Overview -------- The build process is divided into two levels: 1) Yocto 2) ostbuild Yocto is used as a reliable, well-maintained bootstrapping tool. It provides the basic filesystem layout as well as binaries for core build utilities like gcc and bash. This gets us out of circular dependency problems. At the end, the Yocto build process generates two tarballs: one for a base "runtime", and one "devel" with all of the development tools like gcc. We then import that into an OSTree branch e.g. "bases/gnomeos-3.4-yocto-i686-devel". We also have a Yocto recipe "ostree-native" which generates (as you might guess) a native binary of ostree. That binary is used to import into an "archive mode" OSTree repository. You can see it in $builddir/tmp/deploy/images/repo. Now that we have an OSTree repository storing a base filesystem, we can use "ostbuild" which uses "linux-user-chroot" to chroot inside, run a build on a source tree, and outputs binaries, which we then add to the build tree for the next module, and so on. ostbuild details ---------------- The simple goal of ostbuild is that it only takes as input a "manifest" which is basically just a list of components to build. A component is a pure metadata file which includes the git repository URL and branch name, as well as ./configure flags (--enable-foo). There is no support for building from "tarballs" - I want the ability to review all of the code that goes in, and to efficiently store source code updates. The result of a build of a component is an OSTree branch like "artifacts/gnomeos-3.4-i686-devel/libxslt/master". Then, a "compose" process merges together the individual filesystem trees into the final branches (e.g. gnomeos-3.4-i686-devel). Doing a full build on your system --------------------------------- srcdir=/src builddir=/src/build # First, you'll need "http://git.gnome.org/browse/linux-user-chroot/" # installed as setuid root. cd $srcdir git clone gnome:linux-user-chroot cd linux-user-chroot NOCONFIGURE=1 ./autogen.sh ./configure make sudo make install sudo chown root:root /usr/local/bin/linux-user-chroot sudo chmod u+s /usr/local/bin/linux-user-chroot # Next, we're grabbing my Poky branch. git clone git://github.com/cgwalters/poky.git cd $builddir # This command enters the Poky environment, creating # a directory named gnomeos-build. . $srcdir/poky/oe-init-build-env gnomeos-build # Now edit conf/bblayers.conf, and add # /src/ostree/gnomeos/yocto # to BBLAYERS. bitbake ostree-native bitbake gnomeos-contents-{runtime,devel} # This bit is just for shorthand convenience, you can skip it cd $builddir ln -s tmp/deploy/images/repo repo # Now create a file ~/.config/ostbuild.cfg # example contents: # [global] # repo=/src/build/gnomeos-build/build/repo # mirrordir=/src/build/ostbuild/src # workdir=/src/build/ostbuild/work # manifest=/src/ostree/gnomeos/3.4/manifest.json # Now we want to use the "ostbuild" binary that was created # as part of "bitbake ostree-native". You can do e.g.: export PATH=$build/tmp-eglibc/sysroots/x86_64-linux/usr/bin:$PATH # This next command will download all of the source code to the # modules specified in $srcdir/ostree/gnomeos/3.4/manifest.json, # and create a file $workdir/manifest.json that has the # exact git commits we want to build. ostbuild resolve # This command builds everything ostbuild build