Nothing like a new pacman release to make me locate the password to this site…

Tradition dictates I thank people who have contributed to the release (as well as genuinely meaning the thanks!). We had 29 people have a patch committed this release, with a few new names. Here is the top ten:

$ git shortlog -n -s v5.1.0..v5.2.0 | head -n10

108 Eli Schwartz

38 Allan McRae

30 morganamilo

24 Andrew Gregory

20 Dave Reisner

9 Jan Steffens

6 Michael Straube

4 Jonas Witschel

4 Luke Shumaker

3 Que Quotion



We have a clear winner. Although I’m sure that at least half of those are in responses to bugs he created! He claims it is a much smaller proportion… And a new contributor in third.

What has changed in this release? Nothing super exciting as far as I’m concerned, but check out the detailed list here.

We have completely removed support for delta packages. This was a massively underused feature, usually made updates slower for a slight saving on bandwidth, and had a massive security hole. Essentially, a malicious package database in combination with delta packages could run arbitrary commands on your system. This would be less of an issue if a certain Linux distro signed their package databases… Anyway, on balance I judged it better to remove this feature altogether. We may come back to this in the future with a different implementation, but I would not expect that any time soon. Note a similar vulnerability was found with using XferCommand to download packages, but we plugged that hole instead of removing it!

Support for downloading PGP keys using the new Web Key Directory (WKD) was added to pacman . Both pacman-key and makepkg will also look there by default with the latest GnuPG release. This prevents DoS attacks through people adding very large numbers of signatures to PGP keys. The attack scope was limited for Arch Linux anyway, as most people obtain the pacman keyring through the archlinux-keyring package.

The much maligned --force made its way to /dev/null . The --overwrite option has been a replacement for over a year and is a precision surgical instrument compared to the blunt hammer of --force .

There is a small user interface change for searching files databases with -F . Specifying the -s option was redundant, so removed. More information such as package group and installed status is shown in the search results, bringing the output inline with -Ss .

The split of makepkg into smaller and extendable components continued. You can now provide new source download and signature verification routines (e.g. if you are living in the past and want to support cvs:// style URLs). We also added support for lzip, lz4 and zst compressed packages. Arch Linux will switch zst by default in the near future.

Under the hood, we are in the process of changing our build system from autotools to meson . This is relatively complete, but there still was a decent churn of patches to meson files as we approached release. You can build pacman from the release tarball using meson if you want to test. Next release is likely to be meson only. (Edit: you can’t test meson with the 5.2.0 tarball as it is missing a couple of the meson build files.)

Expect the release to land in Arch Linux “soon”. Expect to see another blog post in a year or so when I make the next release…