From d7eac3e0ae20510e2737dc4e23975391fef5ece3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: =?UTF-8?q?Michal=20Koutn=C3=BD?= <mkoutny@suse.com>
Date: Tue, 16 Jan 2018 19:22:46 +0100
Subject: [PATCH] core/timer: Prevent timer looping when unit cannot start
When a unit job finishes early (e.g. when fork(2) fails) triggered unit goes
through states
stopped->failed (or failed->failed),
in case a ExecStart= command fails unit passes through
stopped->starting->failed.
The former transition doesn't result in unit active/inactive timestamp being
updated and timer (OnUnitActiveSec= or OnUnitInactiveSec=) would use an expired
timestamp triggering immediately again (repeatedly).
This patch exploits timer's last trigger timestamp to ensure the timer isn't
triggered more frequently than OnUnitActiveSec=/OnUnitInactiveSec= period.
Steps to reproduce:
0) Create sample units:
cat >~/.config/systemd/user/looper.service <<EOD
[Service]
ExecStart=/usr/bin/sleep 2
EOD
cat >~/.config/systemd/user/looper.timer <<EOD
[Timer]
AccuracySec=5
OnUnitActiveSec=5
EOD
1) systemctl --user daemon-reload
2) systemctl --user start looper.timer
# to have first activation timestamp/sentinel
systemctl --user start looper.service
o Observe the service is being regularly triggered.
3) systemctl set-property user@$UID.service TasksMax=2
o Observe the tight looping as long as the looper.service cannot be started.
Ref: #5969
(cherry picked from commit 204d140c4def364c47d36226e4514a7e077fa196)
(cherry picked from commit fe81f6f734ee46a4877df6dda6e31cdc24c00a3c)
Resolves: #1729230
---
src/core/timer.c | 2 ++
1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
diff --git a/src/core/timer.c b/src/core/timer.c
index d32b007c7c..1d4868643a 100644
--- a/src/core/timer.c
+++ b/src/core/timer.c
@@ -416,6 +416,7 @@ static void timer_enter_waiting(Timer *t, bool initial) {
if (base <= 0)
continue;
+ base = MAX(base, t->last_trigger.monotonic);
break;
@@ -428,6 +429,7 @@ static void timer_enter_waiting(Timer *t, bool initial) {
if (base <= 0)
continue;
+ base = MAX(base, t->last_trigger.monotonic);
break;