Matthew Leeds 1ea10e0705 dir: Don't fetch the summary unnecessarily
Currently P2P flatpak app updates aren't working when
the system installation is being used (but they work for the user
installation). This is because there's a
flatpak_dir_remote_fetch_summary() call in flatpak_dir_update() which
fails if the machine isn't connected to the Internet. And in fact we
don't need to pull the summary from the system remote, we need the one
from the temporary P2P remote, and that gets pulled as a result of the
flatpak_dir_pull() call to get the ref because
OSTREE_REPO_PULL_FLAGS_MIRROR is used. So this commit changes
flatpak_dir_update() to avoid fetching the system remote summary fetch
when P2P support and collection IDs are being used.

Similar logic applies to flatpak_dir_install() and
flatpak_dir_update_appstream() (although P2P appstream updates don't
seem to be working yet).

This is a partial fix for https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/issues/1388

Closes: #1397
Approved by: alexlarsson
2018-02-13 14:46:47 +00:00
2017-11-02 00:45:43 +00:00
2018-02-09 09:23:26 +00:00
2018-02-09 11:00:15 +00:00
2018-02-06 06:30:16 +00:00
2017-05-02 15:01:19 +02:00
2017-12-14 09:04:38 +00:00
2018-02-09 09:23:26 +00:00
2018-02-09 09:23:26 +00:00
2016-04-29 15:38:20 +02:00
2016-07-15 11:58:46 -04:00
2018-02-05 15:21:40 +00:00
2017-12-15 16:24:32 +01:00
2015-03-31 15:36:29 +01:00
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2016-06-02 18:05:22 -04:00
2018-02-09 09:23:26 +00:00
2017-12-15 13:27:58 +01:00
2018-02-05 15:11:44 +00:00
2016-05-06 15:27:19 +02:00
2016-05-06 15:27:19 +02:00

Flatpak icon

Flatpak is a system for building, distributing and running sandboxed desktop applications on Linux.

See https://flatpak.org/ for more information.

Community discussion happens in #flatpak on Freenode and on the mailing list.

Read documentation for the flatpak commandline tools and for the libflatpak library API.

Contributing

Flatpak welcomes contributions from anyone! Here are some ways you can help:

Hacking

Flatpak uses a traditional autoconf-style build mechanism. To build just do

 ./configure [args]
 make
 make install

Most configure arguments are documented in ./configure --help. However, there are some options that are a bit more complicated.

Flatpak relies on a project called Bubblewrap for the low-level sandboxing. By default, an in-tree copy of this is built (distributed in the tarball or using git submodules in the git tree). This will build a helper called flatpak-bwrap. If your system has a recent enough version of Bubblewrap already, you can use --with-system-bubblewrap to use that instead.

Bubblewrap can run in two modes, either using unprivileged user namespaces or setuid mode. This requires that the kernel supports this, which some distributions disable. For instance, Debian and Arch (linux kernel v4.14.5 or later), support user namespaces with the kernel.unprivileged_userns_clone sysctl enabled.

If unprivileged user namespaces are not available, then Bubblewrap must be built as setuid root. This is believed to be safe, as it is designed to do this. Any build of Bubblewrap supports both unprivileged and setuid mode, you just need to set the setuid bit for it to change mode.

However, this does complicate the installation a bit. If you pass --with-priv-mode=setuid to configure (of Flatpak or Bubblewrap) then make install will try to set the setuid bit. However that means you have to run make install as root. Alternatively, you can pass --enable-sudo to configure and it will call sudo when setting the setuid bit. Alternatively you can enable setuid completely outside of the installation, which is common for example when packaging Bubblewrap in a .deb or .rpm.

There are some complications when building Flatpak to a different prefix than the system-installed version. First of all, the newly built Flatpak will look for system-installed flatpaks in $PREFIX/var/lib/flatpak, which will not match existing installed flatpaks. You can use --with-system-install-dir=/var/lib/flatpak to make both installations use the same location.

Secondly, Flatpak ships with a root-privileged policykit helper for system-installation, called flatpak-system-helper. This is dbus activated (on the system-bus) and if you install in a non-standard location it is likely that this will not be found by dbus and policykit. However, if the system installation is synchronized, you can often use the system installed helper instead - at least if the two versions are close in versions.

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