Difference between revisions of "Platform Team/Guide/Sweets Packaging"
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It is common practice in binary-based GNU/Linux distributions to use satellite devel packages to collect various build-time files like C headers or pkg-config files. In the Zero Install environment, this doesn't work, because every package is stored in a separate directory hierarchy, e.g., *.so symlinks, from devel package, will point to nothing, since all *.so.* files from the library package live in a separate directory. | It is common practice in binary-based GNU/Linux distributions to use satellite devel packages to collect various build-time files like C headers or pkg-config files. In the Zero Install environment, this doesn't work, because every package is stored in a separate directory hierarchy, e.g., *.so symlinks, from devel package, will point to nothing, since all *.so.* files from the library package live in a separate directory. | ||
− | Keep all build-time files in the sweet | + | Keep all build-time files in the sweet with runtime files. |
== Feedback == | == Feedback == |
Revision as of 18:17, 30 September 2011
Summary
This guide describes how to prepare software projects to be distributed via Sugar Labs' Packaging Management System, Sweets.
Make sure that you read the introduction page and Usage guide. To understand conceptual ideas, read the Glossary.
Prepare the environment
Using the Usage guide's instructions, install the Sweets. In addition, Sweets might be used from sources:
git clone git://git.sugarlabs.org/sdk/sweets.git cd sweets git submodule init git submodule update ./sweets upgrade
The command ./sweets upgrade
might require relogin from the X session to take into account the new PATH value.
Recipe files
The recipe specification file is an analog of scenario files in regular GNU/Linux distributions, like .spec
files in RPM. It is the cornerstone of Sweets, everything on the sweet project level depends on the recipe file. For activities, activity/activity.info
, an inherited recipe file name, is supported.
On a logical level, the entire Sweets infrastructure might be treated as a set of distribution bundles with sources that contain recipe files. Software projects are identified as Zero Install interfaces that contain information about which distribution bundle needs to be downloaded in order to launch a particular software version. That's not the full picture (there are binary bundles created based on sources), but it is useful for this topic's purpose. Read the Development with Sweets section to learn about the available usage scenarios.
A recipe file is an ini format configuration file that might consist of several sections:
- One or more use case sections.
- Optional archive sections.
- Optional auxiliary sections.
- Optional
[DEFAULT]
section with common options that are accessible from all other sections.
These files need to be placed in the root sources directory with names sweets.recipe
or activity/activity.info
for Sugar activities.
Writing recipes
In sources directory, create a recipe file, e.g., using sweets init
command. Recipe file should contain at least one use case section. There are several types of use case sections:
- Activity for Sugar activities,
- Application for stand alone applications,
- Library for libraries.
Make sure that all required options were set. The implement option has a special meaning, it is an identifier of the sweet.
By default, the entirely sources directory will be packaged into sources tarball. In case if sources list needs to be restricted, add Source section with appropriate include and/or exclude options.
If the sweet needs to be built, add Build section.
If built files are platform dependent, add Archive section with arch=any option.
Interfaces
The implement, associate and requires (optionally) options contain short interfaces. These values have two meanings:
- suffixes for final interfaces, e.g.,
http://sweets.sugarlabs.org/<value>
, - the name of project/package on OBS that will be used to host released sweet.
In the 2nd case, the last slash separated part is a package, and the rest is a project, e.g., for sdk/sugar, sdk is a project and sugar is a package in the sdk project. It is possible to have interface values without slashes, in that case, project and package names are the same.
In the OBS, there is a special project named base. This project contains sweets that all time will be represented only by native packages. In other words, if you need to make sure that your sweet needs to depend only on native packages, use dependencies from the base project.
The base project is also useful for associated interfaces set in associate recipe option. For example, if your sweet needs pygame=2 dependency that is not yet widespread, create ~user/pygame temporary sweet with 2 version only, and use ~user/pygame as a dependency in your sweet. If base/pygame will be added as associated interface to the ~user/pygame, users that have >=2 version in native packages will reuse them instead of ~user/pygame's one.
See OBS projects for all existed sweets.
Stability status
Sweets should have stability status:
- stable, final stable release,
- testing, let people interested in testing try latest changes that are not yet stable,
- developer, just a more extreme version of testing,
This is a useful Zero Install feature that let developers share not yet stable version among the community. Since by default, only stable versions are being used, people, who are interested in helping developers in polishing not yet stable versions, need to explicitly choose not stable versions.
Glob patterns
The include and exclude options contain file patterns. A pattern could be of two types:
- doesn't contain / or ** substrings, will be applied only to file names
- contains / or ** substring, will be applied to the full file path (relative to the root), thus could affect several directory levels
Only these pattern symbols are allowed:
- * matches everything, except directory separator
- ? matches any single character, except directory separator
- ** matches everything, including directory separator
Examples
A list of recipe examples.
Python activity
Python-based activity with standard Sugar Platform dependencies.
[Activity] implement = cartoon-builder name = Cartoon Builder summary = Create your own cell-animation sequences license = GPLv2+ homepage = http://wiki.sugarlabs.org/go/Activities/Cartoon_Builder version = %(activity_version)s stability = stable icon = activity-cartoonbuilder exec = sugar-activity activity.CartoonBuilderActivity # Backwards compatibility of original activity.info options bundle_id = com.ywwg.CartoonBuilderActivity activity_version = 7
Python library
A python-based library that could be used as is, or as an activity dependency.
[Library] implement = libjournal name = libjournal summary = Hight level library to create your own Journal-like activity license = GPLv3+ homepage = http://wiki.sugarlabs.org/go/Activity_Team/Services/Journal version = 1 stability = testing requires = toolkit binding = PYTHONPATH
C-based library
[DEFAULT] depends = base/glib; base/gconf; base/libgee >= 0.5; base/gtk+ >= 2.12 base/pango >= 1.20; base/librsvg [Library] implement = polyol name = polyol summary = Intermediate level GObject based libraries for Sugar description = Polyol is a set of libraries that are written in Vala. Libraries are intended to provide high-level C API to basic Sugar features including Gtk based user interface. Applications that are linked against Polyol, interact with sugar processes (like shell, datastore, etc.) via DBus. license = LGPLv3+ homepage = http://wiki.sugarlabs.org/go/Activity_Team/Polyol version = 1 stability = developer binding = LD_LIBRARY_PATH lib PKG_CONFIG_PATH lib/pkgconfig VAPIDIR share/vala/vapi requires = %(depends)s [Archive] arch = any [Build] requires = %(depends)s; pkg-config; cmake; make; gcc-c configure = cmake -D CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=%(PREFIX)s -D PYTHON_SITEDIR=%(PREFIX)s/python -D COMPONENTS="collab;ds;env;gui;shell;toolkit" -D BINDING=python -D CMAKE_C_FLAGS:STRING="%(CFLAGS)s" . make = make install = make DESTDIR=%(DESTDIR)s install
Releasing
Development with Sweets
Source bundles might be used on a client side not only indirectly, via sweets
command for example, but also explicitly. Sources might be bundled, emailed, etc. In this case, it is no different from .xo
files. To make sources useful within Sweets, the local directory with sources might be used in several ways:
- Applications might be launched from sources,
sweets <path-to-sources>
; - To reuse sources as dependencies for other sweets, source directory needs to be registered in Sweets,
sweets checkout <path-to-sources>
; applications might be checked out as well.
Checking out will register a sweet in the local Sweets instance as a single implementation for the interfaces it implements. This feature is especially useful for libraries, for example, if the sugar-toolkit sources, which implement the sdk/sugar-toolkit
interface, were cloned to the ~/src/sugar-toolkit
directory, then, while running a sdk/sugar
sweet, it would become possible to reuse local sugar-toolkit sources as a regular implementation of the sdk/sugar-toolkit
dependency of sdk/sugar
.
Pitfalls
Devel packages
It is common practice in binary-based GNU/Linux distributions to use satellite devel packages to collect various build-time files like C headers or pkg-config files. In the Zero Install environment, this doesn't work, because every package is stored in a separate directory hierarchy, e.g., *.so symlinks, from devel package, will point to nothing, since all *.so.* files from the library package live in a separate directory.
Keep all build-time files in the sweet with runtime files.
Feedback
- Submit your bug report.
- Ask your question on IRC channels, #sugar (not logged) or #sugar-newbies (logged).