Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Do not require a special flag to be present to update trusted=yes
sources as this flag in the sources.list is obviously special enough.
Note that this is just disabling the error message, the user will still
be warned about all the (possible) failures the repository generated, it
is just triggering the acceptance of the warnings on a source-by-source
level.
Similarily, the trusted=no flag doesn't require the user to pass
additional flags to update, if the repository looks fine in the view of
apt it will update just fine. The unauthenticated warnings will "just" be
presented then the data is used.
In case you wonder: Both was the behavior in previous versions, too.
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On travis-ci connect.cc detects a rotation, triggering it store the IP
which is later appended to the error message, which is all nice and
great if we deal with a real server, but in the testcases it just
triggers failures as strings do not match.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Some distributions (or repositories) do not have as much
"Ign-discipline" as I would like to, so that could be pretty distracting
for our users if enabled by default. It is handy for testcases though.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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feature/acq-trans
Conflicts:
apt-pkg/acquire-item.cc
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consistently using Item::Failed in all specializec classes helps setting
up some information bits otherwise unset, so some errors had an empty
reason as an error. Ign is upgraded to display the error message we
ignored to further help in understanding what happens.
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Using a different user for calling methods is intended to protect us
from methods running amok (via remotely exploited bugs) by limiting what
can be done by them. By using root:root for the final directories and
just have the files in partial writeable by the methods we enhance this
in sofar as a method can't modify already verified data in its parent
directory anymore.
As a side effect, this also clears most of the problems you could have
if the final directories are shared without user-sharing or if these
directories disappear as they are now again root owned and only the
partial directories contain _apt owned files (usually none if apt isn't
running) and the directory itself is autocreated with the right
permissions.
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Conflicts:
apt-pkg/acquire-item.cc
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Some advanced commands can be executed without the keyring being
modified like --verify, so this adds an option to disable the mergeback
and uses it for our gpg calling code.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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For some advanced usecases it might be handy to specify the secret
keyring to be used (e.g. as it is used in the testcases), but specifying
it via a normal option for gnupg might not be available forever:
http://lists.gnupg.org/pipermail/gnupg-users/2013-August/047180.html
Git-Dch: Ignore
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beside testing apt-key a bit it also avoids duplicating gpghome setup
code in apt-key and the test framework
Git-Dch: Ignore
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apt-key does the keyring merge as we need it, so we just call it instead
of reimplementing it to do the merging before gpgv. This means we don't
use gpgv anymore (we never depended on it explicitly - bad style), but
it also means that the message in apt-cdrom add is a bit less friendly
as it says loudly "untrusted key", but for a one-time command its okay.
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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Conflicts:
apt-pkg/acquire-item.cc
apt-pkg/acquire-item.h
apt-pkg/cachefilter.h
configure.ac
debian/changelog
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Instead of trying to inspect /proc and the fds inside we use "test -t 1"
instead as this is available and working on kfreebsd as well – not that
something breaks if we wouldn't, but we like color.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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apt-cache search supported this since ever and in the code for apt was a
fixme indicating this should be added here as well, so here we go.
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Conflicts:
apt-pkg/deb/deblistparser.cc
doc/po/apt-doc.pot
doc/po/de.po
doc/po/es.po
doc/po/fr.po
doc/po/it.po
doc/po/ja.po
doc/po/pl.po
doc/po/pt.po
doc/po/pt_BR.po
po/da.po
po/mr.po
po/vi.po
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The behaviour of echo "\tA\t" differs between dash/zsh which interprets
the \t as tab and bash which prints it literally. Similar things happen
for other escape sequences – without the -e flag.
Switching to printf makes this more painless^Wportable, so that the
tests are also working correctly with bash as sh.
(commit message by committer, patch otherwise unmodified)
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Conflicts:
debian/changelog
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Adds also a small testcase for EDSP
Git-Dch: Ignore
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dpkg on Ubuntu 12.04 does not seem to support parsing arch-specific
dependencies, so we try to detect if we face such a dpkg in the test.
In the other test the order depends on libdb, which changes per arch, so
we just run it through our sorting binary and be happy (hopefully).
Git-Dch: Ignore
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dpkg on Ubuntu 12.04 does not seem to support parsing arch-specific
dependencies, so we try to detect if we face such a dpkg in the test.
In the other test the order depends on libdb, which changes per arch, so
we just run it through our sorting binary and be happy (hopefully).
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Now that libapts acquire system happily passes around hashes and can be
made to support new ones without an ABI break in the future, we can
free ftparchive from all the deprecation warnings the last commit
introduced for it.
The goal here isn't to preserve ABI as we have none to keep here, but to
help avoiding introduction problems of 'new' hashes later as bugs creep
into the copy&paste parts, so short/less of them is good.
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The line contains everchanging execution statistics which is harmful for
testcases as they need to filter out such lines, but this is hard so we
can just add an option to disable them instead and be done.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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debian/experimental
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debian/sid
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This patch should fix spurious test failures in jenkins or travis
that are caused by a race condition in the {stunnel,aptwebserver}.pid
file creation
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Use mkstemp() in apt-extractemplates and add a integrationtest
for apt-extracttemplates too. Thanks to Steve Kemp for the report.
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Beside fixing this minor code duplication it also resolves the problem
of messing up vim syntax-highlighting.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Mostly ensures that we use the build methods and not the system
provided methods in the tests (if we don't want it that way).
Git-Dch: Ignore
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kfreebsd as well as hurd kernel packages call the postinst script as
well so we just need to enable the correct parsing for installed
packages and disable the "protect every version" hammer for them.
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With APT::VersionedKernelPackages users have the option of adding
packages like pre-build out-of-tree modules to the list of automatically
protected from being autoremoved.
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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The unpack of a M-A:same package will force the unpack of all its
siblings directly to prevent that they could be separated by later
immediate actions. In commit 634985f8 a call to SmartConfigure was
introduced to configure these packages at the time the installation
order encounters them. Usually, the unpack order is already okay, so
that this 'earlier' unpack was not needed and if it wouldn't have been
done, the package would now only be unpacked, but by configuring the package
now we impose new requirements which must be satisfied. The code is
clever enough to handle this most of the time (it worked for 2 years!),
but it isn't needed and in very coupled cases this can fail.
Removing this call again removes this extra burden and so simplifies the
ordering as can be seen in the modified tests. Famous last words, but I
don't see a reason for this extra burden to exist hence the remove.
Closes: 740843
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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Inspired by the rest of the patch in 661537, but abstract the
parsing of various ways of setting the build profiles more so it can
potentially be reused and all apt parts have the same behaviour.
Especially config options, cmdline options and environment will not be
combined as proposed as this isn't APTs usual behaviour and dpkg doesn't
do it either, so one overrides the other as it normally does.
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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This change prevents changing the protocol from https to http.
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switch protocols at random is a bad idea if e.g. http can switch to
file, so we limit the possibilities to http to http and http to https.
As very few people (less than 1% according to popcon) have https
installed this likely changes nothing in terms of failure. The commit is
adding a friendly hint which package needs to be installed though.
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