Chris Hofstaedtler
2023-Jan-30 02:22 UTC
[Pkg-xen-devel] Bug#1029998: xen-utils-common: Please provide systemd units
Package: xen-utils-common Version: 4.17.0-1 Severity: normal Dear Xen Maintainers, xen-utils-common currently ships two /etc/init.d scripts (xen, xendomains) and relies on systemd-sysv-generator(8) to integrate with systemd (Debians default init system). Please improve the integration by providing native systemd unit files. When doing so, you can also take advantage of newer features, like sandboxing and other security improvements. Thanks, Chris
Maximilian Engelhardt
2024-Feb-11 14:43 UTC
[Pkg-xen-devel] Bug#1029998: Bug#1039422: xen and systemd support
resending so this also appears in #1029998. Hi Yann, Thanks for your mail.> Maybe one of those bugs should be marked as dup?Yes, doing so now.> I noticed that building this package with libsystemd-dev installed > causes a build failure, as unit files are then generated but not shipped > by any package. So technically today we seem to miss a Build-Conflicts: > libsystemd-dev. > > However, it is likely better to move forward and enable it. I could see > no comment in the BTS talking about any problems around that, are there > any blockers going forward?There is a related bug to this: https://bugs.debian.org/1028251 Basically the situation is a bit more complex, Knorrie wrote some good explanation in #1028251, I am going to copy the relevant part here to make it easier to understand the situation. <quote from #1028251 Message #59> Yeah, well, so, the thing here is... When Debian started to package Xen (thanks! Bastian, in 200X), the upstream init scripts were copy pasted, and adjusted to have the ability to have different Hypervisor-ABI-incompatible versions installed at the same time. Also, this is related to the collection of Makefile patches we carry around to have ABI-incompatible stuff end up in a directory like /usr/lib/xen-4.14/ and /usr/lib/xen-4.17/ ! What does this mean? Well, in the most basic sense it means that you could apt-get (dist-)upgrade and then still be able to xl shutdown a domU afterwards before doing reboot, because it will choose the right tools which match with the ABI of the *now* running hypervisor instead of being left with a dumpster fire, which in the end causes you to shout curse words and cause you to have to go to the machine and hold the power button for 5 seconds to force power it off. This is the thing about where you upgrade from Xen 4.14 to Xen 4.17 during the upgrade from Debian 11/Bullseye to Debian 12/Bookworm, it will allow you, if booting the whole new thing is a huge failure, to reset the computer, and in grub, choose to use the previous Xen (and possibly do that in combination with previous Debian linux kernel) and then have a system where you again at least can start your domUs again *) and first have a good rest, night of sleep before starting to dig into what's going wrong. So, this is exactly the same way of doing stuff like how you can also reboot back into the previous Linux kernel (ABI-compatible) one during a system upgrade, even if you're not using Xen at all! I like this very much. This is the kind of thing that helps admins of systems that have just local disks and a few domUs. Like, the case where you support some non-profit organization with their server stuff running on donated hardware. (Yes, I also do some of those, I do!) And, in case something does fail (there could always be something like a misbehaving mpt3sas card in the hardware or anything that no one else spotted yet), the admin does not have to end up in total panic mode after doing the upgrade on a Friday afternoon lying upside down inside a broom closet, but they can just at least recover from the situation and have something that's running again, and then a day later, or 2 or 3 days or a week later return on another planned moment to fix it, after asking around. Upstream Xen stuff doesn't have anything like that. But, they actually look at us, and they think, ooh, this is actually nice, we should have that also by default. The fact that we have this changed/altered/divergent init scripts in Debian is the main reason that we cannot just enable systemd things which will put upstream whatever on the system. So, what could we do about this? The project plan (that could be drafted on an A4 paper) could look like, gather around all distro maintainers of Linux distro's that are shipping Xen, and then search for a 'Project owner', which we totally need to be someone that is actually employed at a company that actually cares about getting the results of this. Then we go look at the Debian stuff and fix upstream to do the same thing, also fixing all the init/systemd stuff that got lost along the way, and then we can push it down to all other distro's as well again. And after all of that is done, there will be a time where we actually (at Debian) can have a different response to everything init script related than "sorry, probably won't happen". If you look at the init script stuff in Xen upstream already, it quickly shows that it's just a total dumpster fire. Someone cobbled up something in the year 2005, and after that, only changes have been made by people who actually tried to touch it for a few seconds with a 10-foot pole. So, nobody is really caring about this. There is not an actual person upstream who is involved into this. As long as that's the case, it's not a healthy thing for ourselves to start to try fixing all of that from a downstream POV. We're currently doing 'good' with the Debian Xen Team, I think. We can keep up with security updates, and we're in some sort of OK position to get the essential stuff into place for Bookworm, but to say it in good Dutch "Nee, het houdt niet over...". Knorrie P.S. and if you think "I have no idea what you're rambling about Knorrie, I have never experienced that problem", well, then thank you for using Debian ;] *) Yeah, this works for PV and PVH, but until the #$^$%& qemu stops using internal unstable function calls any more so that it doesn't have to hard depend on libxenmisc4.1X any more, you're still screwed for HVM. BUT! if you just shut down the domUs nicely and reboot and you have to go back, then dpkg -i or whatever the previous qemu and you can still start all domUs again instead of going into full panic mode during the night. </quote> Eventually we will have to support systemd units in the Debian package one way or another. As I understood the sysv-init-to-unit generator is going away. We can always just ship the auto generated unit files ourself I guess, but cleaning up all this would be preferred. I did not find time yet to look into the Debian and upstream init script and systemd situation in more detail, but it's on my plan somehow. Help is definitely welcomed if someone wants to work on this and proposes a plan how to change our Debian package to make is easier maintainable in this respect and/or help upstream improve the situation there. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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