There are several things going on:
1. your snap is using this for plugging the ubuntu-app-platform content
interface:
plugs:
shared1:
content: shared1
interface: content
target: shared1
default-provider: provider1:shared1
shared2:
content: shared2
interface: content
target: shared2
default-provider: provider2:shared2
This yaml is using an invalid name for 'default-provider', is specifying
a non-existent 'content' value and does not ship
/run/consumer/current/shared1 or shared2. See
https://github.com/snapcore/snapd/wiki/Interfaces#content for how these
interface attributes are to be used.
Since the ubuntu-app-platform has this in its yaml:
slots:
platform:
content: ubuntu-app-platform1
interface: content
read:
- .
your snapcraft.yaml should be something like for the ubuntu-app-platform snap:
plugs:
uap1:
content: ubuntu-app-platform1
default-provider: ubuntu-app-platform
target: shared1
where 'content' is the same as the 'content' value in the providing snap
(ie, ubuntu-app-platform1), 'default-provider' is the name of the
providing snap (ie, ubuntu-app-platform) and 'target' is the name of a
directory in $SNAP for you snap (this directory *must* exist because it
cannot be created for you).
2. 'sudo snap install ./consumer*snap --dangerous' results in autoconnecting
ubuntu-app-platfrom despite all of the above issues with your snap.yaml. This
is because of a too-lenient snap declaration.
3. Because of the too lenient snap declaration for ubuntu-app-platform, if you
have a snap that plugs both ubuntu-app-platform and mir-libs, since mir-libs
does not currently have a snap declaration, both plugs would be auto-connected
to ubuntu-app-platform and mir-libs skipped.
Note that local unasserted snap installs of content snaps don't have a signed
snap declaration on the system, so only the base declaration can be consulted.
This accounts for differences in behavior with snaps installed with and without
--dangerous.
I have adjusted the snap declaration for ubuntu-app-platform to have:
slots:
content:
allow-auto-connection:
-
plug-attributes:
content: $SLOT(content)
slot-attributes:
content: ubuntu-app-platform1
This means that the auto-connection can only happen with the plugging
snap that uses "content: ubuntu-app-platform1", which is precisely how
it is supposed to work.
To fix your snap for ubuntu-app-platform and mir-libs, use this yaml:
plugs:
uap1:
interface: content
content: ubuntu-app-platform1
target: shared1
default-provider: ubuntu-app-platform
ml0:
interface: content
content: mir0
target: shared2
default-provider: mir-libs
then create the shared1 and shared2 directories beside your
snapcraft.yaml file, then snapcraft will generate a snap that will work
for you. Specifically, if you install ubuntu-app-platform first, upon
install of your snap ubuntu-app-platform will be mounted on
$SNAP/shared1 and nothing will be mounted on $SNAP/shared2 (since mir-
libs doesn't yet have a snap declaration for auto-connection). When you
'sudo snap connect consumer:ml0 mir-libs:mir-libs', then mir-libs will
be mounted on $SNAP/shared2 (after you first 'sudo /usr/lib/snapd/snap-
discard-ns consumer').
In summary, there is no bug in snapd, but there are bugs in your
snapcraft.yaml and there was a bug in the ubuntu-app-platform's snap
declaration. Since the snap declaration is now fixed, marking Fixed
Released.
** Changed in: snapd (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Fix Released
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1674824
Title:
Content interface plugs autoconnect to the wrong provider
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