FS#75745 - [prosody] Add lua-unbound dependency

Attached to Project: Community Packages
Opened by Wilhelm Schuster (wlhlm) - Tuesday, 30 August 2022, 12:26 GMT
Last edited by Buggy McBugFace (bugbot) - Saturday, 25 November 2023, 20:04 GMT
Task Type Bug Report
Category Packages
Status Closed
Assigned To Sergej Pupykin (sergej)
Daurnimator (daurnimator)
Architecture All
Severity Low
Priority Normal
Reported Version
Due in Version Undecided
Due Date Undecided
Percent Complete 100%
Votes 0
Private No

Details

Description:

Running the `prosodyctl` management command for an unrelated task, I got the following output:

$ prosodyctl --root cert import /etc/letsencrypt/live

**************************
Prosody was unable to find lua-unbound
This package can be obtained in the following ways:

Debian/Ubuntu | sudo apt install lua-unbound
luarocks | luarocks install luaunbound
Source | https://www.zash.se/luaunbound.html

Old DNS resolver library will be used
More help can be found on our website, at https://prosody.im/doc/depends
**************************

Imported certificate and key for hosts rot13.io

It looks like lua-unbound is not in the repositories yet.

Additional info:
* package version: prosody-1:0.12.1-1
This task depends upon

Closed by  Buggy McBugFace (bugbot)
Saturday, 25 November 2023, 20:04 GMT
Reason for closing:  Moved
Additional comments about closing:  https://gitlab.archlinux.org/archlinux/p ackaging/packages/prosody/issues/1
Comment by Toolybird (Toolybird) - Tuesday, 30 August 2022, 21:13 GMT
Sidenote: lua-unbound is mentioned in  FS#74159 
Comment by Daurnimator (daurnimator) - Thursday, 08 September 2022, 22:58 GMT
It appears that lua-unbound is only an optional dependency (which is not currently packaged).
Comment by Wilhelm Schuster (wlhlm) - Tuesday, 13 September 2022, 22:21 GMT
That seems to be the case, yes. It's just that upstream annoyingly decided to print out this header every time `prosodyctl` is called. this lead me to believe that upstream are deprecating the old resolver and replacing it. But I can't find any actual evidence for that.

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