I'd be very surprised if this wasn't a cause of many of our problems in Linux
too. I suspect a common case is someone querying the DB (`rpm -qa`) when an
transaction happens, and then theoretically-read-only operation ends up writing
stale data back, but I haven't actually had the time to sit
Um, *this* issue is about RPM behavior on OS X and a sandbox policy prohibiting
writes.
Open an issue with details with details about your Facebook problems if you
wish.
The output of db_stat showing the state of locks is usually the starting point
to identifying the root cause.
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Hence this Issue was filed. :)
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@jayzmh: the issue with dcrpm is the costly detection and possibly imperfect
analysis of "bad actors" not how often db_recover is run. dcrpm is treating a
symptom rather than solving the root cause of whatever problem exists.
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Before this commit, rpm simply did not take hardlinks into account when
calculating disk space requirements. This made it fail spectaculary for
packages that contain a high number of hardlinks, like glibc-locale.
We now "bind" the file size to the last hardlink member. This is still not