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OSTree Contributing Tutorial
{: .no_toc }
The following guide is about OSTree forking, building, adding a command, testing the command, and submitting the change.
- TOC {:toc}
Getting Started
Fork https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree, then run the following commands.
$ git clone https://github.com/<username>/ostree && cd ostree
$ git remote add upstream https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree
$ git checkout main
$ git fetch upstream && git branch --set-upstream-to=upstream/main main
Make a branch from main for your patch.
$ git checkout -b <name-of-branch>
$ git branch --set-upstream-to=upstream/main <name-of-branch>
Building OSTree
Install Build Dependencies
Execute one of the following group commands as superuser depending on your machine's package manager.
For Fedora:
$ dnf install @buildsys-build dnf-plugins-core && \
dnf builddep ostree
For CentOS:
$ yum install yum-utils dnf-plugins-core && \
yum-builddep ostree
For Debian based distros:
$ apt-get update && \
apt-get install build-essential && \
apt-get build-dep ostree
build.sh will have a list of packages needed to build ostree.
OSTree Build Commands
These are the basic commands to build OSTree. Depending on the OS that OSTree will be built for, the flags or options for ./autogen.sh
and ./configure
will vary.
See ostree-build.sh
in this tutorial below for specific commands to building OSTree for Fedora 28 and Fedora 28 Atomic Host.
# optional: autogen.sh will run this if necessary
git submodule update --init
env NOCONFIGURE=1 ./autogen.sh
# run ./configure if makefile does not exist
./configure
make
make install DESTDIR=/path/to/install/binary
Notes
Running git submodule update --init
is optional since autogen.sh
will check to see if one of the submodule files for example from libglnx/
or from bsdiff/
exists.
Additionally, autogen.sh
will check to see if the environment variable NOCONFIGURE
is set. To run ./configure
manually, run autogen in a modified environment as such, env NOCONFIGURE=1 ./autogen.sh
.
Otherwise, leave NOCONFIGURE
empty and autogen.sh
will run ./configure
as part of the autogen.sh
command when it executes.
For more information on --prefix
see Variables for Installation Directories.
make install
will generate files for /bin
and /lib
. If DESTDIR
is unspecified then OSTree will be installed in the default directory i.e. /usr/local/bin
and its static libraries in /usr/local/lib
. Note that the /usr/local
portion of the path can be changed using the --prefix
option for ./configure
.
See this GNU guide on DESTDIR
Staged Installs for more information.
Tip
Make allows parallel execution of recipes. Use make -j<N>
to speed up the build. <N>
is typically $((2 * $(nproc)))
for optimal performance, where nproc
is the number of processing units (CPU cores) available.
See page 106 of the GNU Make Manual for more information about the --jobs
or -j
option.
Testing a Build
It is best practice to build software (definitely including ostree) in a container or virtual machine first.
Testing in a Container
There are a variety of container engines available and many distributions have pre-packaged versions of e.g. Podman and Docker.
If you choose to use Docker upstream, you may want to follow this post-installation guide for Docker. This will allow you to run Docker as a non-root user on a Linux based host machine.
You will need to have pushed a remote git branch $REMOTE_BRANCH
(see ostree-git.sh below
) in order to pull your changes into a container.
The example below uses Docker to manage containers. Save the contents of this Dockerfile somewhere on your machine:
# this pulls the fedora 28 image
FROM registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora:28
# install ostree dependencies
RUN dnf update -y && \
dnf -y install @buildsys-build dnf-plugins-core && \
dnf -y builddep ostree && \
dnf clean all
# clone ostree and update main branch
COPY ostree-git.sh /
RUN ../ostree-git.sh
# builds ostree + any additional commands
COPY ostree-build.sh /
# entry into the container will start at this directory
WORKDIR /ostree
# run the following as `/bin/sh -c`
# or enter the container to execute ./ostree-build.sh
RUN ../ostree-build.sh
Save the following bash scripts in the same directory as the Dockerfile. Then change the mode bit of these files so that they are executable, by running chmod +x ostree-git.sh ostree-build.sh
#!/bin/bash
# ostree-git.sh
# Clone ostree and update main branch
set -euo pipefail
# Set $USERNAME to your GitHub username here.
USERNAME=""
# clone your fork of the OSTree repo, this will be in the "/" directory
git clone https://github.com/$USERNAME/ostree.git
cd ostree
# Add upstream as remote and update main branch
git checkout main
git remote add upstream https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree.git
git pull --rebase upstream main
#!/bin/bash
# ostree-build.sh
# Build and test OSTree
set -euo pipefail
# $REMOTE_BRANCH is the name of the remote branch in your
# repository that contains changes (e.g. my-patch).
REMOTE_BRANCH=""
# fetch updates from origin
# origin url should be your forked ostree repository
git fetch origin
# go to branch with changes
# if this branch already exists then checkout that branch
exit_code="$(git checkout --track origin/$REMOTE_BRANCH; echo $?)"
if [[ "$exit_code" == 1 ]]
then
echo "This branch:" $REMOTE_BRANCH "is not a remote branch."
exit
fi
# make sure branch with changes is up-to-date
git pull origin $REMOTE_BRANCH
# build OSTree commands for Fedora 28 and Fedora 28 Atomic Host
./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr --libdir=/usr/lib64 --sysconfdir=/etc
./configure --prefix=/usr
make -j$((2 * $(nproc)))
make install
# any additional commands go here
Build the container
Run docker build
in the same directory of the Dockerfile
like so:
$ docker build -t ostree-fedora-test .
When this build is done, the -t
option tags the image as ostree-fedora-test
.
Note: Do not forget the dot . at the end of the above command which specifies the location of the Dockerfile.
You will see ostree-fedora-test
listed when running docker images
:
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
ostree-fedora-test latest 817c04cc3656 1 day ago 978MB
Entering the Container
To start the ostree-fedora-test
container, run:
$ docker run -it --rm --entrypoint /bin/sh --name ostree-testing ostree-fedora-test
Note:
--rm
option tells Docker to automatically clean up the container and remove the file system when the container exits. Otherwise remove it manually by running docker rm <container name>
.
The state of the container will not be saved when the shell prompt exits. Best practice is modify the Dockerfile to modify the image.
Testing in a Container Workflow
-
Edit the changes to OSTree on your local machine.
-
git add
to stage the changed files,git commit
and thengit push origin <local-branch>:<remote-branch>
. -
Testing on a new container vs. Testing on an existing container:
If the
ostree-testing
container was newly built right after your changes have been committed, then the container's build ofostree
should contain your changes.Else: Within the
ostree-testing
container, run../ostree-build.sh
in the ostree directory. This will pull in changes from your branch and create a newostree
build. -
make install
will install OSTree in the default location i.e./usr/..
in a Fedora 28 container. -
Test
ostree
.
Testing in a Virtual Machine
To create a Fedora 28 Atomic Host Vagrant VM, run the following commands:
$ mkdir atomic && cd atomic
$ vagrant init fedora/28-atomic-host && vagrant up
An option is to use rsync
to transfer ostree
files to a Vagrant VM.
To find the IP address of a Vagrant VM, run vagrant ssh-config
in the same directory as the Vagrantfile
.
Steps to rsync
files to test an ostree
build:
-
Copy the contents of your public ssh key on your host machine e.g.
id_rsa.pub
to/home/vagrant/.ssh/authorized_keys
on the VM. -
Run
sudo su
, followed byssh localhost
then press Ctrl+c to exit from the decision prompt. This will create the.ssh
directory with the right permissions. -
Using
Vagrant
as the user, runsudo cp ~/.ssh/authorized_keys /root/.ssh/
. So that userroot
has the the same login credentials. -
To override the
Read-only file system
warning, runsudo ostree admin unlock
. -
<ostree-install-dir>
will serve as the local install location forostree
and the path to this directory should be absolute when specified inDESTDIR
. -
Set
rsync
to sync changes in/etc
and/usr
from<ostree-install-dir>/
on the host to the VM:$ rsync -av <ostree-install-dir>/etc/ root@<ip-address>:/etc $ rsync -av <ostree-install-dir>/usr/ root@<ip-address>:/usr
Using option
-n
will execute the commands as a trial, which is helpful to list the files that will be synced. -
Run the commands in step 6 each time a new
ostree
build is executed to update the change. Runningls -lt
in the directory where the changed file is expected, is a simple way to check when a particular file was last modified. Proceed to the test changesostree
with the most recent changes.
Tutorial: Adding a basic builtin command to ostree
Modifying OSTree
This will add a command which prints Hello OSTree!
when ostree hello-ostree
is entered.
-
Create a file in
src/ostree
namedot-builtin-hello-ostree.c
. Code that lives in here belongs to OSTree, and uses functionality from libostree. -
Add the following to
ot-builtin-hello-ostree.c
:#include "config.h" #include "ot-main.h" #include "ot-builtins.h" #include "ostree.h" #include "otutil.h" // Structure for options such as ostree hello-ostree --option. static GOptionEntry options[] = { { NULL }, }; gboolean ostree_builtin_hello_ostree (int argc, char **argv, OstreeCommandInvocation *invocation, GCancellable *cancellable, GError **error) { g_autoptr(GOptionContext) context = NULL; g_autoptr(OstreeRepo) repo = NULL; gboolean ret = FALSE; // Creates new command context, ready to be parsed. // Input to g_option_context_new shows when running ostree <command> --help context = g_option_context_new (""); // Parses the command context according to the ostree CLI. if (!ostree_option_context_parse (context, options, &argc, &argv, invocation, &repo, cancellable, error)) goto out; g_print("Hello OSTree!\n"); ret = TRUE; out: return ret; }
This defines the functionality for
hello-ostree
. Now we have to make sure the CLI can refer to the execution function, and that autotools knows to build this file. -
Add the following in
src/ostree/main.c
:{ "hello-ostree", // The name of the command OSTREE_BUILTIN_FLAG_NO_REPO, // Flag not to require the `--repo` argument, see "ot-main.h" ostree_builtin_hello_ostree, // Execution function for the command "Print hello message" }, // Short description to appear when `ostree hello-ostree --help` is entered
-
Add a macro for the function declaration of
ostree_builtin_hello_ostree
, inot-builtins.h
:BUILTINPROTO(hello_ostree);
This makes the function definition visible to the CLI.
-
Configure automake to include
ot-builtin-hello-ostree.c
in the build, by adding an entry inMakefile-ostree.am
underostree_SOURCES
:src/ostree/ot-builtin-hello-ostree.c \
-
Rebuild ostree:
$ make && make install DESTDIR=/path/to/install/the/content
-
Execute the new
ostree
binary, from where you installed it:$ ostree hello-ostree Hello OSTree!
OSTree Tests
Tests for OSTree are done by shell scripting, by running OSTree commands and examining output. These steps will go through adding a test for hello-ostree
.
-
Create a file in
tests
calledtest-hello-ostree.sh
. -
Add the following to
test-hello-ostree.sh
:set -euo pipefail # Ensure the test will not silently fail . $(dirname $0)/libtest.sh # Make libtest.sh functions available echo "1..1" # Declare which test is being run out of how many pushd ${test_tmpdir} ${CMD_PREFIX} ostree hello-ostree > hello-output.txt assert_file_has_content hello-output.txt "Hello OSTree!" popd echo "ok hello ostree" # Indicate test success
Many tests require a fake repository setting up (as most OSTree commands require
--repo
to be specified). Seetest-pull-depth.sh
for an example of this setup. -
Configure automake to include
test-hello-ostree.sh
in the build, by adding an entry inMakefile-tests.am
under_installed_or_uninstalled_test_scripts
:tests/test-hello-ostree.sh \
-
Make sure
test-hello-ostree.sh
has executable permissions!$ chmod +x tests/test-hello-ostree.sh
-
Run the test:
$ make check TESTS="tests/test-hello-ostree.sh"
Multiple tests can be specified:
make check TESTS="test1 test2 ..."
. To run all tests, usemake check
.Hopefully, the test passes! The following will be printed:
PASS: tests/test-hello-ostree.sh 1 hello ostree ============================================================================ Testsuite summary for libostree 2018.8 ============================================================================ # TOTAL: 1 # PASS: 1 # SKIP: 0 # XFAIL: 0 # FAIL: 0 # XPASS: 0 # ERROR: 0 ============================================================================
Submitting a Patch
After you have committed your changes and tested, you are ready to submit your patch!
You should make sure your commits are placed on top of the latest changes from upstream/main
:
$ git pull --rebase upstream main
To submit your patch, open a pull request from your forked repository. Most often, you'll be merging into ostree:main
from <username>:<branch name>
.
If some of your changes are complete and you would like feedback, you may also open a pull request that has WIP (Work In Progress) in the title.
Before a pull request is considered merge ready, your commit messages should fall within the specified guideline. See Commit message style.
See CONTRIBUTING.md for information on squashing commits, and alternative options to submit patches.
Returning Workflow
When returning to work on a patch, it is recommended to update your fork with the latest changes in the upstream main branch.
If creating a new branch:
$ git checkout main
$ git pull upstream main
$ git checkout -b <name-of-patch>
If continuing on a branch already created:
$ git checkout <name-of-patch>
$ git pull --rebase upstream main