For distros using 'yum', packages which cannot be found are just
ignored. This allows us to include for example 'e4fsprogs' on the
list even though that only exists on RHEL 5.
However for Debian-derived distros, missing packages would cause
apt to fail. This was particularly a problem when building Ubuntu
since it doesn't have as complete a list of packages, and the list
changed a lot between releases.
This commit adds a check first for missing packages, ignoring those
and thus acting more like 'yum'.
echo "Module whitelist: $whitelist"
find $DEBIRF_ROOT/lib/modules/*/kernel -name '*.ko' $whitelist -a -exec rm '{}' \;
-# install additional packages:
-PKGLIST=$(< packagelist)
+# install additional packages from the package list, but
+# only ones which exist in the repository
+PKGLIST=
+for pkg in $(< packagelist); do
+ if [ "$(debirf_exec apt-get -s install $pkg 3>&1 1>&2 2>&3 1>&- | grep '^E:' | wc -l)" -gt 0 ]; then
+ echo "Ignoring package $pkg, because it was not found in this repository."
+ else
+ PKGLIST="$PKGLIST $pkg"
+ fi
+done
echo "Will add $PKGLIST"
debirf_exec apt-get --assume-yes install $PKGLIST
debirf_exec apt-get --assume-yes remove vim-tiny dhcp3-client iptables