Unfortunately in commit 253fcc6e3 I broke the build-bundle command so
that it is unable to resolve remote refs (as opposed to local ones).
This means in the normal case of building a bundle for an app installed
from a remote it fails:
$ flatpak build-bundle /var/lib/flatpak/repo gnome-calculator.flatpak org.gnome.Calculator stable
error: Refspec 'app/org.gnome.Calculator/x86_64/stable' not found
This is because flatpak_repo_resolve_rev() interprets a NULL remote name
to mean the ref is local (in refs/heads/) but in this case we just don't
know which remote it's from. This commit fixes the issue by using
ostree_repo_resolve_rev() directly which searches refs/heads/ and
refs/remotes/, and if that fails falling back to iterating over refs
returned by ostree_repo_list_collection_refs() to catch collection-refs
that may be in refs/mirrors/.
Also, add a unit test that fails without this patch.
Fixes https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/issues/3026Closes: #3032
Approved by: alexlarsson
This commit makes it so that a unit test can create the test app and
runtime using a branch other than master, and changes test-run.sh to use
the branch "stable". This will allow the run command to be tested better
in the following commit.
Closes: #2788
Approved by: matthiasclasen
Use only the last section in the id for origin remotes, to avoid
the origin column being really wide when listing stuff.
Closes: #2448
Approved by: alexlarsson
This adds variable support for collection IDs: they can either be
enabled on the server, on the server and client, or not at all. If
enabled on the server, apps and runtimes are built with collection IDs
and the repository has one set. If enabled on the client, the remote
config is added to the local repository with a collection ID and GPG
verification enabled. They are controlled with
USE_COLLECTIONS_IN_{SERVER,CLIENT}={yes,no}.
These variables are used in the new wrapper tests,
test-repo-collections.sh and test-repo-collections-server-only.sh.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This makes the ostree trivial-httpd --autoexit feature work better,
because it seems to exit whenever the root directory changes (i.e. not
only when its deleted).
This means the root dir can't be the repo (because then we can't
update the repo), or the base testdir (because we create files there
too), so instead we make the repo $testdir/repos/test and
$testdir/repos as the httpd root.
If the bundle contains an origin link we can now install related
things from it, such as locale data.
You can also build the bundle with --runtime-repo=URL, where the url
points to a flatpakrepo file for a repo with runtimes. This works
similar to the RuntimeRepo= feature in flatpakref files.