Hello Jamie, or anyone else affected,

Accepted pulseaudio into xenial-proposed. The package will build now and
be available at
https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/pulseaudio/1:8.0-0ubuntu3.11 in a
few hours, and then in the -proposed repository.

Please help us by testing this new package.  See
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Testing/EnableProposed for documentation on how
to enable and use -proposed.  Your feedback will aid us getting this
update out to other Ubuntu users.

If this package fixes the bug for you, please add a comment to this bug,
mentioning the version of the package you tested and change the tag from
verification-needed-xenial to verification-done-xenial. If it does not
fix the bug for you, please add a comment stating that, and change the
tag to verification-failed-xenial. In either case, without details of
your testing we will not be able to proceed.

Further information regarding the verification process can be found at
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/QATeam/PerformingSRUVerification .  Thank you in
advance for helping!

N.B. The updated package will be released to -updates after the bug(s)
fixed by this package have been verified and the package has been in
-proposed for a minimum of 7 days.

** Changed in: pulseaudio (Ubuntu Xenial)
       Status: Triaged => Fix Committed

** Tags added: verification-needed-xenial

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You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1781428

Title:
  please enable snap mediation support

Status in pulseaudio package in Ubuntu:
  Fix Released
Status in pulseaudio source package in Xenial:
  Fix Committed
Status in pulseaudio source package in Bionic:
  Fix Committed

Bug description:
  [Impact]
  Ubuntu 16.10 added rudimentary snap support to disable audio recording if the 
connecting process was a snap. By Ubuntu 18.04, something changed in the build 
resulting in 'Enable Snappy support: no' with audio recording no longer being 
mediated by pulseaudio (access to the pulseaudio socket continued to be 
mediated by snapd's apparmor policy). This resulted in any application with the 
pulseaudio interface connected to be able to also record. Ubuntu 16.04 never 
had mediation patches and always allowed recording when the pulseaudio 
interface was connected.

  To correct this situation but not regress existing behavior, Ubuntu
  19.04's pulseaudio was updated patch to allow playback to all
  connected clients (snaps or not), record by classic snaps (see bug
  1787324) and record by strict mode snaps if either the pulseaudio or
  new-in-snapd-2.41 audio-record interfaces were connected. With this
  change, snapd is in a position to migrate snaps to the new audio-
  playback and audio-record interfaces and properly mediate audio
  recording (see https://forum.snapcraft.io/t/upcoming-pulseaudio-
  interface-deprecation/13418).

  The patch to pulseaudio consists of adding a module, enabling it in
  default.pa and then when it is enabled, pulseaudio when faced with a
  record operation will, when the connecting process is a snap (ie, its
  security label (ie, apparmor label) starts with 'snap.'), query snapd
  via its control socket to ask if the snap is classic and if not,
  whether the pulseaudio or audio-record interfaces are connected.
  Adjusting pulseaudio in the manner does not require coordination with
  any release of snapd. It does need a newer version of snapd-glib,
  which was recently updated to 1.49 in the last SRU.

  [Test Case]

  IMPORTANT: if updating pulseaudio while the session is running, either
  need to reboot for the test or kill pulseaudio so it can restart with
  the new snap policy

  For unconfined applications:
  $ paplay /usr/share/sounds/alsa/Noise.wav && echo "yes"
  yes

  $ rm -f /tmp/out.wav ; parecord /tmp/out.wav && echo "yes"  # ctrl-c to stop 
recording
  ^Cyes

  $ paplay /tmp/out.wav && echo "yes"
  yes

  For confined, non-snap applications:
  $ sudo apt-get install evince

  $ aa-exec -p /usr/bin/evince -- paplay
  /usr/share/sounds/alsa/Noise.wav && echo yes

  $ rm -f /tmp/out.wav ; aa-exec -p /usr/bin/evince -- parecord /tmp/out.wav && 
echo "yes"  # ctrl-c to stop recording
  ^Cyes

  $ aa-exec -p /usr/bin/evince -- paplay /tmp/out.wav && echo "yes"
  yes

  For classic snaps:
  $ sudo snap install test-snapd-classic-confinement --classic

  $ snap run --shell test-snapd-classic-confinement

  $ cat /proc/self/attr/current   # verify we are classic confined
  snap.test-snapd-classic-confinement.test-snapd-classic-confinement (complain)

  $ paplay /usr/share/sounds/alsa/Noise.wav && echo "yes"
  yes

  $ rm -f /tmp/out.wav ; parecord /tmp/out.wav && echo "yes"  # ctrl-c to stop 
recording
  ^Cyes

  $ paplay /tmp/out.wav && echo "yes"
  yes

  For strict snaps with pulseaudio:
  $ sudo snap install --dangerous ./test-snapd-pulseaudio_1_amd64.snap

  $ snap connections test-snapd-pulseaudio
  Interface   Plug                              Slot         Notes
  pulseaudio  test-snapd-pulseaudio:pulseaudio  :pulseaudio  -

  $ test-snapd-pulseaudio.play --help  # ensure SNAP dirs are created
  ...

  $ sudo cp /usr/share/sounds/alsa/Noise.wav /var/snap/test-snapd-
  pulseaudio/common/

  $ test-snapd-pulseaudio.play /var/snap/test-snapd-pulseaudio/common/Noise.wav 
&& echo yes
  xcb_connection_has_error() returned true
  yes

  (note, the xcb_connection_has_error() message is due to the x11
  interface not being connecting which is unrelated to mediation. x11 is
  left out to ensure that just audio-playback/audio-record are tested)

  $ test-snapd-pulseaudio.record /tmp/out.wav && echo yes # should pass
  ...
  ^Cyes

  $ test-snapd-pulseaudio.play /tmp/out.wav && echo yes
  ...
  yes

  For strict snaps with audio-playback/audio-record:
  $ sudo snap refresh core --candidate # make sure have 2.41. 'install' on 16.04
  $ sudo snap install --dangerous ./test-snapd-audio-record_1_amd64.snap

  $ snap connections test-snapd-audio-record  # record not connected
  Interface       Plug                                    Slot             Notes
  audio-playback  test-snapd-audio-record:audio-playback  :audio-playback  -
  audio-record    test-snapd-audio-record:audio-record    -                -

  $ test-snapd-audio-record.play --help  # ensure SNAP dirs are created
  ...

  $ sudo cp /usr/share/sounds/alsa/Noise.wav /var/snap/test-snapd-audio-
  record/common/

  $ test-snapd-audio-record.play 
/var/snap/test-snapd-audio-record/common/Noise.wav && echo yes
  xcb_connection_has_error() returned true
  yes

  (note, the xcb_connection_has_error() message is due to the x11
  interface not being connecting which is unrelated to mediation. x11 is
  left out to ensure that just audio-playback/audio-record are tested)

  $ test-snapd-audio-record.record /tmp/out.wav  # should fail
  ...
  Stream error: Access denied

  $ sudo snap connect test-snapd-audio-record:audio-record

  $ test-snapd-audio-record.record /tmp/out.wav && echo yes  # should pass
  ...
  ^Cyes

  $ test-snapd-audio-record.play /tmp/out.wav && echo yes
  ...
  yes

  [Regression Potential]

  The regression potential consists of pulseaudio playback and record
  functionality no longer working for snaps and non-snaps. This is
  easily tested via the test cases. Furthermore, the patches have seen 5
  months real world testing since Ubuntu 19.04's release. Note that the
  patches for 18.04 and 16.04 include the fixes to 19.04 for classic
  snaps (and the above test cases verify the correct behavior).

  # Original summary: pulseaudio built with --enable-snappy but 'Enable
  Snappy support: no'

  # Original description

  From https://launchpadlibrarian.net/377100864/buildlog_ubuntu-cosmic-
  amd64.pulseaudio_1%3A12.0-1ubuntu1_BUILDING.txt.gz:

  ...
  dh_auto_configure -- --enable-x11 --disable-hal-compat 
--libdir=\${prefix}/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu 
--with-module-dir=\${prefix}/lib/pulse-12.0/modules 
--with-zsh-completion-dir=\${datadir}/zsh/vendor-completions 
--with-bash-completion-dir=\${datadir}/bash-completion/completions 
--with-systemduserunitdir=\${prefix}/lib/systemd/user --enable-snappy 
--disable-bluez4 --enable-gsettings --disable-gconf
   ./configure --build=x86_64-linux-gnu --prefix=/usr 
--includedir=\${prefix}/include --mandir=\${prefix}/share/man 
--infodir=\${prefix}/share/info --sysconfdir=/etc --localstatedir=/var 
--disable-silent-rules --libdir=\${prefix}/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu 
--libexecdir=\${prefix}/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu --disable-maintainer-mode 
--disable-dependency-tracking --enable-x11 --disable-hal-compat 
--libdir=\${prefix}/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu 
--with-module-dir=\${prefix}/lib/pulse-12.0/modules 
--with-zsh-completion-dir=\${datadir}/zsh/vendor-completions 
--with-bash-completion-dir=\${datadir}/bash-completion/completions 
--with-systemduserunitdir=\${prefix}/lib/systemd/user --enable-snappy 
--disable-bluez4 --enable-gsettings --disable-gconf
  ...
      Enable Ubuntu trust store:     no
      Enable Snappy support:         no
      Enable Apparmor:               yes

  At this point, the patch should probably be dropped, otherwise
  applications like chromium, etc will no longer be able to record.

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