mirror of
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6a3e471304
- gobble.c (gobble_buf): recognize (and ignore) the following fields: Bugs, Installed-Size, MD5sum, Origin, Original-Maintainer, SHA1, SHA256, Task. - pkg.h (enum relop): added comments showing the respective symbol - pkg.h (enum relop): added rel_gg (>>), rel_le (<=), and rel_ll (<<) - gobble.c (gobble_buf): recognize >>, <=, and << - TODO: record progress in support beyond Jlime/OE
170 lines
5.7 KiB
Plaintext
170 lines
5.7 KiB
Plaintext
Open policy decisions
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=====================
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- what to do about cyclic dependencies ?
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A cyclic dependency can be bad new or something perfectly normal,
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depending on how we define the semantics of package A depending on
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package B, and what policy we adopt with respect to the existence of
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cyclic dependencies:
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1) "B must be installed before A"
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In this case, a cyclic dependency means that the package in
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question cannot be installed using the respective sequence of
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installations.
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However, this does not mean that no other sequence can exist in which
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the package could be installed.
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Example:
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A depends on B. There are two versions of B: B_0 depends on nothing
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else while B_1 depends on A.
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If we try to resolve A's dependency with B_1, we enter a circular
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dependency and fail. If we use B_0 instead, there is no problem.
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This means that there are (at least) the following three possible
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policies:
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1A) Cyclic dependencies are tolerated and just mean that the package
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in question may not be installable (for whatever reason).
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1B) A cyclic dependency is always considered an error.
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1C) Cyclic dependencies are tolerated as long as there is a way around
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them, as in the example above.
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2) "B must be installed with A"
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In this case, the cyclic dependency would not be a problem as long as
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all the packages in the cycle are installed together.
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Should an installation get interrupted and cause only part of the
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packages to get installed, the system would then be in an anomalous
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configuration.
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If cyclic dependencies are to be interpreted this way, they are not a
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problem per se. Policy may still discourage their use, though.
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- what to do if we need something that's "provided" ?
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When determining prerequisites, we may encounter a dependency on an item
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that only appears in the Provides: field of a package but it not an
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installable package itself.
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Should we
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1) consider installing the package that provides the requested item, or
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2) ignore the package, leaving it to the user to choose what to do.
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3) if there's only one choice do 1) else do 2).
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?
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Policy 1 would make sense if this is merely an alias or if a package
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enumerates its constituents, which at some point in time - in the past
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or in the future - are separate packages.
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Example:
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- package "dwarf-pluto" could provide "planet-pluto", for packages that
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haven't been updated yet,
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- "binutils" could provide "as", "ld", etc., to allow packages that only
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need specific parts to depend on them (with the option of breaking
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binutils into its constituents in the future),
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- similarly, if "as", "ld", etc., where individual packages in the past
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but are now combined into "binutils", "binutils" could still provide
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its constituents for compatibility with packages whose dependencies
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have not been updated yet.
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Policy 2 would seem more appropriate in the common case of multiple
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choices.
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Example:
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- packages "emacs" and "vim" could both provide "editor", leaving the
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choice to the user.
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- similarly, message packages "foo-en", "foo-zh", etc., could both
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provide "foo-messages".
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In the above example, "Provides" could also be use to prioritize choices,
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e.g., if "foo-en" provides "lang-en" and "foo-zh" provides "lang-zh",
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future installations could prefer prerequisites that introduce fewer new
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items. So a package "bar-en" providing "bar-messages" and "lang-en" would
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be chosen over "bar-zh" providing "bar-messages" and "lang-zh" if we have
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already installed "foo-en" but not "foo-zh" (or vice versa).
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Still left to do
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================
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- consider reducing the size of the lists of conflicts, e.g., by making
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them unique via a red-black tree
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- handle Provides:
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Update: Provides data is now parsed and properly integrated in the
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package database, but not yet used to resolve prerequisites.
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- sort prerequisites such that they can be installed in the specified order
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- consider Architecture:
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Update: we parse and record it now but don't use it yet.
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- what to do with explicit and implicit replacement ?
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- if we can't resolve the prerequisites, give at least a hint of what one
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can do to improve the situation
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- check database for internal consistency
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Update: added detection of cyclic dependencies (in progress)
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Update: added test for QPKG_ADDING cleanup bug
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- implement keyword search
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- consider also supporting the similar but not identical (parent ?) format
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of /var/lib/dpkg/status and /var/lib/apt/lists/*Packages
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Update: added as much as my Ubuntu system can reach before hitting |
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Done
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====
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- optimize the search trees. Right now, we have 81812 calls to make_id
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for 14601 packages, resulting in 7420560 calls to comp_id.
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There can be at most 2 new identifiers per package (package name and
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version), so a perfectly balanced tree should have a depth of no more
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than 14. If we assume that each call to make_id searches to the bottom,
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we'd get 1145368 calls to comp_id, about 15% of the current number.
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So the tree is clearly degenerated.
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Update: after switching to red-black trees, we get only 1497604 calls
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to comp_id. This is 130% of the "good case" estimate above. Insertion
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of a new node is currently done with two lookups, so we'll get rid of
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some more lookups after further optimization.
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Update: after merging the two lookups per new node into one, we're at
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1172642 calls to comp_id, or 102% of the predicted "good case".
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- if there are multiple choices, try to prefer more recent versions
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- check whether introducing a new package would cause a conflict
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Update: conflicts among the packages considered for installation are now
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checked.
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- compile the list of conflicts of installed packages
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