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{{OLPC}}
{{dated}}


For up to date information on creating Activities see http://www.flossmanuals.net/make-your-own-sugar-activities/
Here is a short tutorial about writing a sugar activity. It's a step by step guide to get you started quickly, without going in details of the activity system. Download the [http://www.gnome.org/~marco/sugar-drawing-0.1.tar.gz example sources]


{{Translations}}
== Write the build system ==
{{Developers}}
<< [[Tutorials]]


This tutorial explains step by step how to create the Hello World Activity bundle. You can [http://divieira.googlepages.com/HelloWorld-1.xo download a completed .xo package], though the package will not exactly match the below contents.
Create the <tt>autogen.sh</tt> script:


This tutorial assumes you have read the [[Developers|Developer's Manual]], have [[Developers/Setup|installed a Sugar development environment]] and wish to use the [[Developers/Setup#Python/PyGTK|PyGTK]] development approach (the standard approach to developing activities for the OLPC).
#!/bin/sh

# Run this to generate all the initial makefiles, etc.
== Getting started ==
*Create the bundle directory structure:

mkdir -p HelloWorldActivity.activity/activity

*Write the <tt>activity.info</tt> file, to describe your bundle in the activity sub-directory (e.g. <tt>HelloWorldActivity.activity/activity/activity.info</tt>). The [[Activity Bundles]] specification explain in detail the meaning of each field.
**Note: in a joyride-1525 build, sugar could not locate the icon when I tried this unless I removed the '.svg' extension from the 'icon = activity-helloworld.svg' line.

{{ Box File | activity.info | 2=<pre>
[Activity]
name = HelloWorld
bundle_id = org.laptop.HelloWorldActivity
exec = sugar-activity HelloWorldActivity.HelloWorldActivity
icon = activity-helloworld
activity_version = 1
host_version = 1
show_launcher = yes
</pre>
}}

*Design an icon for your activity by following the instructions on [[Making_Sugar_Icons | making icons for Sugar]] and place it in the activity sub-directory. The file name should match the icon file name specified in the info file (e.g. <tt>activity-helloworld.svg</tt>). The contents of the SVG file will look something like:

{{ Box File | activity-helloworld.svg | 2=<pre>
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE svg PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD SVG 1.1//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/1.1/DTD/svg11.dtd" [
<!ENTITY stroke_color "#666666">
<!ENTITY fill_color "#FFFFFF">
]>
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="55" height="55">
<rect x="5" y="5" width="45" height="45"
style="fill:&fill_color;;stroke:&stroke_color;;stroke-width:3.5"/>
</svg>
</pre>
}}

*Write the <tt>setup.py</tt> script in the top level directory (e.g. <tt>HelloWorldActivity.activity/setup.py</tt>), which in most cases will look like this:

{{ Box File | setup.py | 2=<pre>
#!/usr/bin/env python
from sugar.activity import bundlebuilder
bundlebuilder.start()
</pre>
}}

A more advanced version, which supports building activity bundles without Sugar installed, looks like this:

{{ Box File | setup.py | 2=<pre>
#!/usr/bin/env python
try:
from sugar.activity import bundlebuilder
bundlebuilder.start()
except ImportError:
import os
os.system("find ./ | sed 's,^./,HelloWorldActivity.activity/,g' > MANIFEST")
os.system('rm HelloWorldActivity.xo')
os.chdir('..')
os.system('zip -r HelloWorldActivity.xo HelloWorldActivity.activity')
os.system('mv HelloWorldActivity.xo ./HelloWorldActivity.activity')
os.chdir('HelloWorldActivity.activity')
</pre>
}}

*Code your activity in Python. The name you specified in the <tt>.info</tt> file as "<tt>class</tt>" is the name of the class which runs your code. For the <tt>activity.info</tt> file above, we specify a top-level module named <tt>HelloWorldActivity.HelloWorldActivity</tt> (please note that the use of uppercase names in module names is considered poor [[Python Style Guide|Python style]], feel free to use an activity name with more standard style names).
{{ Box File | HelloWorldActivity.py | 2=<pre>
from sugar.activity import activity
import logging
import sys, os
srcdir=`dirname $0`
import gtk
test -z "$srcdir" && srcdir=.
class HelloWorldActivity(activity.Activity):
PKG_NAME="sugar-drawing"
def hello(self, widget, data=None):
logging.info('Hello World')
def __init__(self, handle):
(test -f $srcdir/drawing.activity) || {
print "running activity init", handle
echo -n "**Error**: Directory "\`$srcdir\'" does not look like the"
activity.Activity.__init__(self, handle)
echo " top-level $PKG_NAME directory"
print "activity running"
exit 1
}
# Creates the Toolbox. It contains the Activity Toolbar, which is the
which gnome-autogen.sh || {
# bar that appears on every Sugar window and contains essential
echo "You need to install gnome-common from the GNOME CVS"
# functionalities, such as the 'Collaborate' and 'Close' buttons.
exit 1
toolbox = activity.ActivityToolbox(self)
}
self.set_toolbox(toolbox)
toolbox.show()
# Creates a new button with the label "Hello World".
REQUIRED_AUTOMAKE_VERSION=1.9 USE_GNOME2_MACROS=1 . gnome-autogen.sh
self.button = gtk.Button("Hello World")
# When the button receives the "clicked" signal, it will call the
# function hello() passing it None as its argument. The hello()
# function is defined above.
self.button.connect("clicked", self.hello, None)
# Set the button to be our canvas. The canvas is the main section of
# every Sugar Window. It fills all the area below the toolbox.
self.set_canvas(self.button)
# The final step is to display this newly created widget.
self.button.show()
print "AT END OF THE CLASS"
</pre>
}}


The above file is called <tt>HelloWorldActivity.py</tt>
Create a configure.ac file:
AC_INIT([Sugar Drawing],[0.1],[],[sugar-drawing])
AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE
AM_PATH_PYTHON
AC_OUTPUT([
Makefile
])


*Create a <tt>MANIFEST</tt> (e.g. <tt>HelloWorldActivity.activity/MANIFEST</tt>), containing the list of the files (relative to the directory that the MANIFEST is in) to include in the package. (Note: Be sure '''not''' to leave blank lines at the end of the file.) This script does that in linux (run it from within the HellowWorldActivity.activity directory):
Automake check for the existence of a few required files, you have to create them even if empty:
cd HelloWorldActivity.activity
find . -type f | sed 's,^./,,g' > MANIFEST


*Your directory structure should now look like this:
touch NEWS README AUTHORS ChangeLog
HelloWorldActivity.activity/
HelloWorldActivity.activity/setup.py
HelloWorldActivity.activity/activity
HelloWorldActivity.activity/activity/activity.info
HelloWorldActivity.activity/activity/activity-helloworld.svg
HelloWorldActivity.activity/HelloWorldActivity.py
HelloWorldActivity.activity/MANIFEST


*Make sure that all your python files have the required permissions to be used.
Write the activity Makefile.am:
chmod a+x setup.py
chmod a+x HelloWorldActivity.py


*Setup your bundle for development (must be user olpc when you do this) to become user olpc, type: su - olpc
activitydir = $(datadir)/sugar/activities/drawing
activity_PYTHON = \
__init__.py \
DrawingActivity.py
EXTRA_DIST = drawing.activity
install-data-local:
sugar-setup-activity $(srcdir)/drawing.activity


If you are prompted for a password, trying using: su
== Write the activity code ==


python setup.py dev
Write a subclass of sugar.activity.Activity. It's a GtkWindow so you can use the "add" method to insert your own widgets. The source of DrawingActivity.py demonstrates it:


This just creates a symlink to your activity folder in <tt>~/Activities</tt>, so that Sugar can find your activity.
import gtk
from sugar.activity.Activity import Activity
class DrawingActivity(Activity):
def __init__(self, service, args):
Activity.__init__(self, service)
button = gtk.Button('Drawing')
self.add(button)
button.show()


*Restart Sugar using Ctrl-Alt-Erase and your activity will appear in the interface! (NOTE: By default, the Home view shows only the favorite activities. You should press Ctrl+2 or go the right-upper corner and change to the List View)
Create the package initialization file:


*Run your activity, and if there are errors use the [[Log]] viewer activity to see what went wrong.
touch __init__.py


== Running ==
Write drawing.activity with the necessary informations about the activity:
If you now run sugar the activity icon should be visible on the frame. (You have to restart sugar to get it to pick up the change if you just installed it. Hit <tt>ctrl-alt-erase</tt>.)


You can also edit the code in your bundle directory directly. Note that the first time your Activity is launched, it leaves a process around even if you close the window, so you must kill the <tt>sugar-activity-factory</tt> to get it to reload when you click again.
[Activity]

name = Drawing
== Distribution ==
id = org.laptop.sugar.Drawing
Create an <tt>.xo</tt> package to distribute your bundle. (An <tt>.xo</tt> file is essentially a zip file built from the MANIFEST with some extra metadata, like a JAR file. It also has some localization ability, and in the future we expect to be able to sign these too.) The bundle name is automatically generated from the '<tt>name</tt>' and '<tt>activity_version</tt>' values found in the <tt>activity.info</tt> file, separated by a dash, with a <tt>.xo</tt> extension.
python_module = drawing.DrawingActivity.DrawingActivity

default_type = _drawing_olpc._udp
./setup.py dist_xo
show_launcher = yes

To install the xo on a laptop you can use the installer script.

sugar-install-bundle HelloWorld-1.xo

== Trouble Shooting ==


You can find application logs in /home/olpc/.sugar/default/logs. If the sample fails to compile, sugar will show you the icon in the circle but remain forever at the "Starting..." tag when you hover your mouse over it. You'll have to restart sugar with &lt;ctrl-alt-erase&gt; in order to remove the icon. You can find the cause of your trouble in the the log named for the "service-name" in your activity.info file, in this case "org.laptop.HelloWorldActivity".
== Build and install ==


== See also ==
Initialize the build system. The value of prefix depends on the path of sugar-jhbuild:


* [[Activity bundles]]
./autogen.sh --prefix=[SUGAR-JHBUILD]/build
* [[Hacking Sugar]]
* [[Localization]] -- you will need to localize your activity to make it accessible to users of the OLPC
* [[Game development HOWTO]]
* [[Textedit Activity]] - simple text editor to support development and testing on the Xo


Build and install:


[[Category:Sugar]]
make
[[Category:HowTo]]
make install
[[Category:Developers]]

Latest revision as of 16:36, 17 January 2014

Emblem-warning.png The currency of this article or section may be limited by out-of-date information.
There may be relevant discussion on its talk page

For up to date information on creating Activities see http://www.flossmanuals.net/make-your-own-sugar-activities/

  english | 日本語 | 한국어 | português | español HowTo [ID# 294804]  +/-  


<< Tutorials

This tutorial explains step by step how to create the Hello World Activity bundle. You can download a completed .xo package, though the package will not exactly match the below contents.

This tutorial assumes you have read the Developer's Manual, have installed a Sugar development environment and wish to use the PyGTK development approach (the standard approach to developing activities for the OLPC).

Getting started

  • Create the bundle directory structure:
mkdir -p HelloWorldActivity.activity/activity
  • Write the activity.info file, to describe your bundle in the activity sub-directory (e.g. HelloWorldActivity.activity/activity/activity.info). The Activity Bundles specification explain in detail the meaning of each field.
    • Note: in a joyride-1525 build, sugar could not locate the icon when I tried this unless I removed the '.svg' extension from the 'icon = activity-helloworld.svg' line.
 File: activity.info
 [Activity]
 name = HelloWorld
 bundle_id = org.laptop.HelloWorldActivity
 exec = sugar-activity HelloWorldActivity.HelloWorldActivity
 icon = activity-helloworld
 activity_version = 1
 host_version = 1
 show_launcher = yes
  • Design an icon for your activity by following the instructions on making icons for Sugar and place it in the activity sub-directory. The file name should match the icon file name specified in the info file (e.g. activity-helloworld.svg). The contents of the SVG file will look something like:
 File: activity-helloworld.svg
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
 <!DOCTYPE svg PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD SVG 1.1//EN"
  "http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/1.1/DTD/svg11.dtd" [
   <!ENTITY stroke_color "#666666">
   <!ENTITY fill_color "#FFFFFF">
 ]>
 <svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="55" height="55">
   <rect x="5" y="5" width="45" height="45"
   style="fill:&fill_color;;stroke:&stroke_color;;stroke-width:3.5"/>
 </svg>
  • Write the setup.py script in the top level directory (e.g. HelloWorldActivity.activity/setup.py), which in most cases will look like this:
 File: setup.py
 #!/usr/bin/env python
 from sugar.activity import bundlebuilder
 bundlebuilder.start()

A more advanced version, which supports building activity bundles without Sugar installed, looks like this:

 File: setup.py
 #!/usr/bin/env python
 try:
 	from sugar.activity import bundlebuilder
 	bundlebuilder.start()
 except ImportError:
 	import os
 	os.system("find ./ | sed 's,^./,HelloWorldActivity.activity/,g' > MANIFEST")
 	os.system('rm HelloWorldActivity.xo')
 	os.chdir('..')
 	os.system('zip -r HelloWorldActivity.xo HelloWorldActivity.activity')
 	os.system('mv HelloWorldActivity.xo ./HelloWorldActivity.activity')
 	os.chdir('HelloWorldActivity.activity')
  • Code your activity in Python. The name you specified in the .info file as "class" is the name of the class which runs your code. For the activity.info file above, we specify a top-level module named HelloWorldActivity.HelloWorldActivity (please note that the use of uppercase names in module names is considered poor Python style, feel free to use an activity name with more standard style names).
 File: HelloWorldActivity.py
 from sugar.activity import activity
 import logging
 
 import sys, os
 import gtk
 
 class HelloWorldActivity(activity.Activity):
     def hello(self, widget, data=None):
         logging.info('Hello World')
 
     def __init__(self, handle):
         print "running activity init", handle
         activity.Activity.__init__(self, handle)
         print "activity running"
 
         # Creates the Toolbox. It contains the Activity Toolbar, which is the
         # bar that appears on every Sugar window and contains essential
         # functionalities, such as the 'Collaborate' and 'Close' buttons.
         toolbox = activity.ActivityToolbox(self)
         self.set_toolbox(toolbox)
         toolbox.show()
 
         # Creates a new button with the label "Hello World".
         self.button = gtk.Button("Hello World")
     
         # When the button receives the "clicked" signal, it will call the
         # function hello() passing it None as its argument.  The hello()
         # function is defined above.
         self.button.connect("clicked", self.hello, None)
     
         # Set the button to be our canvas. The canvas is the main section of
         # every Sugar Window. It fills all the area below the toolbox.
         self.set_canvas(self.button)
     
         # The final step is to display this newly created widget.
         self.button.show()
     
         print "AT END OF THE CLASS"

The above file is called HelloWorldActivity.py

  • Create a MANIFEST (e.g. HelloWorldActivity.activity/MANIFEST), containing the list of the files (relative to the directory that the MANIFEST is in) to include in the package. (Note: Be sure not to leave blank lines at the end of the file.) This script does that in linux (run it from within the HellowWorldActivity.activity directory):
cd HelloWorldActivity.activity
find . -type f | sed 's,^./,,g' > MANIFEST
  • Your directory structure should now look like this:
HelloWorldActivity.activity/
HelloWorldActivity.activity/setup.py
HelloWorldActivity.activity/activity
HelloWorldActivity.activity/activity/activity.info
HelloWorldActivity.activity/activity/activity-helloworld.svg
HelloWorldActivity.activity/HelloWorldActivity.py
HelloWorldActivity.activity/MANIFEST
  • Make sure that all your python files have the required permissions to be used.
chmod a+x setup.py
chmod a+x HelloWorldActivity.py
  • Setup your bundle for development (must be user olpc when you do this) to become user olpc, type: su - olpc

If you are prompted for a password, trying using: su

python setup.py dev

This just creates a symlink to your activity folder in ~/Activities, so that Sugar can find your activity.

  • Restart Sugar using Ctrl-Alt-Erase and your activity will appear in the interface! (NOTE: By default, the Home view shows only the favorite activities. You should press Ctrl+2 or go the right-upper corner and change to the List View)
  • Run your activity, and if there are errors use the Log viewer activity to see what went wrong.

Running

If you now run sugar the activity icon should be visible on the frame. (You have to restart sugar to get it to pick up the change if you just installed it. Hit ctrl-alt-erase.)

You can also edit the code in your bundle directory directly. Note that the first time your Activity is launched, it leaves a process around even if you close the window, so you must kill the sugar-activity-factory to get it to reload when you click again.

Distribution

Create an .xo package to distribute your bundle. (An .xo file is essentially a zip file built from the MANIFEST with some extra metadata, like a JAR file. It also has some localization ability, and in the future we expect to be able to sign these too.) The bundle name is automatically generated from the 'name' and 'activity_version' values found in the activity.info file, separated by a dash, with a .xo extension.

 ./setup.py dist_xo

To install the xo on a laptop you can use the installer script.

 sugar-install-bundle HelloWorld-1.xo

Trouble Shooting

You can find application logs in /home/olpc/.sugar/default/logs. If the sample fails to compile, sugar will show you the icon in the circle but remain forever at the "Starting..." tag when you hover your mouse over it. You'll have to restart sugar with <ctrl-alt-erase> in order to remove the icon. You can find the cause of your trouble in the the log named for the "service-name" in your activity.info file, in this case "org.laptop.HelloWorldActivity".

See also