Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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pretty much useless for the testcases, but handy to test the webserver
itself in 'real world' environments
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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Webserver wrongly sends an additional newline after the data which
causes curl to believe that the next request on this socket has no
header data and so includes all headers in the data output.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Conflicts:
apt-private/private-cmndline.cc
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feature/install-progress-refactor
Conflicts:
apt-pkg/deb/dpkgpm.cc
apt-pkg/makefile
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ported from the mvo/feature/install-progress-refactor branch
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messages that include the architecture
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debian/sid
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stunnel4 is required for https tests
Git-Dch: Ignore
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The tests require nowadays a (somewhat) multiarch-capable dpkg, so
replace the workaround as marked in the FIXME with a proper install as
the workaround isn't working always correctly, letting the test fail.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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With a bit of trickery we can reuse the usual infrastructure we have in
place to acquire deb files for the 'download' operation as well, which
gains us authentification check & display, error messages, correct
filenames and "downloads" from the root-owned archives.
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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We can't remove packages which are held back by the user with a hold, so
marking them (or its dependencies) as garbage will lead our autoremover
into madness – and given that the package is important enough that the
user has held it back it can't be garbage (at least at the moment), so
even if a front-end wants to use the info just for information display
its a good idea to not consider it garbage for them.
Closes: 724995
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Servers might respond with a complete file either because they don't
support Ranges at all or the If-Range condition isn't statisfied, so we
have to parse the headers curl gets ourself to seek or truncate the file
we have so far.
This also finially adds the testcase testing a bunch of partial
situations for both, http and https - which is now all green.
Closes: 617643, 667699
LP: 1157943
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If we get a 416 from the server it means the Range we asked for is above
the real filesize of the file on the server. Mostly this happens if the
server isn't supporting If-Range, but regardless of how we end up with
the partial data, the data is invalid so we discard it and retry with a
fresh plate and hope for the best.
Old behavior was to consider 416 an error and retry with a different
compression until we ran out of compression and requested the
uncompressed file (which doesn't exist on most mirrors) with an accept
line which server answered with "406 Not Acceptable".
Closes: 710924
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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Closes: 722549
Git-Dch: Ignore
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While the InstallPackages code was moved from apt-get into the private
library the output was moved from (std::)cout to c1out which isn't shown
in quiet level 2 (and above), so we flip back to std::cout to ensure
that it is always printed as you are not going to use --print-uris if
you don't want to see the uris…
Closes: 722207
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--allow-unauthenticated switches the download to a pre-0.6 system in
which a package can come from any source, rather than that trusted
packages can only come from trusted sources.
To allow this the flag used to set all packages as untrusted, which is a
bit much, so we check now if the package can be acquired via an
untrusted source and only if this is the case set it as untrusted.
As APT nowadays supports setting sources as trusted via a flag in the
sources.list this mode shouldn't be used that much anymore though.
[Note that this is not the patch from the BTS]
Closes: 617690
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The parser goes a bit to far by stripping :any from dependencies in a
single architecture environment. the flag "Multi-Arch: allowed" doesn't
care any architecture restrictions in that case (as in single arch
everything is native), but it still limits the possible versions
statisfying the dependency so stripping :any over-simplifies in upgrade
situations from "Multi-Arch: none" to "Multi-Arch: allowed".
Closes: 723586
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The Eof check was added (by me of course) in
0aae6d14390193e25ab6d0fd49295bd7b131954f
as part of a fix up ~a month ago (at DebConf).
The idea was not that bad, but doesn't make that much sense either
as this bit is set by the FileFd based on Actual as well, so this is
basically doing the same check again – with the difference that the
HitEof bit can still linger from a previous Read we did at the end of
the file, but have seek'd away from it now.
Combined with the length of entries, entry order and other not that
easily controllable conditions you can be 'lucky' enough to hit this
problem in a way which even visible (truncating of other fields might
not be visible easily, like 'Tags' and others).
Closes: 723705
Thanks: Cyril Brulebois
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Git-Dch: Ignore
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The testcode happily mixes FILE* operations and direct access to fds
which is even a bit suprising that it works on linux and worked so
long for non-linux ports, so we switch to usage of FileFd instead
which provides us with simple fd-only operations. Its overkill for this
test as its a bare file and we ask for the descriptor all the time, but
it shouldn't hurt to implicitly test it a bit this way.
Closes: 721723
Thanks: Aaron M. Ucko
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Compressing files in 4 different styles eats test-time for no practical
gain if we don't test them explicitly, so default to just building 'gz'
compressed files as it is the simplest compression algorithm supported
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Looks like the travis service runs on Ubuntu in a version which has dpkg
with an earlier interface implementation, so lets try if we can't make
the framework work with this dpkg version as well.
Git-Dch: Ignore
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Add test for bug 507998
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