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pkgdev:setup

Jonathan Perkin edited this page Jun 5, 2017 · 7 revisions

Contents

  1. Introduction
  2. OS setup
    1. SmartOS
    2. Mac OS X
    3. Ubuntu Linux
    4. RedHat Linux
  3. Fetch Repositories
  4. Create Sandbox

Introduction

In order to get started with package development it is recommended that you use the pkgbuild infrastructure. This provides scripts and configuration files used by Joyent to produce the official binary packages, and helps to ensure your environment is similar.

OS setup

Follow the instructions below for your target OS.

SmartOS

For SmartOS users we provide a pkgbuild image. This contains everything you need to get going quickly.

Use the image version which matches the package set you want to build. For example, to build packages for 16.4.x/2016Q4 images use the latest 16.4.x pkgbuild image. If you want to develop against pkgsrc trunk, then use whichever the most recent release available is.

$ imgadm update
$ imgadm avail | awk '/pkgbuild.*16.4/ {print}'
0d649af0-e6ed-11e6-8689-7fb3356bad96 pkgbuild 16.4.1 smartos zone-dataset 2017-01-30
$ imgadm import 0d649af0-e6ed-11e6-8689-7fb3356bad96

Create a zone using the chosen image uuid, giving it plenty of RAM and quota if you are planning to build large packages. For example:

{
  "brand": "joyent",
  "image_uuid": "0d649af0-e6ed-11e6-8689-7fb3356bad96",
  "alias": "pkgbuild-16-4",
  "max_physical_memory": 8192,
  "quota": 16,
  "resolvers": [
    "8.8.8.8"
  ],
  "dns_domain": "local",
  "nics": [
    {
      "nic_tag": "admin",
      "ip": "dhcp"
    }
  ]
}
$ vmadm create -f pkgbuild.json

Mac OS X

Create the pbulk user, used for unprivileged builds. The easiest way to do this is via the System Preferences dialog, but if you wish to use the command line then something like might work (adjust UID for your system):

$ user="pbulk"
$ uid=500
$ gid=20
$ comment="pbulk user"

$ dscl . -create /users/$user RecordName $user
$ dscl . -create /users/$user RecordType dsRecTypeNative:users
$ dscl . -create /users/$user UniqueID $uid
$ dscl . -create /users/$user PrimaryGroupID $gid
$ dscl . -create /users/$user NFSHomeDirectory "/Users/$user"
$ dscl . -create /users/$user UserShell "/bin/bash"
$ dscl . -create /users/$user Comment "$comment"
$ dscl . -delete /users/$user AuthenticationAuthority
$ dscl . -create /users/$user Password '*'
$ dscl . -create /users/$user IsHidden 1

$ mkdir /Users/pbulk
$ chown pbulk:staff /Users/pbulk

Mac OS X can run into issues with case-insensitive file systems, so it is often worth creating a separate file system image on which to store pkgsrc.

$ hdiutil create -fs JHFS+X -size 10g -type SPARSE -volname "data" data
$ sudo hdiutil attach -mountpoint /data data.sparseimage

This directory will need to be NFS exported for the sandboxes to access it, as Mac OS X does not ship with any adequate null/bind mount options.

$ cat >/etc/exports <<EOF
/data				-alldirs -maproot=root 127.0.0.1
/private/var/spool/postfix	-maproot=root 127.0.0.1
EOF

Check that the directories are exported. The NFS daemon detects changes to /etc/exports and will update mounts automatically.

$ showmount -e
Exports list on localhost:
/private/var/spool/postfix		127.0.0.1
/data					127.0.0.1

If you are running macOS Sierra 10.12.4 or newer you will unfortunately need to disable System Integrity Protection as Apple has restricted the ability to update the mDNS service which is required for DNS resolution inside build chroots.

Ubuntu Linux

Perform a full upgrade.

$ apt-get update
$ apt-get dist-upgrade
$ apt-get autoremove

Install required packages. git is part of build-essential on 16.04 or later.

$ apt-get install build-essential git mailutils postfix

If using the Joyent Ubuntu image rename the /mnt mount to provide /data.

: Switch /mnt to /data if required
$ sed -ie 's,/mnt,/data,' /etc/fstab

Create the pbulk user, used for unprivileged builds.

$ useradd -U -m -s /bin/bash -c "pbulk user" pbulk

Set hostname if required

$ vi /etc/hostname
pkgsrc-pbulk.local

$ reboot

RedHat Linux

Perform a full upgrade.

$ yum update

Install required packages.

$ yum install bzip2 ed gcc gcc-c++ git psmisc screen

Create the pbulk user, used for unprivileged builds.

$ useradd -U -m -s /bin/bash -c "pbulk user" pbulk

Set hostname if required.

: EL 6.x
$ vi /etc/sysconfig/network
HOSTNAME=pkgsrc-pbulk.local

: EL 7.x
$ hostnamectl set-hostname pkgsrc-pbulk.local

$ reboot

Fetch repositories

Fetch both the pkgsrc and pkgbuild repositories. If you are using the SmartOS pkgbuild image these repositories will have already been cloned, so you may just want to do a git pull instead.

The /data prefix is somewhat hardcoded at this point, though with some work you can use a different prefix if necessary. This is however currently undocumented).

: For OSX/Linux
$ mkdir -p /data
$ cd /data
$ git clone https://github.com/joyent/pkgsrc.git
$ git clone https://github.com/joyent/pkgbuild.git

: For SmartOS
$ (cd /data/pkgbuild; git pull)
$ (cd /data/pkgsrc; git pull)

Add the pkgbuild/scripts directory to your path.

: For OSX/Linux.  SmartOS 'pkgbuild' already has this by default.
$ PATH=$PATH:/data/pkgbuild/scripts

For OS X you will want to track the joyent/osx/trunk branch, i.e.:

$ cd /data/pkgsrc
$ git checkout joyent/osx/trunk
$ git submodule init
$ git submodule update

While for Linux you don't need to do anything and can use the default trunk.

Fetch bootstrap and packages

Darwin-specific for now.

$ mkdir -p /data/packages/Darwin/bootstrap-pbulk
$ cd /data/packages/Darwin/bootstrap-pbulk
$ for bs in i386 pbulk32 pbulk64 x86_64; do
>   curl -O https://pkgsrc.joyent.com/packages/Darwin/bootstrap-pbulk/bootstrap-trunk-${bs}.tar.gz
> done

Create Sandbox

The pkgbuild repository aims to recreate the same environment that produces the official Joyent binaries. The run-sandbox script prepares a chroot environment with everything set up ready to build packages. It takes a single argument which is the pkgbuild configuration to use, based on one of the directories under /data/pkgbuild/conf.

Some examples:

run-sandbox 2016Q4-x86_64       # Create a 64-bit SmartOS sandbox for 16.4.x
run-sandbox 2016Q4-i386         # Create a 32-bit SmartOS sandbox for 16.4.x
run-sandbox 2017Q1-tools        # Create a GZ "tools" SmartOS sandbox for 17.1.x
run-sandbox osx-trunk-x86_64    # Create a 64-bit OS X sandbox
run-sandbox linux-trunk-i386    # Create a 32-bit Linux sandbox

Once you have successfully created a sandbox you can move onto any of the other package development documents.