If applied, users will be able to benefit from several bug fixes that stops the
program from polluting their vocabulary database.
There have been almost 5 years since v0.5.1 was released.
Many important bugfix such as
https://github.com/chewing/libchewing/pull/277
the fix for
https://github.com/chewing/libchewing/issues/232
the error of incorrect phrases being stored
into the user vocabulary database.
There has almost been a year since the last commit on master,
and it is quite stable on my laptop.
The last bits to prevent babeld from running unprivileged was its
kernel_setup_interface routine, that wants to set per interface
rp_filter. This behaviour has been disabled in a patch that has been
submitted upstream at https://github.com/jech/babeld/pull/68 and reuses
the skip-kernel-setup config option.
→ Overall exposure level for babeld.service: 1.7 OK 🙂
This is in preparation to run babeld as DynamicUser and was submitted
upstream in https://github.com/jech/babeld/pull/68 and will be part of
the 1.10 release.
Android is deprecating ndk.dir in favor of specifying exact NDK
version in Gradle configuration. Ensure that we can support multiple
NDKs, and link them into the location the Android Gradle Plugin expects.
This is a bit of a thorny issue. See, the actual `diskSize` variable is
for the *total* disk size, not for the filesystem!
The automatic numbers are meant to compute the *filesystem* required
space. So we have to add any other reserved space!
We have different requirements for reserved space. E.g. there could be
none (when it's actually a filesystem image). There could also be 1MiB
for alignment for an MBR image, legacy+gpt needs 2MiB, then GPT with an
ESP ("bootSize") needs to take the boot partition and GPT size into
account too!
Though luckily(?) for this latter situation we can cheat! As noted in the
change, `bootSize` is NOT the boot partition size. It is actually the
offset where the target filesystem starts.
Reserved space includes:
- inodes space in use (2 blocks per)
- about 5.2% of the space
The 5.2% reserved space was computed empirically when working on a
previous EXT4 image builder. It seems to stabilize around 5% even for
much larger filesystems.