Move the logic of apply_src_policy and apply_srcarch_policy into PolicyEngine.
This fixes an issue with the excuses.yaml output introduced in commit
15e5228669: only the last verdict was added to the excuse info for that
policy.
Signed-off-by: Ivo De Decker <ivodd@debian.org>
When a source has only arch: all binaries, the Build-Depends had no relevant
architectures, so the check was skipped. Instead check it on any architecture,
just like Build-Depends-Indep.
Signed-off-by: Ivo De Decker <ivodd@debian.org>
The src_policy defines wether, for source items, the source policy should be
run (RUN_SRC, the default), the arch policy should be run on every arch
(RUN_ON_EVERY_ARCH_ONLY), or both (RUN_SRC_AND_EVERY_ARCH).
Signed-off-by: Ivo De Decker <ivodd@debian.org>
The recent code changes made use remove from the "binaries" field in
SourcePackages. Lists are not particularly optimized for this kind
of removal and we have a few source packages with a lot of binary
packages (e.g. libreoffice, gcc-X-cross{,-ports}) that might trip
poor performance.
Signed-off-by: Niels Thykier <niels@thykier.net>
Regex compilation is often rather expensive and in this case, we can
do it once instad of once per migration item.
Signed-off-by: Niels Thykier <niels@thykier.net>
Note that this now also applies to binNMUs. A source block also blocks
binaries. Binaries on a specific architecture can be unblock with an
architecture-specific unblock hint.
This also means all binaries from non-primary suites
(testing-proposed-updates, etc) need approval.
Closes: #916209
Currently no policy implements this.
A policy can now implement apply_src_policy_impl or apply_srcarch_policy_impl
(or both), so apply_src_policy_impl is no longer an abstractmethod.
Signed-off-by: Ivo De Decker <ivodd@debian.org>
apply_src_policy expects an excuse with a new source and binaries. It doesn't
apply to srcarch excuses, which only have new binaries for an existing source.
Signed-off-by: Ivo De Decker <ivodd@debian.org>
This is a step towards making migration unit-testable. This step
reduces the need for global state (in the MigrationItem class as class
fields) and with another step we can remove the global state entirely
and enable unit tests to create migration items without having to
worry about other unit tests.
Signed-off-by: Niels Thykier <niels@thykier.net>
All types of dependencies between excuses (Depends, Build-Depends,
Build-Depends-Indep, ...) are handled by the same code. The DependencyType is
used to distinguish between the types where needed.
Signed-off-by: Ivo De Decker <ivodd@debian.org>
This is useful to run tests with the data files from a specific point in time,
without changes due to ageing when the test runs later.
Signed-off-by: Ivo De Decker <ivodd@debian.org>
Currently autopkgtest tries to install our trigger from unstable and the rest
from testing. If that fails, than autopkgtest has a fall-back to allow all
packages from unstable to be installed. This has two severe issues:
1) the version of the test and the package it came from may be out-of-sync
2) too much from unstable may be installed, even stuff that should not/is not
allowed to migrate as it breaks stuff.
Make sure that test depends also get added to triggers if they are broken.
E.g. imagine the following scenario: trigger X changes (breaks) the output
generated by Y. Package Z has Y in the test dependencies and compares the
output in the autopkgtest. We want to have the opportunity that a new version
is automatically fixing the situation.
Two use cases are currently unsupported: needs-build (autopkgtest restriction)
and test dependencies generated by autodep8.
In case autopkgtest triggering is delayed because the required builds aren't
ready yet or the package is not installable, currently there is only the
message that autopktest delays the migration, but no hint why. This commit adds
these hints.
The initial idea was to do this to bootstrap the baseline, but it turns out
that this has the drawback it triggers runs for a package that has a new
autopkgtest where it didn't have it in the version in the target suite. It was
considered harmless (as it would just have a failing reference), but due to
autodep8, package can have a passing result in the target suite while the new
autopkgtest is actually broken. Such a package should not be blocked / getting
a penalty.
The alternative is to make the check here smarter, but as this is only for
bootstrapping, lets do that outside of britney proper.