Neon/Builder: Difference between revisions

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<code>mgmt</code> jobs run various management tasks.  <code>mgmt_tooling</code> is run whenever there is a commit made to pangea-tooling, it blocks new jobs being started while it's running which can be a blocker so you can cancel it if you check the commits to pangea-tooling are not relevant.  It fails if ruby testing fails.  It runs <code>mgmt_docker</code> which updates the docker images used for builds.  <code>mgmt_pause_integration</code> can be run manually and just blocks jobs from starting, remember to kill is when you're done.  <code>mgmt_jenkins_prune_archives</code> and <code>mgmt_jenkins_prune_logs</code> clear some space on the server and run periodically.   
<code>mgmt</code> jobs run various management tasks.  <code>mgmt_tooling</code> is run whenever there is a commit made to pangea-tooling, it blocks new jobs being started while it's running which can be a blocker so you can cancel it if you check the commits to pangea-tooling are not relevant.  It fails if ruby testing fails.  It runs <code>mgmt_docker</code> which updates the docker images used for builds.  <code>mgmt_pause_integration</code> can be run manually and just blocks jobs from starting, remember to kill is when you're done.  <code>mgmt_jenkins_prune_archives</code> and <code>mgmt_jenkins_prune_logs</code> clear some space on the server and run periodically.   
<code>mgmt_progenitor</code> is run daily and runs <code>mgmt_build_xenial_release</code> and stable/unstable.  It does something important. TODO what?
<code>mgmt_progenitor</code> is run daily and runs <code>mgmt_build_xenial_release</code> and stable/unstable.  It deploys code onto slaves and then deploys docker images.


<code>iso</code> jobs builds the installable ISOs.  See [[Neon/InstallableImages]].  The Dev Editions are run daily and the User Edition is run weekly.
<code>iso</code> jobs builds the installable ISOs.  See [[Neon/InstallableImages]].  The Dev Editions are run daily and the User Edition is run weekly.


= The Archive =
= The Archive =
aptly instance
[http://archive.neon.kde.org archive.neon.kde.org] is our .deb package archive.  For your sources.list you need one of the following lines.
forked?
{{Input|1=<nowiki>
repos?
deb http://archive.neon.kde.org/dev/unstable xenial main
./ci-tooling/ci/repo_console.rb --gateway ssh://drax:9090
deb http://archive.neon.kde.org/dev/stable xenial main
https://github.com/KDEJewellers/aptly-api/
deb http://archive.neon.kde.org/user xenial main
</nowiki>}}
 
It is an aptly instance and may be running the [https://github.com/blue-systems/aptly-1 Blue Systems Aptly fork].
 
Admins can access it using the repo console from pangea-tooling:
<code>./ci-tooling/ci/repo_console.rb --gateway ssh://drax:9090</code>
{{Input|1=<nowiki>
{{Input|1=<nowiki>
Repo.list
Repo.list
Line 55: Line 61:
repo.packages()
repo.packages()
</nowiki>}}
</nowiki>}}
This makes available the Aptly-Api code using the Ruby GEM written by Harald and Rohan https://github.com/KDEJewellers/aptly-api/
== User Repo ==
To allow for extra QA the packages built for User Edition are uploaded to the secret <code>release</code> repo
{{Input|1=<nowiki>
deb http://archive.neon.kde.org/release xenial main
</nowiki>}}
You can test this manually and when happy run <code>mgmt_snapshot</code> to copy the packages to user repo.  This will first run <code>mgmt_daily_promotion_xenial_release</code> (slow takes ~30 mins) which installs existing packages and attempts to upgrade them to new packages, if there are any problems it'll stop the snapshot.  It also runs <code>mgmt_appstream-generator</code> which creates the Appstream data files used by the archive.


= The Packaging =
= The Packaging =


<code>dev/unstable</code> is packages built from
<code>user</code> is packages built from tars.
how to package
how to package
ci variable
ci variable
overlapping files
overlapping files

Revision as of 15:18, 27 September 2016

Neon uses a Jenkins continuous integration system to build its packages

The Setup

drax.kde.org is the master server, owned by Blue Systems and administrated by KDE Sysadmins. It runs a Jenkins instance which is a Continuous Integration website at build.neon.kde.org that has many jobs to build the packages and run other functions, either on demand or at pre-scheduled intervals.

The code behind build.neon is from pangea-tooling which also runs the code for DCI Debian CI, KCI Kubuntu CI, ACI Appstream CI, and MCI Mobile neon Plasma CI.

The Jenkins jobs farm off the hard build work to 4 DigitalOcean build servers. It runs most jobs inside a Docker container to give a fresh build environment.

To use the scripts to access Jenkins you will need to set ~/.config/pangea-jenkins.json using access key available inside Jenkins to administrators.

The setup of the machines is maintained in pangea-kitchen which uses Chef to set up the servers with software all configured.

The Jobs

The Jenkins jobs are created by running the pangea-tooling script jenkins_jobs_update_nci.rb. This creates some manual Jobs specified in the script such as the ISO jobs but mostly uses factories to create batches of jobs based on archives.

The YAML files in pangea-conf-projects define what jobs get created.

For each package there is a parent MultiJob which runs some sub jobs.

parent job this is set to checkout the relevant archive from KDE Git as source/ (for Developer Editions), then check out the relevant archive from KDE neon Git as packaging/. It then runs a number of child jobs...

src will create the source package. For User Edition this means running uscan to use the debian/watch file to download the relevant tar, for Dev Editions it uses the source the parent job checked out. It then builds the source package.

bin job will extract the source, install the build dependencies and compile the package. It finishes by checking the output from lintian and fails on any errors, you can override errors with lintian-overrides files in the normal .deb packaging method (see dh_lintian). It also checks for any list-missing files and fails if there are any, override by adding a debian/not-installed files. It also fails if cmake reports build-dependencies it needs, override with debian/meta cmake-ignore.

adt job runs Debian's test framework autopkgtest. See Ubuntu guide for some details. It runs adt-run on the binaries which installs them and runs the relevant test suite as defined in debian/tests/. It doesn't fail if tests fail.

pub job will upload to aptly, see The Archive below.

lintqml job will scan for QML dependencies which have not been satisfied by the package dependencies, it will print a JSON output of any missing QML modules it requests. The packager should add these to the packaging manually and rebuild.

snap job will package it up as a Snappy Snap package. This is experimental, you can see the output at distribute.kde.org.

Other Jobs

watcher jobs are made for packages in User Edition. They use debian/watch files to check for new releases and if one is found add a new changelog entry, merges from Neon/stable, then runs the release build job. See man uscan for info on watch files. It will fail it is finds an "unstable" line in the watch file as we don't include these in User Edition.

mgmt jobs run various management tasks. mgmt_tooling is run whenever there is a commit made to pangea-tooling, it blocks new jobs being started while it's running which can be a blocker so you can cancel it if you check the commits to pangea-tooling are not relevant. It fails if ruby testing fails. It runs mgmt_docker which updates the docker images used for builds. mgmt_pause_integration can be run manually and just blocks jobs from starting, remember to kill is when you're done. mgmt_jenkins_prune_archives and mgmt_jenkins_prune_logs clear some space on the server and run periodically. mgmt_progenitor is run daily and runs mgmt_build_xenial_release and stable/unstable. It deploys code onto slaves and then deploys docker images.

iso jobs builds the installable ISOs. See Neon/InstallableImages. The Dev Editions are run daily and the User Edition is run weekly.

The Archive

archive.neon.kde.org is our .deb package archive. For your sources.list you need one of the following lines.

deb http://archive.neon.kde.org/dev/unstable xenial main
deb http://archive.neon.kde.org/dev/stable xenial main
deb http://archive.neon.kde.org/user xenial main

It is an aptly instance and may be running the Blue Systems Aptly fork.

Admins can access it using the repo console from pangea-tooling: ./ci-tooling/ci/repo_console.rb --gateway ssh://drax:9090

Repo.list
repo = Repo.get("unstable_xenial")
repo.packages()

This makes available the Aptly-Api code using the Ruby GEM written by Harald and Rohan https://github.com/KDEJewellers/aptly-api/

User Repo

To allow for extra QA the packages built for User Edition are uploaded to the secret release repo

deb http://archive.neon.kde.org/release xenial main

You can test this manually and when happy run mgmt_snapshot to copy the packages to user repo. This will first run mgmt_daily_promotion_xenial_release (slow takes ~30 mins) which installs existing packages and attempts to upgrade them to new packages, if there are any problems it'll stop the snapshot. It also runs mgmt_appstream-generator which creates the Appstream data files used by the archive.

The Packaging

dev/unstable is packages built from

user is packages built from tars. how to package ci variable overlapping files