On 1/3/23 13:41, Simon Matter wrote:
On 1/3/23 05:17, Orion Poplawski wrote:
On 12/30/22 04:06, Jelle de Jong wrote:
On 12/27/22 22:55, Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 2022-12-25 07:44, Jelle de Jong wrote:
A recent update of the sssd-common-2.8.1-1.el8.x86_64 package is causing sssd.service systemctl failures all over my CentosOS machines.
...
[sssd] [confdb_expand_app_domains] (0x0010): No domains configured, fatal error!
Were you previously using sssd? Or is the problem merely that it is now reporting an error starting a service that you don't use?
Are there any files in /etc/sssd/conf.d, or does /etc/sssd/sssd.conf exist? If so, what are the contents of those files?
What are the contents of /usr/lib/systemd/system/sssd.service?
If you run "journalctl -u sssd.service", are there any log entries older than the package update?
I got a monitoring system for failing services and I sudenly started getting dozens of notifications for all my CentOS systems that sssd was failing. This is after the sssd package updates, causing this regression. SSSD services where not really in use but some of the common libraries are used.
# systemctl status sssd ● sssd.service - System Security Services Daemon Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/sssd.service; enabled; vendor preset: enabled) Active: failed (Result: exit-code) since Sat 2022-12-24 06:14:10 UTC; 6 days ago Condition: start condition failed at Fri 2022-12-30 11:02:01 UTC; 4s ago ├─ ConditionPathExists=|/etc/sssd/sssd.conf was not met └─ ConditionDirectoryNotEmpty=|/etc/sssd/conf.d was not met Main PID: 3953157 (code=exited, status=4)
Warning: Journal has been rotated since unit was started. Log output is incomplete or unavailable.
# ls -halZ /etc/sssd/sssd.conf ls: cannot access '/etc/sssd/sssd.conf': No such file or directory
Looks like you need to figure out what happened to your /etc/sssd/sssd.conf file. FWIW - I've updated my one CS8 machine to 2.8.1-1 and it seems to be fine.
I did not do anything specific to the configuration file. I tried to reinstall the new sssd-common pacakge, but it will not install the /etc/sssd/sssd.conf file. I can not remove the package because it will remove a lot of packages that I do need. I still think something is wrong with the new sssd packages..
[root@nginx01 ~]# rpm -qplc sssd-common-2.8.1-1.el8.x86_64.rpm /etc/logrotate.d/sssd /etc/pam.d/sssd-shadowutils /etc/rwtab.d/sssd /etc/sssd/sssd.conf
Most likely the file /etc/sssd/sssd.conf is a ghost file and therefore it's not installed but only recognized as being part of the package.
Simon
I do not get this. There has nog been an /etc/sssd/sssd.conf on my system before as it only installed sssd-common due to dependencies for other libaries. I do not use the sssd service. The package gets an update and now my systemd status is failing on a lot of systems and I am being tolled I should get /etc/sssd/sssd.conf sorted?
Can you fix the sssd package by either not enabling the sssd systemd service or some other solution that does not make systemd status fail?
This is a regression and it is going to cause me a lot of time now to write ansible code for the disabling of the sssd service on all systems that have it installed due to dependencies but do not use it.
sssd.services failing regressions and dfn-automatic.serivces failing regressions due to freeipa/sssd/samba conflicts for months now.
Jelle