*) Create dedicated rtpengine user in postinst and remove it in postrm.
*) Use RuntimeDirectory= systemd unit config.
*) Use dedicated user for /proc interface and set file umask to hide it
from other users.
*) Set owner and permissions on default directories used for call recording.
Change-Id: I8e225b36d065d46da2489fb8286916371950f490
The aliases created by systemd under Install/Alias are created and
removed as the service is enabled and disabled, and don't serve as
generic alias names. Furthermore they seem to linger behind when the
package is removed or replaced, which leads to collisions and
installation failures when the NGCP-specific package is replaced by the
non-NGCP version.
Change-Id: I2313ffffb1fa4fb1d570b23113b0618744c58e26
This centralizes the table setting into the respective config files
instead of keeping copies all over the place, that can easily get out
of sync.
Change-Id: I12f3fa172f34861365c31c8d8718b3fae8a9de5b
Log lines written to stderr that are consumed by journald will already
have timestamps added to them. Drop the redundant unixtime output for
this use case.
Change-Id: I34886a69a0ef90de2eb84ee8f446cbad624302c1
These are names used in the ngcp-service nsservices.yml file, adding
them here makes using the system more consistent.
Change-Id: I66b0149cbfe70d2260a6c50617a52e53604256da
While still not the ideal implementation, this is certainly better than
the sysvinit script wrapper. We then will "only" need to move the setup
scripts into proper service files later on.
Change-Id: I990d6847117a4b91a8365a5e307fd96cf5b1899f
Properly switching to native systemd service files is too intrusive for
these services at this point of the release cycle. Let's use this hack
for now, and then convert these to the serveral .service, and .mount
units required.
Change-Id: I8f66bfd8be5924232bf2c34d42b18d2a332db3ee