The script used ${PWD} without proper quoting causing Bash completion
to not work properly if there was whitespace in the path of the current
working directory.
Storing the error encoding in an "encoding" attribute "breaks" the
python3 "input" function: In essence, builtin_input_impl does a
getattr(sys.stdout, 'encoding'), which returns our error encoding
instead of the "real" stdout encoding. In order to avoid this, we
store the error encoding in an "_encoding" attribute.
Making SafeWriter a new-style class simplifies the code a lot.
This is a fix for issue #385. osc commit breaks due to
the use of sfilelist.findall('.//entry[@hash]')
I now will iterate through the sfilelist and use
for entry in sfilelist.findall('entry'):
if entry.get('hash'):
... execute hash code ...
This is a little bit slower, but should not break
on SLE11 anymore
Without this change, using "--alternative-project <prj>" in combination
with "--multibuild-package <flavor>" yields to unexpected results (from
a user's point of view). Note that this may break existing (artificial)
workflows (e.g., using --alternative-project to ignore the package
meta's debuginfo flag), but these workflows should be rare and there
are options to achieve the same.
Fixes: #376 ("osc build -M something does not work with
--alternative-project")
Only include a tag if it "has" text in get_request_issues. Note
that the code in get_formatted_issues always assumes the presence
of the "label" tag.
Fixes: #369 ("crash trying to view diff of a request")
"osc maintainer foo" performs a binary maintainer lookup first. If no
results were found, it aborted. Instead it should do a project maintainer
lookup in the no results case, because the cmd's syntax is ambiguous...
The retrun at this point breaks the call, because in most
cases <prj> is not a binary. And the code always checks for the
binary first and then returns if no binary with the name <prj>
is found.
The following abstract methods are added to the PackageQueryResult
class: recommends(), suggests(), supplements(), and enhances().
Note that not all package/metadata formats have a notion of these
weak dependencies.
rpm rpmmd deb arch
recommends x x x
suggests x x x x
supplements x x
enhances x x x
(where "x" represents "supported"). In case of an unsupported weak
dependency, the implementation returns an empty list.
We need the weak dependency support in order to fix#363 ("osc build
-p ../rpms/tw doesnt send recommends to the server which makes client
side build behave differently to server side build").
There is no good reason why "--revision <rev>" and "--expand-link" or
"--revision <rev>" and "--unexpand-link" should be mutually exclusive
during an "osc up" of a package wc.
Introduce the new "--linkrev <rev>" option to specify a rev of the link
target that is used during link expansion.
In case of a pulled/linkrepair wc, it is possible that the backend
requests a hash for a tracked file, which is neither added, restored,
nor modified. For instance, this can happen if a new file was added
to the link target. Hence, for a pulled/linkrepair wc always send
the sha256 hashes of the tracked files.
This is needed for a new validation of the source server.
The source server will 'ask' for the sha256 sum of files which are new or
modified and osc calculates the sha256 sums for those files and sends them
back to the server.
The server checks the sha256 sums and if dies if something is wrong.
Mount sysfs during "osc chroot". The current implementation
of "osc chroot" is a major pain for plain "su" users, because the
root password has to be entered several times - we should fix this.
Fixes: #354 ("Mount sysfs in chroot")
At the moment just repo.name is considered. So if
the repo is disabled for s390 all other repo / arch
combination are not shown in the repo list.
To be able to change this r is now a list of dicts
containing the name and arch of the disabled repo.
None for repo if a complete arch gets disabled
None for arch if a complete repo gets disabled
Store a newly created config file in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/osc/. For backward
compatibility, ~/.oscrc is used, if present.
Fixes: #313 ("oscrc should be stored in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME on linux")
write oscrc to the default location for user-specific configuration.
If XDG_CONFIG_HOME is not set use ~/.config/osc/oscrc which is basically the same.
If there is already a ~/.oscrc use this one (for compat reasons). Existing user
installations should not get affected by this commit.
The order is the following:
Given config with -c
config defined in OSC_CONFIG
existing ~/.oscrc
default XDG_CONFIG_HOME/osc/oscrc
Support an xz compressed control.tar file. In case of a control.tar.xz and
a missing lzma module, an exception is thrown at runtime (for now, in order
to avoid a hard depedency to the lzma module, which is no standard module).