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RedBear-OS/local/recipes/system/dbus/source.tmp/doc/system-activation.txt
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vasilito f31522130f fix: comprehensive boot warnings and exceptions — fixable silenced, unfixable diagnosed
Build system (5 gaps hardened):
- COOKBOOK_OFFLINE defaults to true (fork-mode)
- normalize_patch handles diff -ruN format
- New 'repo validate-patches' command (25/25 relibc patches)
- 14 patched Qt/Wayland/display recipes added to protected list
- relibc archive regenerated with current patch chain

Boot fixes (fixable):
- Full ISO EFI partition: 16 MiB → 1 MiB (matches mini, BIOS hardcoded 2 MiB offset)
- D-Bus system bus: absolute /usr/bin/dbus-daemon path (was skipped)
- redbear-sessiond: absolute /usr/bin/redbear-sessiond path (was skipped)
- daemon framework: silenced spurious INIT_NOTIFY warnings for oneshot_async services (P0-daemon-silence-init-notify.patch)
- udev-shim: demoted INIT_NOTIFY warning to INFO (expected for oneshot_async)
- relibc: comprehensive named semaphores (sem_open/close/unlink) replacing upstream todo!() stubs
- greeterd: Wayland socket timeout 15s → 30s (compositor DRM wait)
- greeter-ui: built and linked (header guard unification, sem_compat stubs removed)
- mc: un-ignored in both configs, fixed glib/libiconv/pcre2 transitive deps
- greeter config: removed stale keymapd dependency from display/greeter services
- prefix toolchain: relibc headers synced, _RELIBC_STDLIB_H guard unified

Unfixable (diagnosed, upstream):
- i2c-hidd: abort on no-I2C-hardware (QEMU) — process::exit → relibc abort
- kded6/greeter-ui: page fault 0x8 — Qt library null deref
- Thread panics fd != -1 — Rust std library on Redox
- DHCP timeout / eth0 MAC — QEMU user-mode networking
- hwrngd/thermald — no hardware RNG/thermal in VM
- live preload allocation — BIOS memory fragmentation, continues on demand
2026-05-05 20:20:37 +01:00

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D-BUS System Activation
Introduction:
The dbus-daemon runs as the dbus user, and is therefore unprivileged.
Earlier attempts [1] by David Zeuthen at launching system scripts using a
custom DBUS protocol were reviewed, but deemed too difficult to audit, and
also due to a multi-threaded design, too difficult to test.
In the next few paragraphs I will outline a simpler setuid approach for
launching daemons as a configured user.
Scope:
Launching programs using dbus has been a topic of interest for many months.
This would allow simple systems to only start services that are needed,
and that are automatically started only when first requested.
This removes the need for an init system, and means that we can trivially
startup services in parallel.
This has immediate pressing need for OLPC, with a longer term evaluation for
perhaps Fedora and RHEL.
Details:
Setuid applications have to used only when absolutely necessary.
In this implementation I have an single executable,
dbus-daemon-launch-helper, with the ownership root:dbus.
This has the permissions 4750, i.e. u+rwx g+rx +setuid.
It is located in /usr/libexec/ and thus is not designed to be invoked by a
user directly.
The helper must not be passed input that can be changed maliciously, and
therefore passing a random path with user id is totally out of the question.
In this implementation a similar idea as discussed with Davids' patch was
taken, that to pass a single name argument to the helper.
The service filename of "org.me.test.service" is then searched for in
/usr/share/dbus-1/system-services or other specified directories.
If applications want to be activated on the system _and_ session busses, then
service files should be installed in both directories.
A typical service file would look like:
[D-BUS Service]
Name=org.me.test
Exec=/usr/sbin/dbus-test-server.py
User=ftp
This gives the user to switch to, and also the path of the executable.
The service name must match that specified in the /etc/dbus-1/system.d or
/usr/share/dbus-1/system.d conf file.
Precautions taken:
* Only the bus name is passed to the helper, and this is validated
* We are super paranoid about the user that called us, and what permissions we have.
* We clear all environment variables except for DBUS_VERBOSE which is used for debugging
* Anything out of the ordinary causes the helper to abort.
Launching services:
Trivial methods on services can be called directly and the launch helper will
start the service and execute the method on the service. The lauching of the
service is completely transparent to the caller, e.g.:
dbus-send --system --print-reply \
--dest=org.freedesktop.Hal \
/org/freedesktop/Hal/Manager \
org.freedesktop.Hal.Manager.DeviceExists \
string:/org/freedesktop/Hal/devices/computer
If you wish to activate the service without calling a well known method,
the standard dbus method StartServiceByName can be used:
dbus-send --system --print-reply \
--dest=org.freedesktop.DBus \
/org/freedesktop/DBus \
org.freedesktop.DBus.StartServiceByName \
string:org.freedesktop.Hal uint32:0
[1] http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/dbus/2006-October/006096.html