This error was happening on fresh snap install (not upgrade):
```
install: cannot stat '/snap/fwupd/1065/etc/dbus-1/system.d/org.freedesktop.fwupd.conf': No such file or directory
```
Fixes 41a25be6 ("Move D-Bus conf file to datadir/dbus-1/system.d")
Using the library instead of the command line tools provides a more
stable interface. This implementation only fetches PCR 0 for all
available hash algorithms since this is the only PCR that is actually
used in fwupd.
This also means we now include a flashrom subproject as no distro currently has
a flashrom new enough to build the plugin.
Signed-off-by: Richard Hughes <richard@hughsie.com>
Signed-off-by: Artur Raglis <artur.raglis@3mdeb.com>
Signed-off-by: Maciej Pijanowski <maciej.pijanowski@3mdeb.com>
The systemd shutdown script gets called after /snap/fwupd/* gets
unmounted meaning it can't be used to do the activation.
Explicitly check that the symlink for /snap/fwupd/current is mounted
when calling the script.
If a device reports that qmi-pdc is supported (e.g. DW5821e that
supports both fastboot and qmi-pdc), we'll end up first running the
fastboot installation before doing the qmi-pdc installation procedure.
These changes also make sure that the MM device inhibition is kept for
as long as the whole process is ongoing. Only after the last method is
run, the inhibition will be removed.
In order to handle devices being exposed in the system while the MM
inhibition is in place, e.g. to be able to run qmi-pdc after fastboot,
a simple udev based watcher is included, which will take care of
creating the FuMmDevice that is not associated to any modem currently
exposed by MM, but that shares all the details of the original device.
This new logic assumes that the devices don't change their USB layout
during a firmware upgrade, which is not a very good assumption, but it
works for the case at hand. If this is not the case, we may need to
end up doing some custom AT port probing instead of relying on the
original one reported by MM being still valid (note that we don't rely
on the device name, as that may change if some other device is plugged
in the system while we're doing the update, we rely on the USB
interface number).
This is intended for devices that it is not safe to immediately activate
the firmware. It may be called at a more convenient time instead.
Both fwupdmgr and fwupdtool support the feature.
- if called at runtime with fwupdmgr it uses the daemon
- during shutdown fwupdtool uses the pending.db to perform this feature.
The snap build uses xmlb as a subproject. libxmlb actually does
need the uuid-dev dependency.
Resolves this failure:
```
Couldn't use fallback subproject in subprojects/libxmlb for the dependency xmlb
Reason: subprojects/libxmlb/meson.build:107: Native dependency 'uuid' not found
meson.build:158:0: ERROR: Native dependency 'xmlb' not found
```
This also allows us to write mixed-endian structures and adds tests. As part of
this commit we've also changed the API of something that's not yet been in any
tarball release, so no pitchforks please.
The current libxmlb dependency requires this and when run in subproject
mode will cause failures otherwise.
Also bump the snap to use meson 0.47.2 to fix snap build due to this
failure.
The libxmlb library is much faster to query, and does not require the daemon
to parse the XML metadata at startup. It's a zero-copy mmap design that is more
modern and less clunky.
RSS has reduced from 3Mb (peak 3.61Mb) to 1Mb (peak 1.07Mb) and the startup
time has gone from 280ms to 250ms.
Workaround for https://bugs.launchpad.net/launchpad/+bug/1797366
It was previously a symlink to contrib/snap/snapcraft-stable.yaml
however infrastructure changes in launchpad have caused this to break
automatic snap builds.