Sugar Creation Kit/sck/Advanced Topics

< Sugar Creation Kit
Revision as of 06:41, 22 February 2013 by Satellit (talk | contribs) (→‎Build 13.1.0: delete old PM)


Sweets Distribution

Sugar Network Tutorial

  • Annotated screen shots with Links

Sweets-Getting Started

Click on title ^ to go to topic
  • Some ideas on how to present SWEETS. (Inkyfingers)
  • look at Infrastructure for an overview.

Sweets Distribution

Click on title ^ to go to topic
(Sweets Distribution is easier to use for Ubuntu' and its Derivatives (Adding an additional Repository to apt) as the packages are pre-configured, ready to use.)
(Developed for Trisquel-sugar-Toast )

Sweets

Click on title ^ to go to topic
(Advanced)
Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, Mandriva, openSUSE, and Gentoo
(This guide describes how to run Sugar using Sugar Packaging Management System, Sweets.)
Request for better Documentation of installs
Log of Installation of sugar-sweets 0.88 and 0.94 on f16-GNOME3-shell
Installing_Sugar_via_sweets_-_in_Mint-12
Installing_Sugar_via_sweets_-_in_Debian_testing_Wheezy
(For developers)

Sugar Network

Click on title ^ to go to topic
Collaboration support for Internet-less environments (but not only)
Tests of which activities start by page

Harmonic Distribution

* The possibility to launch Base Software in heterogeneous
  software and hardware environments.
* Using Base Software, provide access to various Content
  (Sugar activities, artifacts created by Sugar activities, books, etc.)
  created within the Sugar community.
* Using Base Software, provide collaborative functionality to
  support Social activity around the Content.
* Instruments and workflows to adapt Content and Base Software
  to specific needs that Sugar Deployment might face,
  including extreme ones like off-line environments and restricting
  hardware.
  • [Sugar-devel] [SWEETS] Testing collaboration related fixes 05/07/2012
Hi all!
Following the plan for Harmonic Distribution v0.2 (which will be a basis
for Sugar Distribution to use in peruvian pilot), in Sugar Shell code
were made fixes that are intended to make Telepathy (everything related to
Neighbourhood view and Sugar Activities sharing/joining) more stable
(that was broken since global redesign started after 0.88 release).
Fixes are accessible from SweetsDistribution:Factory repository. Follow
regular Sweets Distribution installation instructions[1] to install
fixed Sugar Shell on all supported platforms[2].
Some visible changes in F1 view:
* the number of buddies should be increased from ~20 to 70-90
  some Sugar versions (maybe 0.90-0.92) don't publish information about
  nickname/colors on regular basis; this information are being stored on
  disk for now
* for some buddies, server still don't have information about colors
  (replaced by gray) and nick names (jabber ids)
If you have a time and want to help Puno deployment pilot, please,
consider possibility to install sweets-desktop from Factory repository
and do some testing of collaboration functionality.

Some tips:

* while interacting with another buddies, make sure that all
  participants use Sweets Distribution (some F1 buddies might misbehave)
* the good criteria of stability level of new Sugar is comparing with
  how collaboration happen in 0.88 Sugar.
Source code, for interested in people, can be found in top commits from:

* http://git.sugarlabs.org/desktop/sugar
* http://git.sugarlabs.org/desktop/sugar-toolkit
* http://git.sugarlabs.org/server/prosody-sugar
[1] Sweets_Distribution#Installation
[2] Sweets_Distribution/Supported_platforms

-- Aleksey
Sugar-devel mailing list Sugar-devel@lists.sugarlabs.org
http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/sugar-devel

BoxGrinder

BoxGrinder Build is an easy to use command line tool to create appliances (virtual images) from simple plaintext appliance definition files. BoxGrinder can produce appliances for a variety of virtual and cloud platforms using plugins supporting technologies such as VMware or EC2.

Pungi

Advanced
  • used to build non-live CD/DVD isos
Pungi needs to run on the arch it is composing, as root, and with an install of what it is composing, eg if you are composing Fedora 8, you need to be running Fedora 8.
This is so that the correct userland tools are used to create the images and such used by anaconda.
The eventual usage of pungi will most likely be in mock chroots to facilitate this.
It needs to run on the arch it is composing due to how anaconda-runtime determines what files to put in the boot images at this time.
Currently the releases of pungi are designed to run on an updated Rawhide system. Development of pungi always tracks Rawhide.
The following sections..." assume you have installed the mock package and prepared the mock chroot"

Build a boot.iso

  • "This section provides instruction on creating PXEboot and boot.iso images"

Build a DVD.iso

  • "This section assumes you have installed the mock package and prepared the mock chroot"

Koji

Click on title ^ to go to topic
(Very Advanced)
Koji is the software that builds RPM packages for the Fedora project

Mock

Mock creates chroots and builds packages in them. Its only task is to reliably populate a chroot and attempt to build a package in that chroot.

How to create an RPM package

  • How to create an RPM package in Fedora
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/How_to_create_an_RPM_package

sugar-build

http://sugarlabs.org/~dnarvaez/sugar-docs/build.html
  • better j-build

Git

Advanced - Used by Sugar Developers
I installed Fedora 18 last night, and I have to say I like sugar-build
more and more.  With just this steps in a clean F18 you get Sugar
running and ready to hack each part of it:  Kudos Daniel Narvaez!
  Re: [Sugar-devel] F18.. go sugar-build, go! 01/18/2013 03:56 PM 
sudo yum install git
git clone git://git.sugarlabs.org/sugar-build/sugar-build
cd sugar-build
make build
make run

Tutorials

L10n Translations

There is a git user named "pootle" that acts as the proxy by which all
PO file translations are committed from the Pootle server.  Please
make pootle a committer on the repo and I will make the connections
between git and the Pootle server.
Some "best practices" about working with git and Pootle are described here.
 Translation Team Best Practices

systemd for Administrators

"Resource Management in one way or another has been available in systemd for a while already,
so it's really time we introduce this to the broader audience."

Vala

"Vala is a new programming language that allows modern programming techniques
to be used to write applications that run on the GNOME runtime libraries,
particularly GLib and GObject."

groupthink

Click on title ^ to go to topic
  • Very Advanced
"Groupthink is a library of self-sharing data structures written in python and shared over dbus.
Together with the D-Bus Tubes provided by the Telepathy framework, this enables data structures to be shared over a network."

OLPC XO-1 and XO-1.5 links and Notes

Click on title ^ to go to topic

wiki.laptop.org

http://wiki.laptop.org/go/The_OLPC_Wiki

Build 13.1.0

http://wiki.laptop.org/go/13.1.0
http://build.laptop.org/13.1.0/os15/xo-1.5/

XO-4 Touch

  • specs

XS Community Edition

  • School Server - Community Edition (XSCE) project

Testing Dextrose in a virtual machine

  • Download Image; KVM; VirtualBox

Dextrose Building

Dextrose uses olpc-os-builder, a tool create by OLPC to build official and customized system images.
The Dextrose git repository contains, olpc-os-builder, local customizations specific to Dextrose,
and fixes and enhancements waiting to be pushed upstream. 

XS Schoolserver 0.7

Click on title ^ to go to topic

Manuals

OLPC Manual
Help Activity Refresh
Manuals Info

Kernel Userspace Interfaces

ARM

References
http://elinux.org/RPi_Distributions
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ARM_microprocessor_cores
http://www.linaro.org/downloads/
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Fedora_ARM_Installer
RPM Fusion: http://rpmfusion.org/Architectures/ARM

TrimSlice

Firmware Updater

Ubuntu on a TrimSlice

  • Testing of TrimSlicePro
TrimSlicePro-Update
  • Testing of TrimSlice H250
Install of Ubuntu to 320 GB HD
Install of Ubuntu to a SDXC Card

 

  • TrimSlicePro Setup Booted from 64 GB SDXC Card in front slot
(SDXC card is expanded to 30 GB with gparted)

 

  • TrimSlicePro Running KDE-Desktop -plus sugar-emulator (0.90.1)
Beautiful Display on Samsung SyncMaster S20B350 HDMI 1600x900 @60Hz PP

Fedora on a TrimSlice

Fedora with XFCE
References
http://scotland.proximity.on.ca/arm-nightlies/vault/f17arm-latest-arm-rpi-xfce-mmcblk0.img.xz
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Architectures/ARM
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Architectures/ARM/Fedora_17_Beta
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Architectures/ARM/Fedora17_rawhide
http://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora-secondary/releases/test/17-Beta/Images/armhfp/
f17-arm RC-1: http://scotland.proximity.on.ca/arm-nightlies/vault/to-mirrors/RC1/armhfp/
Boot from CD: http://www.trimslice.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=25&t=412
linux-tegra-drm:https://gitorious.org/linux-tegra-drm/pages/Host1xIntroduction
Tegra
http://developer.nvidia.com/tegra-2-technical-reference-manual
http://www.trimslice.com/wiki/index.php/OS_Installation_and_update
http://www.trimslice.com/wiki/index.php/Trim-Slice_Linux_Kernel
http://lists.linux-foundation.org/pipermail/ksummit-2012-discuss/2012-June/000304.html
https://gitorious.org/linux-tegra-drm
linux-tegra-drm:https://gitorious.org/linux-tegra-drm/pages/Host1xIntroduction

f17-fedora-arm

f17 Nightly Images
live media creator on arm
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Anaconda/Features/ReworkLiveCD
http://www.redhat.com/archives/anaconda-devel-list/2011-November/msg00081.html
http://lists.fedoraproject.org/pipermail/arm/2012-May/003358.html
Trimslice Pro and H250
Serial interface ONLY
  • Mac-Trimslice Pro Connections:
Nice Terminal Emulator for Mac:http://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/31352/coolterm
  • Connection Diagram:
[MacBookPro USB port]---[usb to serial adapter (&)]---[null modem]--[serial cable]--(TrimSlice serial to mini cable]--[TrimSlice serial port]
(&) DYNEX USB_PDA/Serial Adapter (Dynex DX-UD889)
  • Console Speed 115200 bps, 8n1,
  • root password: -Displays in serial terminal-
root=fedoraarm
  • Note these are experimental FOR TESTING ONLY - Still in development; use with caution
  • The kernel used does not support startx
No graphical interfaces are available at this time for TrimSlicePro and TrimSlice -h
  • dd will write a live USB but it will not boot in arm devices.
works in intel PC's
  • livecd-tools does not work
SD Card Install
This is a Fedora 17 Hard Float Trimslice Image suitable for writing to an SD card and placed in the Trimslice's Full Size SD slot (Front slot)
and booting without further modification.
Write with xzcat file.xz > /dev/mmcblkX, put in the device, and you're ready to go. Boots to a serial console.
Most of the SD card images can be used with a USB storage device drive using the following method:
Write the image to both the USB storage device and an SD card. IE, write the image using xzcat file.xz > /dev/sdX then xzcat file.xz > /dev/mmcblkX.
Once written, use a partition editor such as fdisk to delete the VFAT partition from the USB drive and the Linux partition from SD card.
Plug the SD and USB storage into your ARM device and power up. 
The ARM system will load any applicable bootloader pieces, kernel, and initramfs from the SD card, but use the USB storage for the root filesystem.

Nearly images are self-sufficient, but a kernel tarball is optionally available with the contents of the image's /boot and /lib/modules directories.
These can be used in conjunction with the tarball root filesystems to create your own images.
Resizer
  • Resizer Script and systemd file
http://scotland.proximity.on.ca/fedora-arm/rootfs-resize/rootfs-resize-0.3/
expects 2 partitions on SD card; will not work if a 3rd exists
http://scotland.proximity.on.ca/arm-nightlies/vault/mknightly.tar.xz

Archlinux-TrimSlice

Raspberry Pi / RPi

Good overview of RaspberryPi
Script: http://scotland.proximity.on.ca/raspberrypi/f17-releases/v5/latest/rpfr17-xfce-compose
Order Page: http://www.newark.com/jsp/search/productdetail.jsp?SKU=83T1943
What about this one? http://www.amazon.com/3-5-Inch-TFT-Monitor-Automobile/dp/B0045IIZKU/ref=cm_cmu_pg__header 
cheap and there is a picture that shows the monitor connected to a Raspberry Pi :-)

Write SD in a MAC:http://alltheware.wordpress.com/2012/12/11/easiest-way-sd-card-setup/

http://zenit.senecac.on.ca/wiki/index.php/Raspberry_Pi_Fedora_Remix
http://elinux.org/RaspberryPiBoard#Software_.26_OS_Distribution
http://elinux.org/RPi_Distributions#What_is_armhf
"...BCM2835 used in the Raspberry Pi is the first ARM-based multimedia SoC with fully-functional,
vendor-provided (as opposed to partial, reverse engineered) fully open-source drivers,..."
RPi resolution fix:"disable_overscan=1"
http://www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=24&t=4691
http://elinux.org/R-Pi_Troubleshooting
http://rpmfusion.org/Architectures/ARM
  • Chromium Browser for RPi (beta)
http://hexxeh.net/?p=328117859
  • Update and install software before flashing .img using chroot
http://raspberrypi.stackexchange.com/questions/855/is-it-possible-to-update-upgrade-and-install-software-before-flashing-an-image

Projects and Courses

Kernel Testing

Kernel Compilation

raspberry-pi-root-fs-on-usb-drive
Xorg and LXDE
http://www.raspbian.org/PiscesImages
Mate on RPi
http://www.raspbian.org/RaspbianMate
DL: http://www.raspbian.org/PiscesMATEImages

Testing Pages

List of Test Pages

Testing Introductory Page

Help/Info Wiki Page

Testing/Reports/ARM_RPi

Tests of f18/ f17-remixes; Raspbian-PiscesMATE; and rasbian Debian on the RPi

http://scotland.proximity.on.ca/raspberrypi/test-releases/rpfr17/
http://www.raspbian.org/PiscesMATEImages
http://downloads.raspberrypi.org/images/raspbian/2012-07-15-wheezy-raspbian/2012-07-15-wheezy-raspbian.zip

Testing Sweets on a RPi armhf

  • Install of Sweets Sugar 0.94 on a RPi

xmbc

Gentoo

Mageia-arm

This ARM port supports the Kirkwood series from Marvell.
Most frequent are: Open-RD, computer plugs (SheevaPlug, GuruPlug).
It runs also in qemu as a virtual machine.
Install to QEMU: http://packages.rtp-net.org/mageia/1/armv5tl/docs/README.ARMv5TL
Prebuilt Images: http://packages.rtp-net.org/mageia/1/imgs/

PPC

Power PC
Doing builds again for fedora 16
http://dx.com/p/u2-mini-android-4-0-network-multi-media-player-w-wi-fi-hdmi-tf-black-4gb-ddr-iii-1gb-145864?Utm_rid=93072394&Utm_source=affiliate
http://www.cnx-software.com/2013/01/03/smallart-u-host-allwinner-a10-mini-pc-is-available-for-20/

Chromebook

Fedora-17-on-samsung-chromebook-series-3-arm

EXPERIMENTAL run Fedora 17 on Chromebook
  • Note danger of blowing out the speakers.

Building your own kernel and installing it in the Chromebook

using-nv-u-boot-on-the-samsung-arm-chromebook

Recover your Chrome device

Install a new version of the Chrome operating system on your Chrome device by going through the recovery process. You may want to go through this process if you’re having problems updating your Chrome device or if your Chrome device stops working.

Fedora on a Chromebook

  • NEW--Satellit 01:57, 6 December 2012 (EST)

Chrubuntu-1204

  • ChrUbuntu 12.04 for the new Google Chromebook with ARM processor!

Ubuntu on Chromebook

http://www.samsung.com/global/business/semiconductor/minisite/Exynos/products5dual.html
http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=4917324

Debian on Chromebook

  • Entering Developer Mode
http://goo.gl/TSZxs
"On this device, both the recovery button and the dev-switch have been virtualized.
Our partners don't really like physical switches - they cost money, take up space on the motherboard, and require holes in the case.
To invoke Recovery mode, you hold down the ESC and Refresh keys and poke the Power button.
To enter Dev-mode you first invoke Recovery, and at the Recovery screen press Ctrl-D (there's no prompt - you have to know to do it).
It will ask you to confirm, then reboot into dev-mode.
Dev-mode works the same as always: It will show the scary boot screen and you need to press Ctrl-D or wait 30 seconds to continue booting.
You'll still have to run "crossystem dev_boot_usb=1" and reboot once to boot from USB drives with Ctrl-U. 
To leave Dev-mode and go back to normal mode, just follow the instructions at the scary boot screen. It will prompt you to confirm.
If you want to leave Dev-mode programmatically, you can run "crossystem disable_dev_request=1; reboot" from a root shell  .
Th ere's no way to enter Dev-mode programmatically, and just seeing the Recovery screen isn't enough -  
you have to use the three-finger salute which hard-resets the machine first.
 That's to prevent a remote attacker from tricking your machine into dev-mode without your knowledge.
An unrelated note: Holding just Refresh and poking the Power button hard-resets the machine without entering Recovery.
 That's occasionally useful, but use it with care - it doesn't sync the disk or shut down politely,
 so there's a nonzero chance of trashing the contents of your stateful partition."

gitweb

Fedora

  • TESTING Section
  • Hope to install Fedora on it.--Satellit 02:32, 26 October 2012 (EDT)
  • IRC #fedora-arm freenode

openSUSE

Detailed instructions: https://plus.google.com/u/0/109993695638569781190/posts/b2fazijJppZ
opensuse-on-arm-release-candidate-1
http://news.opensuse.org/2012/10/01/announcing-opensuse-on-arm-release-candidate-1/
http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/12.2:/ARM:/Contrib:/Origen/images/

SoaS in Parallels for OS X

(experimental)
(Not very current)

Sugar Patches

http://patchwork.sugarlabs.org/project/sugar/list/