Merge EDSP 0.5 w/ multi-arch support for external solvers
[ntk/apt.git] / doc / external-dependency-solver-protocol.txt
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25252738 1# APT External Dependency Solver Protocol (EDSP) - version 0.5
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2
3This document describes the communication protocol between APT and
4external dependency solvers. The protocol is called APT EDSP, for "APT
5External Dependency Solver Protocol".
6
7
8## Components
9
10- **APT**: we know this one.
11- APT is equipped with its own **internal solver** for dependencies,
12 which is identified by the string `internal`.
13- **External solver**: an *external* software component able to resolve
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14 dependencies on behalf of APT.
15
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16At each interaction with APT, a single solver is in use. When there is
17a total of 2 or more solvers, internals or externals, the user can
18choose which one to use.
19
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20Each solver is identified by an unique string, the **solver
21name**. Solver names must be formed using only alphanumeric ASCII
22characters, dashes, and underscores; solver names must start with a
23lowercase ASCII letter. The special name `internal` denotes APT's
24internal solver, is reserved, and cannot be used by external solvers.
25
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26
27## Installation
28
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29Each external solver is installed as a file under Dir::Bin::Solvers (see
30below), which defaults to `/usr/lib/apt/solvers`. We will assume in the
31remainder of this section that such a default value is in effect.
32
33The naming scheme is `/usr/lib/apt/solvers/NAME`, where `NAME` is the
34name of the external solver.
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35
36Each file under `/usr/lib/apt/solvers` corresponding to an external
37solver must be executable.
38
39No non-solver files must be installed under `/usr/lib/apt/solvers`, so
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40that an index of available external solvers can be obtained by listing
41the content of that directory.
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42
43
44## Configuration
45
46Several APT options can be used to affect dependency solving in APT. An
47overview of them is given below. Please refer to proper APT
48configuration documentation for more, and more up to date, information.
49
98278a81 50- **APT::Solver**: the name of the solver to be used for
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51 dependency solving. Defaults to `internal`
52
53- **APT::Solver::Strict-Pinning**: whether pinning must be strictly
54 respected (as the internal solver does) or can be slightly deviated
55 from. Defaults to `yes`.
56
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57- **APT::Solver::NAME::Preferences** (where NAME is a solver name):
58 solver-specific user preference string used during dependency solving,
59 when the solver NAME is in use. Check solver-specific documentation
60 for what is supported here. Defaults to the empty string.
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62- **Dir::Bin::Solvers**: absolute path of the directory where to look for
63 external solvers. Defaults to `/usr/lib/apt/solvers`.
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64
65## Protocol
66
67When configured to use an external solver, APT will resort to it to
68decide which packages should be installed or removed.
69
70The interaction happens **in batch**: APT will invoke the external
71solver passing the current status of installed and available packages,
72as well as the user request to alter the set of installed packages. The
73external solver will compute a new complete set of installed packages
74and gives APT a "diff" listing of which *additional* packages should be
75installed and of which currently installed packages should be
76*removed*. (Note: the order in which those actions have to be performed
77will be up to APT to decide.)
78
79External solvers are invoked by executing them. Communications happens
80via the file descriptors: **stdin** (standard input) and **stdout**
81(standard output). stderr is not used by the EDSP protocol. Solvers can
82therefore use stderr to dump debugging information that could be
83inspected separately.
84
d911f277 85After invocation, the protocol passes through a sequence of phases:
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871. APT invokes the external solver
882. APT send to the solver a dependency solving **scenario**
893. The solver solves dependencies. During this phase the solver may
90 send, repeatedly, **progress** information to APT.
914. The solver sends back to APT an **answer**, i.e. either a *solution*
798d79f1 92 or an *error* report.
d911f277 935. The external solver exits
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94
95
96### Scenario
97
98A scenario is a text file encoded in a format very similar to the "Deb
99822" format (AKA "the format used by Debian `Packages` files"). A
100scenario consists of two distinct parts: a **request** and a **package
101universe**, occurring in that order. The request consists of a single
102Deb 822 stanza, while the package universe consists of several such
103stanzas. All stanzas occurring in a scenario are separated by an empty
104line.
105
106
107#### Request
108
109Within a dependency solving scenario, a request represents the action on
110installed packages requested by the user.
111
112A request is a single Deb 822 stanza opened by a mandatory Request field
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113and followed by a mixture of action, preference, and global
114configuration fields.
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115
116The value of the **Request:** field is a string describing the EDSP
117protocol which will be used to communicate. At present, the string must
25252738 118be `EDSP 0.5`. Request fields are mainly used to identify the beginning
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119of a request stanza; their actual values are otherwise not used by the
120EDSP protocol.
798d79f1 121
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122The following **configuration fields** are supported in request stanzas:
123
124- **Architecture:** (mandatory) The name of the *native* architecture on
125 the user machine (see also: `dpkg --print-architecture`)
126
127- **Architectures:** (optional, defaults to the native architecture) A
128 space separated list of *all* architectures known to APT (this is
129 roughly equivalent to the union of `dpkg --print-architecture` and
130 `dpkg --print-foreign-architectures`)
131
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132The following **action fields** are supported in request stanzas:
133
134- **Install:** (optional, defaults to the empty string) A space
135 separated list of package names, with *no version attached*, to
136 install. This field denotes a list of packages that the user wants to
137 install, usually via an APT `install` request.
138
139- **Remove:** (optional, defaults to the empty string) Same syntax of
140 Install. This field denotes a list of packages that the user wants to
141 remove, usually via APT `remove` or `purge` requests.
142
143- **Upgrade:** (optional, defaults to `no`). Allowed values: `yes`,
144 `no`. When set to `yes`, an upgrade of all installed packages has been
145 requested, usually via an APT `upgrade` request.
146
147- **Dist-Upgrade:** (optional, defaults to `no`). Allowed values: `yes`,
148 `no`. Same as Upgrade, but for APT `dist-upgrade` requests.
149
150- **Autoremove:** (optional, defaults to `no`). Allowed values: `yes`,
151 `no`. When set to `yes`, a clean up of unused automatically installed
152 packages has been requested, usually via an APT `autoremove` request.
153
154The following **preference fields** are supported in request stanzas:
155
156- **Strict-Pinning:** (optional, defaults to `yes`). Allowed values:
157 `yes`, `no`. When set to `yes`, APT pinning is strict, in the sense
158 that the solver must not propose to install packages which are not APT
159 candidates (see the `APT-Pin` and `APT-Candidate` fields in the
160 package universe). When set to `no`, the solver does only a best
161 effort attempt to install APT candidates. Usually, the value of this
162 field comes from the `APT::Solver::Strict-Pinning` configuration
163 option.
164
165- **Preferences:** a solver-specific optimization string, usually coming
166 from the `APT::Solver::Preferences` configuration option.
167
168
169#### Package universe
170
171A package universe is a list of Deb 822 stanzas, one per package, called
172**package stanzas**. Each package stanzas starts with a Package
173field. The following fields are supported in package stanzas:
174
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175- All fields contained in the dpkg database, with the exception of
176 fields marked as "internal" (see the manpage `dpkg-query (1)`). Among
177 those fields, the following are mandatory for all package stanzas:
178 Package, Version, Architecture.
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180 It is recommended not to pass the Description field to external
181 solvers or, alternatively, to trim it to the short description only.
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d911f277 183- **Installed:** (optional, defaults to `no`). Allowed values: `yes`,
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184 `no`. When set to `yes`, the corresponding package is currently
185 installed.
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186
187 Note: the Status field present in the dpkg database must not be passed
188 to the external solver, as it's an internal dpkg field. Installed and
189 other fields permit to encode the most relevant aspects of Status in
190 communications with solvers.
798d79f1 191
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192- **Hold:** (optional, defaults to `no`). Allowed values: `yes`,
193 `no`. When set to `yes`, the corresponding package is marked as "on
194 hold" by dpkg.
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195
196- **APT-ID:** (mandatory). Unique package identifier, according to APT.
197
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198- **APT-Pin:** (mandatory). Must be an integer. Package pin value,
199 according to APT policy.
798d79f1 200
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201- **APT-Candidate:** (optional, defaults to `no`). Allowed values:
202 `yes`, `no`. When set to `yes`, the corresponding package is the APT
203 candidate for installation among all available packages with the same
204 name.
205
206- **APT-Automatic:** (optional, defaults to `no`). Allowed values:
207 `yes`, `no`. When set to `yes`, the corresponding package is marked by
208 APT as automatic installed. Note that automatic installed packages
209 should be removed by the solver only when the Autoremove action is
210 requested (see Request section).
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212- **APT-Release:** (optional) The releases the package belongs to, according to
213 APT. The format of this field is multiline with one value per line and the
214 first line (the one containing the field name) empty. Each subsequent line
215 corresponds to one of the releases the package belongs to and looks like
216 this: `o=Debian,a=unstable,n=sid,l=Debian,c=main`. That is, each release line
217 is a comma-separated list of "key=value" pairs, each of which denotes a
218 Release file entry (Origin, Label, Codename, etc.) in the format of
219 APT_PREFERENCES(5).
220
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221### Answer
222
223An answer from the external solver to APT is either a *solution* or an
224*error*.
225
226The following invariant on **exit codes** must hold true. When the
227external solver is *able to find a solution*, it will write the solution
228to standard output and then exit with an exit code of 0. When the
d911f277 229external solver is *unable to find a solution* (and s aware of that), it
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230will write an error to standard output and then exit with an exit code
231of 0. An exit code other than 0 will be interpreted as a solver crash
232with no meaningful error about dependency resolution to convey to the
233user.
234
235
236#### Solution
237
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238A solution is a list of Deb 822 stanzas. Each of them could be an
239install stanza (telling APT to install a specific package), a remove
240stanza (telling APT to remove one), or an autoremove stanza (telling APT
241about the *future* possibility of removing a package using the
242Autoremove action).
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243
244An **install stanza** starts with an Install field and supports the
245following fields:
246
247- **Install:** (mandatory). The value is a package identifier,
248 referencing one of the package stanzas of the package universe via its
249 APT-ID field.
798d79f1 250
d911f277 251- All fields supported by package stanzas.
798d79f1 252
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253**Remove stanzas** are similar to install stanzas, but have **Remove**
254fields instead of Install fields.
798d79f1 255
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256**Autoremove stanzas** are similar to install stanzas, but have
257**Autoremove** fields instead of Install fields. Autoremove stanzas
258should be output so that APT can inform the user of which packages they
259can now autoremove, as a consequence of the executed action. However,
260this protocol makes no assumption on the fact that a subsequent
261invocation of an Autoremove action will actually remove the very same
262packages indicated by Autoremove stanzas in the former solution.
263
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264In terms of expressivity, install and remove stanzas can carry one
265single field each, as APT-IDs are enough to pinpoint packages to be
266installed/removed. Nonetheless, for protocol readability, it is
267recommended that solvers either add unconditionally the fields Package,
268Version, and Architecture to all install/remove stanzas or,
269alternatively, that they support a `--verbose` command line flag that
270explicitly enables the output of those fields in solutions.
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271
272
273#### Error
274
275An error is a single Deb 822 stanza, starting the field Error. The
276following fields are supported in error stanzas:
277
278- **Error:** (mandatory). The value of this field is ignored, although
279 it should be a unique error identifier, such as a UUID.
280
281- **Message:** (mandatory). The value of this field is a text string,
282 meant to be read by humans, that explains the cause of the solver
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283 error. Message fields might be multi-line, like the Description field
284 in the dpkg database. The first line conveys a short message, which
285 can be explained in more details using subsequent lines.
286
287
288### Progress
289
290During dependency solving, an external solver may send progress
291information to APT using **progress stanzas**. A progress stanza starts
292with the Progress field and might contain the following fields:
293
294- **Progress:** (mandatory). The value of this field is a date and time
295 timestamp, in RFC 2822 format. The timestamp provides a time
296 annotation for the progress report.
297
298- **Percentage:** (optional). An integer from 0 to 100, representing the
299 completion of the dependency solving process, as declared by the
300 solver.
301
302- **Message:** (optional). A textual message, meant to be read by the
303 APT user, telling what is going on within the dependency solving
304 (e.g. the current phase of dependency solving, as declared by the
305 solver).
306
307
308# Future extensions
309
310Potential future extensions to this protocol, listed in no specific
311order, include:
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313- fixed error types to identify common failures across solvers and
314 enable APT to translate error messages
315- structured error data to explain failures in terms of packages and
316 dependencies