The code that was supposed to check uninstallability of existing binaries was
broken:
- it only checked arch: all on nobreakall archs, not arch any
- it checked if the new binary was in testing (this never happens)
- it doesn't work when binaries from both unstable and tpu are needed
Note that _excuse_unsat_deps() now handles nobreakall correctly.
don't show information about unsatisfiable depends that is not blocking
migration:
* arch all not on nobreakall arch
* arch any or arch all on breakarch
Also, set verdict to REJECTED_PERMANENTLY explicitly. This was already done
implicitly, because that is the default and it was never set to anything else.
Also, set verdict to REJECTED_PERMANENTLY explicitly. This was already done
implicitly, because that is the default and it was never set to anything else.
If the cruft removal item has a different version than the binary currently in
testing, then the cruft item was replaced since it was added, or it was added
in error. In this case, the item should not be processed.
Signed-off-by: Ivo De Decker <ivodd@debian.org>
When the item is a cruft removal item, the variable contains the binary name,
not the source name. So rename it to item_package and set source_name, to the
source in both cases.
Signed-off-by: Ivo De Decker <ivodd@debian.org>
When the arch: all packages were uploaded by the maintainer, a binnmu (built
on the buildds) shouldn't be blocked, because it doesn't contain the arch: all
binaries anyway.
Signed-off-by: Ivo De Decker <ivodd@debian.org>
The update of gcc to gcc-9 introduced a regression in buildability of
anything relying on kernel headers. This could have been caught by the
kernel's standard rebuild autopkgtest, but we currently only trigger the
linux autopkgtest for source packages named gcc-N, which excludes
gcc-defaults.
Include gcc-defaults in the list of packages that trigger a linux rebuild
test.
Bug-Ubuntu: https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1836100