robin/src-tauri/patterns/opensuse-to-debian.toml
pyr0ball c356c1d4c5 feat(patterns): add boot, SSH, Flatpak, AppArmor, XWayland patterns across all 25 distro files
Adds 141 new pattern entries via expansion script:

Universal (all 25 files):
- slow-boot-network-wait: detect NetworkManager-wait-online stalling boot
- slow-boot-device-timeout: detect fstab entries for disconnected devices
- slow-boot-long-running-job: surface slow service with systemd-analyze hint
- ssh-permissions-key: catch unprotected private key file warning
- flatpak-missing-runtime: detect missing Flatpak runtime with update/reinstall advice

Per distro family:
- apparmor-denial: added to windows-to-debian (only missing debian target)
- xwayland-crash: added to all files missing it, with distro-correct install cmd
  (apt/pacman/dnf/zypper per target family)

All 42 Rust unit tests pass.
2026-05-24 22:00:23 -07:00

203 lines
11 KiB
TOML

[meta]
source_os = "linux"
target_distro_family = "debian"
# openSUSE Tumbleweed/Leap user moving to Debian/Ubuntu/Mint.
# Body text assumes zypper, YaST, and AppArmor familiarity.
[log_paths]
steam = "~/.local/share/Steam/logs/content_log.txt"
proton = "~/.local/share/Steam/logs/proton_log.txt"
# ── apt / dpkg ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
[[patterns]]
id = "apt-lock"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "Could not get lock /var/lib/dpkg/lock"
severity = "warn"
title = "Package manager is locked"
body = "Another apt process is running — often unattended-upgrades (no zypper equivalent, but similar to PackageKit background updates). Wait a minute. If stuck: sudo rm /var/lib/dpkg/lock-frontend /var/lib/dpkg/lock && sudo dpkg --configure -a"
[[patterns]]
id = "dpkg-interrupted"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "dpkg was interrupted"
severity = "warn"
title = "Package install was interrupted"
body = "Like a zypper transaction that got killed, but dpkg needs manual recovery. Fix: sudo dpkg --configure -a"
[[patterns]]
id = "apt-unmet-dependency"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "Unmet dependencies"
severity = "warn"
title = "Package dependency conflict"
body = "apt auto-resolves most conflicts — less interactive than zypper's conflict wizard. Let it try: sudo apt --fix-broken install"
# ── AppArmor ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
[[patterns]]
id = "apparmor-denial"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "apparmor=\"DENIED\""
severity = "info"
title = "AppArmor access denied"
body = "Both openSUSE and Debian/Ubuntu use AppArmor — the tooling is the same. Check: sudo aa-status — audit: sudo aa-logprof — profiles: /etc/apparmor.d/"
# ── System ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
[[patterns]]
id = "kernel-driver-firmware"
sources = ["kmsg"]
match_text = "firmware: failed to load"
severity = "warn"
title = "Firmware file missing"
body = "On Debian: sudo apt install firmware-linux firmware-linux-nonfree (enable non-free sources first). On Ubuntu: sudo apt install linux-firmware. Debian splits firmware by license unlike openSUSE's single kernel-firmware package."
[[patterns]]
id = "oom-killer"
sources = ["kmsg"]
match_text = "Out of memory: Kill process"
severity = "warn"
title = "OOM killer fired"
body = "A process was killed for RAM. openSUSE's installer sets up swap; Debian minimal may not. Add a swapfile: sudo fallocate -l 4G /swapfile && sudo chmod 600 /swapfile && sudo mkswap /swapfile && sudo swapon /swapfile"
[[patterns]]
id = "disk-io-error"
sources = ["kmsg"]
match_text = "Buffer I/O error on device"
severity = "warn"
title = "Disk I/O error"
body = "Check SMART: sudo smartctl -a /dev/sdX — install: sudo apt install smartmontools"
# ── Audio ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
[[patterns]]
id = "pipewire-connect-fail"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "Failed to connect to PipeWire"
severity = "warn"
title = "PipeWire not responding"
body = "Both Tumbleweed and Ubuntu 22.04+/Debian 12+ ship PipeWire. Restart: systemctl --user restart pipewire pipewire-pulse wireplumber"
[[patterns]]
id = "pulseaudio-connect-fail"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "Failed to connect to pulseaudio"
severity = "warn"
title = "PulseAudio not responding"
body = "Older Debian systems still use PulseAudio. Restart: pulseaudio --kill && pulseaudio --start"
[[patterns]]
id = "bluetooth-rfkill-blocked"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "Blocked through rfkill"
severity = "warn"
title = "Bluetooth rfkill blocked"
body = "rfkill unblock bluetooth — same as openSUSE."
# ── GPU / display ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
[[patterns]]
id = "gpu-hang"
sources = ["kmsg"]
match_text = "GPU HANG"
severity = "warn"
title = "GPU hang"
body = "GPU stopped responding. For NVIDIA on Ubuntu: ubuntu-drivers autoinstall — on Debian: apt install nvidia-driver (requires non-free). Unlike openSUSE's OBS NVIDIA repo, Ubuntu keeps drivers in the main archive."
# ── Network ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
[[patterns]]
id = "networkmanager-activation-fail"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "Activation failed"
severity = "info"
title = "NetworkManager: connection failed"
body = "nmcli device status — Debian minimal may use ifupdown instead of NetworkManager. Install if missing: sudo apt install network-manager"
# ── Printing ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
[[patterns]]
id = "cups-server-error"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "Unable to connect to CUPS server"
severity = "info"
title = "Printer service not running"
body = "sudo systemctl start cups && sudo systemctl enable cups — YaST auto-configured printing on openSUSE; Debian leaves CUPS disabled until you enable it."
# ── Gaming ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
[[patterns]]
id = "proton-runtime-missing"
sources = ["applog:proton"]
match_text = "wine: cannot find"
severity = "warn"
title = "Proton runtime issue"
body = "Right-click game in Steam -> Properties -> Local Files -> Verify integrity."
# ── Dynamic linker / shared libraries ────────────────────────────────────────
[[patterns]]
id = "missing-shared-library"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory"
severity = "warn"
title = "App is missing a system library"
body = "This program needs a shared library that isn't installed. On Linux, most apps use shared system libraries rather than bundling their own — unlike Windows .exe files. Find the right package: apt-file search libname.so.6 (swap in the missing filename). Or search: apt-cache search libname. Install it: sudo apt install libpackagename. Note: pip and pip3 cannot fix this — Python packages are not system libraries."
[[patterns]]
id = "slow-boot-network-wait"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "Failed to start Network Wait Online"
severity = "warn"
title = "Boot is slow: waiting for network"
body = "systemd is waiting for a full network connection before finishing boot. This is almost never needed on a desktop or laptop. Disable it: sudo systemctl disable systemd-networkd-wait-online.service NetworkManager-wait-online.service — then reboot. Unlike Windows, Linux lets you disable any boot step that isn't relevant to your setup."
[[patterns]]
id = "slow-boot-device-timeout"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "Timed out waiting for device"
severity = "warn"
title = "Boot is slow: a device that no longer exists"
body = "systemd is waiting for a disk, partition, or device that isn't connected. Common cause: /etc/fstab has an entry for an external drive or old partition. Check: cat /etc/fstab — look for lines pointing to drives that aren't always connected. Add the 'nofail' option to make them optional: UUID=xxx /mnt/point type defaults,nofail 0 0. Or comment the line out with #."
[[patterns]]
id = "slow-boot-long-running-job"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "A start job is running for"
severity = "info"
title = "A service is taking a long time to start"
body = "A background service is taking longer than expected during boot. To find what's slowing your startup: open a terminal after booting and run: systemd-analyze blame — the top entries are the biggest contributors. For a visual timeline saved to a file: systemd-analyze plot > ~/boot-profile.svg — then open the SVG in a browser."
# ── SSH / remote access ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────
[[patterns]]
id = "ssh-permissions-key"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "WARNING: UNPROTECTED PRIVATE KEY FILE"
severity = "warn"
title = "SSH key permissions are too open"
body = "Your SSH private key is readable by other users on this system — SSH refuses to use it as a security measure. Fix: chmod 600 ~/.ssh/id_rsa (replace id_rsa with the key filename shown in the error). Also lock the directory: chmod 700 ~/.ssh. This is different from Windows where file permissions are mostly advisory."
# ── Flatpak ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
[[patterns]]
id = "flatpak-missing-runtime"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "error: runtime/org."
severity = "warn"
title = "Flatpak app is missing a runtime"
body = "A Flatpak app can't find a required runtime (a shared set of libraries). Update all runtimes first: flatpak update — if that doesn't fix it, reinstall the app: flatpak install flathub com.example.AppName. Flatpak runtimes are like Windows runtime packages (VC++ Redistributable) but for Linux apps."
# ── Display / Wayland compatibility ──────────────────────────────────────────
[[patterns]]
id = "xwayland-crash"
sources = ["journald"]
match_text = "XWayland server terminated unexpectedly"
severity = "warn"
title = "XWayland crashed"
body = "XWayland is the compatibility layer that lets older X11 apps run under Wayland. It crashed, so apps that aren't Wayland-native will stop working until you restart your session. If XWayland keeps crashing: make sure it's installed (sudo apt install xwayland) and check GPU driver stability. Log out and back in to recover."