The currently included Qt has known security issues and is outdated. This
can now be replaced by downloading and installing the Qt installer using
the sudo= build field. @relan's provisioner system will also replace this
once that's done. There are only two apps that currently use the Qt stuff:
* csd.qtproject.minesweeper
* org.openorienteering.mapper
We never allow git via SSH or password/key access, and right now, this
causes things to hang forever. This sets things up to fail quickly
with invalid ssh connections.
BatchMode=yes - passphrase/password querying will be disabled.
StrictHostKeyChecking=yes - never automatically prompt, or add host keys to
the ~/.ssh/known_hosts file, and refuse to connect to hosts whose host key
has changed.
Now that fdroidserver requires Python 3, there's no need to tune sshd for
an old version of Paramiko because Ubuntu 14.04 does not have
python3-paramiko package in its repositories:
https://packages.ubuntu.com/search?keywords=python3-paramiko
We can safely assume that Ubuntu 14.04 users have installed a more recent
version of Paramiko from PIP.
The old hash does not work anymore, at least for platform-27. Where this
new one comes from:
1. Download command line tools from
https://developer.android.com/studio/index.html#command-tools
2. Unzip the package
3. Run ./tools/bin/sdkmanager --licenses
4. Read and accept licenses
5. Find the hash in ./licenses/android-sdk-license
Google releases new API SDKs quite rarely (about 2 times a year), but when
they do this, many apps quickly start using it. Allow downloading new API
SDKs to avoid waiting for the next buildserver rebuild.
Now that the download file name and type seems to have stabilized, I
think we no longer need to manually specify each new added release in
this script to unpack.
closes#331
Google is making gradle automatically download Android SDK components that
are needed by the build, but not already present. We need to support that
since it would be a lot of work to fight it. Plus, since each build starts
from the fresh snapshot, it should not be such a big deal to let each
build install stuff during the process.
closes#268
The ever troublesome gpjenkins box needs to use HTTPS mirrors. Plus it
improves the security of the buildserver, since there have been CVEs that
HTTPS would protect against:
https://www.debian.org/security/2016/dsa-3733
Google is pushing gradle towards downloading all the SDK components that it
needs, rather than having a preconfigured SDK installed. The buildserver
strongly supports the old model, with added checksum checking even. We can
still support the old model by pre-configuring the SDK and locking it down
as root. This can then also support the new model by setting the file perms
so that new packages can be auto-installed, but they cannot overwrite any
packages that come pre-installed and pre-verified.
fdroiddata!2096
closes#247
gradle will now automatically download and install missing bits of the
Android SDK. While we prefer to have the SDK packages fully verified, we
should allow this behavior on the buildserver to ensure that builds work
even when the buildserver can't be updated. Since each build starts from a
clean snapshot, this auto-installed build-tools will only be used for the
single build, so it won't affect other apps.
The new ConstraintLayout library in Android Support has some new custom way
of handling the license. I suspect that they are going to use this new way
with all of the bits that gradle downloads. We also have to support it for
apps that use it, including soon fdroidclient.
fdroiddata!2094
ci-images!1
These should be reasonably backwards compatible, and there is already
automake1.11 for those that need a version that old. As for cmake, there
are five apps that seem to it:
com.amaze.filemanager
org.dolphinemu.dolphinemu
org.navitproject.navit
org.yabause.android
org.videolan.vlc
It looks like VLC is the only app that is currently building and using
cmake in the most recent releases. Some of them used to use cmake, but no
longer.
Sometimes, a build process requires newer versions of build tools than are
available in Debian/stable. Oftentimes, using the package straight from
Debian/testing works fine when a package is not available as a backport.
libtool 2.4.6 is needed for building VLC, so it is one example of this.
The preferences file sets up the apt "pinning" so that all updates are not
installed from testing, only the packages that are requested by adding
"/testing" after then package name.
closes#224
In order to install a package from jessie-backports, apt-get has to be told
to get it from there rather than the main archive. It will not use
jessie-backports by default even if it is added as an apt source.
closes#224