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Release Notes 1.4.1 |
There are new features:
- Mock previously used chroot technology. Few past releases Mock offered systemd-nspawn which is modern container technology for better isolation. This release use systemd-nspawn as default. If you want to preserve previous behaviour you can use
--old-chroot
option. NOTE: network is disabled inside container by default now; take a look intosite-defaults.cfg
for desired options (likerpmbuild_networking
). - Mock now uses bootstrap chroot to install target chroot. This is big change and see special paragraph at the bottom of this release notes.
- Chroot now contains
/dev/hwrng
and/dev/prandom
when they exists in host [#33]. - We added
%distro_section
macro to Mageia configs.
There are some bugfixes:
- Resultdir is now chowned to user who executed mock so they can delete the files.
hw_info
plugin chown logs to user who executed mock also.- Previously we declared that package state plugin is enabled by default, but the plugin was in fact disabled. It is now enabled by default (as stated in mock documentation) [RHBZ#1277187].
- Creating directories for mount points have been delayed after mount of tmpfs [#57].
- Exit code of
machinectl
is now ignored asmachinectl
set non-zero code even for non-fatal errors. Errors which are quite often not relevant nor important for mock. hw_info
plugin does not crash when output contains non-ASCII characters [#68].
Notes:
- This version has not been released for EL6. If you are using EL6 and you want to use latest Mock, please upgrade you infrastructure to EL7.
- Configs for
s390
architecture has been removed as it is not supported any more. - Configs for
aarch64
andppc64le
now use different GPG key as those architectures has been moved from Secondary to Primary. - Epel5 config points now to vault.centos.org. Note that EL5 has been EOLed. We will keep epel-5 config for some time. But any issue with building for epel-5 target will not be fixed.
Mock is calling dnf --installroot
to install packages for target architecture into target directory. This works. Mostly. The only problem that use host DNF and rpm to install packages. But this can cause problem when new RPM feature is introduces. Like Soft dependencies or Rich dependencies. When you have EL6 host and try to install Fedora rawhide package with Rich dependency then rpm will fail and you cannot do anything about it. You can upgrade your build machine to Fedora rawhide, but that is often not possible when it is part of critical infrastructure.
So we introduced Boostrap chroot. And 'we' actually means Michael Cullen who implement it. And Igor Gnatenko who proposed this idea. Big kudos for both of them.
Bootstrap chroot means that we first create very minimal chroot for target platform and we call DNF/YUM from that platform. For example: when you are on RHEL7 and you want to build package for fedora-26-x86_64
, mock will first create chroot called fedora-26-x86_64-bootstrap
, it will install DNF and rpm there (fc26 versions). Then it will call DNF from fedora-26-x86_64-bootstrap
to install all needed packages to fedora-26-x86_64
chroot.
The disadvantage is that you will need more storage in /var/lib/mock
, the build is little bit slower. But you will hardly notice that unless you disabled yum_cache
and root_cache
plugins for some reasons.
The advantage is that you can use stable version of OS to build packages for even most recent OS. And vice versa.
If you want to preserve previous behaviour you can use --no-bootstrap-chroot
command line option or set:
config_opts['use_bootstrap_container'] = False
in your configuration.