Pilgrim: Difference between revisions
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=== Pilgrim === |
=== Pilgrim === |
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* How do you enumerate the available branches? I.e. if you don't want to rely on the documentation being kept up to date... |
* How do you enumerate the available branches? I.e. if you don't want to rely on the documentation being kept up to date... |
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* Where can one find the streams.d directory? |
* Where can one find the streams.d directory? |
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Revision as of 21:43, 4 April 2008
Pilgrim
Please add text to answer the following questions:
- what is Pilgrim?
- is it already on XO laptops or do you need to install it?
- What problem does it solve?
- Who is expected to use it?
- What are the typical use cases for Pilgrim?
Details
Pilgrim is composed of two large and two small scripts and many configuration files.
pilgrim # user-interface pilgrim-autobuild # implementation build-one # build the current branch make-repos # touch up yum repositories
The most important branch is "autobuild". This is where changes deemed suitable for all build branches should be merged. See Pilgrim Commit Policy.
The other branches - joyride, meshtest, xtest, and rainbow store branch-specific data like which yum repositories to compose into the image, which packages to pull, which activities to include, and so on.
These data are mostly recorded in
streams.d/olpc-branch.conf # a few important config variables streams.d/olpc-development-yum-install.conf # yum repositories to compose, package exclusions streams.d/olpc-development.stream # lists of packages and activities to install
Questions:
- How do you enumerate the available branches? I.e. if you don't want to rely on the documentation being kept up to date...
- Where can one find the streams.d directory?