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Normally make just lets every job write its output directly,
making the log fairly hard to read with high concurrency.
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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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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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On Ubuntu, cmake installs are vendor-specific apt.conf.d
snippet, causing the build to fail.
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ctest as run by cmake by default does not show the output of the tests
even if the tests failed. In terms of our tests it could be handy to set
it always, but unfortunately it seems like cmake doesn't allow it if the
internet is to be believed, so lets enable it at least while building
packages and on travis.
Gbp-Dch: Ignore
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This is much better than removing them in debian/rules.
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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This can now build all documentation. It should also be fairly
reusable for other projects, as long as they follow the same
naming scheme for the po4a output files and set the PACKAGE_*
variables used here.
We could have done all translations in a single call to po4a
like the makefile based buildsystem does. While that would
have made the output slightly nicer, this solution offers a
huge performance gain because it can translate the documents
in parallel, which also means that the xsltproc stage does not
have to wait for all translations to be done first.
You might think that the add_custom_command() should list the
actual output files as BYPRODUCTS. This is not true however:
Because the files are not always generated, Ninja will think
missing byproducts mean that the target is out of date - which
is not what we want.
Finally, also add the missing doxygen support. Note that the
packaging script cleans up some md5 and map files created by
doxygen, otherwise it is fairly boring.
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This new packaging is much easier to read, although the duplication
in the install files is a bit annoying. We should probably also get
rid of the movefiles for solvers, planners, and https method; but
then we have to keep track of which methods exist in the apt package.
Another disadvantage is that building only the documentation packages
also requires building the code, as there's no way to turn off code
building in the project.
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Julian noticed on IRC that I fall victim to a lovely false friend by
calling referring to a 'planer' all the time even through these are
machines to e.g. remove splinters from woodwork ("make stuff plane").
The term I meant is written in german in this way (= with a single n)
but in english there are two, aka: 'planner'.
As that is unreleased code switching all instances without any
transitional provisions. Also the reason why its skipped in changelog.
Thanks: Julian Andres Klode
Gbp-Dch: Ignore
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Testing the current implementation can benefit from being able to be
feed an EIPP request and produce a fully compliant response. It is also
a great test for EIPP in general.
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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The debian/rules file tries to guess in which directory it is supposed
to be building, but that guess is always ./build – if it wasn't it
would fail later as not all rules take alternatives into acount.
So, as this is clearly not used lets remove this complexity instead of
fixing it up.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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The embedding is done completely automatic by doxygen and documented to
be that way for reasons: /usr/share/doc/doxygen/README.jquery
As we can't do anything about it, it is pointless to keep the warning.
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The rational is that we need to spread the load on the mirrors
that apt update and unattended-upgrades cause. To do so, we
leverage the RandomizeDelay feature of systemd. The other advantage
is that the timer is not run at a fixed daily.daily time but
instead every 24h. This also fixes the problem that the randomized
deplay in the current apt.cron.daily causes other cron jobs to
be deplayed.
A compatibility cron job is also provided for systems that do not
use systemd.
Note that the time is fired two times a day, but the logic inside
of apt.systemd.daily will ensure (via stamp files) that the
servers are hit at most every 24h. Firing two times a day helps
with the worst case update time and it also helps with systems
that are not always on.
LP: #246381, #727685
Closes: #600262, #709675, #663290
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I'd like to avoid pulling libgtest-dev into the bootstrap set.
Fortunately, libgtest-dev is only used for testing apt and apt
correctly implements DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS=nocheck now. So this
bug is about getting rid of the Build-Depends.
Simply removing it (by adding a build profile) is not sufficient
however as configure fails hard, so an additional bit is necessary
to cover for that.
Closes: #809726
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In e75e5879 'replace "which" with "command -v" for portability' I missed
that command -v isn't actually required to be available in debian, so
for the 5 files we are using it:
Two (abicheck/run_abi_test & test/integration/framework) are called in
environments were I believe sh is at least dash or 'better' as the first
one is "interactive" for apt developers and the later is sourced by ~200
tests in the same directory run by hand and ci-services – for the later
we have pulled some uglier hacks for worser things already, so if there
should actually end up needing something more compatible we will notice
eventually (and the later actually had a command -v call for some time
already and nobody came running).
debian/rules and debian/apt.cron.daily I switched back to which as that
is more or less debian-specific or at least highly non-critical.
That leaves cmdline/apt-key.in with a bunch of calls where I will
implement that functionality in shell as this is relatively short-lived
as it is used to detect wget (for net-update, which Michael wants to
revive and in that process will properly use apt-helper instead of wget)
and to detect gpg vs. gpg2 systems, where the earlier is supposed to go
away in the longrun (or the later, but by replacing the earlier…).
[and this gpg/gpg2 detection is new in sid, so I have some sympathy for
that being a problem now.]
Thanks: Jakub Wilk for pointing out #747320
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which is a debian specific tool packaged in debianutils (essential)
while command is a shell builtin defined by POSIX.
Closes: 807144
Thanks: Mingye Wang for the suggestion.
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Passing function pointers around while working on this was very icky,
but if weak symbols are too much to ask for…
Reverts "do not use "-Wl,-Bsymbolic-functions" during the build to avoid
breakage" aka a5fc9be36211a290a7abc3ca2a8bf98943bc1f57.
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If the config.{sub,guess} files we linked in were newer than our
configure script we ended up recreating configure and then rerun it
without all the configuration options which were (potentially) present
for a previous run.
We avoid this by changing to the same ruleset as in the debian/rules
file which compares the config.* files against a stamp file rather than
the configure script itself as its the configuration itself which
depends on all scripts, not configure on the config scripts.
While at it, we also drop the 'make -s dirs' call as we don't need to do
it explicitly here as proper dependencies will take care of it.
Thanks: Helmut Grohne for the detailed bugreport.
Closes: 804923
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It was not nice to use 2 * number of cores in all cases.
Thanks: Jakub Wilk for the suggestion
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Because of dpkg-buildflags we already get most of the hardening
features, +all adds -fPIE and ld -z now
Thanks: Simon Ruderich, Markus Waldeck
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This reverts commit 697c9314c8ba24f3e393b5de11a3fad7adae4bfc.
Conflicts:
debian/rules
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Vendors like ubuntu need to change some options, so giving them
a way to do this less painfully avoids reducing differences.
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config files
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dh_compress compresses .xhtml files by default, which breaks our doxygen
documentation. doxygen has also a bunch of temporary files it creates
which stay in the build directory and so we remove them before
installing them as documentation.
Closes: 738933
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The package ships libapt-private now, so we need an
ldconfig call in postinst. dh_makeshlibs creates
one for us.
Reported-by: lintian
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Adds a small helper to extract the small information bits we store in
apt-vendor.ent and uses it in debian/rules to set apt:keyring as a
substvar for debian/control populated with the &keyring-package; info
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It was enabled for a (long) while in Ubuntu, but it shouldn't hurt to
enable it in Debian as well – especially now that Debian has automatic
analyses of the buildlogs which don't work that well without the 'noise'
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Lintian complains about these links in the source package as they leave
the source directory and as they are autogenerated there isn't that much
sense in shipping them, we can just recreate them before calling
configure.
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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* debian/rules:
- call dh_clean in clean (closes: #714980)
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Building manpages becames more consistent this way and
it is simpler to ignore build artefacts, too.
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Closes: #696923
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- demote debiandoc-sgml to Build-Depends-Indep
* doc/makefile:
- separate translation building of debiandoc from manpages
so that we don't need to build debiandoc for binary packages
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- move internal-solver as 'apt' to his friend dump-solver in
/usr/lib/apt/solvers to avoid writing a manpage for it
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- make apt and apt-utils packages depend on manpages instead of full doc
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- apt-utils packages manpages, so it should depend on build-doc
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- do not sed in configure.in to set the version-number
* prepare-release:
- add as a small script to lazy check and prepare releases
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to the more standard PACKAGE_VERSION and make it work in every file
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- apply patch to enable usage of hardning CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS by
Moritz Muehlenhoff, thanks! (Closes: #653504)
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