Am 15.09.23 um 11:06 schrieb Christopher Obbard:
Package: src:systemd
Version: 254.1-3
Severity: important
X-Debbugs-Cc: chris.obb...@collabora.com

Dear Maintainer,

Installing a new kernel on a system which uses systemd-boot as the
bootloader fails if python3 is not installed. Here's the snippet from apt
upgrade:

     /etc/kernel/postinst.d/zz-systemd-boot:
     Installing kernel version 6.4.0-4-amd64 in systemd-boot...
     /usr/bin/env: ‘python3’: No such file or directory
     /usr/lib/kernel/install.d/60-ukify.install failed with exit status 127.

This renders the new kernel unusable as it never actually gets installed
in the right place for systemd-boot.

/etc/kernel/postinst.d/zz-systemd-boot calls kernel-install, which in turn
calls /usr/lib/kernel/install.d/60-ukify.install which calls /lib/systemd/ukify
to attempt to create a unified kernel image. These are both python3 scripts.

To workaround this, I have deleted /usr/lib/kernel/install.d/60-ukify.install
as we don't (yet!) create uki images with the ukify utility anyway. When
the ukify postinst script _does_ run, it currently just detects the
environment variable KERNEL_INSTALL_LAYOUT != "uki" (set from some config
files) and exits early, not even creating the uki. So this is opt-in.

/lib/systemd/ukify is shipped in the systemd package along with
/usr/lib/kernel/install.d/60-ukify.install, which I think is wrong as
systemd package does not have the right dependencies for this script.


Perhaps we should split the ukify bits into its own package (systemd-ukify)
which depends on python3 and should be manually installed? Also this package
can then depend on e.g. sbsigntool and other packages to actually manage
the signing (but that can be a separate bug!).


Having a separate package feels a bit like overkill for 68K

52K     /lib/systemd/ukify
8,0K    /usr/lib/kernel/install.d/60-ukify.install
8,0K    /usr/share/man/man1/ukify.1.gz


While systemd has a suggests python3, we certainly don't want a hard python3 dependency though.

A possible middle way could be to implement /usr/lib/kernel/install.d/60-ukify.install in shell, the script seems simple enough.

Michael


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