Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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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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You could think a0bf789783ea283914d059aea0f4d0f77d6bbaaf would be
enough, but it turns out its only half of the puzzle.
Closes: 806765
Suggested-By: Julian Andres Klode <jak@debian.org>
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Git-dch: ignore
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As we ship some tools in apt-utils which depend on our private library
we have to ensure that apt-utils depends on a proper apt version.
An exact version is probably a bit much, but the simplest way out.
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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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Git-Dch: Ignore
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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Git-Dch: ignore
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Unfortunately it seems like git-buildpackage does not have a
pre-export hook so the hook is disabled for now.
Git-Dch: ignore
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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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Reported-By: codespell
Git-Dch: Ignore
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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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Commit 653ef26c70dc9c0e2cbfdd4e79117876bb63e87d broke the camels back in
sofar that everything works in terms of our internal use of copy:/, but
external use is completely destroyed. This is kinda the reverse of what
happened in "parallel" in the sid branch, where external use was mostly
fine, internal and external exploded on the GzipIndexes option.
We fix this now by rewriting our internal use by letting copy:/ only do
what the name suggests it does: Copy files and not uncompress them
on-the-fly. Then we teach copy and the uncompressors how to deal with
/dev/null and use it as destination file in case we don't want to store
the uncompressed files on disk.
Closes: 799158
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Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Gbp-Dch: ignore
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This allows running tests in parallel.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Not all tests work yet, most notable the cdrom tests, but those require
changes in libapt itself to have a proper fix and what we have fixed so
far is good enough progress for now.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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Figuring out after the fact what went wrong in the kernel hook is kinda
hart, also as the bugreports are usually very lacking on the details
front. Collecting the internal variables in the debug output we attach
to the generated file might help shine some light on the matter.
It's at least not going to hurt…
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This is basically a rewrite of the script with the general idea of
finding the Debian version of the installed kernels – as multiple
flavours will have the same Debian version – select the two newest of
them and translate them back to versions found in package names.
This way we avoid e.g. kernel and kernel-rt to use up the protected
slots even through they are basically the same kernel (just a different
flavour) so it is likely that if kernel doesn't work for some reason,
kernel-rt will not either.
This also deals with foreign kernel packages, kernels on hold and partly
installed kernels (in case multiple kernels are installed in the same
apt run) in a hopefully sensible way.
Closes: 787827
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Closes: #783337
Thanks: Christian for all the l10n, code & social contributions!
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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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Reported-By: codespell
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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For many usecases like the acquire system libapt-pkg actually needs
tools and config found in the apt package. apt tends to be installed
everywhere libapt-pkg appears usually anyhow, but just in case to nudge
users (and tools) in the right direction.
Note that this isn't and shouldn't be a hard depends as there are
usecases working perfectly without 'apt' and as this is such an esoteric
problem incurring the costs arising from a Depends-Breaks-loop isn't
deemd as worth it.
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Thanks: Niels Thykier for reporting this on IRC
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This makes tests work again!
Gbp-Dch: ignore
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Closes: 788320
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Thanks: Lintian
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Thanks: Lintian
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Thanks: Lintian
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Thanks: Lintian
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The documentation in the patch is from
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/AutomaticSecurityUpdates
That page is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike
3.0. Because I'm unsure how that license meshes with apt's license
I've not copied the text but formulated the same information freely
in my own words.
The original text was contributed by Chris Bainbridge [1][3]
and Kees Cook [2]. Thanks to them.
[1] https://help.ubuntu.com/community/AutomaticSecurityUpdates?action=diff&rev1=40&rev2=41
[2] https://help.ubuntu.com/community/AutomaticSecurityUpdates?action=diff&rev1=38&rev2=39
[3] https://help.ubuntu.com/community/AutomaticSecurityUpdates?action=diff&rev1=37&rev2=38
Closes: 776380
Thanks: Chris Bainbridge and Kees Cook for initial text
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LP: #1332106
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