This means that in steady-state, `zulip-puppet-apply` is expected to
produce no changes or commands to execute. The verification step of
`setup-apt-repo` is quite fast, so this cleans up the output for very
little cost.
Support for Xenial and Stretch was removed (5154ddafca, 0f4b1076ad,
8944e0ad53, 79acd5ae40, 1219a2e854), but not all codepaths were
updated to remove their conditionals on it.
Remove all code predicated on Xenial or Stretch. debathena support
was migrated to Bionic, since that appears to be the current state of
existing debathena servers.
This adds Ubuntu 19.10 as a valid provisioning target.
The release test in setup-apt-repo was changed from a list of values to
a regex check for brevity.
This allows the system to get updates to the Groonga repository
signing key, so `apt update` doesn’t start failing when the key
changes (like it recently did).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
debian-archive-keyring is a dependency of the essential package apt,
so it is present in every Debian system.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
We no longer use tsearch_extras, and the camo patch is irrelevant on
systemd systems (Xenial and newer). So we no longer need to
provide/install a PPA at all.
Closes#13027.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Simulate isn’t enough in some cases. The error message when this
fails looks sufficiently non-alarming.
LXC:
default: + apt-get -dy install lsb-release apt-transport-https gnupg
default: Reading package lists...
default: Building dependency tree...
default:
default: Reading state information...
default: lsb-release is already the newest version.
default: gnupg is already the newest version.
default: The following NEW packages will be installed:
default: apt-transport-https
default: 0 upgraded, 1 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded.
default: Need to get 25.1 kB of archives.
default: After this operation, 238 kB of additional disk space will be used.
default: Err http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ trusty-updates/main apt-transport-https amd64 1.0.1ubuntu2.3
default: 404 Not Found [IP: 91.189.88.161 80]
default: Err http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ trusty-security/main apt-transport-https amd64 1.0.1ubuntu2.3
default: 404 Not Found [IP: 91.189.88.161 80]
default: E: Failed to fetch http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/a/apt/apt-transport-https_1.0.1ubuntu2.3_amd64.deb 404 Not Found [IP: 91.189.88.161 80]
default:
default: E: Some files failed to download
default: + apt-get update
[…]
default: Fetched 4,504 kB in 7s (611 kB/s)
default: Reading package lists...
default: + apt-get -y install lsb-release apt-transport-https gnupg
default: Reading package lists...
Docker:
default: + apt-get -dy install lsb-release apt-transport-https gnupg
default: Reading package lists...
default: Building dependency tree...
default:
default: Reading state information...
default: Package gnupg is not available, but is referred to by another package.
default: This may mean that the package is missing, has been obsoleted, or
default: is only available from another source
default: E: Package 'gnupg' has no installation candidate
default: + apt-get update
[…]
default: Fetched 16.2 MB in 5s (3,326 kB/s)
default: Reading package lists...
default: + apt-get -y install lsb-release apt-transport-https gnupg
default: Reading package lists...
(All in green.)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
/bin/sh and /usr/bin/env are the only two binaries that NixOS provides
at a fixed path (outside a buildFHSUserEnv sandbox).
This discussion was split from #11004.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Apparently, on Debian stretch, the gnupg package isn't installed by
default, which means that our `apt-key add` commands were failing with
these errors on an ultra-minimal Debian installation:
+ apt-key add ./scripts/setup/packagecloud.asc
E: gnupg, gnupg2 and gnupg1 do not seem to be installed, but one of them is required for this operation
+ apt-key add ./scripts/setup/pgroonga-debian.asc
E: gnupg, gnupg2 and gnupg1 do not seem to be installed, but one of them is required for this operation
Fixes#10480.
In scripts/lib/setup-apt-repo line 6:
zulip_source_hash=`sha1sum $SOURCES_FILE`
^-- SC2006: Use $(..) instead of legacy `..`.
In scripts/lib/setup-apt-repo line 10:
SCRIPTS_PATH="$(dirname $(dirname $0))"
^-- SC2046: Quote this to prevent word splitting.
^-- SC2086: Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
In scripts/lib/setup-apt-repo line 36:
if [ "$zulip_source_hash" = "`sha1sum $SOURCES_FILE`" ] && ! [ -e "$STAMP_FILE" ]; then
^-- SC2006: Use $(..) instead of legacy `..`.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
This fixes adding the Ubuntu repositories for Debian, as well as makes
sure that we install the debian-archive-keyring package on Debian,
which is only priority important (and thus might be missing).
This is apparently installed by the perl package; I hadn't even known
it existed. We of course want to use the sha1sum command from
coreutils.
Fixes#8836.
Apparently, the refactoring to make this script only run when changes
are present was buggy, in that if `apt-get update` failed, running
provision against wouldn't rerun `apt-get update`, resulting in a
broken state that requires expertise to fix. This closes that gap, by
using a stamp file to ensure we always successfully update apt before
proceeding.
It doesn't fix existing installations.
We can't fully support it until we fix the tsearch_extras availability
issue, but for now, this is an improvement.
Tweaked by tabbott to cover the outstanding tsearch_extras issue.
This reverts commit 3f95e567c1.
Apparently `apt-add-repository` fails periodically in CI. I suspect
this is some sort of silly networking problem, but given that all
we're saving is a few lines of code, the old version was better if
this fails basically ever.