This reverts commit 89c7d2ae30a43ba2960ce14cddd50f8d8a7da92f, which
was causing kernel modules to be installed in a location other than
/lib/modules/$(uname -r), preventing modprobe from locating them.
CI builds no longer contain the Pagure UID in the package release:
https://github.com/CentOS-PaaS-SIG/upstream-fedora-pipeline/pull/199
This reverts commit 8044841427b22ab04ec6dd8781fbe4be2be411df.
There's an issue with the weak-updates script that needs to
be fixed. Revert this for now.
From the original RHEL patch:
This extra '+' causes problems with the regular expression used with
/usr/lib/rpm/find-debuginfo.sh script from rpm-build, which is used to filter
the debug files to the corresponding debuginfo packages. The '+' character
in the release is interpreted as a regular expression operator and the
debuginfo filter fails, with the build failing on an empty debuginfo file list.
Which means we need to escape the extra '+' character if we want debuginfo
filter to work. I tried to use '\' to escape, but rpm "eats" that, in testing
'[+]' worked so is what I'm using to fix/workaround this problem. When RHEL 8
drops the the extra +<number> in the future, we can remove this fix/workaround.
This problem is likely to come up so just add it in now.
Fedora does some validation on config options to catch
errors. There may be cases when we want to turn off that
checking because it doesn't actually matter. Make this a
full --with option to make it easier to turn off.
Some of the downstream users want to package some modules for
internal use only. While Fedora isn't internal, it's still
useful to have packaging aligned. Add a few modules to this
package.
Other products downstream of Fedora offer kernel ABI guarantees.
Fedora doesn't offer this and have no plans to do so but it's
useful to at least have the packaging in our tree. Add support.
Fedora currently only supports x86_64 secureboot signing.
There's ongoing work to enable other arches though. For now,
just bring in the packaging support with some of it commented
out.
While Fedora doesn't officially support kpatch, there's work
being done to enable kpatch elsewhere. Add the packaging work
but don't actually build anything.