| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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This adds SPDX license headers in place of the wide assortment of things
currently in our script headers. We default to GPL-2.0-only except for the
oeqa code where it was clearly submitted and marked as MIT on the most part
or some scripts which had the "or later" GPL versioning.
The patch also drops other obsolete bits of file headers where they were
encoountered such as editor modelines, obsolete maintainer information or
the phrase "All rights reserved" which is now obsolete and not required in
copyright headers (in this case its actually confusing for licensing as all
rights were not reserved).
More work is needed for OE-Core but this takes care of the bulk of the scripts
and meta/lib directories.
The top level LICENSE files are tweaked to match the new structure and the
SPDX naming.
(From OE-Core rev: f8c9c511b5f1b7dbd45b77f345cb6c048ae6763e)
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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Backup are files sometimes are inconsistent and then cannot be
sorted (YOCTO #11043), and more importantly, are not needed in
the initial rootfs, so they get deleted.
Fixes: [YOCTO #11007]
(From OE-Core rev: e5628c80a52f3caeea9d9dc7f67d1b8a61222aef)
Signed-off-by: Patrick Ohly <patrick.ohly@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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The /etc passwd files in a rootfs consist of the default entries from
base-passwd plus anything that gets added via package installation,
EXTRA_USERS_PARAMS and/or system sysusers.
The execution order of preinst scripts is not perfectly deterministic,
or at least unrelated changes caused it to change in a
non-deterministic way, resulting in irrelevant changes in the order of
passwd entries.
useradd-staticids.bbclass ensures that the numeric IDs don't change,
but re-ordering can still occur, which is bad for reproducible builds
and file-based update mechanisms like swupd which work best if changes
are as minimal as possible.
To achieve that, the files get sorted in a post-processing command,
enabled by default. Sorting is based primarily on the numeric IDs, so
for example, the "root" user continues to be listed first. "nobody"
now is at the end, which wasn't the case before.
The order of the entries should not matter, but in obscure cases where
it does (like having multiple entries for the same numeric ID) this
behavior can be disabled by setting SORT_PASSWD_POSTPROCESS_COMMAND to
an empty string.
Fixes: YOCTO #10520
(From OE-Core rev: ba684f436908ac2300a00c174d5aa06b4f824367)
Signed-off-by: Patrick Ohly <patrick.ohly@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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