This allows to have an unique identifier for the builder image id against
different depgraphs combinations. The package fingerprint is not enough,
as an atom could have a difference deptree depending on the requires
constraints.
TODO: Don't use the full image name, but only the hash as a salt
(currently the salt contains ALSO a reference of the image-repository,
as such it doesn't allow to port a tree in a different docker registry)
Currently, it's used the archive.ReplaceFileTarWrapper
that requite a []byte of the files replaced. This is not
a good idea if files are big and instead could be better
in the near future reimplement ReplaceFileTarWrapper with
a callback that return io.Reader instead of []byte.
If a protected file is already present on target rootfs
it is created a file with the same prefix used in Gentoo:
._cfgXXXX_<filename>
Luet support now these priorities on read configuration file:
- command line option (if available)
- $PWD/.luet.yaml
- $HOME/.luet.yaml
- /etc/luet/luet.yaml
- Adds upgrade --universe and upgrade --universe --clean. It will
attempt to bring the system as much close as the content available in
the repositories. It differs from a standard upgrade which checks
directly that what is pulled in doesn't conflict with the system. In
this new way, we just query the SAT solver to decide that on our
behalf.
- Add uninstall --full-clean. It uses only the SAT solver to uninstall
the package and it will drop as many packages as required (including
revdeps of packages too.
Now it's possible disable color and emoji on standard
output with:
$> luet <cmd> --color=false --emoji=false
Hereinafter, the list of changes:
* Added logging option logging.color (default true)
* Added logging option logging.enable_emoji (default true)
* Added persistent flag --color
* Added persistent flag --emoji
Now it's possible logging to file is handled by the enable_logfile
option and by the path.
From cli is now possible:
* enable log to file with the option --enable-logfile
* modify the logfile path with the option --logfile/-l <path>