nss-resolve is a plugin for the GNU Name Service Switch (NSS) functionality
of the GNU C Library (glibc) providing DNS and LLMNR resolution to programs via
the systemd-resolved daemon (provided in the systemd package).
.
Installing this package automatically adds resolve to /etc/nsswitch.conf.
- libnss-resolve-dbgsym: debug symbols for package libnss-resolve
nss-resolve is a plugin for the GNU Name Service Switch (NSS) functionality
of the GNU C Library (glibc) providing DNS and LLMNR resolution to programs via
the systemd-resolved daemon (provided in the systemd package).
.
Installing this package automatically adds resolve to /etc/nsswitch.conf.
- libpam-systemd: system and service manager - PAM module
This package contains the PAM module which registers user sessions in
the systemd control group hierarchy for logind.
.
If in doubt, do install this package.
.
Packages that depend on logind functionality need to depend on libpam-systemd.
- libpam-systemd-dbgsym: debug symbols for package libpam-systemd
This package contains the PAM module which registers user sessions in
the systemd control group hierarchy for logind.
.
If in doubt, do install this package.
.
Packages that depend on logind functionality need to depend on libpam-systemd.
- libsystemd-dev: systemd utility library - development files
The libsystemd0 library provides interfaces to various systemd components.
.
This package contains the development files.
- libsystemd0: systemd utility library
The libsystemd0 library provides interfaces to various systemd components.
- libsystemd0-dbgsym: debug symbols for package libsystemd0
The libsystemd0 library provides interfaces to various systemd components.
- libudev-dev: libudev development files
This package contains the files needed for developing applications that
use libudev.
- libudev-dev-dbgsym: debug symbols for package libudev-dev
This package contains the files needed for developing applications that
use libudev.
- libudev1: libudev shared library
This library provides access to udev device information.
- libudev1-dbgsym: debug symbols for package libudev1
This library provides access to udev device information.
- libudev1-udeb: libudev shared library
This library provides access to udev device information.
.
This is a minimal version, only for use in the installation system.
- libudev1-udeb-dbgsym: debug symbols for package libudev1-udeb
This library provides access to udev device information.
.
This is a minimal version, only for use in the installation system.
- systemd: system and service manager
systemd is a system and service manager for Linux. It provides aggressive
parallelization capabilities, uses socket and D-Bus activation for starting
services, offers on-demand starting of daemons, keeps track of processes using
Linux control groups, maintains mount and automount points and implements an
elaborate transactional dependency-based service control logic.
.
systemd is compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts and can work as a
drop-in replacement for sysvinit.
.
Installing the systemd package will not switch your init system unless you
boot with init=/bin/systemd or install systemd-sysv in addition.
- systemd-container: systemd container/nspawn tools
This package provides systemd's tools for nspawn and container/VM management:
* systemd-nspawn
* systemd-machined and machinectl
* systemd-importd
- systemd-container-dbgsym: debug symbols for package systemd-container
This package provides systemd's tools for nspawn and container/VM management:
* systemd-nspawn
* systemd-machined and machinectl
* systemd-importd
- systemd-coredump: tools for storing and retrieving coredumps
This package provides systemd tools for storing and retrieving coredumps:
* systemd-coredump
* coredumpctl
- systemd-coredump-dbgsym: debug symbols for package systemd-coredump
This package provides systemd tools for storing and retrieving coredumps:
* systemd-coredump
* coredumpctl
- systemd-dbgsym: debug symbols for package systemd
systemd is a system and service manager for Linux. It provides aggressive
parallelization capabilities, uses socket and D-Bus activation for starting
services, offers on-demand starting of daemons, keeps track of processes using
Linux control groups, maintains mount and automount points and implements an
elaborate transactional dependency-based service control logic.
.
systemd is compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts and can work as a
drop-in replacement for sysvinit.
.
Installing the systemd package will not switch your init system unless you
boot with init=/bin/systemd or install systemd-sysv in addition.
- systemd-journal-remote: tools for sending and receiving remote journal logs
This package provides tools for sending and receiving remote journal logs:
* systemd-journal- remote
* systemd-journal- upload
* systemd-journal- gatewayd
- systemd-journal-remote-dbgsym: debug symbols for package systemd-journal-remote
This package provides tools for sending and receiving remote journal logs:
* systemd-journal- remote
* systemd-journal- upload
* systemd-journal- gatewayd
- systemd-sysv: system and service manager - SysV links
systemd is a system and service manager for Linux. It provides aggressive
parallelization capabilities, uses socket and D-Bus activation for starting
services, offers on-demand starting of daemons, keeps track of processes using
Linux control groups, maintains mount and automount points and implements an
elaborate transactional dependency-based service control logic.
.
systemd is compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts and can work as a
drop-in replacement for sysvinit.
.
This package provides the manual pages and links needed for systemd
to replace sysvinit. Installing systemd-sysv will overwrite /sbin/init with a
link to systemd.
- udev: /dev/ and hotplug management daemon
udev is a daemon which dynamically creates and removes device nodes from
/dev/, handles hotplug events and loads drivers at boot time.
- udev-dbgsym: debug symbols for package udev
udev is a daemon which dynamically creates and removes device nodes from
/dev/, handles hotplug events and loads drivers at boot time.
- udev-udeb: /dev/ and hotplug management daemon
udev is a daemon which dynamically creates and removes device nodes from
/dev/, handles hotplug events and loads drivers at boot time.
.
This is a minimal version, only for use in the installation system.
- udev-udeb-dbgsym: debug symbols for package udev-udeb
udev is a daemon which dynamically creates and removes device nodes from
/dev/, handles hotplug events and loads drivers at boot time.
.
This is a minimal version, only for use in the installation system.

