Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This isn't implementing any new features, it is "just" moving code
around from FileFd methods which decided on each call how to handle the
request by including all logic for all possible compressor backends in
the method body to a model in which backend-specifics are implemented in
a FileFdPrivate subclass. This avoids a big chunk of #ifdef's and should
make it a tiny bit more obvious which backend uses which code.
The execution of the idea is slightly uglified by the need to preserve
ABI and API which causes liberal befriending.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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There's no point trying to read 0 bytes, so let's just not
do this and switch to a while loop like in Write().
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Turn the do-while loop into while loops, so it simply does nothing
if the Size is already 0.
This reverts commit c0b271edc2f6d9e5dea5ac82fbc911f0e3adfa7a which
introduced a fix for a specific instance of the issue in the
CopyFile() function.
Closes: #808381
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On EOF, ToRead will be 0, which might trigger on some systems (e.g.
on the Hurd) an error due to the invalid byte count passed to write().
The whole loop already checks for ToRead != 0, so perform the writing
step only when there was actual data read.
Closes: #808381
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Commit e977b8b9234ac5db32f2f0ad7e183139b988340d tries to make BufSize
calculated based on the size of the buffer; the problem is that
std::unique_ptr::size() returns a pointer to the data, so sizeof()
equals to the size of a pointer (later divided by sizeof(char), which
is 1). The result is that the CopyFile copies in chunks of 8 bytes,
which is not exactly ideal...
As solution, declare BufSize in advance, and use its value to allocate
the Buf array.
Closes: #808381
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This helps writing test cases. Also adapt the test case that
expected 64-bit.
Nothing changes performance wise, the distribution of the hash
values remains intact.
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This makes the test suite work on 32 bit-long platforms.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Trying to clean up directories which do not exist seems rather silly if
you think about it, so let apt think about it and stop it.
Depends a bit on the caller if this is fixing anything for them as they
might try to acquire a lock or doing other clever things as apt does.
Closes: 807477
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Regression of 1e064088bf7b3e29cd36d30760fb3e4143a1a49a (1.1~exp4) which
moved code around and renamed methods heavily ending up calling the
wrong method matching packagenames only instead of calling the full
array. Most commands work with versions, so this managed to fly under
the radar for quite a while.
Closes: 807870
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If we can't work with the hashes we parsed from the Release file we
display now an error message if the Release file includes only weak
hashes instead of downloading the indexes and failing to verify them
with "Hash Sum mismatch" even through the hashes didn't mismatch (they
were just weak).
If for some (unlikely) reason we have got weak hashes only for
individual targets we will show a warning to this effect (again, befor
downloading and failing the index itself).
Closes: 806459
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Reversing the parsing order ensures that we parse weaker hashes (like
SHA1) before we touch newer/stronger hashes (like SHA256) as the weaker
ones will usually be there for a longer time already with data already
present, which we would discard if we start with the strong one first.
The discarding is visible in the debug logs:
File X wasn't in the list for the first parsed hash! (history)
File X wasn't in the list for the first parsed hash! (patches)
which if file X is part of the patch-path means apt will not find a path and
fallback to acquire the whole file instead needlessly.
If file X isn't part of the patch-path that is no problem, so that
effects only the update-call which updates with patches coming from
before and after the addition of a new hash.
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Reported-By: Manuel A. Fernandez Montecelo <mafm@debian.org>
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Fixes a warning reported by gcc.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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With the package names now normalized to lower case, the caches
of affected systems need to be rebuild. Adjust the minor version
to trigger such a rebuild.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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dpkg does that when reading package files, so we should do
the same. This only deals with parsing names from binary
package paragraphs, it does not look at source package names
and/or the list of binaries in a dsc file.
Closes: #807012
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required and important were swapped, leading to wrong
output.
Closes: #807523
Thanks: Manuel A. Fernandez Montecelo for discovering this
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Gbp-Dch: ignore
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We need to pass 0llu instead of 0 as the init value, otherwise
std::accumulate will calculate with ints.
Reported-by: Raphaël Hertzog
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This should make it more obvious that CHANGEPATH is a placeholder which
apt will replace with a package specific path rather than a string
constant.
Mail-Reference: <87d1upgvaf.fsf@deep-thought.43-1.org>
Mail-Archive: https://lists.debian.org/debian-dak/2015/12/msg00005.html
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Otherwise a user is subject to unexpected content-injection depending on
which directory she happens to start apt in. This also cleans up the code
requiring less implementation details in build-dep which is always good.
Technically, this is an ABI break as we override virtual methods, but
that they weren't overridden was a mistake resulting in pure classes,
which shouldn't be pure, so they were unusable – and as they are new in
1.1 nobody is using them yet (and hopefully ever as they are borderline
implementation details).
Closes: 806693
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Regression of 14341a7ee1ca3dbcdcdbe10ad19b947ce23d972d.
Reported-By: Julian Andres Klode <jak@debian.org>
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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The implementation changed in
495b7a615a2d8f485beadf88c6ed298f5bbe50c2
Git-Dch: Ignore
Reported-By: Julian Andres Klode <jak@debian.org>
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This reverts commit 7ac9386cb6e272625490fcf3e8183b45e28bbc43.
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This reverts commit 28f24d3dad1844af316337d565ba2ebc11c8ce97.
This fails on Ubuntu as they build with -Bsymbolic-functions.
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Dropping privileges is an involved process for code and system alike so
ideally we want to verify that all the work wasn't in vain. Stuff
designed to sidestep the usual privilege checks like fakeroot (and its
many alternatives) have their problem with this through, partly through
missing wrapping (#806521), partly as e.g. regaining root from an
unprivileged user is in their design. This commit therefore disables
most of these checks by default so that apt runs fine again in a
fakeroot environment.
Closes: 806475
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This also deals with the unlikely case of groups being mentioned
multiple times or if the effective group isn't mentioned at all.
In practice, it is a debugging aid through like for #806475.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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Seems like a simpler workaround than forcing a lower optimization
level just for this for all of apt.
See also:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gcc-5/+bug/1473674
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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Closes: #806422
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If it does not exist disabled priv dropping as there is nothing
we can drop to. This will unblock people with special chroots
or systems that deleted the "_apt" user.
Closes: #806406
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This fixes a regression caussed by commit
95278287f4e1eeaf5d96749d6fc9bfc53fb400d0
that moved the error detection of RunFds() later into the loop.
However this broke detecting issues like dead acquire methods.
Instead of relying on the global error state (which is bad)
we now pass a boolean value back from RunFds() and break on
false.
Closes: #806406
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The manpages were fixed by Justin B Rye, lets deal with the rest now.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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Reference mail:
https://lists.debian.org/debian-l10n-english/2015/11/msg00006.html
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In 8d041b4f we made apt figure out based on the last Release file it has
if it should request a file or not given that the hashes changed or not.
So if we have a last Release file and do a request, do not sent a
Last-Modified header as we expect a change so much that a non-change
would indeed be an error. The Last-Modified header is therefore at best
ignored by the server, so sending it is just wasted effort. In the worst
case as time is a fragile thing the server decides against sending us an
update with the idea that we already have the latest content, which we
know for a fact that we haven't. Given that we sent less information to
the server our request is on its own also less identifiable as coming
from a returning or new user.
The disadvantage is that if we end up getting an old index file after
getting a new Release file from another mirror the old mirror will not
be able to tell us 'Hit', but instead sends us the complete file we
discard, but both lets us end up with the same error class in the end,
so the difference isn't big in practice.
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Reported-By: codespell
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Out of memory and similar circumstanzas could cause MMap::Map to fail
and especially the mmap/malloc calls in it. With some additional
checking we can avoid segfaults and similar in such situations – at
least in theory as if this is a real out of memory everything we do to
handle the error could just as well run into a memory problem as well…
But at least in theory (if MMap::Map is made to fail always) we can deal
with it so good that a user actually never sees a failure (as the cache
it tries to load with it fails and is discarded, so that DynamicMMap
takes over and a new one is build) instead of segfaulting.
Closes: 803417
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In ce1f3a2c we started warning about failing unlinking, which we
consistently do for directories. That isn't a problem as directories
usually aren't in the places we do want to clean up – with the potential
exeception of "lost+found", so lets ignore it like we ignore our own
partial/ subdirectory.
Closes: 805424
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space-gapping: '-o option= value'
That is a very old feature (straight from 1998), but it is super
surprising if you try setting empty values and instead get error
messages or a non-empty value as the next parameter is treated as the
value – which could have been empty, so if for some reason you need a
compatible way of setting an empty value try: '-o option="" ""'.
I can only guess that the idea was to support '-o option value', but we
survived 17 years without it, we will do fine in the future I guess.
Similar is the case for '-t= testing' even through '-t testing' existed
before and the code even tried to detect mistakes like '-t= -b' … all
gone now.
Technically that is as its removing a feature replacing it with another
a major interface break. In practice I really hope for my and their
sanity that nobody was using this; but if for some reaon you do: Remove
the space and be done.
I found the patch and the bugreport actually only after the fact, but
its reassuring that others are puzzled by this as well and hence a
thanks is in perfect order here as the patch is practical identical
[expect that this one here adds tests and other bonus items].
Thanks: Daniel Hartwig for initial patch.
Closes: 693092
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In 0940230d we started dropping privileges for file (and a bit later for
copy, too) with the intend of uniforming this for all methods. The
commit message says that the source will likely fail based on the
compressors already – and there isn't much secret in the repository
content. After all, after apt has run the update everyone can access the
content via apt anyway…
There are sources through which worked before which are mostly
single-deb (and those with the uncompressed files available).
The first one being especially surprising for users maybe, so instead of
failing, we make it so that apt detects that it can't access a source as
_apt and if so doesn't drop (for all sources!) privileges – but we limit
this to file/copy, so the uncompress which might be needed will still
fail – but that failed before this regression.
We display a notice about this, mostly so that if it still fails (e.g.
compressed) the user has some idea what is wrong.
Closes: 805069
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This 'ignores' the component Release files you can find in Debian
alongside the binary-* directories, which isn't exactly a common
usecase, but it worked before, so lets support it again as this isn't
worse than a valid Release file which is unsigned.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Limit the field length to a char to avoid bogus FF for
utf-8 characters with the default length.
Closes: 799123
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Reported-By: cppcheck
Git-Dch: Ignore
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A slightly unlikely bug, but lets fix it while slightly reworking this
whole function to be slightly saner to look at, even if still not good.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Unlinking /dev/null is bad, we shouldn't do that. Also, we should print
at least a warning if we tried to unlink a file but didn't manage to
pull it of (ignoring the case were the file is /dev/null or doesn't
exist in the first place).
This got triggered by a relatively unlikely to cause problem in
pkgAcquire::Worker::PrepareFiles which would while temporary
uncompressed files (which are set to keep compressed) figure out that to
files are the same and prepare for sharing by deleting them. Bad move.
That also shows why not printing a warning is a bad idea as this hide
the error for in non-root test runs.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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The wrapping will fail in the best case and actually end up deleting
/dev/null in the worst case. Given that there is no point in trying to
write atomically to /dev/null as you can't read from it again just
ignore these flags if higher level code ends up trying to use them on
/dev/null.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Leading or trailing newlines can be confusing for our parser as it
expects two newlines to start/stop a new stanza. To solve this the lines
we wanna add are printed first, ignore any leading newlines and then add
the stanza as provided by dpkg-deb with or without trailing newlines as
the parser will look at the first stanza only anyway and removing
trailing newlines is considerably harder to do.
Closes: 802553
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Based on a discussion with Niels Thykier who asked for Contents-all this
implements apt trying for all architecture dependent files to get a file
for the architecture all, which is treated internally now as an official
architecture which is always around (like native). This way arch:all
data can be shared instead of duplicated for each architecture requiring
the user to download the same information again and again.
There is one problem however: In Debian there is already a binary-all/
Packages file, but the binary-any files still include arch:all packages,
so that downloading this file now would be a waste of time, bandwidth
and diskspace. We therefore need a way to decide if it makes sense to
download the all file for Packages in Debian or not. The obvious answer
would be a special flag in the Release file indicating this, which would
need to default to 'no' and every reasonable repository would override
it to 'yes' in a few years time, but the flag would be there "forever".
Looking closer at a Release file we see the field "Architectures", which
doesn't include 'all' at the moment. With the idea outlined above that
'all' is a "proper" architecture now, we interpret this field as being
authoritative in declaring which architectures are supported by this
repository. If it says 'all', apt will try to get all, if not it will be
skipped. This gives us another interesting feature: If I configure a
source to download armel and mips, but it declares it supports only
armel apt will now print a notice saying as much. Previously this was a
very cryptic failure. If on the other hand the repository supports mips,
too, but for some reason doesn't ship mips packages at the moment, this
'missing' file is silently ignored (= that is the same as the repository
including an empty file).
The Architectures field isn't mandatory through, so if it isn't there,
we assume that every architecture is supported by this repository, which
skips the arch:all if not listed in the release file.
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