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Diffstat (limited to '')
-rwxr-xr-x | test/units/testsuite-07.main-PID-change.sh | 172 |
1 files changed, 172 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/test/units/testsuite-07.main-PID-change.sh b/test/units/testsuite-07.main-PID-change.sh new file mode 100755 index 0000000..bd1144c --- /dev/null +++ b/test/units/testsuite-07.main-PID-change.sh @@ -0,0 +1,172 @@ +#!/usr/bin/env bash +# SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later +set -eux +set -o pipefail + +# Test changing the main PID + +# shellcheck source=test/units/util.sh +. "$(dirname "$0")"/util.sh + +# The main service PID should be the parent bash process +MAINPID="${PPID:?}" +test "$(systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-07.service)" -eq "$MAINPID" + +# Start a test process inside of our own cgroup +sleep infinity & +INTERNALPID=$! +disown + +# Start a test process outside of our own cgroup +systemd-run -p DynamicUser=1 --unit=test-sleep.service /bin/sleep infinity +EXTERNALPID="$(systemctl show -P MainPID test-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-07.service)" -eq "$EXTERNALPID" + +# Update our own main PID to the internal test PID, this should work, too +systemd-notify MAINPID=$INTERNALPID +test "$(systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-07.service)" -eq "$INTERNALPID" + +# Update it back to our own PID, this should also work +systemd-notify MAINPID="$MAINPID" +test "$(systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-07.service)" -eq "$MAINPID" + +# Try to set it to PID 1, which it should ignore, because that's the manager +systemd-notify MAINPID=1 +test "$(systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-07.service)" -eq "$MAINPID" + +# Try to set it to PID 0, which is invalid and should be ignored +systemd-notify MAINPID=0 +test "$(systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-07.service)" -eq "$MAINPID" + +# Try to set it to a valid but non-existing PID, which should be ignored. (Note +# that we set the PID to a value well above any known /proc/sys/kernel/pid_max, +# which means we can be pretty sure it doesn't exist by coincidence) +systemd-notify MAINPID=1073741824 +test "$(systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-07.service)" -eq "$MAINPID" + +# Change it again to the external PID, without privileges this time. This should be ignored, because the PID is from outside of our cgroup and we lack privileges. +systemd-notify --uid=1000 MAINPID="$EXTERNALPID" +test "$(systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-07.service)" -eq "$MAINPID" + +# 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-07.service)" -eq "$INTERNALPID" + +# Update it back to our own PID, this should also work +systemd-notify --uid=1000 MAINPID="$MAINPID" +test "$(systemctl show -P MainPID testsuite-07.service)" -eq "$MAINPID" + +cat >/tmp/test-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 $MAINPID >/run/mainpidsh/pid +EOF +chmod +x /tmp/test-mainpid.sh + +systemd-run --unit=test-mainpidsh.service \ + -p StandardOutput=tty \ + -p StandardError=tty \ + -p Type=forking \ + -p RuntimeDirectory=mainpidsh \ + -p PIDFile=/run/mainpidsh/pid \ + /tmp/test-mainpid.sh +test "$(systemctl show -P MainPID test-mainpidsh.service)" -eq "$(cat /run/mainpidsh/pid)" + +cat >/tmp/test-mainpid2.sh <<\EOF +#!/usr/bin/env bash + +set -eux +set -o pipefail + +# Create a number of children, and make one the main one +sleep infinity & +disown + +sleep infinity & +MAINPID=$! +disown + +sleep infinity & +disown + +echo $MAINPID >/run/mainpidsh2/pid +chown 1001:1001 /run/mainpidsh2/pid +EOF +chmod +x /tmp/test-mainpid2.sh + +systemd-run --unit=test-mainpidsh2.service \ + -p StandardOutput=tty \ + -p StandardError=tty \ + -p Type=forking \ + -p RuntimeDirectory=mainpidsh2 \ + -p PIDFile=/run/mainpidsh2/pid \ + /tmp/test-mainpid2.sh +test "$(systemctl show -P MainPID test-mainpidsh2.service)" -eq "$(cat /run/mainpidsh2/pid)" + +cat >/dev/shm/test-mainpid3.sh <<EOF +#!/usr/bin/env bash + +set -eux +set -o pipefail + +sleep infinity & +disown + +sleep infinity & +disown + +sleep infinity & +disown + +# Let's try to play games, and link up a privileged PID file +ln -s ../mainpidsh/pid /run/mainpidsh3/pid + +# Quick assertion that the link isn't dead +test -f /run/mainpidsh3/pid +EOF +chmod 755 /dev/shm/test-mainpid3.sh + +# This has to fail, as we shouldn't accept the dangerous PID file, and then +# inotify-wait on it to be corrected which we never do. +(! systemd-run \ + --unit=test-mainpidsh3.service \ + -p StandardOutput=tty \ + -p StandardError=tty \ + -p Type=forking \ + -p RuntimeDirectory=mainpidsh3 \ + -p PIDFile=/run/mainpidsh3/pid \ + -p DynamicUser=1 \ + `# Make sanitizers happy when DynamicUser=1 pulls in instrumented systemd NSS modules` \ + -p EnvironmentFile=-/usr/lib/systemd/systemd-asan-env \ + -p TimeoutStartSec=2s \ + /dev/shm/test-mainpid3.sh) + +# Test that this failed due to timeout, and not some other error +test "$(systemctl show -P Result test-mainpidsh3.service)" = timeout + +# Test that scope units work +systemd-run --scope --unit test-true.scope /bin/true +test "$(systemctl show -P Result test-true.scope)" = success + +# Test that user scope units work as well + +systemctl start user@4711.service +runas testuser systemd-run --scope --user --unit test-true.scope /bin/true +test "$(systemctl show -P Result test-true.scope)" = success |