* say -- echo which honors quiet
* error -- echo which does not honor quiet
* switch non error echos to say
* switch error echos to error
* run letsencrypt-auto-source/build.py
* Add quiet flags to package manager invocations
Add the following flags when 'certbot-auto --quiet' is invoked:
- Add '-qq' to calls to 'apt-get' in Debian
- Add '--quiet' to calls to 'yum' or 'dnf' in CentOS or Fedora
- Add '--quiet' to calls to 'urpmi' in Mageia
- Add '--quiet' to calls to 'pkg install' in FreeBSD
* Fix $QUIET flag in bootstrappers
- Set the value of $QUIET properly (i.e. s/$QUIET/QUIET when setting the
variable) in
- deb_common.sh
- mageia_common.sh
- rpm_common.sh
- Actually use $QUIET when running $tool in rpm_common.sh
* Add handling of $QUIET to Arch and Open Suse
* Add logic to set --non-interactive if --quiet
* Add missing $QUIET_FLAG to rpm_common.sh
* Run build.py
* Limit --help to 80 cols
* Update indentation within bootstrappers
* Add $QUIET_FLAG to second call to `urpmi` (redux)
* Make certbot-auto indentation consistent
Since a majority of certbot-auto uses 2 spaces per indentation level,
made indentation in letsencrypt-auto and platform-specific shell scripts
a consistent 2 spaces
Fixes#3902
* Fix last `if` statement body in rpm_common.sh
- The others seem to either be platforms where openssl is part of the
base system, or where I can't quickly confirm that it's safe to ask
for installation of something called "openssl".
- If we miss any platforms, the OCSP checking code in "certbot
certificates" should fail gracefully.
* Added support for shells without default variable support
* Added support for BusyBox installs that do not have `command` but has `which`
* Style fixes as suggested by reviewer
* Renamed `WHERE_IS` to `EXISTS` as suggested by review
* Removed expansion of `$LE_AUTO_SUDO` to `x` as the `-n` can check empty strings.
* Added `EXISTS` to debian bootstrap as suggested in review
On Debian 7 (and probably relative distro's) `aptitude show virtualenv` exits
with 0, since it is a virtual package. However, it doesn't have any installation
candidates, so filter on this case before trying to install `virtualenv` to
prevent installation-errors while bootstrapping.
NB, to make this clear:
(0)#: apt-cache show virtualenv
N: Can't select versions from package 'virtualenv' as it is purely virtual
N: No packages found
(0)#: echo $?
0
Furthermore, --quiet=0 is necessary, to be able to grep through `apt-cache`'s
output via a pipe. More details on
http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/201869/why-isnt-apt-cache-policy-output-piped/202041#202041.
Notably, this also installs pip via the recommended `get-pip` route rather than
grabbing a whole new version over Homebrew; this allows the install to work with
OS X's built-in Python or with the python.org Python.
Otherwise, we sometimes end up using the system Python, for which we'd need to use sudo to install virtualenv. Brew complicates this by yelling at you if you do use sudo. So let's simplify things by always using the homebrew python, which is more up to date anyway.
This fixes an "OSError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory" on Fedora 23. Note that openssl-devel was not sufficient to install the openssl commandline tool.
The current manual-testing build of le-auto now crashes with #1548, but that should have been resolved when we upgraded the cryptography lib and so should go away when we build a new version.
Originally, I had it in mind to move letsencrypt-auto inside this dir. However, now we'd like to copy it or link it to the root level, where people are used to finding it (at least for awhile). Since it would be confusing to have a letsencrypt-auto and a letsencrypt_auto right next to each other, we rename this folder.