School Network/Open Build Service

Summary

This is a patched Sugar Labs instance of Open Build System (OBS) that is intended to be a:

  • Hosting sources and making binaries, if there is need, for Sweets.
  • Convenient instrument to create 3rd party repositories with native packages for all supported GNU/Linux distributions.

For detailed information, read the original Open Build System documentation.

Sites

obs.sugarlabs.org

This is an API site, all OBS clients use it to get access to OBS. There is no need to work with site directly but it is possible.

Site uses HTTP Basic authentication. To get access, create Sugar Labs Central Login account.

packages.sugarlabs.org

This is an original OBS Web client. It is intended to be used only by people who need to create native packages, i.e., not for most of Sugar developers. But, until creating more appropriate tool for Sugar needs, it is the only one Web client to manage already released software (the releasing is being processed by sweets command).

Content

The contend on OBS might be several kinds:

Projects

Projects are directories of Packages and might be two types:

  • top level, regular projects, like base or sdk;
  • user's home projects, like home:<user>.

Packages

Packages represent particular software projects and contain all files associated with these projects, e.g., tarballs with sources.

There are several types of package supported on OBS:

  • packages that represent sweets,
  • native packages based on sweets,
  • native packages with using sweet recipes as spec files,
  • aliases,
  • regular OBS packages.

See Usage section for more details.

Repositories

Every project has repositories to build its packages against. Repositories might be two types:

  • inherited from another project;
  • initial repositories, aka downloaded-on-demand, that are associated with particular GNU/Linux distribution release;
  • sweets.sugarlabs.org repository should present if Packages need to be distributed via Zero Install.

Every repository has supported architectures, e.g., i586 or x86_64. There is also special architecture, 0install, only for sweets.sugarlabs.org.

Supported platforms

There is special project, named base, it contains all GNU/Linux distributions that are supported on OBS. All other projects need to inherit repositories from this project.

Usage

There are several OBS usage workflows.

Sweets

Sweets is using OBS as a place to host sources and, if there is need, build binaries. There are two ways to interact with OBS:

  • Console based client, sweets, for uploading new releases;
  • Application to manage already released versions, it is possible to use packages.sugarlabs.org for that but it is too overfeatured and need to be replaced by more appropriate option.

The result will be reused via Zero Install.

Sweet packages

After beeing released, sweets might be formed to native packages repositories. For that case:

  • Create new project;
  • Add new repositories packages need to be build for, they should be directly or indirectly inherited from the base project;
  • Go to OBS package that represent a sweet you need to build native packages for, e.g., sugar;
  • Click Link sweet package link to add it to your project.

The result will be regular OBS repositories with native packages. The only difference is that after installing on target systems, the content of these packages will be placed to /opt directory instead of regular /usr. The reason is that sweets are not indented to be placed directly to the /usr and there might be file name collisions with existed files.

Recipe based packages

These are regular OBS packages except that instead of regular spec files, e.g., RPM .spec, they might be build basing on sweets.recipe files. It is a kind of meta packaging but restricted by design. In comparing with sweet packages, these packages will be placed to /usr.

Regular packages

It is exactly how OBS is originally designed to work.

Policy

  1. REDIRECT School Network/Open Build Service/Policy

Resources