Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
LP: #1812696
|
|
This new field allows a repository to declare that access to
packages requires authorization. The current implementation will
set the pin to -32768 if no authorization has been provided in
the auth.conf(.d) files.
This implementation is suboptimal in two aspects:
(1) A repository should behave more like NotSource repositories
(2) We only have the host name for the repository, we cannot use
paths yet.
- We can fix those after an ABI break.
The code also adds a check to acquire-item.cc to not use the
specified repository as a download source, mimicking NotSource.
(cherry picked from commit c2b9b0489538fed4770515bd8853a960b13a2618)
LP: #1814727
(cherry picked from commit d75162bc67d5a1a690eb2a8747d31ad68353823e)
|
|
This allows disabling a repository by pinning it to 'never',
which is internally translated to a value of -32768 (or whatever
the minimum of short is).
This overrides any other pin for that repository. It can be used
to make sure certain sources are never used; for example, in
unattended-upgrades.
To prevent semantic changes to existing files, we substitute
min + 1 for every pin-priority: <min>. This is a temporary
solution, as we are waiting for an ABI break.
To add pins with that value, the special Pin-Priority
"never" may be used for now. It's unclear if that will
persist, or if the interface will change eventually.
(cherry picked from commit 8bb2a91a070170d7d8e71206d1c66a26809bdbc3)
LP: #1814727
(cherry picked from commit f52e7a2040f461fb37f88751f5a42a5d5c130441)
|
|
While running our CI we noticed that sometimes we see an error
from the new json hooks code. The error message is:
```
E: Could not read response to hello message from hook [ ! -f /usr/bin/snap ] || /usr/bin/snap advise-snap --from-apt 2>/dev/null || true: Broken pipe
```
when purging the snapd package which provides the hook. This indicates
that we should probably also consider EPIPE not an error (just like
we do for ECONNRESET). This PR does exactly this.
(cherry picked from commit 6af48a7f83540c807be1d2777470d23e6b260eb8)
LP: #1814543
(cherry picked from commit 97412ac47a974b1eb0e8280cf11b3b80ff1ba17f)
|
|
|
|
This fixes a security issue that can be exploited to inject arbritrary debs
or other files into a signed repository as followed:
(1) Server sends a redirect to somewhere%0a<headers for the apt method> (where %0a is
\n encoded)
(2) apt method decodes the redirect (because the method encodes the URLs before
sending them out), writting something like
somewhere\n
<headers>
into its output
(3) apt then uses the headers injected for validation purposes.
Regression-Of: c34ea12ad509cb34c954ed574a301c3cbede55ec
LP: #1812353
|
|
|
|
|
|
This allows us to install matching auth files for sources.list.d
files, for example; very useful.
This converts aptmethod's authfd from one FileFd to a vector of
pointers to FileFd, as FileFd cannot be copied, and move operators
are hard.
(cherry picked from commit bbfcc05c1978decd28df9681fd73e2a7d9a8c2a5)
LP: #1811120
(cherry picked from commit 5629f35ecb7956b180364ebaf57e79f35885344e)
|
|
This gives more protection for people where kernel metapackages
are accidentally removed.
LP: #1787460
(cherry picked from commit a4b0ce5a4f5068f780b3aa94473230b5093a837d)
(cherry picked from commit 890f21e846025701f4596a69399f798219357c76)
|
|
[l10n] Update Italian translation
See merge request apt-team/apt!36
|
|
Signed-off-by: Milo Casagrande <milo@milo.name>
|
|
|
|
Some post-invoke scripts install packages, which fails because
the environment variable is not set. This sets the variable for
all three kinds of scripts {pre,post-}invoke and pre-install-pkgs,
but we will only allow post-invoke at a later time.
Gbp-Dch: full
(cherry picked from commit 6675601c81de85b40dc89772c1d6d17f1811c5ba)
LP: #1796808
|
|
|
|
|
|
pkgCacheFile's destructor unlocks the system, which is confusing
if you did not open the cachefile with WithLock set. Create a private
data instance that holds the value of WithLock.
This regression was introduced in commit b2e465d6d32d2dc884f58b94acb7e35f671a87fe:
Join with aliencode
Author: jgg
Date: 2001-02-20 07:03:16 GMT
Join with aliencode
by replacing a "Lock" member that was only initialized when the lock
was taken by calls to Lock, UnLock; with the latter also taking place
if the former did not occur.
Regression-Of: b2e465d6d32d2dc884f58b94acb7e35f671a87fe
LP: #1794053
(cherry picked from commit e02297b8e22dae04872fe6fab6dba966de65dbba)
|
|
It is perfectly valid behavior for a server to respond with
Connection: close eventually, even when pipelining. Turning
off pipelining due to that is wrong. For example, some Ubuntu
mirrors close the connection after 101 requests. If I have
more packages to install, only the first 101 would benefit
from pipelining.
This commit introduces a new check to only turn of pipelining
for future connections if the pipeline for this connection did
not have 3 successful fetches before, that should work quite well to
detect broken server/proxy combinations like in bug 832113.
(cherry picked from commit df696650b7a8c58bbd92e0e1619e956f21010a96)
LP: #1794957
|
|
We forgot to set the variable for the selection changes. Let's
set it for that and some other dpkg calls.
Regression-Of: c2c8b4787b0882234ba2772ec7513afbf97b563a
(cherry picked from commit 55489885b51b02b7f74e601a393ecaefd1f71f9c)
|
|
The dpkg frontend lock is a lock dpkg tries to acquire
except if the frontend already acquires it.
This fixes a race condition in the install command where the
dpkg lock is not held for a short period of time between
different dpkg invocations.
For this reason we also define an environment variable
DPKG_FRONTEND_LOCKED for dpkg invocations so dpkg knows
not to try to acquire the frontend lock because it's held
by a parent process.
We can set DPKG_FRONTEND_LOCKED only if the frontend lock
really is held; that is, if our lock count is greater than 0
- otherwise an apt client not using the LockInner family of
functions would run dpkg without the frontend lock set, but
with DPKG_FRONTEND_LOCKED set. Such a process has a weaker
guarantee: Because dpkg would not lock the frontend lock
either, the process is prone to the existing races, and,
more importantly, so is a new style process.
Closes: #869546
[fixups: fix error messages, add public IsLocked() method, and
make {Un,}LockInner return an error on !debSystem]
(cherry picked from commit c2c8b4787b0882234ba2772ec7513afbf97b563a)
LP: #1781169
|
|
The default buffer size for pkgTagFile is 32kb which should be big
enough for everything… expect for enormous lists of provides,
resulting in:
$ apt show librust-winapi-dev
E: Unable to parse package file /var/lib/apt/lists/ftp.br.debian.org_debian_dists_unstable_main_binary-amd64_Packages (2)
E: Internal Error, Unable to parse a package record
The "apt-cache show" codepath uses instead a max size for all files,
which seems a bit excessive, but works – using the max size for the file
in question seems most appropriate.
The patch is written for the 1.6.y series as a rewrite of the related
code in the 1.7.y series (commit bf53f39c9a0221b670ffff74053ed36fc502d5a0)
removed this problem before it was reported.
Closes: #905527
LP: #1787120
|
|
|
|
This reverts commit ed94a024e14e0fdbd9ea6cabd07063da441bcc02.
|
|
|
|
APT in 1.6 saw me rewriting the mirror:// transport method, which works
comparable to the decommissioned httpredir.d.o "just" that apt requests
a mirror list and performs all the redirections internally with all the
bells like parallel download and automatic fallback (more details in the
apt-transport-mirror manpage included in the 1.6 release).
The automatic fallback is the problem here: The intend is that if a file
fails to be downloaded (e.g. because the mirror is offline, broken,
out-of-sync, …) instead of erroring out the next mirror in the list is
contacted for a retry of the download.
Internally the acquire process of an InRelease file (works with the
Release/Release.gpg pair, too) happens in steps: 1) download file and 2)
verify file, both handled as URL requests passed around. Due to an
oversight the fallbacks for the first step are still active for the
second step, so that the successful download from another mirror stands
in for the failed verification… *facepalm*
Note that the attacker can not judge by the request arriving for the
InRelease file if the user is using the mirror method or not. If entire
traffic is observed Eve might be able to observe the request for
a mirror list, but that might or might not be telling if following
requests for InRelease files will be based on that list or for another
sources.list entry not using mirror (Users have also the option to have
the mirror list locally (via e.g. mirror+file://) instead of on a remote
host). If the user isn't using mirror:// for this InRelease file apt
will fail very visibly as intended.
(The mirror list needs to include at least two mirrors and to work
reliably the attacker needs to be able to MITM all mirrors in the list.
For remotely accessed mirror lists this is no limitation as the attacker
is in full control of the file in that case)
Fixed by clearing the alternatives after a step completes (and moving a pimpl
class further to the top to make that valid compilable code). mirror://
is at the moment the only method using this code infrastructure (for all
others this set is already empty) and the only method-independent user
so far is the download of deb files, but those are downloaded and
verified in a single step; so there shouldn't be much opportunity for
regression here even through a central code area is changed.
Upgrade instructions: Given all apt-based frontends are affected, even
additional restrictions like signed-by are bypassed and the attack in
progress is hardly visible in the progress reporting of an update
operation (the InRelease file is marked "Ign", but no fallback to
"Release/Release.gpg" is happening) and leaves no trace (expect files
downloaded from the attackers repository of course) the best course of
action might be to change the sources.list to not use the mirror family
of transports ({tor+,…}mirror{,+{http{,s},file,…}}) until a fixed
version of the src:apt packages are installed.
Regression-Of: 355e1aceac1dd05c4c7daf3420b09bd860fd169d,
57fa854e4cdb060e87ca265abd5a83364f9fa681
LP: #1787752
|
|
|
|
JSON hooks might disappear and the common idiom to work around hooks
disappearing is to check for the hook in the shell snippet that is
in the apt.conf file and if it does not exist, do nothing. This caused
APT to fail however, expecting it to acknowledge the handshake.
Ignoring ECONNRESET on handshakes solves the problem.
The error case, and the other error cases also did not stop execution
of the hook, causing more errors to pile up. Fix this by directly going
to the closing part of the code.
LP: #1776218
(cherry picked from commit 1d53cffad22c92645090e0e6ddde31fe4f7c3b05)
|
|
|
|
This should avoid test failures on ubuntu:bionic
(cherry picked from commit 3a37521aec0b02e12deaef58772ae0bca9a75496)
|
|
We don't use ninja to build the package in 1.6.y, so we need
to pull it in manually.
|
|
This ensures that we don't hang waiting for debconf.
(cherry picked from commit 551ded4b63f6f47f022c5ca841031fc2566a58ff)
|
|
debSystem uses a reference counted lock, so you can acquire it
multiple times in your applications, possibly nested. Nesting
locks causes a fd leak, though, as we only increment the lock
count when we already have locked twice, rather than once, and
hence when we call lock the second time, instead of increasing
the lock count, we open another lock fd.
This fixes the code to check if we have locked at all (> 0).
There is no practical problem here aside from the fd leak, as
closing the new fd releases the lock on the old one due to the
weird semantics of fcntl locks.
(cherry picked from commit 79f012bd09ae99d4c9d63dc0ac960376b5338b32)
|
|
We want to kill everything using our temporary directory.
LP: #1773992
(cherry picked from commit 819426013c6ca6310bb469440702b6295dba4498)
|
|
Gbp-Dch: ignore
|
|
120s is an insanely high default time out, lower it to 30s
to make things a bit nicer.
(cherry picked from commit 329a4a6159f1972ff5ec7bc2db26430f26dc61f3)
|
|
Correctly register timed out IP addresses from a timed out
select() call as a bad address so we do not try it again.
LP: #1766542
(cherry picked from commit 71b65b3563d223f6cd69261918ec06d10da48e6c)
|
|
id: '': no such user
./test-bug-611729-mark-as-manual: 59: [: Illegal number:
Regression-of: 68842e1741a5005b1e3f0a07deffd737c65e3294
Gbp-Dch: Ignore
(cherry picked from commit ea901a491bcfe406267c7c38c227c5caabf017a0)
|
|
Salsa has support for GitLab CI. This introduces a test setup
for it, derived from the ones for shippable and travis. It is
not optimal yet: The build is run in the test stage. Fixing this
requires us to separate test from build dependencies, and storing
build/ as an artifact of the build stage; since build and test
stage run on different runners with fresh checkouts and images.
(cherry picked from commit 8cc38267809a15ec9819bce721e52fcd90a523b9)
|
|
If sudo was invoked by root, SUDO_UID will be 0, and apt
will not print a Requested-By line.
(cherry picked from commit 68842e1741a5005b1e3f0a07deffd737c65e3294)
|
|
Still allow the older one to be used.
Closes: #897149
(cherry picked from commit 39d9e217a22901892647499ee695ba472a111d25)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Only use zstd defined variables if zstd was found.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This makes cross-building a bit easier, and also porting to
other platforms.
(cherry picked from commit 7d6994799f6782ba5e024ad0861e036d93e5f447)
|
|
|
|
[jak: Fix invalid empty line]
Closes: #895117
|
|
This reverts commit 57a00c50b14a49ed91816e3f4467e0f2e57ee772.
|
|
json-based hooks for apt cli tools
See merge request apt-team/apt!10
|