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* Find the URL at https://edge.launchpad.net/api/devel/ubuntu/lucid/i386/chroot_url (or similar). | * Find the URL at https://launchpad.net/api/devel/ubuntu/lucid/i386/chroot_url (or similar). |
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wget -O - -q https://edge.launchpad.net/api/devel/ubuntu/lucid/i386/chroot_url | xargs wget | wget -O - -q https://launchpad.net/api/devel/ubuntu/lucid/i386/chroot_url | xargs wget |
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* Within five seconds of upload acceptance, the buildd should start building. Wait until it is complete. * `scripts/process-accepted.py --ppa ubuntu # Create publishings for the binaries.` * `scripts/publish-distro.py --ppa # Publish the source and binaries.` |
* Within five seconds of upload acceptance, the buildd should start building. Wait until it is complete (the build page will say "Uploading build"). * `scripts/process-upload.py -vvv --builds -C buildd /var/tmp/builddmaster # Process the build upload.` * `scripts/process-accepted.py -vv --ppa ubuntu # Create publishings for the binaries.` * `scripts/publish-distro.py -vv --ppa # Publish the source and binaries.` |
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* `scripts/process-upload.py /var/tmp/poppy` | * `scripts/process-upload.py -vvv /var/tmp/poppy` |
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* `scripts/process-accepted.py ubuntu` * `scripts/publish-distro.py` |
* `scripts/process-accepted.py -vv ubuntu` * `scripts/publish-distro.py -vv` |
You're going to run Soyuz in a branch you create for the purpose. To get the whole experience, you'll also be installing the slave-side launchpad-buildd package on your system.
Initial setup
Run utilities/start-dev-soyuz.sh to ensure that some Soyuz-related services are running. Some of these may already be running, in which case you'll get some failures that are probably harmless. Note: these services eat lots of memory.
Once you've set up your test database, run utilities/soyuz-sampledata-setup.py -e you@example.com (where you@example.com should be an email address you own and have a GPG key for). This prepares more suitable sample data in the launchpad_dev database, including recent Ubuntu series. If you get a "duplicate key" error, make schema and run again.
make run (or if you also want to use codehosting, make run_codehosting—some services may fail to start up because you already started them, but it shouldn't be a problem).
Open https://launchpad.dev/~ppa-user/+archive/test-ppa in a browser to get to your pre-made testing PPA. Log in with your own email adddress and password test. This user has your GPG key associated, has signed the Ubuntu Code of Conduct, and is a member ubuntu-team (conferring upload rights to the primary archive).
Extra PPA dependencies
The testing PPA has an external dependency on Lucid. If that's not enough, or not what you want:
Log in as admin@canonical.com:test (I suggest using a different browser so you don't break up your ongoing session).
Open https://launchpad.dev/~ppa-user/+archive/test-ppa/+admin
- Edit external dependencies. They normally look like:
deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu %(series)s main restricted universe multiverse
Configure a buildd
This assumes a local install of the launchpad-buildd package. A less intrusive setup using chroot is under TryOutBuildSlave.
cd lib/canonical/buildd
debian/rules package
dpkg-buildpackage -b
sudo dpkg -i ../launchpad-buildd_*_all.deb
sudo apt-get -f install
- Make it work.
Edit /etc/launchpad-buildd/default and make sure ntphost points to an existing NTP server. You can check the NTP server pool to find one near you.
- Get an Ubuntu buildd chroot from Launchpad
Find the URL at https://launchpad.net/api/devel/ubuntu/lucid/i386/chroot_url (or similar).
- If you want lucid and your architecture is i386, download the tarball with:
wget -O - -q https://launchpad.net/api/devel/ubuntu/lucid/i386/chroot_url | xargs wget
scripts/ftpmaster-tools/manage-chroot.py -s lucid -a i386 add -f chroot-ubuntu-lucid-i386.tar.bz2
Mark Bob the Builder as OK (https://launchpad.dev/builders/bob/+edit)
Upload a source to the PPA
Run scripts/process-upload.py /var/tmp/poppy (creates hierarchy)
Add to ~/.dput.cf:
[lpdev] fqdn = ppa.launchpad.dev:2121 method = ftp incoming = %(lpdev)s login = anonymous
Find a source package some_source with a changes file some_source.changes
dput -u lpdev:~ppa-user/test-ppa/ubuntu some_source.changes
scripts/process-upload.py /var/tmp/poppy -C absolutely-anything -vvv # Accept the source upload.
If this is your first time running soyuz locally, you'll also need to publish ubuntu: scripts/publish-distro.py -C
- Within five seconds of upload acceptance, the buildd should start building. Wait until it is complete (the build page will say "Uploading build").
scripts/process-upload.py -vvv --builds -C buildd /var/tmp/builddmaster # Process the build upload.
scripts/process-accepted.py -vv --ppa ubuntu # Create publishings for the binaries.
scripts/publish-distro.py -vv --ppa # Publish the source and binaries.
- Note that private archive builds will not be dispatched until their source is published.
Dealing with the primary archive
dput lpdev:ubuntu some_source.changes
scripts/process-upload.py -vvv /var/tmp/poppy
- Watch the output -- the upload might end up in NEW.
- If it does, go to the queue and accept it.
- Your builder should now be busy. Once it finishes, the binaries might go into NEW. Accept them if required.
scripts/process-accepted.py -vv ubuntu
scripts/publish-distro.py -vv
The first time, add -C to ensure a full publication of the archive.