rpm-ostree/docs/compose-server.md
Colin Walters 04839e200f Misc doc tweaks/cleanups
- Link to osbuild blog
- Drop CentOS 7 stuff
- clarify goals a bit
2021-02-12 16:45:46 -05:00

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Compose server

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Using higher level build tooling

Originally rpm-ostree compose tree was intended to be a "high level" tool, but that didn't work out very well in practice. Today, you should consider it as a low level tool. For example, most people that want to generate OSTree commits also want to generate bootable disk images, and rpm-ostree has nothing to do with that.

One example higher level tool that takes care of both OSTree commit generation and bootable disk images is coreos-assembler; it is strongly oriented towards "CoreOS-like" systems which include rpm-ostree and Ignition.

The osbuild project has some support for rpm-ostree based systems. See this blog entry for example.

Background on managing an OSTree repository

Before you get started, it's recommended to read (at least) these two sections of the OSTree manual:

Generating OSTree commits in a container

rpm-ostree compose tree runs well in an unprivileged (or "run as root") podman container. You can also use other container tools, they are just less frequently tested.

You can also directly install rpm-ostree on a traditional yum/rpm based virtual (or physical) machine - it won't affect your host. However, containers are encouraged.

Choosing a base config

Currently, rpm-ostree is fairly coupled to the Fedora project. We are open to supporting other distributions however.

Example base rpm-ostree "manifest repositories" are:

Running rpm-ostree compose tree

This program takes as input a manifest file that describes the target system, and commits the result to an OSTree repository.

The input format is a YAML (or JSON) "treefile".

If you're doing this multiple times, it's strongly recommended to create a cache directory:

# rpm-ostree compose tree --unified-core --cachedir=cache --repo=/srv/repo /path/to/manifest.yaml

This will download RPMs from the referenced repos, and commit the result to the OSTree repository, using the ref named by ref.

Once we have that commit, let's export it:

# ostree --repo=repo pull-local build-repo exampleos/8/x86_64/stable

You can tell client systems to rebase to it by combining ostree remote add, and rpm-ostree rebase on the client side.

More information