Difference between revisions of "Activity Team/Obsolete/Zero Sugar Use Cases"

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How [[Activity Team/Zero Sugar|Zero Sugar]] could be useful with examples.
 
  
 
== Natively packaged or direct from developer activities? ==
 
== Natively packaged or direct from developer activities? ==
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* A user can always pick up a recent version from a developer.
 
* A user can always pick up a recent version from a developer.
  
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== For Sugar on a Stick deployments ==
 
== For Sugar on a Stick deployments ==
  

Latest revision as of 13:49, 25 November 2010

Stop hand.png NOTE:
The content of this page is considered
DEPRECATED and OBSOLETE
It is preserved for historical research, along with its talk page.

It was only draft content




Natively packaged or direct from developer activities?

Zero Sugar could help with optimizing developer-to-distributor-to-user model. For example:

  • Developer lets 0sugar create packages for major GNU/Linux distributions on OBS.
  • Distributors, either using native OBS features (like links and branches), create their own compilations of activities on OBS, or just attach/copy OBS packages, and so compose repositories with activities for end users.
  • For end users, Sugar will understand that there are packaged and direct activity instances
  • The user (or distributor), by setting a policy, may prefer only packaged versions.
  • A user can always pick up a recent version from a developer.

For Sugar on a Stick deployments

Assuming that most activities use Zero Sugar and activity developers want to support packagers (that is, use Zero Sugar OBS integration), it is possible to create live DVD/USB images on demand.

Easy activity development workflow

For now, developers:

  • create .xo bundles,
  • choose server/service to host activity, e.g., ASLO or just upload .xo somewhere on wiki,
  • for a non-Python-based activity, build code (for how many platforms/environments?).
  • For activities that contain dependencies beyond those in the Sugar Platform, the developer needs to mention it somewhere.
  • Within Sugar, only one 'stable' activity version exists.

With Zero Sugar, developers:

  • call 0sugar commit command to make a newly created activity version accessible for users.
  • The developer could release, not only stable releases, e.g., development, or testing releases, (users will know the release stability status, without reading it somewhere). And by setting a policy, one could prefer only stable versions (or help to test development versions).

Easy activity deployment workflow

For now, users:

  • find .xo bundle somewhere, e.g., on ASLO or wiki;
  • after downloading, have to be sure that that the activity will run in their environment, e.g., for binary-based activities, blobs were built for their platform, or all extra-Sugar-Platform dependencies are installed.
  • If activity was not installed from ASLO or a distributor channel, the users have to manage activity versions on their own.
  • If they want to help with testing, they have to fetch the activity from source repositories or from irregular places, like people.sugarlabs.org.

With Zero Sugar, users:

  • know, that every activity is identified by a URL, like http://go.sugarlsbs.org/My_Activity;
  • can launch it from any (supported) environment, just by sugar-launch http://go.sugarlsbs.org/My_Activity command or from UI.
  • The activity URL could be picked up from anywhere, it could be emailed, passed via jabber message, posted on a wiki, etc.
  • The user can help with testing an activity just by setting a policy (globally or for a particular activity) and following regular procedures to launch it.