Conceptually the session thread owns the session, so let's clear out
everything predictably there, rather than sometimes having it happen
on the main thread.
Also, this moves up clearing the pending/outstanding queues *before*
we unreference the session, since conceptually they need to reference
it as well.
Based on a patch from: Matthew Barnes <mbarnes@redhat.com>
Closes: #383
Approved by: mbarnes
I don't think this fixes the bug I was seeing, but it makes me more
comfortable to know we have a strong ref to the main context across
the thread lifetime, and we only unset the default right before
we go away.
If something in `thread_closure_unref()` used
`g_main_context_get_thread_default()` for example it'd be wrong
before.
Closes: #383
Approved by: mbarnes
Systems like pulp may want to keep retrying in a loop if the server
throws a (hopefully transient) 500, and we need test coverage of
handling these errors versus our existing 404 and 206 coverage.
Closes: #383
Approved by: mbarnes
We clean up the temporary directory on failure, which means it's hard
to know *why* a regex didn't match. Print it when we hit an error.
Closes: #383
Approved by: mbarnes
This should fix the memory leaks in #352
This is a subset of the changes, the other part is in my pull code rewrite
Closes: #382
Approved by: cgwalters
G_DEFINE_AUTOPTR_CLEANUP_FUNC is a new function in GLib 2.44, but
libglnx contains a backported version of it. A few source files were
however using G_DEFINE_AUTOPTR_CLEANUP_FUNC either without including
libglnx.h, or without including it early enough.
This fix is similar to the one in commit d368624.
Closes#376Closes: #377
Approved by: smcv
I often want to have "idempotent" systems that iterate to a known
state. If after generating a commit, the system is interrupted, I'd
like the next run to still generate a delta. But we don't want to
regenerate if one exists, hence this option.
Closes: #375
Approved by: jlebon
"ostree pull" intermittently fails with a bus error on at least some
mipsel CPUs, and applying gdb to the resulting core dump does not produce
any useful information. Debugging help would be appreciated. (Mitigates:
#827473)
distcheck tests that all the files are installed under $prefix. That
doesn't work with the systemd unit directory since the path comes from
pkg-config. Override the setting to be under $prefix in that case.
Closes: #372
Approved by: cgwalters
On some systems there may be no root= argument, so the tests for
appending /proc/cmdline arguments will fail. Instead, loop over each of
the arguments in the host's /proc/cmdline and test that they're in the
constructed config file. That will actually test if ostree added all of
the system's /proc/cmdline args correctly. The regex isn't perfect here,
but it's probably good enough for this test.
Closes: #372
Approved by: cgwalters
When creating sysroots with libostreetest, we don't get the benefit of
the OSTREE_SYSROOT_DEBUG setting in libtest.sh. That means we'll get
immutable deployments that can't be easily cleaned up.
Ensure the environment variable is set before creating new sysroots. It
would be nice to set the debug flags directly, but that's private API
that isn't currently pulled into libostreetest.
Closes: #372
Approved by: cgwalters
I've seen a few people hit this and wonder why checkouts are slow/take
space. Really, ensuring this happens is the *point* of OSTree.
Physical copies should be a last resort fallback for very unusual
situations (one of those is rpm-ostree checking out the db since
librpm doesn't know how to read from libostree).
Even I hit the fact that `/var` is a mountpoint disallowing hardlinks
with `/ostree` once and was confused. =)
Add this to the rofiles-fuse test case because it creates a mount
point.
Closes: #368
Approved by: jlebon
The program is called ro*files* and ostree creates physical
copies of directories, so changing them is fine.
I hit this when trying to do a copy checkout onto an rofiles-fuse
mount.
Closes: #368
Approved by: jlebon
libtoolize creates a version of libtool for the right architecture
in $(top_builddir), which is guaranteed to be present, and is
guaranteed to match what we are compiling (even during
cross-compilation).
Packaging systems sometimes separate /usr/bin/libtool, which is
specific to one architecture, from the libtool development files
such as libtoolize and ltmain.sh, which are architecture-independent.
For example, in Debian, libtool_*_all.deb contains the files necessary
to libtoolize a package and is depended on by the dh-autoreconf package,
but libtool-bin_*_amd64.deb (or whatever architecture) contains
/usr/bin/libtool and is not normally necessary to depend on.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
Closes: #367
Approved by: cgwalters