On systems with SELinux enabled, we have to create the directories on
top of which we mount another partition or virtual file system (e.g.,
/dev) with the correct SELinux context, BEFORE we mount the other
partition. Otherwise, SELinux will get really confused when systemd
tries to recreate the mount tree for a private file system namespace for
a service. And unfortunately, even an autorelabel does not fix it
because it runs when /dev etc. are already mounted.
Without this fix, on Fedora >= 30, the system installed with Calamares
would fail to start the dbus-broker system bus, leading to several
important pieces of functionality not working (e.g., shutdown as
non-root).
On systems without SELinux enabled, chcon (which is part of coreutils)
will just print a warning and do nothing, so this should always be safe.
Instead of relying on a module-specific implementation, use the new
PartitionSize class for storing partition sizes.
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Ferraris <arnaud.ferraris@collabora.com>
Instead of relying on a module-specific implementation, use the new
PartitionSize class for storing partition sizes.
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Ferraris <arnaud.ferraris@collabora.com>
Using PartUtils::PartSize as reference, this commit creates a new
PartitionSize class in libcalamares, which will then be used in every
module needing such a class.
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Ferraris <arnaud.ferraris@collabora.com>
In order to prepare for future refactoring of the PartSize class, move
the bytesToSectors() function to libcalamares in the CalamaresUtils
namespace.
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Ferraris <arnaud.ferraris@collabora.com>
In the sidebar, the "Install" step should be named "Set Up" when in
setup mode, which will be more consistent with the other UI texts,
including button labels.
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Ferraris <arnaud.ferraris@collabora.com>
- Although KDE CI onlt tests with Qt 5.10, and KPMCore 4 requires
Qt 5.10, Calamares is still ok with older Qt and KPMCore 3.3,
so drop the dependency back down again. This means, though, that
the code will build against a Qt version we don't usually test.
We're going to assume that Someone Else does the LTS-Qt testing
for us.
- This small header file contained a few unrelated typedefs.
Move those typedefs to the classes they relate to. This
**does** mean that some consumers need to #include something
else instead.
- Use type names more consistently.
Editorial: why are **pages** responsible for creating the jobs?
- Remove (heavy-handed) top-level include_directories, in favor
of more focused ones; this helps to make sure that the dependencies
ordering is correct.
- Currently just moves a single enum, but this is prep-work for
moving the non-GUI parts of the module system into libcalamares,
to better support GUI-less operation.
src/modules/partition/jobs/ClearMountsJob.cpp
(ClearMountsJob::getCryptoDevices): Skip not only `/dev/mapper/control`,
but also `/dev/mapper/live-*`. Fedora live images use
`/dev/mapper/live-*` internally. We must not unmount those devices,
because they are used by the live image and because we need
`/dev/mapper/live-base` in the `unpackfs` module.
src/modules/unpackfs/main.py (UnpackOperation.mount_image): Check
whether entry.source is a regular file or a device and only use
`-o loop` on regular files, not devices.
At least on Fedora >= 29, `-o loop` fails on the read-only device
`/dev/mapper/live-base` (though `-o loop,ro` would be accepted).
- Simplify delegate: unused m_parent, tidy up inheritance, then drop
unnecessary custom constructor and extra Q_OBJECT macro.
- Drop some unnecessary included headers
- Drop single-use #define. APP was used in only one place; remove it
(that would be stylistically correct, anyway).
- Update copyright headers
- Document new label-handling
- The text rectangle was **moved**, not shrunk-in-place. Add
the missing - sign for the right and bottom margin.
- While here, move from #define to constexpr.
- Use a named enum instead of a collection of booleans
- Support old-style configuration but complain about it
- Update AppImage config as well
The new setup allows four different restart modes: never,
always, user-unchecked and user-checked. The user-modes
are interactive and give the user a choice (defaulting to
unchecked-don't-restart and checked-do-restart respectively).
The non-interactive versions vary in how they are
displayed.
CMakeModules/BoostPython3.cmake: Also try e.g. "python37" as the module
name, because Fedora 30 switched from the e.g. "python-py37" format to
that. Otherwise, Boost::Python3 cannot be found on Fedora without
manually setting CALAMARES_BOOST_PYTHON3_COMPONENT.