> 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 at 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. Do you have a file /etc/sssd/sssd.conf? IIRC you said you don't have such a file, which is fine. Do you have any file in /etc/sssd/conf.d/? This directory should be empty but it's possible that another package puts something there. Regards, Simon