GLEP 69: File installation masks
Author | Michał Górny <mgorny@gentoo.org> |
---|---|
Type | Standards Track |
Status | Deferred |
Version | 1 |
Created | 2015-03-29 |
Last modified | 2019-11-07 |
Posting history | 2016-05-20 |
GLEP source | glep-0069.rst |
Contents
Status
No progress made for over 60 days. Marked deferred by GLEP editor Michał Górny on 2017-10-13.
Abstract
This GLEP describes a feature of package manager that can be used to prevent some of package's files from being installed. Both the minimal Package Manager behavior and profile data format is described, making it possible for GLEP-compliant package managers to support the feature efficiently, and allowing developers to rely upon it.
Motivation
Currently there are two major ways of filtering files installed by packages: USE flags and INSTALL_MASK.
The advantage of USE flags is that they are cleanly supported, and therefore provide an elegant way of providing choice. However, they require each ebuild to provide a specific code path to handle them, and each value change requires rebuilding the whole package — which often comes with a greater cost than the cost of installing the unused file. It also causes USE flag mismatches in binary packages, making it impossible to reuse them on a wider range of systems.
INSTALL_MASK is implemented purely at Package Manager (Portage) level, and therefore requires no specific ebuild support. It allows uniform filtering of installed files based on their names or paths. The files are still included in binary packages (and filtered out when binary packages are installed), making it possible to reuse binary packages across systems both using the files and filtering them out. However, the major disadvantage of INSTALL_MASK as implemented now is that it's rather low-level by design, requesting user to explicitly name paths to be wiped. Furthermore, it is a Portage-specific feature that lacks proper specification.
This GLEP aims to solve the shortcomings of INSTALL_MASK by providing a minimal specification of how it should be supported, and extending the current Portage implementation with support for profile-defined path groups. This makes it possible for package managers to implement the feature reliably and in a user-friendly way, therefore making it possible to use it throughout Gentoo.
Specification
Package Manager Implementation requirements
A Package Manager implementing this specification must provide an ability for user to configure installed path filtering. User must be allowed to at least select profile-defined path groups. The Package Manager must provide support for stacking inclusive and exclusive path specifications.
The filtering of installed files is to be performed when merging installed package to the filesystem. It must not apply to files contained in binary packages built by the Package Manager. However, the Package Manager may provide an additional mechanism for filtering files included in binary packages. The details of such mechanism are outside the scope of this specification.
When filtering, the Package Manager should match each installed file path to the specified inclusive and exclusive filters, in configured order. If the filter chain results in the file being positively matched, the Package Manager must behave as if it was not installed by the package. The exact way for matching specified filters is unspecified, except for matching the path wildcards in path group definitions.
Profile-defined path groups
Each profile can specify zero or more path groups. The groups are defined in an optional install-mask.conf file inside the profile. The file has sectioned, key-value format (alike layout.conf).
Each section is started by [name], with name specifying the defined group name, and must be followed by:
- one or more path keys, each one specifying a single path to be filtered. The path is specified as a fnmatch() wildcard, and all paths matching it are filtered. If the path matches a directory, the directory is filtered recursively. Enabling the group causes all paths included in it to be filtered;
- exactly one description key, specifying the human-readable description of the group.
[bash-completion] path=/usr/share/bash-completion description=Completions for app-shells/bash and auxiliary files [locale] path=/usr/share/locale/*/LC_MESSAGES description=All localizations [locale-pl] path=/usr/share/locale/pl/LC_MESSAGES description=Localizations for polish language
Scope of path group definitions
Since path groups are not directly tied to ebuilds, all of them apply globally. A specific group can be used by user as long as the profile providing it is enabled (either directly or as a result of profile inheritance). A reference to an undefined group should be considered an error.
Sub-profiles can override path group definitions. If a path group with the same name is defined by multiple profiles in the inheritance chain, the last definition applies. If the last definition does not define any path= keys (i.e. is empty), it removes the path group defined by an earlier profile.
Please note that an implementation is also allowed to provide means of overriding path groups in user configuration.
Rationale
The specification was intended to provide best match with current Portage implementation, while making it possibly flexible and extending appropriately for user-friendly use.
The inclusion of profile-defined path groups was necessary to make the feature user-friendly. It both serves the purpose of saving user from figuring out the correct path wildcards, and providing a complete reference of possible paths of interest. Support for stacking and exclusive specifications makes it possible to exclude specific path subsets, e.g. a specific locale while filtering out all other localizations.
The specification also requires that the mask is only applied to installed files and not binary packages. This way, it is possible to reuse the binary package on a system with different INSTALL_MASK value. This also makes deploying binhosts easier, as users don't have to worry about accidentally filtering out files. The additional clause allows providing additional mechanism to filter files from binary packages (PKG_INSTALL_MASK in Portage) while keeping the base implementation safe.
The support for specifying direct paths is left optional since it is not strictly necessary for the goal. All its details are left implementation-defined, including the specific way patterns are matched, to accommodate the specific matching used in Portage.
The file format for profile-defined path group database was chosen to reuse the format of metadata/layout.conf. This avoids having to implement yet another format parser in the package manager, while keeping it easy to read and write. XML was considered as an alternative, however it seemed unnecessarily complex for the needs of this specification.
Originally, the path groups were defined repository-wide. However, this caused scoping problems — in particular, it was unclear what behavior would be correct for multiple repositories attempting to define the same group. Binding the groups to profiles fits the global scope better. It also makes it possible to limit path groups to specific profiles — e.g. avoid providing systemd path group in systemd profiles where it would make the system unbootable.
Backwards Compatibility
The GLEP specifically requires that binary packages built by Package Managers implementing it are not affected. Therefore, the binary packages retain full compatibility with Package Managers not implementing this GLEP.
The GLEP does allow the current (2016-05-20) Portage implementation details of INSTALL_MASK and PKG_INSTALL_MASK as implementation-defined. However, Portage does not implement all the features required by this GLEP.
The additional profile files will be discarded by non-compliant Package Managers, and therefore do not affect backwards compatibility.
Reference implementation
Initial INSTALL_MASK support in Portage
As of 2016-05-20 Portage has install masking support that is not compliant with this GLEP.
The configuration is done through two variables: - INSTALL_MASK that filters files installed to the system, - PKG_INSTALL_MASK that filters files included in binary packages.
Both variables are independent; that is, it is possible to filter a file for binary packages while installing it on the live system.
Both variables accept space-separated set of fnmatch() patterns. Each pattern can either match against full path or against the filename. There is no support for exclusions; any file that matches at least one of the patterns is effectively filtered out by being removed from appropriate installation tree.
GLEP implementation for Portage
In order to enable support for this GLEP in Portage, three initial patches were prepared and sent for Portage:
- portage.package.ebuild.config: Move FEATURES=no* handling there [1],
- portage.dbapi.vartree: Move INSTALL_MASK handling into merging [2],
- portage.dbapi.vartree: Support exclusions in INSTALL_MASK [3].
The patches replace old INSTALL_MASK handling that was written using bash and GNU find with a complete Python infrastructure. The filtering is now done on-the-fly when installing files, therefore having no need to physically remove them from the install tree. This made it possible to add exclusion support.
The path group support is work-in-progress.
References
[1] | portage.package.ebuild.config: Move FEATURES=no* handling there, Message-ID 20160522065604.10593-2-mgorny@gentoo.org, https://archives.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage-dev/message/bdce65377f162be398230c648d4f9712 |
[2] | portage.dbapi.vartree: Move INSTALL_MASK handling into merging, Message-ID 20160522065604.10593-3-mgorny@gentoo.org, https://archives.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage-dev/message/c9b95dff7be46876d052ca13da675947 |
[3] | portage.dbapi.vartree: Support exclusions in INSTALL_MASK, Message-ID 20160522065604.10593-4-mgorny@gentoo.org, https://archives.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage-dev/message/29e128a9f41122fa0420c1140f7b7f94 |
Copyright
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