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This is needed on FreeBSD which has versions like 11.0-RC1,
otherwise the tests would fail.
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This check should work regardless if dpkg was installed by dpkg
or by a native package manager like RPM or pkg.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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This is more safe against sticky bits. For example, in FreeBSD
all files created in /tmp have the group set to wheel.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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In the old days, apt-inst used to use binaries, but now it
uses the built-in support and matches using Name, and not a
Binary.
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Gbp-Dch: ignore
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On BSD systems, we cannot simply use find -name or stuff, we
always have to pass a directory name first.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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This breaks the tests with FreeBSD's shell, and is not needed -
it works fine without it.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Use of echo with special characters is not portable. On a normal
POSIX system, the behavior with backslash escaped strings is
implementation-defined. On an XSI-conformant system, they must
be interpreted.
A way out is the printf command - printf "%b" specifies that
the following argument is to be printed with backslash escapes
interpreted.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Especially on non-Debian platforms, dpkg might not list itself
on the host system, and thus dpkg --assert-multi-arch fails.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Use /dev/fd in test-bug-712116-dpkg-pre-install-pkgs-hook-multiarch,
skip test-no-fds-leaked-to-maintainer-scripts (it is not guaranteed
that /dev/fd contains all file descriptors), and avoid the unneeded
use of /proc/fd in another test case.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Our test suite assumes that dpkg's admindir is var/lib/dpkg. This
might not always be true; for example, on FreeBSD, it is located
at /var/db/dpkg.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Gbp-Dch: ignore
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That's what it's called on FreeBSD.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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This is needed for Fedora and FreeBSD.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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We are simply checking for gnuCMD and gCMD for each command we
are interested in.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Gbp-Dch: ignore
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This allows other vendors to use different paths, or to build
your own APT in /opt for testing. Note that this uses + 1 in
some places, as the paths we receive are absolute, but we need
to strip of the initial /.
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On FreeBSD, readlink -f requires the last component
to exist.
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The C.UTF-8 locale is not portable, so we need to use C, otherwise
we crash on other systems. We can use std::locale::classic() for
that, which might also be a bit cheaper than using locale("C").
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This basically just links everything to libintl if USE_NLS is
on. It would be better to just link those targets that are
actually translated, but doing so is a huge PITA.
Also move the include_directories() for the build-tree include/
directory to the top of the CMakeLists.txt, otherwise it only
gets passed after Intl_INCLUDE_DIRS, which means we will built
against installed apt-pkg headers (if any) instead of our own.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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The BSD systems still ship their own db.h with a historical
BSD implementation, which is preferred by CMake, as it searches
its default path first. We thus have to disable the DEFAULT_PATH
for the search, unfortunately. We also need to pass the correct
include directory to the target.
Furthermore, on FreeBSD the library is called db-<VERSION>, so
let's add db-5 to the list of allowed names.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Gbp-Dch: ignore
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On FreeBSD, we have to include sys/params.h and sys/mount.h,
not sys/vfs.h.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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This makes things work with /usr/local on FreeBSD.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Does not exist on FreeBSD
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Somewhat annoying, but OK. Might want to switch to something more
clever to get rid of the typedef at all.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Several modules use std::array without including the
array header. Bad modules.
Some modules use STDOUT_FILENO and friends, or close()
without including unistd.h, where they are defined.
One module also uses WIFEXITED() without including
sys/wait.h.
Finally, environ is not specified to be defined in unistd.h. We
are required to define it ourselves according to POSIX, so let's
do that.
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Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Previously, we would have generated all the translations, but not
turn them on in the code. Instead, move the Translation crap into
po/ and disable po/ alltogether if USE_NLS if OFF.
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Distributions seem to install this stuff all over the place, so
let's add a common list of paths we know about.
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We basically called ourselves before, creating an endless loop.
Reported-By: clang
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This module should cover all sorts of large file supports, as long
as they either support the getconf LFS_CFLAGS command; or the
_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 or _LARGE_FILES macros.
Closes: #834767
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This time it is the formatting of floating numbers in progress
reporting with a radix charater potentially not being dot.
Followup of 7303e11ff28f920a6277c159aa46f80c007350bb. Regression of
b58e2c7c56b1416a343e81f9f80cb1f02c128e25 in so far as it exchanging
very effected with slightly less effected code.
LP: 1611010
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Commit 7ec343309b7bc6001b465c870609b3c570026149 got us most of the way,
but the last mile was botched by having the pending calls in the wrong
order as this way we potentially 'force' dpkg to remove/purge a package
it doesn't want to as another package still depends on it and the
replacement isn't fully installed yet.
So what we do now is a configure before remove and purge (all with
--no-triggers) and finishing off with another configure pending call to
take care of the triggers.
Note that in the bugreport example our current planner is forcing dpkg
to remove the package earlier via --force-depends which we could do for
the pending calls as well and could be used as a workaround, but we want
to do less forcing eventually.
Closes: 835094
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This fixes some actual bugs for PROJECT and BZIP2_INCLUDE_DIR.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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This can lead to an inconsistent state otherwise, with the
output being updated and the byproduct not; for example,
when the build was manually interrupted.
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This workaround is a bit more ugly, but does not use a
(somewhat) deprecated debhelper command.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Manually clean up the apt.maintscript, it moved stuff from
before the comment to after the comment...
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The README.source is not usable anymore, and the Build-Conflicts
andd Breaks/Replaces are not needed anymore.
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debhelper 10 is much nicer with the installation part from
a dirty tree, so you can just fix some stuff breaking the
install step and then continue building with debuild -b -nc
until you have fixed all your stuff.
It also has some other advantages, of course, like some
bug fixes in shell escaping for maintscript, or systemd
helper changes.
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This gets rid of the special casing of etc/apt, various
example file installations handled by the upstream build
system, and of course the directory creation for all dirs
created by the upstream build system.
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These directories are essential for apt to work, so we should
install them in the upstream build system and not just in the
debian packaging...
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Hardcoding gpgv1 and gnupg1 breaks Ubuntu, because on Ubuntu,
these packages do not exist yet. Instead allow gnupg (<< 2)
for gnupg1 and gnupg2 for gnupg (>= 2), so we cover all
potential combinations.
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Our previous hack did not really support or groups and other
more advanced dependency types. This hack basically removes
build profiles, and the @-type depends for tests, and otherwise
converts the deps to a package which is then installed via
gdebi.
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Instead of erroring out when receiving a SIGINT, let the
child deal with it - we'll error out anyway if the child
exits with an error or due to the signal. Also ignore
SIGQUIT, as system() ignores it.
This basically fixes Bug #832593, but: we are running
the hooks via sh -c. Some shells exit with a signal
error even if the command they are executing catches
the signal and exits successfully. So far, this has
been noticed on dash, which unfortunately, is our
default shell.
Example:
$ cat trap.sh
trap 'echo int' INT; sleep 10; exit 0
$ if dash -c ./trap.sh; then echo OK: $?; else echo FAIL: $?; fi
^Cint
FAIL: 130
$ if mksh -c ./trap.sh; then echo OK: $?; else echo FAIL: $?; fi
^Cint
OK: 0
$ if bash -c ./trap.sh; then echo OK: $?; else echo FAIL: $?; fi
^Cint
OK: 0
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