NEWS -*- outline -*- ---- Welcome to schroot 1.6.3. Please read these release notes carefully. Full installation instructions are provided in the INSTALL file. The README file also contains more specific notes regarding building and configuration. * Major changes in 1.6.3: None. * Major changes in 1.6.2: 1) PAM pam_env is used to set up additional environment from /etc/security/pam_env.conf and /etc/default/locale. 2) /usr/bin/X11 and /usr/games have been removed from the default PATH. * Major changes in 1.6.1: None. * Major changes in 1.6.0: 1) The new profile and old script-config options are mutually exclusive. While profile is set by default, if script-config is set, it will unset and override the effect of the profile setting. script-config is deprecated and will be removed in schroot 1.7.x. Please update your configuration to use the profile key. 2) The CHROOT_PROFILE setup-script variable has been renamed to CHROOT_PROFILE_DIR. CHROOT_PROFILE now contains the profile name only, while CHROOT_PROFILE_DIR contains the absolute path to the profile directory. * Major changes in 1.5.4: None. * Major changes in 1.5.3: 1) dchroot always uses "/bin/sh -c" to run the specified command, rather than the user's shell, in order to ensure consistent behaviour. 2) Add shell fallbacks. When running a login shell, try $SHELL (if preserving the environment), or else passwd pw_shell, then /bin/bash and finally /bin/sh. This may be overidden using the shell configuration key, which may in turn be overidden by the --shell option. 3) Support for QEMU linux user emulation using binfmt_misc on Linux is enabled by default. If binfmt_misc is available, and a suitable program is available for running non-native architecture programs, it will be made available in the chroot automatically. This permits chroots for other architectures to be used transparently. * Major changes in 1.5.2: 1) Support for overlayfs has been added in addition to the existing aufs and unionfs support. 2) Arbitrary options may now be set in a chroot definition in schroot.conf. These options are also set in the environment when running setup scripts, making this a simple means by which setup scripts may be customised without writing code. 3) The above options may be set (where permitted) on the schroot command-line by using the new --option command-line option to set the option to a user-defined value, which will permit users to customise the behaviour of setup scripts. Note that only keys specified in the new user-modifiable-keys or root-modifiable-keys settings are permitted to be set, for security reasons. 4) A new "custom" chroot type has been added. This permits the testing and development of new specialised chroot types without the need to write any C++ chroot modules. It just requires a custom setup script, which can use arbitrary options set in your schroot.conf for configuration. Options are provided to set up the session cloning and purging behaviour for the custom chroot. See schroot.conf(5) for further details. 5) Services may be started and stopped inside the chroot on session creation and session ending. These are specified using the new setup.services key, and are started and stopped using invoke-rc.d. See schroot.conf(5) for further details. 6) Chroot profiles are now selectable using the new "profile" key. This replaces the older "script-config" key, which is now deprecated. The profile configuration file referenced by script-config is also deprecated, the individual settings it contained now being directly configurable in schroot.conf. See schroot.conf(5) for further details. * Major changes in 1.5.1: 1) schroot no longer requires GCC to build, following the removal of GCC-specific features. It may now build with other C++ compilers. 2) Large file support is enabled by default. This enables the use of files over 2 GiB in size on 32 bit architectures. 3) The environment variable CHROOT_ALIAS has been added to the setup script execution environment, and SCHROOT_ALIAS_NAME to the user environment. These may be used to conditionally alter behaviour depending upon the chroot alias used. 4) dchroot and dchroot-dsa no longer use dchroot.conf. Both programs now always use schroot.conf, and additionally use the same authentication mechanisms as schroot. This is intended to provide the same basic configuration for all tools, and to also improve security by only having a single set of authentication rules. * Major changes in 1.5.0: 1) The deprecated options priority, run-setup-scripts and run-exec-scripts (all chroot types) and location ("plain" and "directory" chroot types) have been obsoleted and removed from the documentation. 2) Source chroots no longer create a chroot with a -source suffix; the source: namespace should be used instead. Likewise sessions are no longer present in the chroot: namespace, and are only found in the session: namespace. This means the fully-qualified name must be used to refer to sessions except when performing actions which use session: as the default namespace. 3) Support for zip file archives has been removed. zip was not able to archive named pipes and device nodes, and so was not usable for chroot archival. 4) AUTH_VERBOSITY is no longer set in setup scripts. Please use VERBOSE instead. VERBOSITY replaced and deprecated AUTH_VERBOSITY in version 1.4.5. * Major changes in 1.4.26: 1) Added --exclude-aliases option. This removes aliases from the chroot selection. * Major changes in 1.4.25: 1) Support for overlayfs has been added in addition to the existing aufs and unionfs support. * Major changes in 1.4.24: 1) Support for zip file archives has been removed. zip was not able to archive named pipes and device nodes, and so was not usable for chroot archival. 2) The autoconf and automake build logic from schroot 1.5.1 has been backported to add multi-arch support to schroot 1.4. * Major changes in 1.4.23: None. * Major changes in 1.4.22: 1) Large file support is enabled by default. This enables the use of files over 2 GiB in size on 32 bit architectures. 2) Chroot profiles no longer bind filesystems with rbind. Recursive bind mounting of /proc, /dev and /sys caused breakage with systemd due to its use of autofs mounts. autofs interacts badly with bind mounting, leading to unmountable mount points. While rbind is still possible, it is not done by default, and instead only specific filesystems are mounted; additional mounts required must be added to the profile fstab file. 3) Session metadata includes the original chroot name. This is available in the user environment as SCHROOT_CHROOT_NAME and in the setup scripts as CHROOT_NAME. 4) A buildd profile is now provided. This was previously provided by the sbuild package, but has now been consolidated with the main collection of schroot profiles. 5) A helper program, schroot-sbuild has been provided in order to provide better privilege separation with sbuild. This permits an authorised user in the sbuild group to run builds as the sbuild user. * Major changes in 1.4.21: None. * Major changes in 1.4.20: 1) Add support for the Boost filesystem v3 library, to permit building with Boost version 1.46. Older versions of Boost continue to be supported. * Major changes in 1.4.19: None. * Major changes in 1.4.18: None. * Major changes in 1.4.17: None. * Major changes in 1.4.16: 1) Chroot naming restrictions introduced in 1.4.0 have been relaxed following a code audit to evaluate the security implications. The name may not contain a leading period (‘.’). Any characters are permitted, with the following restrictions. The characters ‘:’ (colon), ‘,’ (comma) and ‘/’ (forward slash) are not permitted anywhere in the name. The name may also not contain a trailing tilde ('~'). See schroot.conf(5) for more information. * Major changes in 1.4.15: None. * Major changes in 1.4.14: None. * Major changes in 1.4.13: None. * Major changes in 1.4.12: None. * Major changes in 1.4.11: None. * Major changes in 1.4.10: None. * Major changes in 1.4.9: None. * Major changes in 1.4.8: 1) Chroot names are now prefixed by a namespace. Three namespaces are used in this release, "chroot:", "source:" and "session:" for chroots, source chroots and sessions, respectively. These may all be selected with the --all-chroots, --all-source-chroots and --all-sessions options. Individual chroots may be referred to with or without a prefix, depending upon the context. For most actions, "chroot:" is the default prefix, while the --run-session, --recover-session and --end-session actions use "session:" as the default prefix. 2) Source chroots previously used a -source suffix. A chroot named "squeeze" providing a source chroot would also create a source chroot named "squeeze-source". The source chroot is now named "source:squeeze", but a chroot with a -source suffix is still created for compatibility (actually now named "chroot:squeeze-source"). The -source suffix names will be dropped in the 1.5.x development releases and 1.6.x stable releases. 3) Session chroots previously were in the same flat namespace as chroots. Now that sessions are in a separate namespace, it is possible to create a session with the same name as the original chroot. For example a chroot named "build" is actually "chroot:build" and so the session will be named "session:build". For compatibility session names are also still placed in the "chroot:" namespace so that they still work without namespaces with actions such as --info (namespaces are not required for session-specific actions such as --run-session). The compatibility name will be dropped in the 1.5.x development releases and 1.6.x stable releases. 4) The option --list, in addition to respecting the various --all options will now allow the use of --chroot as well. This may be used to verify the existence of the specified chroots. --list defaults to showing --all-chroots --all-source-chroots which is the effective behaviour of previous releases. 5) The key named priority in the configuration file has been deprecated. This was originally introduced for compatibility with sbuild, but sbuild has never used the property. It will be obsoleted and removed in the 1.5.x development releases and 1.6.x stable releases. 6) The enviroment variables HOME and SESSION are always preserved (this was a regression in 1.4.7). * Major changes in 1.4.7: 1) Install profile configurations in the correct location. 1.4.6 incorrectly installed these into $sysconfdir rather than $sysconfdir/schroot due to a mistake in the build scripts. * Major changes in 1.4.6: 1) The environment may be preserved on a per-chroot basis using the new preserve-environment key in the configuration file. This is equivalent to using the --preserve-environment option, but only affects a single chroot. 2) It is now possible to add a "location" configuration option to specify the location of the chroot within the archive file for file type chroots. Previously, it was assumed that the location was always the root, whereas it is typical to create archives which unpack into a subdirectory rather than the current directory. This makes chroot file archive creation and use easier. 3) Chroots of type "loopback" now always create session files which adds the ability to begin and end sessions with this chroot type. 4) The setup scripts have been improved to increase their reliability during failure. Previously, if a problem occured it might not have been possible to end a session which would result in stray files being left in the session and mount directories. This should no longer occur. 5) Users should note that by default the entirety of /dev is bind mounted into the chroot environment. If this has security implications, the "minimal" profile does not mount any of /dev into the chroot and may be a more secure alternative. For most situations, mounting /dev in the chroot and providing full access to the devices on the host system is perfectly acceptable. * Major changes in 1.4.5: 1) A new chroot type, "btrfs-snapshot", has been added. This is similar to the existing LVM snapshot functionality, but using snapshots of Btrfs subvolumes. Btrfs is currently still marked experimental in the Linux kernel, so this feature should also be regarded as experimental and subject to change. Btrfs snapshots are somewhat faster than LVM snapshots, are more flexible, and use very little disc space. LVM snapshots require pre-allocating a fixed amount of storage per snapshot. 2) Source chroots may be disabled for chroot types providing source chroots using the new source-clone key in the configuration file. 3) Configuration profiles "minimal", "desktop" and "sbuild" have been added in addition to the existing "default" profile. These provide pre-canned configurations for several common usage scenarios, and are used with the script-config key. 4) Frequently asked questions are addressed in the new schroot-faq(7) manual page. 5) The default message verbosity may be set using the new message-verbosity key in the configuration file. * Major changes in 1.4.4: None. * Major changes in 1.4.3: None. * Major changes in 1.4.2: 1) Added support for building with Boost 1.42. * Major changes in 1.4.1: 1) A dchroot bug which prevented root from accessing chroots where they were not specifically granted access has been fixed. root now has access to all chroots. Note this only affected dchroot and dchroot-dsa, not schroot. 2) The setup script configuration files 'script-defaults', 'mount-defaults', 'copyfiles-defaults' and 'nssdatabases-defaults', located in /etc/schroot, have been moved to /etc/schroot/default. 'script-defaults' has been renamed to 'config', and 'mount-defaults' has been renamed to 'fstab'. Likewise 'nssdatabases-defaults' has been renamed to 'nssdatabases' and 'copyfiles-defaults' to 'copyfiles'. Note that the default setting for 'script-config' in schroot.conf has changed from 'script-defaults' to 'default/config'. If manually setting 'script-config' to 'script-defaults' in your chroot definitions, this will require updating. If unset, no changes are required. 3) Additional setup script environment variables have been added: HOST, HOST_OS, HOST_VENDOR, HOST_CPU and PLATFORM. These are for adding platform-specific logic to setup scripts, and are initially for FreeBSD and GNU/kFreeBSD compatibility. 4) Additional FreeBSD compatibility work in setup scripts and block device code. schroot should now work with current FreeBSD and Debian GNU/kFreeBSD systems. * Major changes in 1.4.0: None. For users upgrading from the previous stable release (1.2.x), please read the changes made since 1.2.3. Changes to the configuration file format may require some small changes to your existing configuration. Additionally, the naming of chroot configuration files under /etc/schroot/chroot.d has been made stricter, in order to prevent reading of editor backup files and dpkg conffile backups. It uses the same naming rules as specified in run-parts(8) for the --lsbsysinit option. If some of your chroots are not available after upgrading to 1.4.0, this may be the reason. Simply rename the files to a conforming name and they will become available. * Major changes in 1.3.2: None. * Major changes in 1.3.1: 1) Kernel personality support should now work on non-Linux architectures such as kfreebsd. * Major changes in 1.3.0: None. * Major changes in 1.3.0-rc1: 1) Exec scripts have been removed. Unlike setup scripts, these scripts were never used, and there are no known uses for them. Removing them will improve the performance of schroot. The run-exec-scripts configuration option is no longer used, but is still permitted to be used until it is obsoleted in a future release. 2) Setup scripts are now always run for all chroot types except "plain". In practice, scripts were required for all types except "plain" in order to function correctly. The ability to configure this is not useful and so setting run-setup-scripts is now deprecated in schroot.conf. It may still be set for backward compatibility, but it has no effect and will be removed in the future. 3) Chroot configuration files in /etc/schroot/chroot.d are not loaded if they are backup files or dpkg conffile backups. 4) Support for GCC versions prior to 3.4 has been removed. 5) System databases are copied into the chroot using the getent program to use the appropriate name service switch (NSS) modules to get the data, rather than just copying the files. This means all NSS database sources are supported, including NIS and LDAP. 6) Setup script output is logged to stderr which prevents schroot outputting to stdout when run with verbose logging enabled. 7) Most schroot features are compiled conditionally, which should ease porting to non-Linux platforms. 8) Support for union filesystems has been added (aufs and unionfs). This permits the use of read-only block-device, directory and loopback chroots with a temporary writable overlay. For "scratch" temporary chroots, this method is recommended over the existing LVM snapshot support. It is considered to be faster, more robust, and uses less disc space. 9) The "command-prefix" option no longer requires an absolute path to the command. It will use the normal search path inside the chroot to locate the command. 10) When creating a session, the users in "users", "root-users", and groups in "groups" and "root-groups" are no longer preserved. The user requesting access will be the sole user listed in "users" for the session; however, if the user was in "root-users" or "root-groups", they will be added to "root-users" instead. This ensures that only the user creating the session will have access, so that other users having access to the chroot will not also automatically gain access to other users sessions. * Major changes in 1.2.3: None. * Major changes in 1.2.2: None. * Major changes in 1.2.1: 1) A new chroot type, "loopback", has been added. This is similar to the "block-device" type, but allows for loopback mounting of filesystems contained within regular files. 2) "lvm-snapshot" chroot types now clean up correctly in the case of failures during setup. * Major changes in 1.2.0: 1) In addition to /etc/schroot/schroot.conf, chroot definitions may be placed in separate files under /etc/schroot/chroot.d to enable packages and system administrators to easily make new chroots available to schroot. 2) Configuration files may now be symlinks as well as regular files. 3) schroot now builds with GCC 4.3. 4) All setup and exec scripts source and use the script configuration file specified with the script-config configuration key. * Major changes in 1.1.6: 1) Relicence under the GNU General Public License, version 3 or later. 2) Per-chroot custom mountpoints are now possible through the use of an fstab file. This may be used to mount or bind mount any filesystem within the chroot with the assistance of a helper utility, schroot-mount. Set FSTAB=fstab in the script-config file to specify which file to use. 3) Per-chroot custom file copying is now supported. Set COPYFILES=file in the script-config file to specify a file containing a list of files to copy from the host system into the chroot. This change merged the 20network and 30passwd setup scripts into a single script, 20copyfiles. If you previously customised either of these scripts, the changes will need to be copied over to the new files. 4) If invalid options are used in schroot.conf, warnings will be printed, rather than simply ignoring them. * Major changes in 1.1.5: 1) A "script-config" option has been added to allow customisation of the chroot setup and execution scripts on a per-chroot basis. See schroot.conf(5) for further details. 2) A --session-name has been added to allow naming sessions when using --begin-session. This replaces the automatically-generated chroot-UUID session name. * Major changes in 1.1.4: 1) When ending a session, processes still running in the chroot are terminated. * Major changes in 1.1.3: Bugfixes and translation updates only. * Major changes in 1.1.2: Bugfixes and translation updates only. * Major changes in 1.1.1: 1) For dchroot and dchroot-dsa, the syslog logging of the command or shell being run in the chroot now only occurs when running as root or switching to another user. If the user is the same inside and outside the chroot, and not root, the command or shell being run will not be logged. 2) Using symbolic links in the mount path (SCHROOT_MOUNT_DIR) will no longer result in severe dataloss. 3) User-defined filtering of the chroot environment is now permitted using the environment-filter key in the configuration file, which uses a regular expression to identify environment variables for removal. 4) The environment variables SCHROOT_COMMAND, SCHROOT_USER, SCHROOT_GROUP, SCHROOT_UID and SCHROOT_GID are set inside the chroot specifying the command being run, the user name, group name, user ID and group ID, respectively. * Major changes in 1.1.0: 1) Authentication now uses the Controlling TTY (/dev/tty) for communication with the user. This means PAM interaction with the user will work even if stdin, stdout and stderr are all redirected. If authentication is required and no CTTY is available, it will fail (due to authentication being an interactive process). 2) The syslog logging of the command or shell being run in the chroot now only occurs when running as root or switching to another user. If the user is the same inside and outside the chroot, and not root, the command or shell being run will not be logged. 3) A --directory option has been added to schroot, dchroot and dchroot-dsa. This option allows the user to explictly specify the working directory inside the chroot. * Major changes in 1.0.6: Bugfixes only. * Major changes in 1.0.5: Bugfixes only. * Major changes in 1.0.4: 1) Using symbolic links in the mount path (SCHROOT_MOUNT_DIR) will no longer result in severe dataloss. 2) LSB init script functions are now used. * Major changes in 1.0.3: 1) For dchroot and dchroot-dsa, the syslog logging of the command or shell being run in the chroot now only occurs when running as root or switching to another user. If the user is the same inside and outside the chroot, and not root, the command or shell being run will not be logged. * Major changes in 1.0.2: 1) The syslog logging of the command or shell being run in the chroot now only occurs when running as root or switching to another user. If the user is the same inside and outside the chroot, and not root, the command or shell being run will not be logged. 2) A --directory option has been added to schroot, dchroot and dchroot-dsa. This option allows the user to explictly specify the working directory inside the chroot. * Major changes in 1.0.1: Bugfixes and translation updates only. * Major changes in 1.0.0: Bugfixes and translation updates only. * Major changes in 0.99.4: 1) All errors in the configuration file now show the full details of the problem, including the exact line number, group and key. 2) Duplicate groups and keys with groups are now treated as errors. 3) The terminal state is only saved and restored when running a login shell. It is no longer saved and restored when running commands. This is to correct the problem of schroot being stopped when running in the background while restoring the terminal settings. 4) Child processes are now terminated when SIGTERM is received, in addition to SIGHUP. * Major changes in 0.99.3: 1) A new chroot type, "directory", has been added. This is the same as the "plain" type, but additionally allows filesystem mounting when setup scripts are enabled. 2) A further dchroot compatibility issue has been corrected. Multiple command options specified on the command line are concatenated into a single command, separated by spaces. * Major changes in 0.99.2: 1) A --debug option has been added to all programs. Its use is documented in the manual pages. 2) When errors are found in the chroot configuration, the line number in the configuration file is now reported. 3) The use of run-parts(8) is no longer needed. This should make the package portable to non-Debian systems. * Major changes in 0.99.1: 1) A dchroot-dsa compatibility mode has been implemented. This behaves in the same manner as the DSA dchroot program, and is useful for backward compatibility with DSA dchroot, as well as migrating from DSA dchroot. 2) The dchroot program is now compatible with the command-line syntax of older versions, and also matches the older behaviour of which directory is used inside the chroot. The behaviour is documented in the manual page. 3) In addition to "groups" and "root-groups" options for controlling chroot access, "users" and "root-users" have been added for finer control over access. Corresponding "source-users" and "source-root-users" options have been added for source chroots. 4) Files, Devices and Locations in schroot.conf must be absolute pathnames. Relative names are a security risk, because the behaviour may vary depending on the current working directory. It was previously the sysadmin's responsibility to set these correctly, but this rule is now strictly enforced. * Major changes in 0.99.0: 1) In order to support running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, a "personality" option has been added. This may be set to "linux32" to run a 32-bit Linux chroot on an amd64 system, for example. 2) dchroot has an additional personality field in dchroot.conf. This may also be set to linux32 to achieve the same effect as the personality setting in schroot.conf. 3) The root user can access all chroots, even when the root group is omitted from the groups or root_groups lists. Authentication is still required, but by default is skipped due to using pam_rootok.so in the PAM configuration. 4) Session recovery is only performed at system startup, not on upgrades. This prevents upgrades interfering with active sessions. * Major changes in 0.2.11: 1) The 10mount script, used to unmount filesystem in a chroot, will exit with an error if unmounting fails (for safety). It also uses /proc/mounts (via a new program, schroot-listmounts) to ensure all filesystems in the chroot are unmounted. 2) The 05file script, used to unpack and repack chroot archives, will use schroot-listmounts to check if any filesystems are mounted before purging the chroot. This is in order to avoid dataloss. 3) Setup scripts can now abort on failure during cleanup (exec-stop and setup-stop phases). Previously the scripts continued in the face of failure, and broken sessions were removed. Broken sessions which failed to clean up must now be removed by the system administrator (which was required previously; it just wasn't apparent), or the session can be ended again once the problem has been rectified. * Major changes in 0.2.10: Bugfixes only. * Major changes in 0.2.9: 1) The package now compiles with older compilers, such as GCC 3.3 and 3.4. 2) If the current working directory does not exist inside the chroot, the user's home directory ($HOME, home directory in passwd, or /) will be used when running a login shell. If running a command and the directory does not exist, schroot will exit with an error. * Major changes in 0.2.8: Bugfixes only. * Major changes in 0.2.7: Bugfixes only. * Major changes in 0.2.6: 1) For all chroot types, a "command-prefix" option has been added. This is a command to prefix to all commands run inside the chroot. 2) The scripts run before and after executing a command or shell in the chroot have been moved from /etc/schroot/run.d to /etc/schroot/exec.d. The corresponding configuration option in schroot.conf has been renamed from "run-session-scripts" to "run-exec-scripts". This change was to reduce ambiguity in the naming, to make it easier to understand and configure. 3) The session operations "--recover-session", "--run-session", and "--end-session" now allow multiple chroots to be specified with "--chroot", rather than just one. 4) The "file" and "lvm-snapshot" chroot types both implement "source chroots", to provide access to the source block device and archive file, respectively. The "source-groups" and "source-root-groups" options have been added to set the "groups" and "root-groups" options for the source chroot. 5) The "file" chroot, when accessed as a source chroot using the "-source" suffix, will now automatically repack itself into a new archive file on ending a session. * Major changes in 0.2.5: 1) The output of "--info" now displays a "Path" line if available. This is the location of the chroot in the filesystem. * Major changes in 0.2.4: 1) For "block-device" and "lvm-snapshot" type chroots, it is now possible to add a "location" configuration option to specify the location of the chroot within the device filesystem, rather than assuming the location is always the root. This allows multiple chroots to be stored on a single LVM LV, for example. 2) For "plain" chroots, if setup scripts (run-setup-scripts) is enabled, session management is also enabled. This is not true session management, because it uses bind mounts rather than a copy of the chroot, so should be used with caution, but will make concurrent access to the chroot with session scripts enabled rather more useful. * Major changes in 0.2.3: 1) A dchroot compatibility mode has been implemented. This behaves in the same manner as the dchroot program, and is useful for backward compatibility with dchroot, as well as migrating from dchroot. 2) Access to the source device of an "lvm-snapshot" type chroot is simplified. For a chroot named "snap", a "block-device" type chroot named "snap-source" is created for easy access to the source device. 3) The output of "--info" now includes a "Session Managed" line, which is true if full session management is available, or false otherwise. * Major changes in 0.2.2: 1) Session metadata is now correctly saved and restored. 2) New option "--config" to dump chroot configuration, in the same manner as "--info". This is useful to test if the configuration you put in schroot.conf is what schroot is actually parsing. 3) Session-managed chroot types ("file" and "lvm-snapshot") now run setup and session scripts by default. It was previously disabled for all chroot types for safety reasons. It's considered safe for these types due to their ephemeral nature. * Major changes in 0.2.1: 1) Creating a session now returns a zero exit status on success. * Major changes in 0.2.0: 1) A new chroot type, "file", has been added, to allow chroots to be created by unpacking a file archive, such as a tar or zip file. 2) The source has been rewritten in C++, and documented with Doxygen. 3) A testsuite has been added to unit test as much functionality as is reasonably possible. * Major changes in 0.1.7: 1) The chroots now implement locking to restrict access to chroots which are already in use. 2) The "current-users" and "max-users" configuration options have been removed. These have been obsoleted by chroot locking. 3) The command-line options "--all-chroots" and "--all-sessions" have been added, which have similar behaviour to "--all", but selects all chroots and all active sessions, respectively. 4) Session creation, use and removal is now available for LVM snapshot chroots, using the options documented in schroot(1). 5) The session commands also work with non-session-based chroot types (plain and block-device), but are equivalent to using the chroot normally. 6) An init script is used to recover (restore) session chroots at system startup. 7) If no chroot is specified, schroot will fall back to using the "default" chroot. Adding a "default" alias to an existing chroot will make this chroot the default. * Major changes in 0.1.6: 1) Setup scripts may be run on startup and shutdown and before and after a command in order to perform setup tasks such as configuring the chroot and mounting filesystems. These are stored in /etc/schroot/setup.d and /etc/schroot/run.d, and run using run-parts(8). New scripts may easily be added by the system administrator. See schroot-setup(5). 2) Different types of chroots are now supported. The current types are "plain" (the default, which is the type supported by previous releases), "block-device" (a block device mounted on the fly) and "lvm-snapshot" (an LVM snapshot of an LV made on the fly). * Major changes in 0.1.5: 1) The authentication system has been extended to remove the dependency upon libpam_misc. There are no user-visible changes. 2) The root user (uid 0) no longer has special privileges during authentication. If the root user should have special privileges (such as not requiring authentication to change to any other user), do the following: - uncomment the pam_rootok.so line in pam.d/schroot. This will disable the requirement for root authentication. - add root to groups (root_groups membership is redundant), so that root is allowed access. 3) The configuration file, /etc/schroot.conf has been moved to /etc/schroot/schroot.conf. This should be moved automatically when upgrading the Debian package. 4) A new directory, /etc/schroot/setup.d has been added. This contains scripts to perform setup and cleanup tasks in the chroot, which are run with run-parts(8). This provides an easy was to configure and customise chroots. * Major changes in 0.1.4: 1) A new chroot configuration option, "priority", has been added. This is intended for use with sbuild, to indicate whether the distribution in a chroot is older than the distribution in another chroot. 2) The printed messages displaying the command or shell being run now correctly inform the user if the shell is a login shell or not. * Major changes in 0.1.3: 1) HOME, LOGNAME and USER are set in the environment if the old environment is not being preserved. 2) schroot now aborts earlier if no chroots are defined in schroot.conf, rather than failing with a confusing failed assertion error. 3) An option parsing bug which could sometimes cause a crash has been fixed. * Major changes in 0.1.2: 1) Support for gettext has been added, to allow localisation into any language. 2) If a command is specified, it will be searched for in $PATH. Previously, an absolute path was always required. * Major changes in 0.1.1: 1) Add a large number of pointer checks. * Major changes in 0.1.0: 1) Initial release. 2) Debian packaging created.