forked from jengelh/virtualbox
3e022f355d2ce5d8a26121ad10a1493b447dd0ce8925bd6add7475aadcf36a45
- Version bump to 6.1.22 (released April 29 2021 by Oracle) This is a maintenance release. The following items were fixed and/or added: VMM: Improved performance of 64-bit Windows and Solaris guests when Hyper-V is used on recent Windows 10 hosts VMM: Fixed frequent crashes of 64-bit Windows Vista and Server 2003 guests when Hyper-V is used GUI: Fixed regression where user was not able to save unset default shortcuts (bug #20305) Storage: Fixed regression in LsiLogic SAS controller emulation caused VM crash (bug #20323) Linux Guest Additions: Fixed issue when it was not possible to run executables from mounted share (bug #20320) Fixes for CVE-2021-2145 CVE-2021-2250 CVE-2021-2264 CVE-2021-2266 CVE-2021-2279 CVE-2021-2280 CVE-2021-2281 CVE-2021-2282 CVE-2021-2283 CVE-2021-2284 CVE-2021-2285 CVE-2021-2286 CVE-2021-2287 CVE-2021-2291 CVE-2021-2296 CVE-2021-2297 CVE-2021-2306 CVE-2021-2309 CVE-2021-2310 CVE-2021-2312 OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/request/show/890457 OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Virtualization/virtualbox?expand=0&rev=601
Instructions for creating a separate VirtualBox project and building the packages Although it is possible to modify a project at the openSUSE Build System (OBS), I have found it to be more convenient to use the various osc commands to create a local copy, edit it on my own computer to fix any problems, and then push the result to OBS. A. Create a new sub-project: 1. Branch the package: osc branch Virtualization virtualbox 2. Checkout the package using the "osc co" command listed B. Build the project: 1. Use "osc build" to build. This step is rather compute intensive and takes about an hour on my Toshiba laptop with a dual-core Intel Core i7 CPU with hyper-threading, 12 GB RAM, and an SSD. 2. The build results are stored in the /var/tmp/build-root tree. These files can occupy a lot of disc space, particularly when one builds several flavors. To keep from running out of space on the / partition, I mount /var/tmp on a separate partition. At present, I have used about 43 GiB in that partition. 3. Special flavors: When a new kernel is released, there may be several API changes that affect builds of the kernel modules used by VirtualBox. In Factory, the project that contains the latest kernels is "Kernel-HEAD-standard". To run a test build with this kernel, use the command "osc build Kernel-HEAD-standard". When switching between kernel projects, use of the "--clean" switch is advised, otherwise strange "missing library" messages will result. 4. On occasion, there may be breakage in the build when there is an update with python or Qt. Use the "--alternative-project=<xxx>" switch to force usage of the revised component. C. Steps to take with a new release: 1. When Orable releases a new version, you will need to download then new tarball from https://download.virtualbox.org/virtualbox/. While downloading the file, I also get the new UserManual.pdf. 2. openSUSE makes some changes to the tarball by running the command bash ./virtualbox-patch-source.sh <name of tarball just downloaded> This command unpacks the tar file, makes some modifications to the source, and recreates the tar file with "patched" in its name. Any further modifications are made by patches that are applied during the build process. Do NOT make any further changes to the tar file. 3. Edit the "Version" line near the start of virtualbox.spec to select the new version. 4. Use "osc rm <old version>" and "osc add <new version>" to get the new file into osc. The local build will work without these changes, but the remote operations will fail.`
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