Skip to content

Scripts for building Redis Stable for Enterprise Linux 6 and 7

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

bcdonadio/redis-stable

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

5 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Redis Stable for Enterprise Linux

Hosted repo for redis-stable RPMs | packagecloud Scripts for building Redis Stable for Enterprise Linux 6 and 7 | github

This project contains a set of scripts and dockerfiles (recipes) to build, sign and push to PackageCloud.io a distribution of Redis following the official Redis.io stable channel, instead of lagging behing with the EPEL-provided (but very battle-tested) version of the package.

The biggest motivation for me was the Redis Cluster feature introduced in 3.0, but there was a lot of other changes which might also motivate you to use this packaging of Redis.

The way the code was packaged follows the EPEL guidelines (in fact, the spec file was forked from redis-2.8.19 from EPEL). It uses the jemalloc provided by the system, instead of in-tree dependency, and enforces the use of both -fPIC and RedHat hardening flags on all built artifacts.

Versions

  • redis: 3.2.8

Supported distributions

  • RedHat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 6
  • RedHat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 7
  • CentOS 6
  • CentOS 7

Building

Dependencies

Ensure you have the following in your building machine:

  • recent version of Docker
  • rubygems
  • rpm-sign

In Fedora, you can install these with:

# yum install docker rubygems rpm-sign

Then, if you intend to push the files to Packagecloud.io, install it with:

# gem install package_cloud

Scripts

build.sh

This script creates a container for each $VERSION (space separated) of a $DIST (single distribution supported currently) listed on the common.sh script, naming it according to the $REPO parameter, and executes the according dockerfile in the recipes folder (simple concatenation of $DIST, $VERSION and .dockerfile).

The resulting artifacts are copied to the host machine on the build folder.

sign.sh

This script signs with your GPG key listed in your ~/.rpmmacros file all rpm packages underneath the build folder.

A valid ~/.rpmmacros looks like the following:

%_gpg_name Bernardo Donadio (https://www.bcdonadio.com/) <[email protected]>
%__gpg /usr/bin/gpg2

Obviously, you need to have the secret-key of the identity listed in the %_gpg_name directive in your gpg keyring.

Caution: gpg and gpg2 use different keyrings, and both can be installed at the same time.

push.sh

This script pushes every rpm file underneath the build folder to Packagecloud.io, verifying their signatures are valid in the processes. If a package isn't signed with a valid signature, it aborts the process.

The repository used is the one listed inside the common.sh script, in the $REPO directive.

In the first run, the package_cloud package will asks your user and password for the service. Also obviously, you need to have push privileges to the repository.

About

Scripts for building Redis Stable for Enterprise Linux 6 and 7

Topics

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages