Dextrose/Getting Involved

From Sugar Labs
< Dextrose
Revision as of 14:11, 26 July 2010 by Tch (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Dextrose   ·   Get Involved   ·   Contacts   ·   Resources   ·   FAQ   ·   Roadmap   ·   To Do   ·   Meetings

F11-XO1

We use olpc-os-builder, a tool used by OLPC to create official and customized system images.

Our version contains local customizations specific to Paraguay and some patches that should be upstreamed.

How to create a build

We cook our builds on Machine/robbie, which is Fedora 11 i386. I could create builds also on my laptop, which runs Fedora 12 x86_64. What the host system runs shouldn't matter much, because all the work is being done in a chroot environment.

  • Checkout our local tree:
 git clone git://git.sugarlabs.org/dextrose/mainline.git
  • One time preparation
 yum upgrade
 yum install libtomcrypt-devel bitfrost make gcc mtd-utils
 make
  • Build:
 time sudo ./osbuilder.py examples/f11-xo1-py.ini
  • Wait 15 minutes
  • Serve hot

Signing

  • Put the 4 signing keys somewhere in your home:
bernie@robbie:~$ ll src/olpc/keys/
-rw-------. 1 bernie bernie 1,2K Feb  5  2009 pyo1.private
-rw-------. 1 bernie bernie  270 Feb  5  2009 pyo1.public
-rw-------. 1 bernie bernie 1,2K Feb  5  2009 pys1.private
-rw-------. 1 bernie bernie  270 Feb  5  2009 pys1.public
-rw-------. 1 bernie bernie 1,2K Feb  5  2009 pyw1.private
-rw-------. 1 bernie bernie  270 Feb  5  2009 pyw1.public
  • Make sure the keys are NOT world-readable
  • Edit the paths in the [signing] section of examples/f11-xo1-py.ini


Publishing the images

I'm currently publishing selected builds in my public html folder.

Signed builds should be published only if they implement the OLPC anti-theft system (OATS). Signing does not have anything to do with quality or endorsement (i.e. signed builds are not necessarily bug-free).

  • TODO: We don't have a place for publishing official images yet
  • TODO: We don't have a procedure for releasing builds to field technicians (we may use repo.paraguayeduca.org in the future)
  • TODO: We don't keep release notes for our builds (we should probably use the wiki)


Customizing the build

The topic of is too vast to discuss in detail here. Start by reading http://git.paraguayeduca.org/gitweb/users/bernie/olpc-os-builder.git/blob_plain/HEAD:/doc/README README] in the olpc-os-builder tree. Then, as needed, read the various README files contained in the modules directory.

Being a Build Master involves knowledge of many workflows, including:

  • Dealing with yum and rpm.
  • Creating yum package repositories with [1].
  • Uploading activities to [2].
  • General understanding of the Linux system plumbing infrastructure: kernel,

udev, dbus, DeviceKit, NetworkManager, Xorg...

  • Flashing laptops and debugging any problems
  • Interaction with the Sugar and OLPC community to solve issues and minimize our divergence from the official builds.

Upstream

Our upstream code comes from dev.laptop.org:

git remote add olpc git://dev.laptop.org/projects/olpc-os-builder
git fetch olpc
git log olpc/master

Building custom kernels

$ git clone git://git.paraguayeduca.org/users/bernie/olpc-2.6
$ cd olpc-2.6
$ setarch i386 make ARCH=i386 xo_1-kernel-rpm