mirror of
https://git.asonix.dog/asonix/pict-rs.git
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229 lines
7.7 KiB
Markdown
229 lines
7.7 KiB
Markdown
# pict-rs on Ubuntu and Debian
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### The problem
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At the time of writing, ImageMagick 7 has not been packaged for Debian Sid. This is a problem for
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pict-rs, which depends on ImageMagick 7's commandline interface for media processing. Ubuntu users
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are also affected, since Ubuntu inherits the Imagemagick package from Debian in the `universe`
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archive.
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pict-rs is also developed against ffmpeg 6, although from my testing it seems like the required
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interfaces exist as far back as ffmpeg 4.4, which is the current stable version in Ubuntu 22.04. I
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believe ffmpeg 5 is being prepped for the next Ubuntu release (23.10).
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### Possible Solutions
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Running pict-rs on an Ubuntu or Debian system can be done in the following ways:
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1. Download the [ImageMagick AppImage](https://imagemagick.org/script/download.php). This is option
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only works for running pict-rs on x86_64
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2. Compile ImageMagick 7 from source. User MichelSup in the [pict-rs matrix
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channel](https://matrix.to/#/%23pictrs:matrix.asonix.dog?via=matrix.asonix.dog) has done this.
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3. Run pict-rs with `Nix`
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Since I do my development for pict-rs on NixOS, I will document running pict-rs with Nix here.
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### Installing with Nix
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#### Install Nix
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The official instructions [live here](https://nixos.org/download.html), but on Ubuntu you can follow
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these steps:
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```bash
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$ sudo apt update
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$ sudo apt install curl xz-utils
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$ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --daemon
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```
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The Nix installer will ask if it's okay for it to make the changes it wants to make, and it will
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print detailed logs about what it's doing.
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After you get nix installed, we need to enable some nix features.
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Open up `/etc/nix/nix.conf` in your favorite text editor (vim) and add the following line:
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```
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experimental-features = nix-command flakes
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```
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#### Build pict-rs
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Now that nix is installed and configured, we can download and build the pict-rs nix package.
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We'll fetch the latest code in the v0.4.x branch with git. This branch holds the latest changes
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intended for releases in the 0.4 cycle.
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```bash
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$ sudo apt install git
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$ git clone -b v0.4.x https://git.asonix.dog/asonix/pict-rs
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```
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And then we'll build the pict-rs nix package.
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```bash
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$ cd pict-rs
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$ nix build
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```
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This will create a nix package with pict-rs and it's dependencies (exiftool, ffmpeg, and
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imagemagick). You can see the contents of the package in the `result` symlink that was created by
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the `nix build` command.
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```bash
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$ ls -lh | grep result
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lrwxrwxrwx 1 asonix asonix 57 jul 9 19:47 result -> /nix/store/lblq0ns1p86qnpm3kd86ljpg2yx2i06b-pict-rs-0.4.1
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$ ls result
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bin
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$ ls result/bin
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pict-rs
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```
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> As an aside, this `pict-rs` file in `result/bin` is actually a shell script and not the binary.
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This script's purpose is to bring pict-rs' dependencies into the `$PATH` variable before
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invoking the real pict-rs binary. This is part of how Nix keeps applications isolated from each
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other while still allowing inter-package dependencies to exist.
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#### Configuring systemd
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Depending on when you follow these instructions, the produced pict-rs binary may have a different
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path in the nix store. This is expected.
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Now that we have a binary, we can configure it to start with `systemd`. This means writing a unit
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file that will start the pict-rs binary when the machine boots. We have a couple options for this,
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so I'll talk about both here.
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Before we do any of that, let's go ahead and write the start of our unit file. Open a new file
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called `pict-rs.service`
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```service
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[Unit]
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Description=A simple image host
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Documentation=https://git.asonix.dog/asonix/pict-rs
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After=network-online.target
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```
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This just sets up some metadata and tells the operating system to wait until the network has been
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brought up before starting pict-rs.
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After the `[Unit]` section, we'll add a new section called `[Service]`. This describes how to launch
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pict-rs, and when to restart it if needed. We'll need that symlink path from earlier for this step,
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too.
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```service
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[Service]
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Type=simple
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ExecStart=/nix/store/lblq0ns1p86qnpm3kd86ljpg2yx2i06b-pict-rs-0.4.1/bin/pict-rs run
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Restart=on-failure
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```
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These are the minimum required fields to launch pict-rs, but it probably won't run how you'd like.
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We'll configure pict-rs next
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##### Adding configuration to the Unit File
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This is the easier route, and will keep all the configuration in one file. In the same service file,
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in the same `[Service]` section, we'll set some environment variables.
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```service
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Environment="PICTRS__SERVER__ADDRESS=127.0.0.1:8080"
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Environment="PICTRS__SERVER__API_KEY=SOME-REALLY-SECRET-KEY"
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Environment="PICTRS__TRACING__LOGGING__TARGETS=warn"
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Environment="PICTRS__MEDIA__FORMAT=avif"
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Environment="PICTRS__REPO__PATH=/var/lib/pict-rs/sled"
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Environment="PICTRS__REPO__EXPORT_PATH=/var/lib/pict-rs/sled"
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Environment="PICTRS__STORE__PATH=/var/lib/pict-rs/files"
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```
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This tells pict-rs to run just on the local box on part 8080, sets an api key for access to the
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internel endpoints, reduces the log output to just warnings and errors, tells pict-rs to
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automatically convert uploaded images to avif, and sets the directories for pict-rs' state to
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`/var/lib/pict-rs`.
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In all, our unit file should look like this:
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```service
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[Unit]
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Description=A simple image host
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Documentation=https://git.asonix.dog/asonix/pict-rs
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After=network-online.target
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[Service]
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Type=simple
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ExecStart=/nix/store/lblq0ns1p86qnpm3kd86ljpg2yx2i06b-pict-rs-0.4.1/bin/pict-rs run
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Restart=on-failure
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Environment="PICTRS__SERVER__ADDRESS=127.0.0.1:8080"
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Environment="PICTRS__SERVER__API_KEY=SOME-REALLY-SECRET-KEY"
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Environment="PICTRS__TRACING__LOGGING__TARGETS=warn"
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Environment="PICTRS__MEDIA__FORMAT=avif"
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Environment="PICTRS__REPO__PATH=/var/lib/pict-rs/sled-repo"
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Environment="PICTRS__REPO__EXPORT_PATH=/var/lib/pict-rs/exports"
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Environment="PICTRS__STORE__PATH=/var/lib/pict-rs/files"
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```
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Once the unit file is ready, save it to `/etc/systemd/system/pict-rs.service`.
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##### Adding a dedicated pict-rs configuration file
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Instead of configuring pict-rs with environment variables, we can instead use a configuration file.
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First, we'll update our `ExecStart` entry to tell pict-rs to load the configuration file.
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```service
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ExecStart=/nix/store/lblq0ns1p86qnpm3kd86ljpg2yx2i06b-pict-rs-0.4.1/bin/pict-rs -c /etc/pict-rs.toml run
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```
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Our full service file should now look like this:
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```service
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[Unit]
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Description=A simple image host
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Documentation=https://git.asonix.dog/asonix/pict-rs
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After=network-online.target
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[Service]
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Type=simple
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ExecStart=/nix/store/lblq0ns1p86qnpm3kd86ljpg2yx2i06b-pict-rs-0.4.1/bin/pict-rs -c /etc/pict-rs.toml run
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Restart=on-failure
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```
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Save this service file to `/etc/systemd/system/pict-rs.service`
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Now, we'll configure pict-rs with toml. Open a new file at `/etc/pict-rs.toml`
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We'll add the following configuration:
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```toml
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[server]
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address = "127.0.0.1:8080"
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api_key = "SOME-REALLY-SECRET-KEY"
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[tracing.logging]
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targets = "warn"
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[media]
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format = "avif"
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[repo]
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path = "/var/lib/pict-rs/sled-repo"
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export_path = "/var/lib/pict-rs/exports"
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[store]
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path = "/var/lib/pict-rs/files"
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```
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After saving that configuration file, we're ready to start pict-rs.
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#### Starting pict-rs
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Now that we have created a unit file for pict-rs, we are able to start the service. You can do this
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with the following commands:
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```bash
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$ sudo systemctl daemon-reload
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$ sudo systemctl enable --now pict-rs
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```
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If everything went well, `pict-rs` should now be running on your system. You can follow its logs
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with this command:
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```bash
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$ journalctl -xfu pict-rs
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```
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I hope this has been helpful to Ubuntu and Debian server admins. If you are familiar with packaging
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software for Debian, consider stepping up to help maintain the ImageMagick package. There was a call
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for help maintaining it last year on the [debian bug
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tracker](https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=1017366)
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