This means that menus are now printed in noconfirm mode, I don't see
this as a problem because Pacman still prints its questions during
noconfirm.
When the user has edited pkgbuilds Yay will prompt if they want to
continue with the intall. This prompt is also enabled during noconfirm
to ensure the user is happy with the pkgbuilds.
Before versioned deps with the same name would be combined into a single
version range.
For example:
`foo>1 foo>3 foo<4 foo<5` would be merged into the range `3<foo<4`
This was assumed to be fine because of course no package is going to
have conflicting dependencies `foo>3 foo<1` but what was not thought
about it that a package or packages could provide multiple versions of
a provider. Java being example, you could have 8 and 9 provided for at
the same time.
This then causes a problem when you try to install two packages at once,
one requiring `java<8` and the other `java>9` when combined this leads
to a range that can not be satisfied.
Instead we now never merge dependencies but check them all individually.
We also make sure to pull in all already installed providers. The reason
for this is, before if a package did not apear in the dep tree we
assumed it to be satisfied because of the .FindSatisfier in the dep
resolving. So if you installed a package that needs `foo=1` and you
already had a package providing that it would not be in the dep tree and
we assume it is fine. But if you install a package that needs `foo=1`
and install a package that prvoides `foo=2` then foo will all of
a sudden be in the dep tree but only version 2 will be there. For this
reason we also load all the already installed packages in so that the
`foo=1` will be there.
Allows searching the RPC for words that may be too short or have
too many results as long as another word in the search will work.
If no words can be used without error then the last error will be
returned and the program will exit.
To know what AUR packages need updating a rpc request is needed for all
packages. The dep tree is designed to cache everything to minimize the
amount of rpc requests. The downside of this is the dep tree ends up
with all sorts of packages in cache that it doesn't need. Then the
deptree tries to resolve deps for all of thoes packages.
By spliting the sysupgrade from the dep tree this stops this from
happening, it uses one more rpc request but also may lower the amount of
total rpc requests needed lated on.
This fixes a couple of tiny bugs such as triggering providers prompts
and printing AUR out of date messages for packages that are not going
to be installed.
This also fixes another display bug where repo packages from -Su would
not apear when printing the packages to be installed under [Repo].
Devel packages can't be trusted to sho their real provides. Pretend that
that the provide applies to all versions. In the rare case where the
dependency is unsatisfied pacman will refuse to install so no harm can
be caused.
When printing the upgrade menu, sort the repos in the order they are
defined in pacman.conf (or more technically, the order they are
registered in alpm). Packages in the same repo are still sorted
alphabetically.
If a repo is not in pacman.conf or the database query fails it will
fallback to alphabetical.