This removes the need for having to specify sourcepkg manually in
every package that will build subpkgs.
--HG--
extra : convert_revision : 383e4c467e84844d2f4f61ae5c5e07a5124e9cfb
The library is only responsible now to find all binary packages
from repositories, sort them and create a dictionary with all
details. The frontend (xbps-bin) provides support for this,
and this allows for more flexibility and removes some stuff
that didn't belong in the library.
While here implemented support to show total download/installed
size for all packages that are going to be installed.
Next step will be to implement user interactivity before
installing/removing/updating packages.
--HG--
extra : convert_revision : 858e9a89bc6a60b348435f2416a8af3ebb6ea5c9
Multiple shells can be (un)registered by a single package, like:
register_shell="/bin/zsh-foo /bin/zsh-blah"
--HG--
extra : convert_revision : 0172a74b41e26089da97fcdc8cc2d5cb6ae147f2
Also the following changes were made:
* Added an info-files trigger, to (un)register info files.
* xbps-base-dirs: it's responsible to install triggers on destdir.
--HG--
extra : convert_revision : 8d707053616f38d2b5beef7cf28e1bc4a66812b8
A new target has been added to xbps-bin: autoremove. It works in
the same way than 'apt-get', but there's no stdin input. By default
it will list you all orphaned packages, and -f flag must be set
to really remove them.
The following is a real example for the git package, which requires
directly perl and curl-libs, and indirectly libidn and openssl.
$ xbps-bin -r ~/testing-xbps remove git
Removing package git-1.6.1.3 ... done.
$
$ xbps-bin -r ~/testing-xbps autoremove
The following packages were installed automatically
(as dependencies) and aren't needed anymore:
perl-5.10.0 curl-libs-7.19.0 libidn-1.10 openssl-0.9.8j
If you are really sure you don't need them, use -f to confirm.
$
--HG--
extra : convert_revision : 70eebaa3d99be27753b94f580c8ec86330c7c2d3
Now if any package is going to be removed and it's required by
other packages, it won't let you remove it unless -f is set.
Here's an example of how it looks like:
[juan@fedora-vm xbps]$ xbps-bin -r ~/testing-xbps remove glibc
WARNING! glibc is required by the following packages:
zlib-1.2.3 ncurses-libs-5.7 gcc-libstdc++-4.3.2 e2fsprogs-libs-1.41.4
cracklib-2.8.13 expat-2.0.1 ncurses-5.7 cpio-2.9
module-init-tools-3.6 busybox-initramfs-1.13.2 udev-138 procps-3.2.7
pam-1.0.2 dbus-libs-1.2.12 lzma-utils-libs-4.32.7 coreutils-7.1
sed-4.1.5 grep-2.5.4 gawk-3.1.6 gzip-1.3.12
bzip2-1.0.5 bash-4.0 less-424 gdbm-1.8.3
groff-1.20.1 lzma-utils-4.32.7 dbus-1.2.12 proplib-0.3
dash-0.5.4 findutils-4.4.0 util-linux-ng-2.14.2 initramfs-tools-0.92o
file-5.00 diffutils-2.8.1 wget-1.11.4 man-db-2.5.3
sysklogd-1.5 eject-2.1.5 shadow-4.1.2.2 sudo-1.7.0
e2fsprogs-1.41.4 tzdata-2009a vim-7.2 upstart-0.5.1
kernel-2.6.28.1 xbps-base-pkg-0.1 kbd-1.14.1
If you are sure about this, use -f to force deletion for this package.
[juan@fedora-vm xbps]$
--HG--
extra : convert_revision : eeb92925e51f11d5b3bf7e069ed4986ae5fb0c2d
* If a dir is listed in $keep_dirs it won't be removed (anyway any
directory that is not empty won't either).
* If a config file hasn't been modified (SHA256 hash matches) the
file will be removed, otherwise it won't be removed.
There's still missing support to handle new configuration files when
there's an existing file, but will do later.
--HG--
extra : convert_revision : 448af95876fc7a47da07a9a910d6111047f72271