Development Team/Chroot
Sugar ought to be easy to run from chroots. For a variety of silly reasons, this isn't yet the case, but it might be soon. Ping Michael with questions.
Chroot Construction
There are lots of ways to create appropriate chroots; e.g. by hand, with debootstrap, with mock, etc.
With debootstrap, you want something like
debootstrap --arch i386 sid sid-root http://debian.lcs.mit.edu/debian sudo chroot sid-root /bin/bash -l
With mock, it would be more like
mock -r fedora-devel-i386 --init mock -r fedora-devel-i386 --shell
X11
Most X11 servers are configured to disable TCP connections. This means that in order to get a working X connection we can:
- bind-mount the X unix socket into the chroot.
- ssh into the chroot with X11-forwarding enabled.
- enable TCP on an X server, e.g. a nested Xephyr.
We're going to try option (3) first:
Xephyr -ac :1
and, inside the chroot:
export DISPLAY=localhost:1
- NB: If you figure out how to make Xephyr bind only to localhost sockets (or how to make it use a custom xauth config), speak up!
D-Bus
Sugar wants to be able to use global state stored in both HAL and NetworkManager, both of which live on the system bus. Consequently, we need to bind-mount
mount --bind /var/run/dbus $CHROOT/var/run/dbus
before entering the chroot. (Mock uses unshare() to enter a new mount-point namespace since this makes garbage collection of mountpoints much easier.)
With debootstrap, you'll also need to run some of
mount -t proc proc $CHROOT/proc mount -t devpts devpts $CHROOT/dev/pts mount -t selinuxfs selinux $CHROOT/selinux
manually in order to get a working chroot.