Updating from Tumbleweed 20260331 to 20260415, zypper dup fails at accountsservice :(
error: lsetfilecon: (11 /usr/share/accountsservice, system_u:object_r:accountsd_share_t:s0) Invalid argument
error: Plugin selinux: hook fsm_file_prepare failed
error: unpacking of archive failed on file /usr/share/accountsservice: cpio: (error 0x2)
error: accountsservice-23.13.9-11.3.x86_64: install failed
error: accountsservice-23.13.9-11.2.x86_64: erase skipped
(557/916) Installing: accountsservice-23.13.9-11.3.x86_64 ..................................................................................................[error]
Installation of accountsservice-23.13.9-11.3.x86_64 failed:
Error: Subprocess failed. Error: RPM failed: Command exited with status 1.
Abort, retry, ignore? [a/r/i] (a): a
Warning: %posttrans and %transfiletrigger scripts are not executed when aborting!
What should I do?
- Remember that a rolling distro is bleeding edge. That means that from time to time you WILL encounter some issues.
- Tumbleweed is (somewhat) unique in its approach to rolling. The quality checks that occur on openQA partially mitigate failures by withholding the next distro upgrades until they can be reviewed. However, the openSUSE devs are not perfect, openQA is not perfect, and some times rolling forward with a known issues is deemed acceptable.
- This is where btrfs comes in. The answer to your question of what to do if zypper dup fails is two part: A) roll back to the automatic “pre” snapshot taken by snapper before the dup. B) Just wait for the devs to fix the issue!
- If you are impatient, you can check for progress on a specific issue by searching the issue on https://bugzilla.opensuse.org/, or chat up the community either on the forums or on the matrix space in the support room.
Feel free to ask questions anytime!
At the moment I’m thinking of hopping to Debian 😅 I ran Fedora Workstation for a few weeks out of an external drive and then openSUSE Tumblewed for a couple weeks (this time on my main system drive) and thought I was good, never had any problems with updating the system. And today is my first distro update since I moved to openSUSE full-time and I get this :( Perhaps I am not ready for a rolling distro.
btw did Slowroll get systemd-boot already?
I know people are hating AI, but Opus again helped me. My system is fixed and updated. It diagnosed the root cause and told me how to fix it and I can attest that it worked. Below you can find a writeup on what was done.
When working with AI I check the commands I don’t understand, consult the
tldrpages andmanpages or ask it to further explain what it wants to do and why. I also have Snapper and Restic backup so I wasn’t too worried about screwing things up.However, if system updates can fail like this and I’m not at fault (I wasn’t), then I think Tumbleweed or rolling distros in general are not for me. I cannot keep asking AI for help, SELinux, labeling something in the filesystem – I don’t even know what that means. It was rough today and it gave me a scare. I am not ready to troubleshoot such advanced concepts as a Linux newbie, so I think I’ll bail and switch to something else.
Fixing
zypper dupfailure on openSUSE Tumbleweed with SELinuxA debugging session covering an
accountsserviceRPM install failure during
zypper dup, caused by a stale compiled SELinux policy in the kernel.
The problem
zypper dupfailed on a single package:error: lsetfilecon: (11 /usr/share/accountsservice, system_u:object_r:accountsd_share_t:s0) Invalid argument error: Plugin selinux: hook fsm_file_prepare failed error: unpacking of archive failed on file /usr/share/accountsservice: cpio: (error 0x2) error: accountsservice-23.13.9-11.3.x86_64: install failed error: accountsservice-23.13.9-11.2.x86_64: erase skipped ( 4/360) Installing: accountsservice-23.13.9-11.3.x86_64 ..................................................................................................[error] Installation of accountsservice-23.13.9-11.3.x86_64 failed: Error: Subprocess failed. Error: RPM failed: Command exited with status 1. Abort, retry, ignore? [a/r/i] (a): a Warning: %posttrans and %transfiletrigger scripts are not executed when aborting! Problem occurred during or after installation or removal of packages: Installation has been aborted as directed.
Diagnosis
The key line is:
lsetfilecon: (11 /usr/share/accountsservice, system_u:object_r:accountsd_share_t:s0) Invalid argumentRPM’s SELinux plugin is trying to apply the label
accountsd_share_tto
/usr/share/accountsservice, and the kernel returnsEINVAL. This typically
means one of:- The filesystem doesn’t support the xattrs SELinux needs, or
- The SELinux policy loaded in the kernel doesn’t know the type being applied.
The
%posttranswarning at the end is a consequence — it means other packages
queued in the transaction had their post-transaction scripts skipped, so the
system is in a partially-upgraded state.Gathering facts
rpm -q selinux-policy # → selinux-policy-20260410-1.1.noarch zypper info selinux-policy # → Status: up-to-date, Version: 20260410-1.1 sudo getenforce # → Enforcing sudo semanage module -l | grep accountsd # → accountsd 100 pp sudo seinfo -t accountsd_share_t # → Types: 0 ← smoking gun df -T /usr/share/accountsservice # → /dev/mapper/cr_root btrfs ... getfattr -d -m - /usr/share/accountsservice # → security.selinux="system_u:object_r:usr_t:s0" sudo ausearch -ts recent -m AVC # → AVCs related to snapper_sdbootutil_plugin_t, all permissive=1 # → unrelated to this failureWhat the results mean
selinux-policyon disk is current (20260410-1.1).- The
accountsdmodule is installed at priority 100. - But
seinfo -t accountsd_share_treturnsTypes: 0— the loaded kernel
policy does not know this type. - Filesystem is Btrfs with xattrs working; the existing label
usr_tis set
fine, so it’s not a filesystem support issue. - The AVCs in the audit log are unrelated noise from the aborted dup — all
permissive=1, from sdbootutil housekeeping.
Root cause
The
selinux-policyRPM on disk definesaccountsd_share_t, but the kernel
is running an older compiled policy that predates that type. When RPM’s
SELinux plugin tried to applyaccountsd_share_t, the kernel said “I don’t
know what that is” →EINVAL.This usually happens when
selinux-policywas updated on disk in an earlier
transaction, but the policy store wasn’t recompiled and reloaded — likely
because a%posttransscript that would have calledsemodule -Bwas
skipped during a prior interrupted transaction.
Fix
1. Rebuild and reload the policy store
sudo semodule -BThis forces the modular policy (including
accountsd) to be recompiled from
the on-disk modules and loaded into the kernel. It can take 30–90 seconds.2. Verify the type is now known
sudo seinfo -t accountsd_share_t # → Types: 13. Retry the dup
sudo zypper dupThe
accountsserviceinstall should now succeed. Because the first attempt
aborted with%posttransscripts skipped,zypper dupmay have extra
cleanup/reinstall work to do — that’s expected.4. Regenerate TPM2 PCR predictions
During the dup,
sdbootutilemitted warnings like:NVIndex policy created WARNING: Volume key cannot be extracted. Dropping PCR 15 WARNING: File measure-pcr-prediction should be updated WARNING: Call sdbootutil update-predictions --measure-pcr find: '/var/lib/pcrlock.d/': No such file or directoryBreakdown:
Volume key cannot be extracted. Dropping PCR 15— expected and
harmless. sdbootutil binds without PCR 15 when the volume key isn’t
available; unlock still works via other PCRs.find: '/var/lib/pcrlock.d/': No such file or directory— ties back to
one of the AVCs we saw: the snapper sdbootutil plugin removedpcrlock.d
during cleanup.permissive=1means SELinux didn’t block it; this is a
plugin ordering issue, not an SELinux problem.WARNING: Call sdbootutil update-predictions --measure-pcr— the PCR
prediction file needs regenerating before the next boot, or TPM2 may fail
to release LUKS keys and you’ll fall back to the passphrase prompt.
Run the suggested command once dup completes cleanly:
sudo sdbootutil update-predictions --measure-pcr5. Schedule a filesystem relabel and reboot
The on-disk label on
/usr/share/accountsservicewas still the generic
usr_t, so after a policy jump it’s worth reconciling all labels:sudo fixfiles onboot sudo rebootfixfiles onbootschedules a full relabel at next boot — takes a few minutes
during boot but is the cleanest way to get labels in sync with the updated
policy.
Full sequence
sudo semodule -B # rebuild policy sudo seinfo -t accountsd_share_t # verify: Types: 1 sudo zypper dup # finish the dup sudo sdbootutil update-predictions --measure-pcr # regen TPM predictions sudo fixfiles onboot # schedule relabel sudo reboot
Safety notes
- Before rebooting, confirm the LUKS passphrase is accessible (in a password
manager). TPM2 auto-unlock is a convenience layer on top of the passphrase
— if predictions are wrong, the system falls back to the passphrase rather
than locking you out. - openSUSE’s Btrfs + snapper setup means a pre-dup snapshot exists. Confirm
withsudo snapper list. If anything goes sideways, an older snapshot can
be booted from systemd-boot. - If the TPM2 unlock fails at first boot after dup, enter the passphrase and
re-runsudo sdbootutil update-predictions --measure-pcronce booted —
predictions sometimes need recalculating against the actual booted
measurements.
Key takeaways
lsetfilecon ... Invalid argumentduring an RPM install = the kernel
policy doesn’t know a type the package is trying to apply. Fix with
semodule -Bto recompile and reload.seinfo -t <type>returningTypes: 0for a type you expect to exist is
the definitive signal that the loaded policy is stale relative to what’s on
disk.- When a
zypper dupaborts mid-transaction,%posttransscripts are
skipped — which can leave SELinux policy out of sync and cause cascading
failures on the next dup. Finishing the transaction cleanly and relabeling
afterwards is the safe recovery path. - The sdbootutil PCR warnings are separate from the SELinux issue but worth
addressing in the same session, since the next reboot will exercise both.
To be fair, SELinux isn’t easy to anyone.
If you’re not comfortable troubleshooting advanced stuff, then I recommend trying Linux Mint instead. Great starting point and you can always try Tumbleweed or something else again when you’re more comfortable.


