+* journalctl --verify: don't show files that are currently being
+ written to as FAIL, but instead show that their are being written
+ to.
+
+* nspawn: allow configuring cgroup (and other) properties via
+ --property= when invoking from the command line.
+
+* add udev rule construct SYSCTL{} to write to sysctls
+
+* assign MESSAGE_ID to log messages about failed services
+
+* coredump: make the handler check /proc/$PID/rlimits for RLIMIT_CORE,
+ and supress coredump if turned off. Then change RLIMIT_CORE to
+ infinity by default for all services. This then allows per-service
+ control of coredumping.
+
+* introduce some call that iterates through cmsg and closes all fds
+ passed in, and use it everywhere...
+
+* generate better errors when people try to set transient properties
+ that are not supported...
+ http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2015-February/028076.html
+
+* nspawn, if stdout/stderr/stdin are non-ttys, don't set up
+ /dev/console, but instead just pass the fds through directly.
+
+* When runlevel3.target is used to define dependencies on other units,
+ then we don't pick it up currently, since nothing ever references
+ runlevel3.target, and never figure out it actually is just an alias
+ for multi-user.target. A hackish fix could be to add a .wants link
+ from multi-user.target to runlevel3.target, if it is a symlink to
+ it. Best would be to create this .wants/ symlink from
+ sysv-generator. systemd would then load the referenced unit, figure
+ out it is just an alias and that the dependency would be on itself
+ and suppress it. Thus the alias and its deps would be loaded as
+ desired.
+
+* PID 1: when invoking systemctl preset-all on first boots, operate in
+ an exclusively additive way, i.e. never remove any pre-existing
+ symlinks, only add new ones.
+
+* Introduce $LISTEN_NAMES to complement $LISTEN_FDS, containing a
+ colon separated list of identifiers for the fds passed.
+
+* networkd: implement BindCarrier= logic to .network units that binds
+ application of the file to the carrier sense on another interface,
+ in order to implement uplink/downlink logic.