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ali@374
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Kris's original TODO list follows:
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ali@374
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ali@374
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krh@65
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Towards replacing rpm + yum (0.1):
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krh@65
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5 |
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krh@214
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6 |
- drop the filelists from the main package set file, split out to a
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krh@214
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secondary file. for package sets that depend on other package sets,
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krh@214
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8 |
we need to be able to generate properties with owning packages that
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krh@214
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are in another set. this way, a package that requires a file, will
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krh@214
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look up the provides in the set and find the package that owns it
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krh@214
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and then try mark that for update.
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krh@214
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krh@82
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- installer part:
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krh@65
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krh@82
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15 |
- pre install check; check that dirs can be created (no files where
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krh@82
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want to create dirs), move config files according to file
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krh@82
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flags. (.rpmnew etc)
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krh@65
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18 |
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krh@82
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19 |
- store rpm headers for installed packages.
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krh@65
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20 |
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krh@214
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21 |
- implement rpm uninstall and update.
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krh@214
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22 |
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krh@214
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- triggers? just say no?
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krh@214
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krh@189
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- rpm seems to consider glibc > 2.6.90 to mean greater than
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krh@189
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2.6.90-anything. That is, a comparison that doesn't mention the
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krh@189
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release field, shouldn't regard the release field of pkgs it
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krh@189
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compares against. glibc-common-2.6.90 has
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krh@189
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krh@189
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conflicts: glibc < 2.6.90, glibc > 2.6.90
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krh@189
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krh@189
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since rpm doesn't let you do glibc != 2.6.90, and
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krh@189
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krh@189
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requires: glibc = 2.6.90
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krh@189
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krh@189
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will always pull in glibc. But even with a != relation, would
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krh@189
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glibc-2.6.90-16 be equal to 2.6.90? glibc 2.7.90-8 dropped it in
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krh@189
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favor of requires = 2.7.90-8 (#225806).
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krh@189
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39 |
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krh@65
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- signed packages
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krh@65
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krh@70
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- space calculation before transaction, but ideally, do a number of
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krh@70
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smaller transactions.
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krh@70
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krh@70
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- pre-link changing binaries and libs on disk screwing up checksum?
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krh@70
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krh@82
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- pipelined download and install; topo-sort packages in update set,
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krh@82
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pick one with all deps in the current set, add it to the current set
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krh@82
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and satisfy deps against update set => result: minimal update
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krh@82
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transaction. Queue download and install/update transaction for the
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krh@82
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packages in the minimal set, start over. This also makes the
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krh@82
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installation phase much more interruptible, basically just stop
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krh@82
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after a sub-transaction finishes. As we keep the update set around
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krh@82
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as a target, we can restart if needed. Probably don't need to, can
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krh@82
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just do a new update. During a sub-transaction we should keep the
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krh@82
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target set (i.e. the current set to be) around as a lock file
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richard@310
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(system.rzdb.lock or so, see git) so that razor updates are
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krh@82
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prevented if the systems crashes during an update.
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krh@74
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krh@214
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- implement depsolving between multiple package sets by creating an
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krh@214
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iterator that has a sorted list of all installed pkgs from all sets,
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krh@214
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all installed requires from all sets, all installed provides from
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krh@214
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all sets etc. could be a list of tuples (pkgs index, set index).
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krh@214
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should simplify even the two-set depsolving a bit since we can
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krh@214
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pretend there's just one set. this should also be useful for the
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krh@214
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'overlay set' idea where the system set is actually made up of a
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krh@214
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number of sets, but typically a read-only set from a read-only fs
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krh@214
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and a read-write set from a r/w fs.
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krh@214
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krh@214
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- locking: we use advisory file locking on the system set
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richard@310
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(/var/lib/razor/system.rzdb) to indicate a transaction is in
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krh@214
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progress. The locking algorithm is as follows:
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krh@214
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krh@214
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1. obtain advisory lock on system set. if this is already taken,
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krh@214
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we know that a process is actively modifying the system set and
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krh@214
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we have to wait. there's a fcntl that lets you block for the
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krh@214
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lock to go away.
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krh@214
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richard@310
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2. if a system-next.rzdb file already exists an earlier razor
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krh@214
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process was interrupted or crashed and we may want to clean
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richard@310
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that up. the system-next.rzdb file will record what the
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krh@214
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previous instance was trying to do and we can just replay that
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krh@214
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to clean up.
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krh@214
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krh@214
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3. create the new package set whichever way and write it to
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richard@310
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system-next.rzdb, then start installing/removing rpms.
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krh@214
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richard@310
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4. When the update is complete, rename system-next.rzdb to
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richard@310
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system.rzdb and remove the advisory lock.
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krh@214
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krh@214
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we should probably introduce a new object that encapsulates this
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krh@214
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sequence, the filename conventions, rpm cache, e.g. struct
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krh@214
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razor_image, with operations such as
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krh@214
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krh@214
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#define RAZOR_IMAGE_READ 0x01
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krh@214
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#define RAZOR_IMAGE_WRITE 0x02
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krh@214
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krh@214
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struct razor_image *
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krh@214
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razor_image_open(const char *root, unsigned int flags);
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krh@214
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krh@214
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int
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krh@214
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razor_image_begin_transaction(struct razor_image *image,
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krh@214
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struct razor_set *target);
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krh@214
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krh@214
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int
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krh@214
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razor_image_finish_transaction(struct razor_image *image);
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krh@214
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krh@214
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the transaction pipelineing described above sits on top of this,
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krh@214
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since each step there needs to complete a full transaction that
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krh@214
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writes out a new package set.
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krh@214
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krh@214
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for overlay package sets we could do something like
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krh@214
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krh@214
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struct razor_image *
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krh@214
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razor_image_open_with_base(const char *root, unsigned int flags,
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krh@214
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struct razor_image *base);
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krh@214
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krh@214
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where base specifies the r/o package set it's layered on. this
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krh@214
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allows for stacking several layers of images.
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krh@214
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krh@213
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krh@213
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Package set file format items:
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krh@213
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jbowes@318
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- nail down byte-order of repo file.
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krh@213
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krh@213
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- version the sections in the file, put the element size in the header
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krh@213
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so we can add stuff to elements in a backwards compatible way.
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krh@213
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maybe not necessary, we can just add sections that augment the
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krh@213
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sections we want to add to (similar to how rpm has add versioned
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krh@213
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deps).
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krh@213
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krh@213
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krh@65
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Misc ideas:
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krh@65
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krh@1
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- keep history of installed packages/journal of package transaction,
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krh@1
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so we can roll back to yesterday, or see what got installed in the
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krh@1
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latest yum update.
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krh@1
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krh@18
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- use hash table for package and property lists so we only store
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krh@18
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unique lists (like for string pool).
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krh@40
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krh@40
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- use existing, running system as repo; eg
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krh@40
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krh@40
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razor update razor://other-box.local evince
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krh@40
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krh@40
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to pull eg the latest evince and dependencies from another box. We
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krh@40
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should be able to regenerate a rzr pkg from the system so we can
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krh@40
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reuse the signature from the originating repo.
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krh@41
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krh@41
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- Ok, maybe the fastest package set merge method in the end is to use
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krh@41
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the razor_importer, but use a hash table for the properties. This
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krh@41
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way we can assign them unique IDs immediately (like tokenizing
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krh@41
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strings).
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krh@47
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richard@310
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- test suite should be easy, just keep .rzdb files around and test
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krh@47
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different type of upgrades that way (obsoletes, conflicts, file
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krh@47
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conflicts, file/dir problems etc). Or maybe just keep a simple file
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richard@310
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format ad use a custom importer to create the .rzdb files.
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krh@47
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krh@63
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- overlay package sets? mount a read-only /usr over nfs or from the
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krh@63
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virt-host and have a local package set overlaid over the read-only
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krh@63
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one. shouldn't need new features in the core package set data
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krh@63
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structure, but should be just conventions on top. we have the base
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krh@63
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package set from the r/o system, the overlay set from the local
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krh@63
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system and we can have an effective package set which is the merge
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krh@63
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of everything from the overlay into the base set. the effective set
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krh@63
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is easy to compute and we could do it on the fly or cache it. or
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krh@63
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maybe the effective set is the on-disk representation and the
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krh@63
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overlay can be computed when needed, we just keep a link back to the
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krh@63
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base.
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krh@71
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krh@71
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- incremental rawhide repo updates? instead of downloading 10MB zipped
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richard@310
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repo every time, download a diff rzdb? Should be pretty small,
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krh@82
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especially if we don't have file checksums in metadata. Filenames
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krh@82
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and properties are for the most part already present, typically just
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krh@82
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a version bump plus maybe tweaking a couple requires. The upstream
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krh@82
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repo can store multiple incremental updates in one big file and
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krh@82
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provide an index file that maps updates for a given date (we should
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krh@82
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use repo-file checksums though) to a range in the file: Download the
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richard@310
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index file, search for a match for your latest rawhide.rzdb file,
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krh@82
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download range of updates that brings it up to date.
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krh@74
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krh@74
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- use hash tables for dirs when importing files to avoid qsorting all
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krh@74
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files in rawhide.
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krh@75
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krh@82
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Bugs:
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krh@82
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krh@82
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- eliminate duplicate entries in package property lists.
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