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<b><font color=red><big>For information on current-day OLPC software build systems, see [[Build system]].</big></font></b> |
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{{Build system}} |
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[http://dev.laptop.org/git/users/mstone/puritan Source code]. [http://dev.laptop.org/git?p=users/mstone/puritan;f=README;hb=ui README]. |
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{{Dated}} |
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Puritan is an MIT-licensed disk-image compiler for constructing OLPC disk images from sources including RPM repositories and build-stream descriptions. It is loosely derived from a similar tool, [[Pilgrim]], written by David Zeuthen, John Palmieri, C. Scott Ananian, Dennis Gilmore, and Michael Stone and is being considered to replace [[Pilgrim]], along with [[livecd-tools]]. |
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In the puritan framework, each and every compilation (build configuration) is described by a git commit and can be authoritatively identified by a git tag pointing to that commit. Relationships between compilations are recorded in the git version graph. |
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[http://dev.laptop.org/git/users/mstone/puritan Source code]. [http://dev.laptop.org/git?p=users/mstone/puritan;f=README;hb=ui README]. Latest version: ''ui:'' '''[http://dev.laptop.org/git?p=users/mstone/puritan;a=tree;hb=e7a6bdb6dfa0b6bd067a0c9bb12c480bea09b81f e7a6bdb6]''', ''compilation:'' '''[http://dev.laptop.org/git?p=users/mstone/puritan;a=tree;hb=8b944b2dcdb770acf802bf7324a1d6c26bc07573 8b944b2d]'''. |
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{{:Puritan/Introduction}} |
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== Principles == |
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In the present layout, changes that are suitable for all builds should be included in the 'compiler' puritan branch. Build-specific configuration and instructions should go in other branches and these other branches should be regularly rebased on top of 'compiler' in order to produce highly readable history graphs. |
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{{:Puritan/Principles}} |
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If desired, the RPM and activity sources for each build can be archived in a separate git repository and can be strongly versioned along with the compilation that used them by including the sources as a git submodule in the compilation commit. |
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== |
== Instructions == |
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{{:Puritan/Instructions}} |
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The raw dependencies of puritan consist of: |
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== Configuration == |
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git-core python-2.5 mock |
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Puritan is highly and easily configurable by means of small modifications to the files and directories contained in each compilation. Detailed suggestions on how to [[Puritan/Configuration|configure Puritan]] are available. |
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Mock is used to construct a build root with packages described by the compilation's <tt>bootstrap</tt> and <tt>dependencies</tt> files. |
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== Notes and Tricks == |
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* Use the [http://dev.laptop.org/git/users/mstone/puritan source], Luke! (It was written to be read!) |
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* with some uis and compilations, various subcommands (e.g. 'build') may fail because /etc/mock/fedora-9-i386.cfg is not present in Debian's mock package 0.9.7-2 |
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** one workaround is to create it from http://teach.laptop.org/~mstone/fedora-9-i386.cfg. |
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* Mock and SElinux do not interact very well. |
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** at least one workaround is discussed [http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Extras/MockTricks#Using_mock_under_SELinux on the Fedora MockTricks]] page. |
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** the author simply disables selinux with <tt>sudo setenforce 0</tt> in order to avoid the hassle. |
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* [http://meld.sourceforge.net/ Meld] is a great tool for diffing the filesystem trees produced by the 'produce_tree' build stage and for comparing your builds to those made by others. |
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* [[Git]] will be your friend, but, to get the most out of the relationship, you're going to have to invest in it. Ask for help when you need it! |
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** <tt>gitk --all</tt> or <tt>git log</tt> will show you lots of other compilations you could run! |
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* The latest compilation now automatically caches packages in a directory called 'smart/packages' inside the compilation. Some other state is also cached, so if things start behaving strangely, try deleting the 'smart' directory. |
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wget -O puritan.rpm http://teach.laptop.org/~mstone/releases/RPMS/noarch/puritan-0.2-1.olpc2.noarch.rpm |
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sudo rpm -Uvh puritan.rpm |
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Puritan was designed from the ground up to support decentralized development because its author felt that deployment autonomy was going to be critical to the success of the OLPC project. Therefore, please use your autonomy! In particular, please help improve puritan by: |
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then by checking out a 'puritan compilation' to be run by <tt>/usr/bin/puritan</tt> |
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* Using it! As much as you can! Produce cool disk images! Publish your patches! (patch review available on request). |
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$(git clone git://dev.laptop.org/users/mstone/puritan compilation; cd compilation; git checkout origin/devel_jffs2) |
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* Making puritan work on your platform - it's only dependencies are python2.5, git-core, and mock! |
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puritan ./compilation HEAD ./results |
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=== On Debian === |
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''Note: yum seems to be broken on Debian at the moment, which is preventing this recipe from working. :('' --[[User:24.61.13.93|24.61.13.93]] 03:01, 7 March 2008 (EST) |
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sudo apt-get install mock git-core |
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sudo usermod -a -G mock $USERNAME |
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git clone git://dev.laptop.org/users/mstone/puritan ui |
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$(git clone git://dev.laptop.org/users/mstone/puritan compilation; cd compilation; git checkout origin/devel_jffs2) |
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/usr/bin/python2.5 ui/puritan/main.py ./compilation HEAD ./results |
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Finally, please help improve puritan by |
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[[Category:Puritan]] |
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* making it work on your platform |
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Latest revision as of 16:56, 8 February 2011
For information on current-day OLPC software build systems, see Build system.
Puritan
Source code. README. Latest version: ui: e7a6bdb6, compilation: 8b944b2d. Puritan is a disk-image compiler which converts source material including packages, activities, and hacks into installable disk images. It consists of two pieces: a UI and a family of compilations (example). The compilations are simple Python programs which populate a filesystem with the materials you supply, then format it for distribution. The UI runs the compilations in a controlled environment created by Mock and configured according to the compilation's bootstrap and dependencies files.
Puritan was developed as a replacement for Pilgrim but was never officially adopted by OLPC. For details on the active OLPC build system, see Build system.
Principles
Puritan is based on several fundamental principles.
- Tools should be usable for both decentralized and centralized patterns of development.
- People **will** want to make unpackaged changes to their builds.
- Caching matters.
- Interactive development matters.
- Build reproducibility matters.
- Error-detection, handling, and cleanup matter.
- People working on the OLPC build system will become accustomed to git and python.
Instructions
Preparation
To use Puritan, you need to install dependencies:
# NB: mock >= 0.9.7 is needed. # debian: sudo apt-get install mock git-core # fedora: sudo yum install mock git-core # both sudo usermod -a -G mock $USER newgrp mock
and to check out and run a 'ui' and a 'compilation'.
(git clone git://dev.laptop.org/users/mstone/puritan compilation; cd compilation; git branch --track 767 origin/767; git checkout 767) git clone git://dev.laptop.org/users/mstone/puritan ui python2.5 ui/puritan/main.py # read help sudo python2.5 ui/puritan/main.py -v build ./compilation HEAD ./results -- -i
Interactive Debugging
The '-i' option above enables an interactive error-handling mode. If an error occurs,
with the most recent compilation and ui, you will be dropped directly into bash inside the buildroot.
- to resume the compilation, type
exit 0
- to quit the compilation, type
exit 1
with earlier compilations which still support interactive error-handling: instructions
Other Notes
- Fedora
Note: if you encounter permission errors when running this command, you may need to:
sudo setenforce 0 # disable selinux
Note: a word of warning: while _my_ uis and compilations will treat your computer nicely, other people's might not. Caveat emptor.
- Ubuntu
mock_0.9.7-2 on ubuntu requires [1] in order to run. Additionally, if you run puritan as root, you should either
usermod -a -G mock -u $SUDO_UID unset SUDO_UID # or
- All
Some puritan compilations now feature a 'download' operation which can be used to download all packages that the compilation will install for later (offline) use:
sudo python2.5 ui/puritan/main.py -v download ./compilation HEAD ./results
This command will generate a program in the results directory which can be used to download the packages.
Configuration
Puritan is highly and easily configurable by means of small modifications to the files and directories contained in each compilation. Detailed suggestions on how to configure Puritan are available.
Notes and Tricks
- Use the source, Luke! (It was written to be read!)
- with some uis and compilations, various subcommands (e.g. 'build') may fail because /etc/mock/fedora-9-i386.cfg is not present in Debian's mock package 0.9.7-2
- one workaround is to create it from http://teach.laptop.org/~mstone/fedora-9-i386.cfg.
- Mock and SElinux do not interact very well.
- at least one workaround is discussed on the Fedora MockTricks] page.
- the author simply disables selinux with sudo setenforce 0 in order to avoid the hassle.
- Meld is a great tool for diffing the filesystem trees produced by the 'produce_tree' build stage and for comparing your builds to those made by others.
- Git will be your friend, but, to get the most out of the relationship, you're going to have to invest in it. Ask for help when you need it!
- gitk --all or git log will show you lots of other compilations you could run!
- The latest compilation now automatically caches packages in a directory called 'smart/packages' inside the compilation. Some other state is also cached, so if things start behaving strangely, try deleting the 'smart' directory.
Help Out
Puritan was designed from the ground up to support decentralized development because its author felt that deployment autonomy was going to be critical to the success of the OLPC project. Therefore, please use your autonomy! In particular, please help improve puritan by:
- Using it! As much as you can! Produce cool disk images! Publish your patches! (patch review available on request).
- Making puritan work on your platform - it's only dependencies are python2.5, git-core, and mock!
- Maintaining the devel_ext3 compilation
- Adding some reasonable automatic package or buildroot caching system so that it runs faster without impairing build repeatability
- Improving the UI with commands for manipulating compilations, or for diffing builds, or for profiling compilations, or ...