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author | David Kalnischkies <david@kalnischkies.de> | 2015-04-12 19:16:01 +0200 |
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committer | David Kalnischkies <david@kalnischkies.de> | 2015-04-12 21:44:27 +0200 |
commit | 596ec43ce34421080a58b28299c1ed9cb0dbaa25 (patch) | |
tree | 89297d3bc3942ee6560478dc9bab5e69aa4e85e5 /debian/apt.examples | |
parent | d5cf8851753dde4f45bfd3b48fcdf34247a8752a (diff) |
parse specific-arch dependencies correctly on single-arch systems
On single-arch the parsing was creating groupnames like 'apt:amd64' even
through it should be 'apt' and a package in it belonging to architecture
amd64. The result for foreign architectures was as expected: The
dependency isn't satisfiable, but for native architecture it means the
wrong package (ala apt:amd64:amd64) is linked so this is also not
satisfiable, which is very much not expected.
No longer excluding single-arch from this codepath allows the generation
of the correct links, which still link to non-exisiting packages for
foreign dependencies, but natives link to the expected native package
just as if no architecture was given.
For negative arch-specific dependencies ala Conflicts this matter was
worse as apt will believe there isn't a Conflict to resolve, tricking it
into calculating a solution dpkg will refuse.
Architecture specific positive dependencies are rare in jessie – the
only one in amd64 main is foreign –, negative dependencies do not even
exist. Neither class has a native specimen, so no package in jessie is
effected by this bug, but it might be interesting for stretch upgrades.
This also means the regression potential is very low.
Closes: 777760
Diffstat (limited to 'debian/apt.examples')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions