Release Notes for Alpine 3.20.0: Difference between revisions
m (→grub 2.12: Attempt to correct small typos/grammar/redundancy. Correct file path for grub backup file.) |
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=== grub 2.12 === | === grub 2.12 === | ||
When upgrading existing installations using grub on UEFI systems, make sure to update the installed bootloader before rebooting | When upgrading existing installations using grub on UEFI systems, make sure to update the installed bootloader before rebooting otherwise your machine might not boot. | ||
The problem is that grub added new configuration that executes <code>fwsetup --is-supported</code>, but grub 2.06 does not support the <code>--is-supported</code> argument yet, causing grub to | The problem is that grub added a new configuration that executes <code>fwsetup --is-supported</code>, but grub 2.06 does not support the <code>--is-supported</code> argument yet, causing grub to try to reboot into firmware unconditionally. | ||
Here is an example assuming the default setup. Don't blindly copy this example but verify what's applicable to your system. | Here is an example assuming the default setup. Don't blindly copy this example, but verify what's applicable to your system. | ||
==== EFI ==== | ==== EFI ==== | ||
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; fwa : The respective [https://gitlab.alpinelinux.org/alpine/alpine-conf/-/blob/master/setup-disk.in#L320-324 firmware architecture] for your system | ; fwa : The respective [https://gitlab.alpinelinux.org/alpine/alpine-conf/-/blob/master/setup-disk.in#L320-324 firmware architecture] for your system | ||
==== Short-term | ==== Short-term workaround ==== | ||
A short-term | A short-term workaround to get the system bootable again is to restore the backup configuration: | ||
{{Cmd|cp /boot/grub/grub.cfg.backup /boot/grub.cfg }} | {{Cmd|cp /boot/grub/grub.cfg.backup /boot/grub.cfg }} | ||
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Another replacement alternative, the [https://spdx.org/licenses/LGPL-3.0-only.html LGPL-3.0-only] licensed fork [https://redict.io/ Redict] is also available in the community repository. | Another replacement alternative, the [https://spdx.org/licenses/LGPL-3.0-only.html LGPL-3.0-only] licensed fork [https://redict.io/ Redict] is also available in the community repository. | ||
=== yq === | === yq === | ||
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=== aws-cli === | === aws-cli === | ||
Due to incompatibility issues with Python 3.12, aws-cli has been temporarily disabled until the issue is resolved by upstream. See the corresponding problem | Due to incompatibility issues with Python 3.12, aws-cli has been temporarily disabled until the issue is resolved by upstream. See the corresponding problem upstream: https://github.com/aws/aws-cli/issues/8342 | ||
=== GNOME 46 === | === GNOME 46 === |
Revision as of 21:20, 20 May 2024
Base System
grub 2.12
When upgrading existing installations using grub on UEFI systems, make sure to update the installed bootloader before rebooting otherwise your machine might not boot.
The problem is that grub added a new configuration that executes fwsetup --is-supported
, but grub 2.06 does not support the --is-supported
argument yet, causing grub to try to reboot into firmware unconditionally.
Here is an example assuming the default setup. Don't blindly copy this example, but verify what's applicable to your system.
EFI
# grub-install --target=$target --efi-directory=$efi_directory \ --bootloader-id=alpine --boot-directory=/boot --no-nvram # install -D $efi_directory/EFI/alpine/grub$fwa.efi $efi_directory/EFI/boot/boot$fwa.efi
- target
- The relevant target for your system
- efi_directory
- Either /boot/efi or /boot. Run
awk '$2 ~ /boot/ && $3 ~ /fat|msdos/ { print $2 }' /proc/mounts
to confirm. - fwa
- The respective firmware architecture for your system
Short-term workaround
A short-term workaround to get the system bootable again is to restore the backup configuration:
cp /boot/grub/grub.cfg.backup /boot/grub.cfg
This should allow you to boot the system again in order to fix it permanently. This will be reverted when either grub or the kernel is updated again.
This will only work if update-grub
has not been executed any more since the upgrade to grub 2.12.
Others
Redis
Due to the relicensing of Redis to RSALv2+SSPLv1, a non-free license model, the BSD-3-Clause licensed fork Valkey has replaced Redis in the main package repository.
A valkey-compat package is provided with symlinks and group for easy Redis replacement.
The redis aport has been moved to the community repository, with a shorter support cycle, and will not be upgraded past 7.2.x due to the license change.
Another replacement alternative, the LGPL-3.0-only licensed fork Redict is also available in the community repository.
yq
yq was renamed to yq-go. https://gitlab.alpinelinux.org/alpine/aports/-/issues/16052
aws-cli
Due to incompatibility issues with Python 3.12, aws-cli has been temporarily disabled until the issue is resolved by upstream. See the corresponding problem upstream: https://github.com/aws/aws-cli/issues/8342
GNOME 46
New upstream release of GNOME.
Depending on how you installed GNOME, you may have to manually add gcr-ssh-agent
after upgrading to retain GNOME Keyring ssh integration.