Somewhat embarrassingly we were not actually showing the 8bitdo manual detach
images because... we were not actually exporting them. I don't know how this
ever worked in GNOME Software, but it would also explain the low 'success' rate
of the 8bitdo firmware on the LVFS.
This will also be used by Logitech in the future for the C1 Unifying devices.
To work in gnome-softare, this also needs the matching functionality to call
gs_app_add_screenshot() with the new exported data.
When the LVFS switches over to outputting <issues> rather than appending to the
update description we need to be in a position to display the new data.
This allows the daemon to set the base directory to store remotes.
This fixes issues with systemd where the installation prefix was set
to soemthing not writable such as `/usr/local` but systemd
`STATE_DIRECTORY` doesn't match up.
```
$ fwupdmgr refresh
Fetching metadata https://cdn.fwupd.org/downloads/firmware.xml.gz
Downloading… [***************************************] Less than one minute remaining…
Fetching signature https://cdn.fwupd.org/downloads/firmware.xml.gz.asc
Failed to update metadata for lvfs: Error creating directory /usr/local/var/lib/fwupd/remotes.d: Read-only file system
```
It should also hopefully help with immutable systems.
Users are getting confused when they're being told that AC power is required
when they are already on AC power... but the battery is too low to perform the
update.
Rather than wrapping every sync D-Bus call with a GTask helper (hundreds of
additional lines of code and dozens of new entrypoints in libfwupd) I think it
is best for client software wanting async operation just uses the D-Bus
interface. I consider it part of the API as much as the shared library and
I don't see it changing in a non-compatible way any time soon.
Exposing these already-exported symbols allows client software to use the
demarshalling functionality and to operate on the GObjects directly from an
existing GDBus async return value.
I'm getting a bit fed up with failed reports from arch users where they just
have a broken system. I don't think it's useful to upload to the LVFS or notify
the vendor about failures like this.
This allows several things, for instance:
* Adding or removing blacklisted plugins or devices
* Changing the idle timeout where allowed
...without a user needing to manually modify a configuration file.
Some firmwares only update one part of the system, e.g. the EC or ME firmware.
Other updates include all the updates needed for the whole system, and vendors
have been doing different things with the component name due to this.
To fix, add an enumerated set of firmware 'categories' that can be set by the
uploader in the metainfo.xml file (or changed the LVFS) which automatically
set the name suffix.
Only append the translated version in the client when <categories> has
not been set, as the LVFS is still operating in compatibility mode and setting
the <name> with the prefix. Add the support to fwupd now so we can switch in
about 9 months time.
On some hardware the SHA1 checksum is not set and so we want to use the SHA256
hash value as well.
The LVFS doesn't currently read the ChecksumDevice value and so nothing will
explode serverside when changing this type from 'string' to 'array of strings'.
This allows us to one day implement 'reinstall', allows us to have a more useful
`get-releases` command and also means we can add other reasons for blocking the
release in the future.
In the future we'll want to use this flag to signify if the release is an
upgrade, downgrade, below the version-lowest, or if it is locked in some way.
This feature is turned on with the new fwupdtool option `--enable-json-state`
The intended use case is for ChromeOS to be able to save information about
devices on the system when `fwupdtool update` was run to display in the UX at
a later time.
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.