1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
|
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -ex
set -o pipefail
systemd-analyze log-level debug
systemd-analyze log-target console
test `systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-20.service` -eq $$
# Start a test process inside of our own cgroup
sleep infinity &
INTERNALPID=$!
disown
# Start a test process outside of our own cgroup
systemd-run -p DynamicUser=1 --unit=test20-sleep.service /bin/sleep infinity
EXTERNALPID=`systemctl show -P MainPID test20-sleep.service`
# Update our own main PID to the external test PID, this should work
systemd-notify MAINPID=$EXTERNALPID
test `systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-20.service` -eq $EXTERNALPID
# Update our own main PID to the internal test PID, this should work, too
systemd-notify MAINPID=$INTERNALPID
test `systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-20.service` -eq $INTERNALPID
# Update it back to our own PID, this should also work
systemd-notify MAINPID=$$
test `systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-20.service` -eq $$
# Try to set it to PID 1, which it should ignore, because that's the manager
systemd-notify MAINPID=1
test `systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-20.service` -eq $$
# Try to set it to PID 0, which is invalid and should be ignored
systemd-notify MAINPID=0
test `systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-20.service` -eq $$
# Try to set it to a valid but non-existing PID, which should be ignored. (Note
# that we set the PID to a value well above any known /proc/sys/kernel/pid_max,
# which means we can be pretty sure it doesn't exist by coincidence)
systemd-notify MAINPID=1073741824
test `systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-20.service` -eq $$
# Change it again to the external PID, without privileges this time. This should be ignored, because the PID is from outside of our cgroup and we lack privileges.
systemd-notify --uid=1000 MAINPID=$EXTERNALPID
test `systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-20.service` -eq $$
# Change it again to the internal PID, without privileges this time. This should work, as the process is on our cgroup, and that's enough even if we lack privileges.
systemd-notify --uid=1000 MAINPID=$INTERNALPID
test `systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-20.service` -eq $INTERNALPID
# Update it back to our own PID, this should also work
systemd-notify --uid=1000 MAINPID=$$
test `systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-20.service` -eq $$
cat >/tmp/test20-mainpid.sh <<EOF
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -eux
set -o pipefail
# Create a number of children, and make one the main one
sleep infinity &
disown
sleep infinity &
MAINPID=\$!
disown
sleep infinity &
disown
echo \$MAINPID > /run/mainpidsh/pid
EOF
chmod +x /tmp/test20-mainpid.sh
systemd-run --unit=test20-mainpidsh.service -p StandardOutput=tty -p StandardError=tty -p Type=forking -p RuntimeDirectory=mainpidsh -p PIDFile=/run/mainpidsh/pid /tmp/test20-mainpid.sh
test `systemctl show -P MainPID test20-mainpidsh.service` -eq `cat /run/mainpidsh/pid`
cat >/tmp/test20-mainpid2.sh <<EOF
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -eux
set -o pipefail
# Create a number of children, and make one the main one
sleep infinity &
disown
sleep infinity &
MAINPID=\$!
disown
sleep infinity &
disown
echo \$MAINPID > /run/mainpidsh2/pid
chown 1001:1001 /run/mainpidsh2/pid
EOF
chmod +x /tmp/test20-mainpid2.sh
systemd-run --unit=test20-mainpidsh2.service -p StandardOutput=tty -p StandardError=tty -p Type=forking -p RuntimeDirectory=mainpidsh2 -p PIDFile=/run/mainpidsh2/pid /tmp/test20-mainpid2.sh
test `systemctl show -P MainPID test20-mainpidsh2.service` -eq `cat /run/mainpidsh2/pid`
cat >/dev/shm/test20-mainpid3.sh <<EOF
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -eux
set -o pipefail
sleep infinity &
disown
sleep infinity &
disown
sleep infinity &
disown
# Let's try to play games, and link up a privileged PID file
ln -s ../mainpidsh/pid /run/mainpidsh3/pid
# Quick assertion that the link isn't dead
test -f /run/mainpidsh3/pid
EOF
chmod 755 /dev/shm/test20-mainpid3.sh
# This has to fail, as we shouldn't accept the dangerous PID file, and then inotify-wait on it to be corrected which we never do
! systemd-run --unit=test20-mainpidsh3.service -p StandardOutput=tty -p StandardError=tty -p Type=forking -p RuntimeDirectory=mainpidsh3 -p PIDFile=/run/mainpidsh3/pid -p DynamicUser=1 -p TimeoutStartSec=2s /dev/shm/test20-mainpid3.sh
# Test that this failed due to timeout, and not some other error
test `systemctl show -P Result test20-mainpidsh3.service` = timeout
systemd-analyze log-level info
echo OK > /testok
exit 0
|