Remove /bin/sh from bash RPROVIDES as this has a side-effect which
confuses rpm package manager when also busybox provides /bin/sh and
base-files depend on /bin/sh . The problem is broken down below.
First, bash depends on base-files and bash pkg_postinst must run
after base-files was installed, because it requires /etc/shells
provided by base-files to be in place.
Second, base-files depends on /bin/sh, which is provided by either
bash or busybox in this case. This is the actual problem here, if
bash is selected as /bin/sh provider, then there is cyclic dependency
between bash and base-files, and that confuses dnf which may install
the packages in the wrong order, bash first and base-files second .
To make this worse, if busybox is also /bin/sh provider, it can and
does happen that some systems pick busybox as the /bin/sh provider,
while others pick bash as the /bin/sh provider, and that cyclic
dependency does not always appear.
Attempt to break this dependency, remove pre-inst script from the
base-files recipe, which removes its dependency on /bin/sh and
allows it to be installed very early, and always before bash.
(From OE-Core rev:
e71b64a9b22c7db316e92e78a4bce8b9f994a4ae)
Signed-off-by: Marek Vasut <marex@denx.de>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Steve Sakoman <steve@sakoman.com>
BASEFILESISSUEINSTALL ?= "do_install_basefilesissue"
-# In previous versions of base-files, /run was a softlink to /var/run and the
-# directory was located in /var/volatlie/run. Also, /var/lock was a softlink
-# to /var/volatile/lock which is where the real directory was located. Now,
-# /run and /run/lock are the real directories. If we are upgrading, we may
-# need to remove the symbolic links first before we create the directories.
-# Otherwise the directory creation will fail and we will have circular symbolic
-# links.
-#
-pkg_preinst:${PN} () {
- #!/bin/sh -e
- if [ x"$D" = "x" ]; then
- if [ -h "/var/lock" ]; then
- # Remove the symbolic link
- rm -f /var/lock
- fi
-
- if [ -h "/run" ]; then
- # Remove the symbolic link
- rm -f /run
- fi
- fi
-}
-
do_install () {
for d in ${dirs555}; do
install -m 0555 -d ${D}$d