- try harder to not change anything during self-upgrade
- also honor locking to packages that where earlier used in
merging common dependencies
- clarify upgrade applet help messages
make cache a special kind of repository, and automatically cache
special packages (virtual packages, or ones installed from command
line). add test cases for handling virtual packages. fixes#1617.
It is incorrect optimization causing valid solutions to be skipped.
Any performance it might've gained, should be fixed by reintroduction
of the minimum penalty logic added in previous commit.
Enabled when all attempts to satisfy a name failed, we know that we
can ignore all decisions until we find a decision affecting the name
we wanted to satisfy.
We can't just use the primary name, as that would mess up
backtracking. We need to record the name which caused the name
to get considered - that way the right last_touched_decision is
used on backtracking.
* push_decision expects to always get the package primary 'name'
as apk_name. ASSERT that and fix problem cases.
(though - this might need to be reverted, and store the non
primary name in apk_decision instead to accomodate for better
backtracking optimizations)
* fix error reporting of virtual package names
* make 'assign_name' errors soft. the incorrect packages just are
no longer consider instead of aborting whole calculation.
* fix backtracking of virtual packages that are not depended
directly
apk_name_state is now quite small; and we avoid overhead of two
pointers (+ malloc overhead) when we just make it part of apk_name.
It also fixes some problems (that got introduced) where apk_name_state
was not allocated.
Solver will now never report partial solution where a conflict
constraint is not satisfied. The is because with --force we might
install the partial solution; and if conflicted packages were to
be installed we might have extra trouble.
Required for provides support as package might be pulled in via
non-primary package name. This allows relatively easily to pass
through inherited flags via the provided names. ref #574.
Reasoning:
- it is less useful now that we do not do common dependency merging
- provides support would make the required logic overly complicated
- callgrind reports that depending on the case it can improve or
decrease performance (the overhead pays off only in some cases);
the difference is not large either way
Otherwise we might start to change packages unexpectedly when not
upgrading. This also fixes some other things the solver might've
decided to do.
Add also few test cases to detect bad behaviour.
In case someone did "fix --force" for package for which we have no
APK available, we would uninstall the package instead of silently
ignoring the request. This could mean worse things.
So now we just consider unavailable packages a bad deal for reinstall
requests. And will downgrade if necessary. But if we really don't
have any APK available, we just skip the request but report it.
If n+1 packages depend A, and A depend on B. Add n+1 dependencies
to B. Otherwise if someone conflicts B, B might be left out.
Leaving package unassigned is no longer a non-preferred action,
this fixes the final test case that was failing.
And with --force we might even install that scenario.
Add also some debug checks.
callgrind says it's more overhead than improvement. back jumping
effectively prunes all bad trees. but can be added later if it
becomes needed; due to e.g. provides support.
It is faster to just scan the cache directory for existing packages
at startup than trying to faccessat() them on demand. It also makes
quite a few parts of the code more readable and simpler.
* properly do absolute scoring now, the previous scoring where
preference could get reduced could have caused incorrect early
pruning of search tree
* backtracking is now separated from package state, and first
branching point is the decision if a name is left unassigned
or if something _has_ to be assigned. this allows multiple future
search tree optimizations like handling of common dependencies
early.
* merge common dependency names early to provide deeper forward
checking.
Instead of "skipping" certain packages, we include them as-if required,
and at expansion time we decide if they actually need to be considered
for installation. This cleans up the expansion main loop a little bit
and makes the code work together better.
* cleaned up little bit on the internal state machine
* the decision applying mechanism now aborts early to avoid work
if we are approaching bad solution candidate
* package availability checking is now done on-demand; which
could still be improved
* solver internally calculates now using tags; not repository masks
* installeddb now contains the tag name where the package came from
-> we can now handle upgrades properly
* the pinning is still a preference, and not strictly enforced;
versioned dependencies may overrule preference
Forgot to reset per-name penalty when it got locked by apply_decision.
This also fine tunes compare_package_preference() to always prefer
packages specified on command line speeding up calculation certain
complicated solutions.
* upgrade needs explicit check so we don't try self-upgrade
(which would print additional messages on screen)
* add can fix problems, so check against the new world
* merge the code in few places
Previously we would cache the penalty when evaluating the final
solution, and adding that until we backtrack to first topology
position changing that penalty. However, we can just keep track
of minimum penalty based on name state, and add it. This allows
us to bail out early on bad branches because we know in advance
how things will turn out.
Previously we would not upgrade just by doing "apk add foo@tag" if
foo was already installed. It required explicit '-u'. This allows
'apk add' to explicitly prefer the newly specified pinning.
Improves /etc/apk/repositories format so you can say:
http://nl.alpinelinux.org/alpine/v2.3/main
@edge http://nl.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/main
@testing http://nl.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/testing
After which you can pin dependencies to these tags using:
apk add stableapp newapp@edge bleedingapp@testing
Apk will now by default only use the untagged repositories,
but adding a tag to specific dependency:
1. will prefer that tag for the name
2. allowing pulling in dependencies from that tag (though,
it prefers untagged packages to satisfy deps if possible)
fixes#575
allow per-name solver flags to be inheritable, and use them in
self-upgrade, add -u and the fix applet. this gives more familiar
behaviour for the upgrades.
the only bit of information needed in solver commit is the "hard"
topology sorting information for trigger ordering. fixes a bug in
"apk del" which uses the state pointers to do intermediate
calculations between solution solving and commit.
Allow to select packages that conflict in case we are looking for
errors. This allows 'add --force' to install (on boot) the set of
packages with minimum conflicts.