When I'm doing local development builds, it's quite common for me not to want to accumulate history. There are also use cases for this on build servers as well. In particular, using this, one could write a build system that didn't necessarily need to have access to (a copy of) the OSTree repository. Instead, the build system would determine the last commit ID on the branch, and pass that to a worker node, then sync the generated content back. The API supported generating custom commits that don't necessarily reference the previous commit on the same branch, let's just expose this in the command line for convenience. I plan to also support this rpm-ostree. Closes: #223 Approved by: jlebon |
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README.md
OSTree
New! See the docs online at Read The Docs (OSTree)
OSTree is a tool that combines a "git-like" model for committing and downloading bootable filesystem trees, along with a layer for deploying them and managing the bootloader configuration.
OSTree is like git in that it checksums individual files and has a content-addressed-object store. It's unlike git in that it "checks out" the files via hardlinks, and they should thus be immutable. Therefore, another way to think of OSTree is that it's just a more polished version of Linux VServer hardlinks.
Features:
- Atomic upgrades and rollback for the system
- Replicating content incrementally over HTTP via GPG signatures and "pinned TLS" support
- Support for parallel installing more than just 2 bootable roots
- Binary history on the server side (and client)
- Introspectable shared library API for build and deployment systems
This last point is important - you should think of the OSTree command line as effectively a "demo" for the shared library. The intent is that package managers, system upgrade tools, container build tools and the like use OSTree as a "deduplicating hardlink store".
Projects using OSTree
rpm-ostree is a tool that uses OSTree as a shared library, and supports committing RPMs into an OSTree repository, and deploying them on the client. This is appropriate for "fixed purpose" systems. There is in progress work for more sophisticated hybrid models, deeply integrating the RPM packaging with OSTree.
Project Atomic uses rpm-ostree to provide a minimal host for Docker formatted Linux containers. Replicating a base immutable OS, then using Docker for applications meshes together two different tools with different tradeoffs.
xdg-app uses OSTree for desktop application containers.
GNOME Continuous is a custom build system designed for OSTree, using OpenEmbedded in concert with a custom build system to do continuous delivery from hundreds of git repositories.
Building
Releases are available as GPG signed git tags, and most recent versions support extended validation using git-evtag.
However, in order to build from a git clone, you must update the submodules. If you're packaging OSTree and want a tarball, I recommend using a "recursive git archive" script. There are several available online; this code in OSTree is an example.
Once you have a git clone or recursive archive, building is the same as almost every autotools project:
env NOCONFIGURE=1 ./autogen.sh
./configure --prefix=...
make
make install DESTDIR=/path/to/dest
More documentation
New! See the docs online at Read The Docs (OSTree)
Some more information is available on the old wiki page: https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/OSTree
Contributing
See Contributing.