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1 | # APT External Installation Planner Protocol (EIPP) - version 0.1 | |
2 | ||
3 | This document describes the communication protocol between APT and | |
4 | external installation planner. The protocol is called APT EIPP, for "APT | |
5 | External Installation Planner Protocol". | |
6 | ||
7 | ||
8 | ## Terminology | |
9 | ||
10 | In the following we use the term **architecture qualified package name** | |
11 | (or *arch-qualified package names* for short) to refer to package | |
12 | identifiers of the form "package:arch" where "package" is a package name | |
13 | and "arch" a dpkg architecture. | |
14 | ||
15 | ||
16 | ## Components | |
17 | ||
18 | - **APT**: we know this one. | |
19 | - APT is equipped with its own **internal planner** for the order of | |
20 | package installation (and removal) which is identified by the string | |
21 | `internal`. | |
22 | - **External planner**: an *external* software component able to plan an | |
23 | installation on behalf of APT. | |
24 | ||
25 | At each interaction with APT, a single planner is in use. When there is | |
26 | a total of 2 or more planners, internals or externals, the user can | |
27 | choose which one to use. | |
28 | ||
29 | Each planner is identified by an unique string, the **planner name**. | |
30 | Planner names must be formed using only alphanumeric ASCII characters, | |
31 | dashes, and underscores; planner names must start with a lowercase ASCII | |
32 | letter. The special name `internal` denotes APT's internal planner, is | |
33 | reserved, and cannot be used by external planners. | |
34 | ||
35 | ||
36 | ## Installation | |
37 | ||
38 | Each external planner is installed as a file under Dir::Bin::Planners | |
39 | (see below), which defaults to `/usr/lib/apt/planners`. We will assume | |
40 | in the remainder of this section that such a default value is in effect. | |
41 | ||
42 | The naming scheme is `/usr/lib/apt/planners/NAME`, where `NAME` is the | |
43 | name of the external planner. | |
44 | ||
45 | Each file under `/usr/lib/apt/planners` corresponding to an external | |
46 | planner must be executable. | |
47 | ||
48 | No non-planner files must be installed under `/usr/lib/apt/planners`, so | |
49 | that an index of available external planners can be obtained by listing | |
50 | the content of that directory. | |
51 | ||
52 | ||
53 | ## Configuration | |
54 | ||
55 | Several APT options can be used to affect installation planing in APT. | |
56 | An overview of them is given below. Please refer to proper APT | |
57 | configuration documentation for more, and more up to date, information. | |
58 | ||
59 | - **APT::Planner**: the name of the planner to be used for dependency | |
60 | solving. Defaults to `internal` | |
61 | ||
62 | - **Dir::Bin::Planners**: absolute path of the directory where to look | |
63 | for external solvers. Defaults to `/usr/lib/apt/planners`. | |
64 | ||
65 | ||
66 | ## Protocol | |
67 | ||
68 | When configured to use an external planner, APT will resort to it to | |
69 | decide in which order packages should be installed, configured and | |
70 | removed. | |
71 | ||
72 | The interaction happens **in batch**: APT will invoke the external | |
73 | planner passing the current status of (half-)installed packages and of | |
74 | packages which should be installed, as well as a request denoting the | |
75 | packages to install, reinstall, remove and purge. The external planner | |
76 | will compute a valid plan of when and how to call the low-level package | |
77 | manager (like dpkg) with each package to satisfy the request. | |
78 | ||
79 | External planners are invoked by executing them. Communications happens | |
80 | via the file descriptors: **stdin** (standard input) and **stdout** | |
81 | (standard output). stderr is not used by the EIPP protocol. Planners can | |
82 | therefore use stderr to dump debugging information that could be | |
83 | inspected separately. | |
84 | ||
85 | After invocation, the protocol passes through a sequence of phases: | |
86 | ||
87 | 1. APT invokes the external planner | |
88 | 2. APT send to the planner an installation planner **scenario** | |
89 | 3. The planner calculates the order. During this phase the planner may | |
90 | send, repeatedly, **progress** information to APT. | |
91 | 4. The planner sends back to APT an **answer**, i.e. either a *solution* | |
92 | or an *error* report. | |
93 | 5. The external planner exits | |
94 | ||
95 | ||
96 | ### Scenario | |
97 | ||
98 | A scenario is a text file encoded in a format very similar to the "Deb | |
99 | 822" format (AKA "the format used by Debian `Packages` files"). A | |
100 | scenario consists of two distinct parts: a **request** and a **package | |
101 | universe**, occurring in that order. The request consists of a single | |
102 | Deb 822 stanza, while the package universe consists of several such | |
103 | stanzas. All stanzas occurring in a scenario are separated by an empty | |
104 | line. | |
105 | ||
106 | ||
107 | #### Request | |
108 | ||
109 | Within an installation planner scenario, a request represents the action | |
110 | on packages requested by the user explicitly as well as potentially | |
111 | additions calculated by a dependency resolver which the user has | |
112 | accepted. | |
113 | ||
114 | An installation planner is not allowed to suggest the modification of | |
115 | package states (e.g. removing additional packages) even if it can't | |
116 | calculate a solution otherwise – the planner must error out in such | |
117 | a case. An exception is made for scenarios which contain packages which | |
118 | aren't completely installed (like half-installed or trigger-awaiting): | |
119 | Solvers are free to move these packages to a fully installed state (but | |
120 | are still forbidden to remove them). | |
121 | ||
122 | A request is a single Deb 822 stanza opened by a mandatory Request field | |
123 | and followed by a mixture of action, preference, and global | |
124 | configuration fields. | |
125 | ||
126 | The value of the **Request:** field is a string describing the EIPP | |
127 | protocol which will be used to communicate and especially which answers | |
128 | APT will understand. At present, the string must be `EIPP 0.1`. Request | |
129 | fields are mainly used to identify the beginning of a request stanza; | |
130 | their actual values are otherwise not used by the EIPP protocol. | |
131 | ||
132 | The following **configuration fields** are supported in request stanzas: | |
133 | ||
134 | - **Architecture:** (mandatory) The name of the *native* architecture on | |
135 | the user machine (see also: `dpkg --print-architecture`) | |
136 | ||
137 | - **Architectures:** (optional, defaults to the native architecture) A | |
138 | space separated list of *all* architectures known to APT (this is | |
139 | roughly equivalent to the union of `dpkg --print-architecture` and | |
140 | `dpkg --print-foreign-architectures`) | |
141 | ||
142 | The following **action fields** are supported in request stanzas: | |
143 | ||
144 | - **Install:** (optional, defaults to the empty string) A space | |
145 | separated list of arch-qualified package names, with *no version | |
146 | attached*, to install. This field denotes a list of packages that the | |
147 | user wants to install, usually via an APT `install` request. | |
148 | ||
149 | - **Remove:** (optional, defaults to the empty string) Same syntax of | |
150 | Install. This field denotes a list of packages that the user wants to | |
151 | remove, usually via APT `remove` or `purge` requests. | |
152 | ||
153 | - **ReInstall:** (optional, defaults to the empty string) Same syntax of | |
154 | Install. This field denotes a list of packages which are installed, | |
155 | but should be reinstalled again e.g. because files shipped by that | |
156 | package were removed or corrupted accidentally, usually requested via | |
157 | an APT `install` request with the `--reinstall` flag. | |
158 | ||
159 | The following **preference fields** are supported in request stanzas: | |
160 | ||
161 | - **Planner:** (optional, defaults to the empty string) a purely | |
162 | informational string specifying to which planner this request was send | |
163 | initially. | |
164 | ||
165 | - **Immediate-Configuration:** (option, unset by default) A boolean | |
166 | value defining if the planner should try to configure all packages as | |
167 | quickly as possible (true) or shouldn't perform any kind of immediate | |
168 | configuration at all (false). If not explicitly set with this field | |
169 | the planner is free to pick either mode or implementing e.g. a mode | |
170 | which configures only packages immediately if they are flagged as | |
171 | `Essential` (or are dependencies of packages marked as `Essential`). | |
172 | ||
173 | - **Allow-Temporary-Remove-of-Essentials** (optional, defaults to `no`). | |
174 | A boolean value allowing the planner (if set to yes) to temporarily | |
175 | remove an essential package. Associated with the APT::Force-LoopBreak | |
176 | configuration option its main use is highlighting that planners who do | |
177 | temporary removes must take special care in terms of essentials. Legit | |
178 | uses of this option by users is very uncommon, traditionally | |
179 | a situation in which it is needed indicates a packaging error. | |
180 | ||
181 | ||
182 | #### Package universe | |
183 | ||
184 | A package universe is a list of Deb 822 stanzas, one per package, called | |
185 | **package stanzas**. Each package stanzas starts with a Package | |
186 | field. The following fields are supported in package stanzas: | |
187 | ||
188 | - The fields Package, Version, Architecture (all mandatory) and | |
189 | Multi-Arch, Pre-Depends, Depends, Conflicts, Breaks, Essential | |
190 | (optional) as they are contained in the dpkg database (see the manpage | |
191 | `dpkg-query (1)`). | |
192 | ||
193 | - **Status:** (optional, defaults to `uninstalled`). Allowed values are | |
194 | the "package status" names as listed in `dpkg-query (1)` and visible | |
195 | e.g. in the dpkg database as the second value in the space separated | |
196 | list of values in the Status field there. In other words: Neither | |
197 | desired action nor error flags are present in this field in EIPP! | |
198 | ||
199 | - **APT-ID:** (mandatory). Unique package identifier, according to APT. | |
200 | ||
201 | ||
202 | ### Answer | |
203 | ||
204 | An answer from the external planner to APT is either a *solution* or an | |
205 | *error*. | |
206 | ||
207 | The following invariant on **exit codes** must hold true. When the | |
208 | external planner is *able to find a solution*, it will write the | |
209 | solution to standard output and then exit with an exit code of 0. When | |
210 | the external planner is *unable to find a solution* (and is aware of | |
211 | that), it will write an error to standard output and then exit with an | |
212 | exit code of 0. An exit code other than 0 will be interpreted as | |
213 | a planner crash with no meaningful error about dependency resolution to | |
214 | convey to the user. | |
215 | ||
216 | ||
217 | #### Solution | |
218 | ||
219 | A solution is a list of Deb 822 stanzas. Each of them could be an: | |
220 | ||
221 | - unpack stanza to cause the extraction of a package to the disk | |
222 | ||
223 | - configure stanza to cause an unpacked package to be configured and | |
224 | therefore the installation to be completed | |
225 | ||
226 | - remove stanza to cause the removal of a package from the system | |
227 | ||
228 | An **unpack stanza** starts with an Unpack field and supports the | |
229 | following fields: | |
230 | ||
231 | - **Unpack:** (mandatory). The value is a package identifier, | |
232 | referencing one of the package stanzas of the package universe via its | |
233 | APT-ID field. | |
234 | ||
235 | - All fields supported by package stanzas. | |
236 | ||
237 | **Configure** and **Remove stanzas** require and support the same | |
238 | fields with the exception of the Unpack field which is replaced in | |
239 | these instances with the Configure or Remove field respectively. | |
240 | ||
241 | The order of the stanzas is significant (unlike in the EDSP protocol), | |
242 | with the first stanza being the first performed action. If multiple | |
243 | stanzas of the same type appear in direct succession the order in such | |
244 | a set isn't significant through. | |
245 | ||
246 | The solution needs to be valid (it is not allowed to configure a package | |
247 | before it was unpacked, dependency relations must be satisfied, …), but | |
248 | they don't need to be complete: A planner can and should expect that any | |
249 | package which wasn't explicitly configured will be configured at the end | |
250 | automatically. That also means through that a planner is not allowed to | |
251 | produce a solution in which a package remains unconfigured. | |
252 | ||
253 | In terms of expressivity, all stanzas can carry one single field each, as | |
254 | APT-IDs are enough to pinpoint packages to be installed/removed. | |
255 | Nonetheless, for protocol readability, it is recommended that planners | |
256 | either add unconditionally the fields Package, Version, and Architecture | |
257 | to all install/remove stanzas or, alternatively, that they support | |
258 | a `--verbose` command line flag that explicitly enables the output of | |
259 | those fields in solutions. | |
260 | ||
261 | #### Error | |
262 | ||
263 | An error is a single Deb 822 stanza, starting the field Error. The | |
264 | following fields are supported in error stanzas: | |
265 | ||
266 | - **Error:** (mandatory). The value of this field is ignored, although | |
267 | it should be a unique error identifier, such as a UUID. | |
268 | ||
269 | - **Message:** (mandatory). The value of this field is a text string, | |
270 | meant to be read by humans, that explains the cause of the planner | |
271 | error. Message fields might be multi-line, like the Description field | |
272 | in the dpkg database. The first line conveys a short message, which | |
273 | can be explained in more details using subsequent lines. | |
274 | ||
275 | ||
276 | ### Progress | |
277 | ||
278 | During dependency solving, an external planner may send progress | |
279 | information to APT using **progress stanzas**. A progress stanza starts | |
280 | with the Progress field and might contain the following fields: | |
281 | ||
282 | - **Progress:** (mandatory). The value of this field is a date and time | |
283 | timestamp from the UTC timezone, in RFC 2822 format (see 'date -uR' as | |
284 | an example). The timestamp provides a time annotation for the | |
285 | progress report. | |
286 | ||
287 | - **Percentage:** (optional). An integer from 0 to 100, representing the | |
288 | completion of the installation planning process, as declared by the | |
289 | planner. | |
290 | ||
291 | - **Message:** (optional). A textual message, meant to be read by the | |
292 | APT user, telling what is going on within the installation planner | |
293 | (e.g. the current phase of planning, as declared by the planner). | |
294 | ||
295 | ||
296 | # Future extensions | |
297 | ||
298 | Potential future extensions to this protocol are to be discussed on | |
299 | deity@lists.debian.org. |