Source: vcdimager Version: 0.7.24+dfsg-0.2 Severity: serious Tags: buster sid User: debian...@lists.debian.org Usertags: qa-ftbfs-20170805 qa-ftbfs Justification: FTBFS on amd64
Hi, During a rebuild of all packages in sid, your package failed to build on amd64. Relevant part (hopefully): > x86_64-linux-gnu-g++ -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I.. -I.. -I../include/ -I../lib/ > -g -O2 -MT info2.o -MD -MP -MF .deps/info2.Tpo -c -o info2.o info2.cpp > In file included from ../include/libvcd/info.h:37:0, > from info2.cpp:34: > /usr/include/cdio/iso9660.h:277:45: error: flexible array member > 'iso9660_dir_s::filename' not at end of 'struct iso9660_pvd_s' > char filename[EMPTY_ARRAY_SIZE]; > ^ > /usr/include/cdio/iso9660.h:310:20: note: next member 'char > iso9660_pvd_s::root_directory_filename' declared here > char root_directory_filename; /**< Is '\\0' or root > ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > /usr/include/cdio/iso9660.h:283:8: note: in the definition of 'struct > iso9660_pvd_s' > struct iso9660_pvd_s { > ^~~~~~~~~~~~~ > /usr/include/cdio/iso9660.h:277:45: error: flexible array member > 'iso9660_dir_s::filename' not at end of 'struct iso9660_svd_s' > char filename[EMPTY_ARRAY_SIZE]; > ^ > /usr/include/cdio/iso9660.h:424:20: note: next member 'char > iso9660_svd_s::root_directory_filename' declared here > char root_directory_filename; /**< Is '\\0' or root > ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > /usr/include/cdio/iso9660.h:392:8: note: in the definition of 'struct > iso9660_svd_s' > struct iso9660_svd_s { > ^~~~~~~~~~~~~ > Makefile:450: recipe for target 'info2.o' failed > make[3]: *** [info2.o] Error 1 The full build log is available from: http://aws-logs.debian.net/2017/08/05/vcdimager_0.7.24+dfsg-0.2_unstable.log A list of current common problems and possible solutions is available at http://wiki.debian.org/qa.debian.org/FTBFS . You're welcome to contribute! About the archive rebuild: The rebuild was done on EC2 VM instances from Amazon Web Services, using a clean, minimal and up-to-date chroot. Every failed build was retried once to eliminate random failures.