The reason I want to remove the code is that it wasn't meant for
Desktop. It works on Desktop when using wayland but this is was
definitely not the intent back then. As I say in
https://code.launchpad.net/~adrien/ubuntu/+source/openssl/+git/openssl/+merge/466581
, I don't think the postinst can be
Well, we're not in the world of needrestart just yet, it's only seeded in
Server.
On Thu, 30 May 2024, 04:20 Seth Arnold, <244...@bugs.launchpad.net>
wrote:
> Adrien, thanks so much for digging into this again.
>
> This is so very complicated, why does openssl need special handling in
> the world
Adrien, thanks so much for digging into this again.
This is so very complicated, why does openssl need special handling in
the world of needrestart? My inclination is to remove all this
complexity and address any shortcomings of needrestart in the
needrestart package. Am I off base?
Thanks
--
Y
I did some archeology because I'm trying to get rid of the Ubuntu delta
compared to Debian.
I think the code change in 1.0.0e-2ubuntu3 is problematic. No blame: the
shell script was already hairy and difficult to understand and in order
to spot that, I had to identify a chunk of dead code, remove
A web server is supposed to retrieve data from database, run application
logic, write back to database if needed, write an HTML document or JSON
object to output, and wait for the next request. Ideally, it's stateless
between requests.
A desktop application, on the other hand, is more likely to ha
@mdeslaur: Again, thank you for your reply! Pardon my ignorance but I've
never quite understood why that is - why is an update of libssl
different from an update of other libs where you can simply restart the
depending applications/daemons? And why is it different on a desktop?
Maybe these question
@khaled-blah: yes, on a server, it should do the usual and add a reboot
required blurb to the motd.
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Title:
Spurious reboot notifications caused b
@mdeslaur: Thank you for your reply! Does that mean that it is supposed
to happen on an Ubuntu server system?
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Title:
Spurious reboot notification
@khaled-blah: please file a new bug, you are not supposed to see reboot
notifications when openssl gets upgraded on a desktop system.
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Title:
Spur
On Ubuntu 14.04 this bug still persists. Is there any reason why libssl
would require different treatment than other libraries? I.e. why
wouldn't it suffice to restart services depending on libssl or
libcrypto?
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The problem still exists. Xubuntu 11.10 on a desktop, the only
application with an open window that is obviously using SSL is Firefox,
the only update was for libssl and openssl, and Update Manager still
tells me a reboot is required.
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On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 12:54 AM, Marc Deslauriers <
marc.deslauri...@canonical.com> wrote:
> Right now, the best way we have of determining if we're a server or a
> desktop is to check if X is running. It's not ideal, and suggestions are
> welcome.
>
I think my question is suggesting that there r
Right now, the best way we have of determining if we're a server or a
desktop is to check if X is running. It's not ideal, and suggestions are
welcome.
We need a way for sysadmins to get notifications that some of the major
automatic updates they are installing, such as openssl and the kernel,
req
How do you distinguish a server from a desktop, and what about servers that
don't run ssl-using daemons?
Thomas
On Oct 4, 2011 2:05 PM, "Marc Deslauriers"
wrote:
> We've already removed reboot notifications from openssl on desktops, I'm
> just talking about servers.
>
> --
> You received this bug
We've already removed reboot notifications from openssl on desktops, I'm
just talking about servers.
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Title:
Spurious reboot notifications caused
On Tue, Oct 4, 2011 at 3:37 PM, Marc Deslauriers <
marc.deslauri...@canonical.com> wrote:
> Actually, we do want a reboot notification when we issue security
> updates. When we issue security updates, we don't enter the major
> upgrade section, as we don't want the update to automatically restart
Actually, we do want a reboot notification when we issue security
updates. When we issue security updates, we don't enter the major
upgrade section, as we don't want the update to automatically restart
services, but we do want the sysadmin to perform a planned
reboot/service restart as the running
This bug was fixed in the package openssl - 1.0.0e-2ubuntu3
---
openssl (1.0.0e-2ubuntu3) oneiric; urgency=low
* Only issue a restart required notification on important upgrades, and
not other actions such as reconfiguration or initial installation.
(LP: #244250)
-- Anders
Agreed. It really doesn't make sense to issue the reboot-required
notification when we aren't doing the whole restart-services dance.
I'll look at the branch you proposed for this.
** Changed in: openssl (Ubuntu)
Status: Fix Released => In Progress
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This bug is not fixed. It’s still the case that libssl1.0.0 generates a
spurious reboot notification during reconfiguration, on initial
installation, and on non-critical upgrades, as originally reported. The
only change in 1.0.0e-2ubuntu1 is that this no longer happens at all on
systems running /
This bug was fixed in the package openssl - 1.0.0e-2ubuntu1
---
openssl (1.0.0e-2ubuntu1) oneiric; urgency=low
* Resynchronise with Debian, fixes CVE-2011-1945, CVE-2011-3207 and
CVE-2011-3210 (LP: #850608). Remaining changes:
- debian/libssl1.0.0.postinst:
+ Display a
** Branch linked: lp:~sbeattie/ubuntu/oneiric/openssl/lp850608
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Title:
Spurious reboot notifications caused by libssl upgrades.
To manage notific
** Changed in: openssl (Ubuntu)
Assignee: Luke Yelavich (themuso) => Marc Deslauriers (mdeslaur)
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Title:
Spurious reboot notifications caused
** Tags added: glucid lucid
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Title:
Spurious reboot notifications caused by libssl upgrades.
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Still seen on my 8.04 development workstation and my 10.10 laptop.
Based on Colin Watson's comment, I guess it should work like this:
1. Automatically restart services that depend on SSL, just as we do
when the services' packages are upgraded.
2. Give a "logout recommended" notice (not a "reboo
I've changed the description to more precisely characterize the
actionable problem here, namely a buggy postinst script that sends
spurious reboot notifications.
** Summary changed:
- reboot every single update in the past month on ubuntu hardy nearly.
massively decreasing my uptime.
+ Spurious
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