Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Again no practical difference, but for consistency a boolean option
should really be accessed via a boolean method rather than an int
especially if you happen to try setting the option to "true" …
Gbp-Dch: Ignore
(cherry picked from commit c15ba854b6736696f164e4d2c243a944e2d4006e)
(cherry picked from commit c0dc26456ba74da449eae11c04c3edb3b5f1e35e)
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This can happen e.g. for file: repositories. There is no inherent
problem with setting such values internally, but its bad style,
forbidden in the manpage and could be annoying in the future.
Gbp-Dch: Ignore
(cherry picked from commit 44ecb8c3579e5ae8828f83530e4151a0ff84d5d6)
(cherry picked from commit fec19de5e786564ed8699b38310f7d1a7c348c01)
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apt tools do not really support these other variables, but tools apt
calls might, so lets play save and clean those up as needed.
Reported-By: Paul Wise (pabs) on IRC
(cherry picked from commit e2c8c825a5470e33c25d00e07de188d0e03922c8)
(cherry picked from commit 52067bd0a9e23642b7fa791fb63f4b69cafceb36)
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We can't cleanup the environment like e.g. sudo would do as you usually
want the environment to "leak" into these helpers, but some variables
like HOME should really not have still the value of the root user – it
could confuse the helpers (USER) and HOME isn't accessible anyhow.
Closes: 842877
(cherry picked from commit 34b491e735ad47c4805e63f3b83a659b8d10262b)
(cherry picked from commit cc5919076ba1c2dab773a6c06cb3dd5497f0c656)
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A user relying on the deprecated behaviour of apt-get to accept a source
with an unknown pubkey to install a package containing the key expects
that the following 'apt-get update' causes the source to be considered
as trusted, but in case the source hadn't changed in the meantime this
wasn't happening: The source kept being untrusted until the Release file
was changed.
This only effects sources not using InRelease and only apt-get, the apt
binary downright refuses this course of actions, but it is a common way
of adding external sources.
Closes: 838779
(cherry picked from commit 84eec207be35b8c117c430296d4c212b079c00c1)
LP: #1657440
(cherry picked from commit 5605c9880f36c764baaca59328777d34645a32fa)
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This is a follow up to the previous issue where we did not check
if getline() returned -1 due to an end of file or due to an error
like memory allocation, treating both as end of file.
Here we ensure that we also handle buffered writes correctly by
flushing the files before checking for any errors in our error
stack.
Buffered writes themselves were introduced in 1.1.9, but the
function was never called with a buffered file from inside
apt until commit 46c4043d741cb2c1d54e7f5bfaa234f1b7580f6c
which was first released with apt 1.2.10. The function is
public, though, so fixing this is a good idea anyway.
Affected: >= 1.1.9
(cherry picked from commit 6212ee84a517ed68217429022bd45c108ecf9f85)
(cherry picked from commit e115da452632a024a2885fea27a6c2c5145282b1)
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This fixes a security issue where signatures of the
InRelease files could be circumvented in a man-in-the-middle
attack, giving attackers the ability to serve any packages
they want to a system, in turn giving them root access.
It turns out that getline() may not only return EINVAL
as stated in the documentation - it might also return
in case of an error when allocating memory.
This fix not only adds a check that reading worked
correctly, it also implicitly checks that all writes
worked by reporting any other error that occurred inside
the loop and was logged by apt.
Affected: >= 0.9.8
Reported-By: Jann Horn <jannh@google.com>
Thanks: Jann Horn, Google Project Zero for reporting the issue
LP: #1647467
(cherry picked from commit 51be550c5c38a2e1ddfc2af50a9fab73ccf78026)
(cherry picked from commit 4ef9e0837ce139b398299431ae2294882f531d8e)
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This reverts commit 1b63558a39ee1eed7eb024cd0e164d73beb165b1.
This commit caused a regression in the unit tests: The error was
propagated to Close(), where we expected it to return true.
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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").
(cherry picked from commit 0fb16c3e678044d6d06ba8a6199b1e96487ee0d8)
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In 3bdff17c894d0c3d0f813d358fc45d7a263f3552 we did it for the datetime
parsing, but we use the same style in the parsing for pdiff (where the
size of the file is in the middle of the three fields) so imbueing here
as well is a good idea.
(cherry picked from commit 1136a707b7792394ea4b1d039dda4f321fec9da4)
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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
(cherry picked from commit 0919f1df552ddf022ce4508cbf40e04eae5ef896)
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Followup of b58e2c7c56b1416a343e81f9f80cb1f02c128e25.
Still a regression of sorts of 8b79c94af7f7cf2e5e5342294bc6e5a908cacabf.
Closes: 832044
(cherry picked from commit 7303e11ff28f920a6277c159aa46f80c007350bb)
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Rewritten in 9febc2b238e1e322dce1f94ecbed46d595893b52 for c++ locales
usage and rewritten again in 1d742e01470bba27715a8191c50adde4b39c2f19 to
avoid a currently present stdlibc++6 bug in the std::get_time
implementation. The later implementation uses still stringstreams for
parsing, but forgot to explicitly reset the locale to something sane
(for parsing english dates that is), so date and especially the parsing
of a number is depending on the locale. Turns out, the French (among
others) format their numbers with space as thousand separator so for
some reason the stdlibc++6 thinks its a good idea to interpret the
entire datetime string as a single number instead of realizing that in
"25 Jun …" the later parts can't reasonably be part of that number even
through there are spaces there…
Workaround is hence: LC_NUMERIC=C.UTF-8
Closes: 828011
(cherry picked from commit 3bdff17c894d0c3d0f813d358fc45d7a263f3552)
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As reported upstream in
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=71556
the implementation of std::get_time is currently not as accepting as
strptime is, especially in how hours should be formatted.
Just reverting 9febc2b238e1e322dce1f94ecbed46d595893b52 would be
possible, but then we would reopen the problems fixed by it, so instead
I opted here for a rewrite of the parsing logic which makes this method
a lot longer, but at least it provides the same benefits as the rewrite
in std::get_time was intended to give us and decouples us from the fix
of the issue in the standard library implementation of GCC.
LP: 1593583
(cherry picked from commit 1d742e01470bba27715a8191c50adde4b39c2f19)
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HTTP/1.1 hardcodes GMT (RFC 7231 §7.1.1.1) and what is good enough for the
internet must be good enough for us™ as we reuse the implementation
internally to parse (most) dates we encounter in various places like the
Release files with their Date and Valid-Until header fields.
Implementing a fully timezone aware parser just feels too hard for no
effective benefit as it would take 5+ years (= until LTS's are out of
fashion) until a repository could use non-UTC dates and expect it to
work. Not counting non-apt implementations which might or might not
only want to encounter UTC here as well.
As a bonus, this eliminates the use of an instance of setlocale in
libapt.
Closes: 819697
(cherry picked from commit 9febc2b238e1e322dce1f94ecbed46d595893b52)
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(cherry picked from commit eceb219c2a64f3f81421c3c6587380b6ae81a530)
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This fixes a regression introduced in
commit 8f858d560e3b7b475c623c4e242d1edce246025a
don't leak FD in AutoProxyDetect command return parsing
which accidentally made the proxy autodetection code also read
the scripts output on stderr, not only on stdout when it switched
the code from popen() to Popen().
Reported-By: Tim Small <tim@seoss.co.uk>
(cherry picked from commit 0ecceb5bb9cc8727c117195945b7116aceb984fe)
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If the dependency line does not contain spaces in the repository
but does in the dpkg status file (because dpkg normalized the
dependency list), the dpkg line might be longer than the line
in the repository. If it now happens to be longer than 1024
characters, it would be skipped, causing the hashes to be
out of date.
Note that we have to bump the minor cache version again as
this changes the format slightly, and we might get mismatches
with an older src cache otherwise.
Fixes Debian/apt#23
(cherry picked from commit 708e2f1fe99e6f067292bc909f03f12c181e4798)
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memcpy is marked as nonnull for its input, but ignores the input anyhow
if the declared length is zero. Our SHA2 implementations do this as
well, it was "just" MD5 and SHA1 missing, so we add the length check
here as well as along the callstack as it is really pointless to do all
these method calls for "nothing".
Reported-By: gcc -fsanitize=undefined
(cherry picked from commit 644478e8db56f305601c3628a74e53de048b28c8)
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If the inner Base256ToNum() returned false, it did not set
Num to a new value, causing it to be uninitialized, and thus
might have caused the function to exit despite a good result.
Also document why the Res = Num, if (Res != Num) magic is done.
Reported-By: valgrind
(cherry picked from commit cf7503d8a09ebce695423fdeb2402c456c18f3d8)
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Adding 1 to the value of d->End - current makes restLength one byte
too long: If we pass memchr(current, ..., restLength) has thus
undefined behavior.
Also, reading the value of current has undefined behavior if
current >= d->End, not only for current > d->End:
Consider a string of length 1, that is d->End = d->Current + 1.
We can only read at d->Current + 0, but d->Current + 1 is beyond
the end of the string.
This probably caused several inexplicable build failures on hurd-i386
in the past, and just now caused a build failure on Ubuntu's amd64
builder.
Reported-By: valgrind
(cherry picked from commit 923c592ceb6014b31ec751b97b3ed659fa3e88ae)
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If a Binary field contains one or more spaces before a comma, the
code produced a segmentation fault, as it accidentally set a pointer
to 0 instead of the value of the pointer.
If the comma is at the beginning of the field, the code would
create a binStartNext that points one element before the start
of the string, which is undefined behavior.
We also need to check that we do not exit the string during the
replacement of spaces before commas: A string of the form " ,"
would normally exit the boundary of the Buffer:
binStartNext = offset 1 ','
binEnd = offset 0 ' '
isspace_ascii(*binEnd) = true => --binEnd
=> binEnd = - 1
We get rid of the problem by only allowing spaces to be eliminated
if they are not the first character of the buffer:
binStartNext = offset 1 ','
binEnd = offset 0 ' '
binEnd > buffer = false, isspace_ascii(*binEnd) = true
=> exit loop
=> binEnd remains 0
(cherry picked from commit ce6cd75dc367b92f65e4fb539dd166d0f3361f8c)
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An absolute filename for a *.deb file starts with a /. A package with
the name of the file is inserted in the cache which is provided by the
"real" package for internal reasons. The pinning code detects a regex
based wildcard by having the regex start with /. That is no problem
as a / can not be included in a package name… expect that our virtual
filename package can and does.
We fix this two ways actually: First, a regex is only being considered a
regex if it also ends with / (we don't support flags). That stops our
problem with the virtual filename packages already, but to be sure we
also do not enter the loop if matcher and package name are equal.
It has to be noted that the creation of pins for virtual packages like
the here effected filename packages is pointless as only versions can be
pinned, but checking that a package is really purely virtual is too
costly compared to just creating an unused pin.
Closes: 835818
(cherry picked from commit e950b7e2f89b5e48192cd469c963a44fff9f1450)
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This fixes issues with chroots, but the goal here was to get
the test suite working on systems without dpkg.
(cherry picked from commit 2ed62ba6abcad809d1898a40950f86217af73812)
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We basically called ourselves before, creating an endless loop.
Reported-By: clang
(cherry picked from commit d651c4cd71a43c385c3d3bcd3a9f25bf0a67f8f2)
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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
(cherry picked from commit a6ae3d3df490e7a5a1c8324ba9dc2e63972b1529)
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In af81ab9030229b4ce6cbe28f0f0831d4896fda01 we implement by-hash as a
special compression type, which breaks this filesize setting as the code
is looking for a foobar.by-hash file then. Dealing this slightly gets
us the intended value. Note that this has no direct effect as this value
will be set in other ways, too, and could only effect progress reporting.
Gbp-Dch: Ignore
(cherry picked from commit 3084ef2292642d43e533654354a4929abe55d91b)
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Since its existence in 2010 DirectoryExists was always marked with this
attribute, but for no real reason. Arguably a check for the existence of
the file is not modifying global state, so theoretically this shouldn't
be a problem. It is wrong from a logical point of view through as
between two calls the directory could be created so the promise we made
to the compiler that it could remove the second call would be wrong, so
API wise it is wrong.
It's a bit mysterious that this is only observeable on ppc64el and can be
fixed by reordering code ever so slightly, but in the end its more our
fault for adding this attribute than the compilers fault for doing
something silly based on the attribute.
LP: 1473674
(cherry picked from commit 9445fa62386c80c9822e77484d30b2109aa0f2dc)
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When checking if a file is empty, we forget to check that
fstat() actually worked.
(cherry picked from commit 15fe8e62d37bc87114c59d385bed7ceefb72886b)
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If the URI had no password the username was ignored
(cherry picked from commit a1f3ac8aba0675321dd46d074af8abcbb10c19fd)
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APT (usually) knows which package is essential or not, so we can avoid
passing this force flag to dpkg unconditionally if the user hasn't
chosen a non-default essential handling obscuring the information.
(cherry picked from commit d3930f8716f439c229cd3d11813823d847a2ecff)
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Previously, when data could be created and sig not, we would unlink
sig, not data (and vice versa).
(cherry picked from commit d0d06f44ed60a3888528d834a799bae86c2978d5)
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There is no point in trying to perform Write/Read on a FileFd which
already failed as they aren't going to work as expected, so we should
make sure that they fail early on and hard.
(cherry picked from commit 02c38073af51802c02bb104d4450e0e112d641ad)
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Reported-By: cppcheck
Gbp-Dch: Ignore
(cherry picked from commit 196d590a99e309764e07c9dc23ea98897eebf53a)
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If another file in the transaction fails and hence dooms the transaction
we can end in a situation in which a -patched file (= rred writes the
result of the patching to it) remains in the partial/ directory.
The next apt call will perform the rred patching again and write its
result again to the -patched file, but instead of starting with an empty
file as intended it will override the content previously in the file
which has the same result if the new content happens to be longer than
the old content, but if it isn't parts of the old content remain in the
file which will pass verification as the new content written to it
matches the hashes and if the entire transaction passes the file will be
moved the lists/ directory where it might or might not trigger errors
depending on if the old content which remained forms a valid file
together with the new content.
This has no real security implications as no untrusted data is involved:
The old content consists of a base file which passed verification and a
bunch of patches which all passed multiple verifications as well, so the
old content isn't controllable by an attacker and the new one isn't
either (as the new content alone passes verification). So the best an
attacker can do is letting the user run into the same issue as in the
report.
Closes: #831762
(cherry picked from commit 0e071dfe205ad21d8b929b4bb8164b008dc7c474)
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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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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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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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