Difference between revisions of "Platform Team/Guide/Sweets Usage"
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sweets sdk/sugar:emulator = 0.88 | sweets sdk/sugar:emulator = 0.88 | ||
− | For now, since there is no Sweets support in the Shell to run activities as sweets, Glucose sweets contain Fructose and Sugar Platform dependencies. To run Sugar | + | For now, since there is no Sweets support in the Shell to run activities as sweets, Glucose sweets contain Fructose and Sugar Platform dependencies as a suggested dependencies. To run Sugar with injecting all of them, use the {{Code|-S<nowiki>|</nowiki>--force-suggested}} command-line argument: |
− | sweets sdk/sugar: | + | sweets -S sdk/sugar:emulator |
If you need to develop Sugar, see [[Platform_Team/Guide/Sweets_Packaging#Sugar_sweets|Sweets Packaging]] guide's instructions. | If you need to develop Sugar, see [[Platform_Team/Guide/Sweets_Packaging#Sugar_sweets|Sweets Packaging]] guide's instructions. |
Revision as of 09:28, 3 November 2011
This guide describes how to use Sugar Labs' Packaging Management System. See also introduction page and Packaging guide.
Installation
Required packages
First, install PackageKit related packages. The following command will also install Polkit authentication agent, here for Gnome session (if you start sugar emulator from Gnome Desktop Environment).
Fedora specific instructions:
sudo yum install gnome-packagekit
Debian and Ubuntu specific instructons:
sudo apt-get install packagekit-gnome
Relogin from X session to let Gnome start the Polkit authentication agent.
Install
wget http://download.sugarlabs.org/sweets/sweets/installer.sh sh installer.sh
Relogin from X session to take into account the new PATH environment variable value.
Besides, sweets
might be run from the sources.
Upgrade
If sweets was installed from a bundle:
sweets upgrade
Usage
Read the Sweets Glossary to understand the basic concept (and overview of the bigger picture). The rest of the text will operate with the following terms:
SWEET
, the full interface URL, likehttp://sweets.sugarlabs.org/sdk/sugar
, or the short one, likesdk/sugar
;COMMAND
, sweet's command that indicates how to run a particular sweet; by default, sweets have only therun
command, but it is possible to have several commands;VERSION
, sweet's version
See the Sugar via Sweets section for real examples of how to use Sweets to run Sugar Shell.
Launch
To launch a sweet with verbatim passing of optional ARGUMENTS
:
sweets SWEET [ARGUMENTS]
Sometimes sweets support several launching commands; it is possible to specify one during the launch:
sweets SWEET:COMMAND
To run a particular, but not the latest, version:
sweets SWEET =|>=|<= VERSION
To get the full list of available versions:
sweets status SWEET -v
To get information, e.g., a list of supported commands, about a sweet:
sweets show SWEET
Troubleshooting
Feeds are being updated from time to time. After experiencing any problems, and for refreshing the local feeds cache, it will be useful to re-download feeds. Use, once, the -R
command line argument for the launch command (make sure that -R
goes before the SWEET
, because using it afterwards will cause passing it as a SWEET
's argument):
sweets -R SWEET
If sweets
can't find a proper implementation, see the e
lines in the output of:
sweets status SWEET -vdd
Search
It is possible to search sweets among locally known ones and those registered on http://sweets.sugarlabs.org (not yet implemented). The search is based on the Xapian search engine. Thus, it is possible to use Xapian's query language.
For command format is:
sweets search QUERY
Notice that partial search is enabled. So, the query tele
will be treated as tele*
to search all words that start from tele
.
sweets
supports the following search prefixes based on recipe options:
- interface the first interface from the implementations list, e.g.,
http://sweets.sugarlabs.org/sdk/sugar
; - sweet the first interface from the implementations list in short Sweets notations, e.g.,
sdk/sugar
; - implement the list of implemented interfaces;
- associate the list of associated interfaces;
- name the short name of a sweet;
- summary sweet's summary;
- description long sweet's description;
- category list of category names;
- license list of licenses;
- type sweet's type, which might be
library
,application
oractivity
; - keep if activity, that a sweet is representing, is favorited;
- tags the list of sweet's tags;
- mime_types the list of activity MIME types, that a sweet is representing or supports.
So, it is possible to search only among particular sweet attributes, like name:telepathy
to search only among particular sweet names.
sweets
support additional notation for exact searching in the form of prefix:=string
. For example the query name:=sugar
will find sweets only with exactly sugar
as a name and omit names like sugar-base
. If the search string contains spaces, wrap it within double quotes, name:="Sugar Commander"
. Note, wildcards do not work in the exact search case where asterisks will be treated literally.
Sugar via Sweets
To try Sweets in practice, run several Sugar versions. On the Sweets level, there are not any restrictions to using Sweets on any GNU/Linux distribution. Successful usage depends only on the presence of PackageKit and the quality of the sweet packages (sweets). For now, sugar sweets are well aware of Fedora, Debian/Ubuntu, and Gentoo package names and not so well aware of openSUSE and Mandriva. Sugar sweets launchs were tested on some recent Fedora and Ubuntu releases. The quality of other GNU/Linux distribution support depends only on how often Sweets is used on these distributions and the reporting of problems by the community.
Note, Sugar Shell does not start the authentication agent, and preparing sugar to start can be processed only in a Desktop Environment, e.g., Gnome (or launch authentication agent manually).
There are two sweets for Glucose:
sdk/sugar
, for pristine Glucose;dextrose/sugar
, for Glucose with Dextrose patches applied.
To see what Glucose versions these sweets provide, type in a terminal:
sweets status sdk/sugar -v
To launch a recent stable Sugar version in emulator mode, type in a terminal:
sweets sdk/sugar:emulator
By default, the most recent stable version will be used. To run a particular version, execute with additional arguments:
sweets sdk/sugar:emulator = 0.88
For now, since there is no Sweets support in the Shell to run activities as sweets, Glucose sweets contain Fructose and Sugar Platform dependencies as a suggested dependencies. To run Sugar with injecting all of them, use the -S|--force-suggested
command-line argument:
sweets -S sdk/sugar:emulator
If you need to develop Sugar, see Sweets Packaging guide's instructions.
Sugar sweet from X sessions
To start Sugar in the session mode, i.e., not from Xephyr, it will be useful to add a new X session. Place sweets
invocation into your ~/.xsession
file:
PATH=$HOME/.local/bin:$PATH sweets sdk/sugar
and create a /usr/share/xsessions/sweets.desktop
desktop file:
[Desktop Entry] Encoding=UTF-8 Name=Sweets GenericName=Sweets Exec=/etc/X11/Xsession Type=Application
After getting a login screen, Sweets session should be present in the sessions list.
Current limitations
- For now,
sweets
knows only enough about the glucose dependencies to install them from native packages in Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, Mandriva, openSUSE, and Gentoo. - Activities can't reuse sweets benefits.
Feedback
- Submit your bug report or feature request.
- Subscribe to the sugar-devel mailing list and email with the subject prefixed with [SWEETS].
- Ask your question on IRC channels, #sugar (not logged) or #sugar-newbies (logged).