rpm-ostree ========== This tool takes a set of packages, and commits them to an [OSTree](https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/OSTree) repository. At the moment, it is intended for use on build servers. Using rpm-ostree ---------------- There are two levels; the core "rpm-ostree" command takes a set of packages and commits them to an OSTree repository. The higher level rpm-ostree-autobuilder parses a "products.json" which generates potentially many filesystem trees. It also has code to generate disk images and run smoketests. Installing and setting up a repository -------------------------------------- There are packages available in the rpm-ostree COPR; you can also just "sudo make install" it. Once you have that done, choose a build directory. Here we'll use /srv/rpm-ostree. # cd /srv/rpm-ostree # mkdir repo # ostree --repo=repo init --mode=archive-z2 Running rpm-ostree ------------------ The core "rpm-ostree" takes as input a "treefile". There is a demo one in `src/demo-treefile.json`. # rpm-ostree sometreefile.json All this does is use yum to download RPMs from the referenced repos, and commit the result to the OSTree repository, using the ref named by `ref`. You can export `/srv/rpm-ostree/repo` via any static webserver. Running the autobuilder ----------------------- The autobuilder instead takes as input a `products.json` which generates multiple treefiles. Try this: # ln -s /path/to/rpm-ostree.git/fedostree/products.json . # rpm-ostree-autobuilder That will automatically poll every hour for changes in the RPMs referenced by the `products.json` file, commit them to the `/srv/rpm-ostree/repo`, and generate cached disk images in `/srv/rpm-ostree/images`.