Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Also fixes message itself to mention the correct option name as noticed
in #832113.
(cherry picked from commit b9c20219dc17db1d29eaf297263a4b008bd1b90b)
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We read the entire input file we want to patch anyhow, so we can also
calculate the hash for that file and compare it with what he had
expected it to be.
Note that this isn't really a security improvement as a) the file we
patch is trusted & b) if the input is incorrect, the result will hardly be
matching, so this is just for failing slightly earlier with a more
relevant error message (althrough, in terms of rred its ignored and
complete download attempt instead).
(cherry picked from commit 6e71ec6fcdcaa926c98fa58cd4af38e42556df15)
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The flush call is a no-op in most FileFd implementations so this isn't
as critical as it might sound as the only non-trivial implementation is
in the buffered writer, which tends not be used to buffer another
buffer…
(cherry picked from commit 8ca481e8419c19b6ef9074b68cc028177a507161)
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Closes: 832039
(cherry picked from commit a913e64ead6ada2adae6fb5f35212187ad5acd01)
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Escape "+" in kernel package names when generating APT::NeverAutoRemove
list so it is not treated as a regular expression meta-character.
[Changed by David Kalnischkies: let test actually test the change]
Closes: #830159
(cherry picked from commit 130176bcb6ce65c98d5692196c55cc18b4c210e0)
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Instead of only trying the first host we get via SRV, we try them all as
we are supposed to and if that isn't working we try to connect to the
host itself as if we hadn't seen any SRV records. This was already the
intend of the old code, but it failed to hide earlier problems for the
next call, which would unconditionally fail then resulting in an all
around failure to connect. With proper stacking we can also keep the
error messages of each call around (and in the order tried) so if the
entire connection fails we can report all the things we have tried while
we discard the entire stack if something works out in the end.
(cherry picked from commit 3af3ac2f5ec007badeded46a94be2bd06b9917a2)
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If we don't give a specific error to report up it is likely that all
error currently in the error stack are equally important, so reporting
just one could turn out to be confusing e.g. if name resolution failed
in a SRV record list.
(cherry picked from commit b50dfa6b2dd2d459e0c2746ac9367982b96ffac0)
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If we have files in partial/ from a previous invocation or similar such
those could be symlinks created by file:// sources. The code is
expecting only real files through and happily changes owner,
modification times and permission on the file the symlink points to
which tend to be files we have no business in touching in this way.
Permissions of symlinks shouldn't be changed, changing owner is usually
pointless to, but just to be sure we pick the easy way out and use
lchown, check for symlinks before chmod/utimes.
Reported-By: Mattia Rizzolo on IRC
(cherry picked from commit 3465138575e1fd0d5892d9b6be1ae232eb873460)
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The generated dump output is incorrect in sofar as it uses the name as
the key for this compressor, but they don't need to be equal as is the
case if you force some of the inbuilt ones to be disabled as our testing
framework does it at times.
This is hidden from changelog as nobody will actually notice while
describing it in a few words make it sound like an important change…
Git-Dch: Ignore
(cherry picked from commit 52bafeade99b700eeb4585608c5eee086b94dfa8)
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methods/http.cc:640:13: runtime error: reference binding to null pointer
of type 'struct FileFd'
This reference is never used in the cases it has a nullptr, so the
practical difference is non-existent, but its a bug still.
Reported-By: gcc -fsanitize=undefined
(cherry picked from commit 4460551841d909d3ee9c1de00156ed3cdf8b1665)
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Gbp-Dch: ignore
(cherry picked from commit 2a90aa7a064047fb1c8783b31720cd345018ca4a)
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This caused a crash because the cache was a nullptr.
Closes: #829651
(cherry picked from commit 8823972649b0d3049c9c0d34b5f1d31160234fb4)
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As the volatile sources are parsed last they were sorted behind the
dpkg/status file and hence are treated as a downgrade, which isn't
really what you want to happen as from a user POV its an upgrade.
(cherry picked from commit cb9ac09bd6a36e73c2dce1d529acde6e4d15e32d)
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If we have a (e.g. locally built) deb file installed and do try to
install it again apt complained about this being a downgrade, but it
wasn't as it is the very same version… it was just confused into not
merging the versions together which looks like a downgrade then.
The same size assumption is usually good, but given that volatile files
are parsed last (even after the status file) the base assumption no
longer holds, but is easy to adept without actually changing anything in
practice.
(cherry picked from commit e7edb2fef8370d54a4b8e5a01266e6eda81ef84e)
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Traditionally all providers are protected providing something as apt
can't know which of them is actually really providing the functionality
for the user ensuring that we don't propose the removal of used stuff,
but that is of course also keeping stuff around which could be removed.
That can cause the collection of multiple old providers until the
provided package is itself no longer needed (e.g. out-of-tree kernel
modules). We combat this by marking providers only from the newest
source package version so that old providers built by older versions of
the same source package can be garbage collected.
(cherry picked from commit a0ed43f7323b9d7976ed0ba8d437a42e24af9eaf)
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As the previous commit, this shouldn't change behavior at all, but
beside being more explicit and perhaps faster its also considerably
shorter (granted, mostly by if0-block elimination).
Gbp-Dch: Ignore
(cherry picked from commit 5a3339db48479114a0e1e11ebc8d640eb3e49933)
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Piling everything in a single if statement always made my head wobble,
but it hasn't even a benefit as the most common case of a package which
isn't installed passes all of the old if and lands in the non-existent
else-part of the inner if. So beside a subjective cleanup of what goes
on this implementation should also be a bit faster.
No change in behavior should be present.
Gbp-Dch: Ignore
(cherry picked from commit 769e9f3ea1cbe67d3b98e6db6c956abde2384868)
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The old prettyprinters have only access to the struct they pretty print,
which isn't enough usually as we want to know for a package also a bit
of state information like which version is the candidate.
We therefore need to pull the DepCache into context and hence use a
temporary struct which is printed instead of the iterator itself.
(cherry picked from commit 84573326f41dd09b914b8374548e7ee7c93d0439)
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Writing first means that even in the event of a power-failure the
autobit is saved for future processing instead of "forgotten" so that
the package is treated as manually installed.
In some cases we have to re-run the writing after dpkg is done through
as dpkg can let packages disappear and in such cases apt will move
autobits around (or in that case non-autobits) which we need to store.
(cherry picked from commit 309f497b7280a45e3626493318adb6d39ba5c69b)
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If we can't read the old file we can't just move forward as that would
discard potentially discard old data (especially other fields). We let
it fail only after we are done writing the new file so a user has the
chance to look into and merge the new data (which is otherwise
discarded).
(cherry picked from commit 520931867ee2fac8415a624204414d3b62550996)
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We deploy atomic renames for some files, but these renames also happen
if something about the file failed which isn't really the point of the
exercise…
Closes: 828908
(cherry picked from commit fc5db01bb7d1546944200d197866b0b5c378f100)
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Needed for the previous change
(cherry picked from commit 33aa2752e7c7a6f0a01b191111aa35a5fe69cf20)
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If a package file is formatted in a way that that no space
follows a deprecated "<", we would reformat it to "<=" and
increase the length of the output by 1, which can break.
Under normal circumstances with "<=" this should not be an
issue.
Closes: #828812
(cherry picked from commit b6e9756ca03ec887ef1d0bc8e38f63c29db7a365)
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Seen in #828011 if we fail to parse a header field like Last-Modified we
end up interpreting the data as response header for coming requests in
case we don't rotate to a new server in DNS rotation.
(cherry picked from commit cc0a4c82b3c132abba9b9ec35fd61bc8b45a1b80)
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.. instead of hardcoding the functionnality in the apt.systemd.daily
script.
Also make the compatibility cron job provide the same functionnality
for systems that do not use systemd.
Closes: #827930
(cherry picked from commit 51d659e7d8cdce59f910eceeee68e2c2afdb70d4)
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wu-ftpd sends the response without parens, whereas we expect
them.
I did not test the patch, but it should work. I added another
return true if Pos is still npos after the second find to make
sure we don't add npos to the string.
Thanks: Lukasz Stelmach for the initial patch
Closes: #420940
(cherry picked from commit 25a694165ae46c159e0d91bf0b27717f00dbc66e)
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Filesize is a silly hash all by itself, but in combination with others
it can be a strong opponent, so ensuring that it is in the list of
hashes and hence checked by the normal course of action the acquire
process takes is a good thing.
(cherry picked from commit 5da51e0e2da3f055306562d38103b06a23d81719)
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If apt decides it can't download a file it is relatively pointless to
try to tell dpkg-source to unpack it.
(cherry picked from commit 60a0cb424e91acebc2bba0f9add220b474e432e6)
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Check for cached hash entries to determine which (if any) hash types
need to be generated for the current file.
In 1.0.9, each hash type was handled by a separate method, each of
which checked the cache. It looks like when these code paths were
unified (in a311fb96b84757ef8628e6a754232614a53b7891) the cache
checks were not incorporated into the new method.
(cherry picked from commit 51018e947ab1df3ddba5d7a84ed2284d599d8a12)
Pull request Debian/apt#16
Closes: #806924
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Regression introduced in 8f858d560e3b7b475c623c4e242d1edce246025a.
Commands are probably better of always having output through as the
fall through to the generic proxy settings is likely not intended. As
documenting and implementing this more consistently is kind of a
regression through, it is split off into the next commit.
Closes: 827713
(cherry picked from commit cad1877559f3e1703c3fea4d081978e1b4bb4a0e)
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Closes: 827067
(cherry picked from commit 5e5607ef967dbc0dfc0f1aa24a71ed9f5dcf7200)
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Just closing the fd would be enough, but while we are at it we can also
use the Popen interface to have an easier time with this.
(cherry picked from commit 8f858d560e3b7b475c623c4e242d1edce246025a)
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Seen first in #826783, but as this buglog also shows leaked uncompressed
files as well we don't close it just yet.
(cherry picked from commit 6f35be91c9e86e463bca7df6eadf05412c7b732c)
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This effects only compressors configured on the fly (rather then the
inbuilt ones as they use a library).
(cherry picked from commit bdc42211700ef0f6f40e4ef3f362e52d684d70fb)
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Closes: 826291
(cherry picked from commit 8f7cee4410c7fdbc66af6a232c6900b3ceb48b48)
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First seen on hurd, but easily reproducible on all systems by removing
the 'execution' bit from the current working directory and watching some
tests (mostly the no-output expecting tests) fail due to find printing:
"find: Failed to restore initial working directory: …"
Samuel Thibault says in the bugreport:
| To do its work, find first records the $PWD, then goes to
| /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/ to find the files, and then goes back to $PWD.
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| On Linux, getting $PWD from the 700 directory happens to work by luck
| (POSIX says that getcwd can return [EACCES]: Search permission was denied
| for the current directory, or read or search permission was denied for a
| directory above the current directory in the file hierarchy). And going
| back to $PWD fails, and thus find returns 1, but at least it emitted its
| output.
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| On Hurd, getting $PWD from the 700 directory fails, and find thus aborts
| immediately, without emitting any output, and thus no keyring is found.
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| So, to summarize, the issue is that since apt-get update runs find as a
| non-root user, running it from a 700 directory breaks find.
Solved as suggested by changing to '/' before running find, with some
paranoia extra care taking to ensure the paths we give to find are really
absolute paths first (they really should, but TMPDIR=. or a similar
Dir::Etc::trustedparts setting could exist somewhere in the wild).
The commit takes also the opportunity to make these lines slightly less
error ignoring and the two find calls using (mostly) the same parameters.
Thanks: Samuel Thibault for 'finding' the culprit!
Closes: 826043
(cherry picked from commit 0cfec3ab589c6309bf284438d2148c7742cdaf10)
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Setting the C++ locale via std::locale::global(std::locale("")); which
would otherwise default to the default C locale (aka: unaffected by
setlocale) effects the formatting of numeric types in IO streams, which
for output for humans is perfectly sensible, but breaks our many text
interfaces used and parsed by us and others without expecting the
numbers to be formatted.
Closes: #825396
(cherry picked from commit b58e2c7c56b1416a343e81f9f80cb1f02c128e25)
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Closes: 824702
(cherry picked from commit 91be4122fb4dba065c19ea3f292b1945a94b5d99)
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(cherry picked from commit 0264502c2ed8da69358959d6dc7beb67f422b5cf)
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This fixes Debian/apt#13 and the launchpad bug listed below,
but is far more advanced. I went through private-cmndline.cc
and looked at the supported options.
LP: #1573547
Thanks: Elias Fröhner and Svyatoslav Gryaznov for the initial work
(cherry picked from commit 5aba18968d87500232244760101ab2954c106581)
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The report mentions "apt list --upgradable", but there are others which
have inconsistent behavior ranging from segfaulting to doing something
with the partial (and hence incomplete) data. We had a recent report
about sources.list (#818628), this one mentions prefences, the obvious
next step is conf files… so the testcase is adapted to check for all
three in file and directory versions and run a bunch of commands each
time which should all have more or less the same behavior in such a case
(aka error out).
Closes: 824503
(cherry picked from commit fdf9eef4d96a18d0167708499c993e1174251e88)
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Using Pkg.CandVersion() here is wrong as its implementation will return
a candidate based just on the default policy settings ignoring user
preferences and otherwise set candidates (aka: it sidesteps the
pkgDepCache).
This causes M-A:same libraries to be detected as screwed even through
they aren't, so that they end up being kept back.
Reported-By: Felipe Sateler on IRC
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Closes: 823976
(cherry picked from commit 6fb0b9ed8c6e3b5af5aac14e8f57c4d0ec2cc638)
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Always those silly mistakes. Do what I mean, not what I said…
Reported-By: Travis
Git-Dch: Ignore
(cherry picked from commit 737ce3135d332e3b6165ac1fac5c68e21ba1bdba)
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Failures can happen and APT regardless will do a partial cache
update anyway. Because APT ensures that the list directory is
in a sane state, it makes sense to also call success hooks if
success was only partial - otherwise it loses sync with APT.
Most importantly, this causes the appstream cache to be empty,
see launchpad bug #1562733.
This is somewhat overly optimistic though: As soon as any repository
has nonexisting optional files, the missing optional files are also
treated as success, which means a single broken repository without an
InRelease file still runs Success hooks, even though it really should
not.
(cherry picked from commit 35664152e47a1d4d712fd52e0f0a2dc8ed359d32)
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Versions which are only available in dpkg/status aren't installable and
apt doesn't pick them as candidate for this reason – for the same reason
such packages shouldn't be sent to an external solver via EDSP. The
packages are pinned to -1, but if the solver has strict pinning disabled
it could end up picking this version anyhow – which is a request apt can
not satisfy.
Reported-By: Maximiliano Curia <maxy@debian.org> on IRC
(cherry picked from commit 33190fe3d3c200dcd417cd336f9db11f5f4408d5)
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