Dieser Inhalt ist in der von Ihnen ausgewählten Sprache nicht verfügbar.

5.286. rpm


Updated rpm packages that fix multiple bugs and add various enhancements are now available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.
The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a command-line driven package management system capable of installing, uninstalling, verifying, querying, and updating software packages.

Bug Fixes

BZ#799317
Previously, presence of ELF files prevented cross-architecture obsoletion of packages on multi-arch systems, causing file conflicts when a supposedly obsoleted package was not removed. With this update, obsoletes are now processed for all matching package names regardless of their contents, allowing scenarios like eliminating no longer needed 32-bit package variant on 64-bit multi-arch systems to work as expected.
BZ#746190
Previously, a bug in execution of package scriptlets utilizing RPM's embedded Lua interpreter could have caused RPM's working directory to change inadvertently, resulting in a failure to install remaining local packages in the transaction unless absolute paths were used to address the packages on the "rpm" or "yum" command line. With this update, the Lua scriptlet execution now always saves and restores the current working directory, ensuring correct operation regardless of whether absolute or relative paths to packages are used.
BZ#785236
Previously, the "-D" shortcut option for "--define" was incorrectly taken as a shortcut for "--predefine", which led to incorrect macro evaluation when attempting to override macros from system configuration. The "-D" shortcut option now equals "--define" as intended and documented.
BZ#768516
Previously, RPM's "--last" query format output could have been ambiguous on multi-arch systems such as AMD64/Intel 64 as package architecture was omitted. Package's architecture is now included in "--last" output as well, making it non-ambiguous and also consistent with the default query output format.
BZ#664427
As the build dependencies recorded in source packages can vary depending on the architecture where the source packages happened to be generated, using the yum-builddep utility on a source package does not always report correct results. RPM's Python bindings have now been enhanced to permit yum-builddep to operate on spec files directly, ensuring that the correct build dependency information for the local system is used.
BZ#752119
Previously, certain multi-line brace constructs could have caused the automatic Perl dependency generator script to miss dependencies from pe. The generator has now been updated to properly handle these situations.

Enhancements

BZ#714678
When building packages on file systems with a very high number of files, the on-disk inode numbers could have been truncated in RPM's 32bit-integer-based hardlink tracking, resulting in incorrect package generation and, consequently, installation. RPM now uses per-package virtual numbering for hardlink tracking to eliminate the possibility of truncation, ensuring correct operation regardless of physical inode numbers at package build time, in a backwards compatible way.
BZ#736960
Previously, RPM ignored any exit codes from %pretrans package scriptlets. This was inconsistent with semantics of other scriptlets and prevented the possibility of early abort of package installation before the transaction really starts. RPM now treats %pretrans failure similarly to that of %pre: the package with failing %pretrans scriptlet is not installed at all.
BZ#761000
Packages for Fedora 17 or later require a special rpmlib() dependency provided by RPM to track the /usr merge that was completed in Fedora 17, otherwise it will no be possible to use, for example, mock chroot to install and build packages for that distribution. This special tracking dependency has been added to RPM now to allow Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 to be used as a host for building packages for these newer Fedora versions.
All users of RPM are advised to upgrade to these updated packages, which fix these bugs and add these enhancements.
Red Hat logoGithubRedditYoutubeTwitter

Lernen

Testen, kaufen und verkaufen

Communitys

Über Red Hat Dokumentation

Wir helfen Red Hat Benutzern, mit unseren Produkten und Diensten innovativ zu sein und ihre Ziele zu erreichen – mit Inhalten, denen sie vertrauen können.

Mehr Inklusion in Open Source

Red Hat hat sich verpflichtet, problematische Sprache in unserem Code, unserer Dokumentation und unseren Web-Eigenschaften zu ersetzen. Weitere Einzelheiten finden Sie in Red Hat Blog.

Über Red Hat

Wir liefern gehärtete Lösungen, die es Unternehmen leichter machen, plattform- und umgebungsübergreifend zu arbeiten, vom zentralen Rechenzentrum bis zum Netzwerkrand.

© 2024 Red Hat, Inc.