The python3.x tests were deactivated because they wouldn't have
worked anyway. This is the last PR that should be activated within
the python3 PR stack.
In that case, the packages to setup the build environment are
taken from the repositories defined in the kiwi file. Osc did
not take into account that the build config must match this
path. So it cannot just get the build config like with normal
builds, but must use a different path.
This led to build errors on some projects like CentOS 7 which
rely on 'Order' statements from the project config.
The OBS backend already had support for this: the 'path' parameter
can be used to overwrite the project path in the _buildconfig
query. We now use this to provide the correct path if we
detect this case. (The detection is currently a heuristic
because OBS does not provide us with a clear indicator.)
Always error out if the source services execution failed (the old
code only errored out if the local_service_run config option was
set (this behavior was probably unintentionally introduced in commit
d3dd8539d9 ('- fallback to "build
--local-package" if it does not exist instead of complaining'))).
Also, do not suppress all exceptions (if something failed in the
services execution code path, the user should be informed).
The bug was reported by darix.
The vc_export_env call was introduced in commit
37ca5535ce ("Export vc env vars when
running a source service") and broke the testsuite. The potential
http request is useless if there are no services. Hence, avoid it.
Thanks to Marco Strigl for catching the testsuite error!
Some services (like the obs_scm) will use them. Note: if realname
or email is not set in the oscrc, an additional http request will
be performed.
This change was requested by darix.
No functional changes. Note that we cannot simply decode the control's
fields as ascii/utf-8 because a field is not necessarily a valid
ascii/utf-8 encoding (it is possible to register _arbitrary_ custom
fields via a 'register-custom-fields' hook when building a deb
package).
Note: DebQuery.debvercmp really deserves a cleanup:/
cmp(a, b) returns
-1 if a < b
0 if a == 0
1 if a > b
This is needed since python3 has no cmp function anymore.
All credits for this go to Marco Strigl <mstrigl@suse.com> (see
PR#483 [1]).
[1] https://github.com/openSUSE/osc/pull/483
The None argument is always <= than the other argument. We need this
in case of a broken/pathological package where version() or release()
return None (see vercmp (which calls rpmvercmp)).
Returning None breaks ArchQuery.vercmp. Returning b'0' is ok because
an epoch, if present, is always supposed to be an integer (at least
in a "valid" arch package (see scripts/libmakepkg/lint_pkgbuild/epoch.sh.in
in the pacman sources)). Hence, if we compare the epoch of a package,
which has no explicit epoch set, with the epoch of a package, which
has an explicit epoch set, we always have a <= relation.
If size is 0, using pb.Percentage will result in a
ZeroDivisionException. Note: the output in case of
size == 0 looks a bit "strange" - for a consistent
output we should probably subclass pb.Percentage.
* new function create_text_meter with fallback selection
* NoPBTextMeter.start() will print the basename (if not stated otherise with
basename = None)
* The callers that should use an alternare TextMeter class now call create_text_meter()
* The callers that should not use and alternate TextMeter (because of different handling,
like build.py) call create_text_meter(use_pb_fallback=False)
* the warning 'Please install the progressbar module' is now only shown once
improvements
Now, CpioWrite provides a bytes-only API. It would be also possible
that the API accepts bytes and str (we would need to explicitly
encode the latter) but this would be a bit inconsistent wrt.
cpio.CpioRead (which is bytes-only).
Also, by using a bytesarray instead of a [] we avoid several
intermediate ''.join(...)s.
This is a bytes only API because a filename in a cpio archive can
contain, for instance, illegal utf-8 sequences. A user can decode
the filename/content as she wishes.
A ValueError is more appropriate because there is no issue with the
ar archive itself. Also, the old codepath never worked because the
fn parameter was missing.
Since an ar archive can contain arbitary filenames (that is a
filename can be an invalid utf-8 encoding (for instance,
"foo\xff\xffbar")), the ar module provides a bytes only API. A
user can decode filenames as she wishes.
Note: if a "fn" parameter is passed to Ar.__init__ it should be a
bytes (a str is also ok, but then be aware that an ArError's file
attribute might be a str or a bytes).
There is no need to unpack a single byte because it is not
affected by (byte) endianness (and that's what struct.unpack is
about). Moreover, rpmquery.unpack_string now supports an optional
encoding parameter, which could be used by the python3 port to
decode a string. Note: in general we cannot assume that all strings
in a rpm are utf-8 encoded (it is possible to build a rpm that
contains illegal utf-8 sequences).