In case the signature file is corrupt, e.g. it could not be downloaded
successfully, the gnupg code just prints an error message but will not
return the error to the user. So we patch the code to return the error
and check the value in the calling code.
- Use latest Muen version
- Sync VirtualBox Muen subject state
- Drop unneccessary subject IP patch
- Adapt Muen RUN_OPTs
- Update documentation
Note: the GPL 2017 toolchain is now required and as the debug output
format has changed the mulog-subject.py script must be updated on
autopilot instances.
This patch adds hooks for customizing the location of the configure
script within the package, the build target, as well as the install
step. This is useful for packages like tcl that deviate from the
usual layout of source packages.
Issue #2648
The new 'verify' component facilitates the code of GnuPG to verify
detached OpenPGP signatures against public keys.
Since GnuPG depends on libgcrypt and libgpg-error, the patch adds these
libraries to the libports repository.
Fixes#2640
Adds two new netperf tests, netperf_lxip_router and netperf_lwip_router
who test the TCP throughput of the NIC router when routed with a tcp-forward
rule and NAT.
Issue #2624
Until now, if we examined an EPT fault and the corresponding guest
physical memory was not allocated, we forwarded the faulting instruction
to the instruction emulator, which in turn handled the memory allocation
implicitly. This lead to long instruction emulation times on certain
instructions (e.g. 'rep mov' on large memory junks). Therefore, we now
allocate and map the corresponding guest physical memory immediately in
the EPT fault handler and directly return to the guest.
fixes#2645
This is a follow-up commit to "Increase default warning level", which
overrides Genode's new default warning level for targets contained in
higher-level repositories. By explicitly whitelisting all those targets,
we can selectively adjust them to the new strictness over time - by
looking out for 'CC_CXX_WARN_STRICT' in the target description files.
Issue #465