-i, --ignore can be specified multiple times and can be used to
ignore configuration of those packages while configuration of all
packages is being performed.
Close#67
This explicitly enables the in memory fetch/store of remote repository
data archives mode, ignoring existing on-disk repodata archives.
This changes the previous behaviour of falling back to this mode if no
on-disk repodata archives were found.
Thanks to @Gottox and @dominikh for comments.
- Full dependency graphs can be generated with -f in pkgdb or repository
mode (-R).
- Removed -o and writing dot files by default, the generated dot file
is written to stdout.
- Misc tweaks that I cannot remember right now.
These routines return a xbps_array_t with a full sorted dependency graph
for the target pkg, by querying pkgdb or rpool.
Update xbps-query(8) to use the new libxbps API.
* Rather than requiring a config file to be generated with -g, if -c
is unset and default config file does not exist, use builtin defaults.
* Always process all available pkg objs.
* -R is now used to enable repository mode rather than checking revdeps.
* -o removed; simply use <pkgname>.dot.
The "architecture" configuration keyword is now available to override
the native machine architecture returned by (uname(2)).
The XBPS_ARCH environment variable still has preference.
This allows you to print to stdout any file stored in a binary package,
locally or remotely!
$ xbps-query -R --cat=/usr/bin/ls coreutils > ls
$ file ls
ls: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked (uses shared libs), for GNU/Linux 2.6.32, BuildID[sha1]=7a195fc46d1d5cdca32bfccd3b30f81784e342ed, stripped
$
- This mode prints to stdout the matching FILE stored in a binary package.
- ABI break: renamed xbps_get_pkg_plist_from_binpkg() xbps_binpkg_get_plist().
- Added xbps_binpkg_get_file() as a generic way to get pkg file contents.
- Removed useless comments from xbps_api_impl.h.
The behaviour of this routine mimics the existing xbps_array_add() with
the difference that stored objects are moved to the right to insert
our object as the first element on the array.
Use this to add replaced packages in the transaction array at the head
rather than at the end, to preserve the proper sorting order.