Building distro packages is great, however if they aren't built in the
correct environment with the associated dependencies, then they won't
work properly on those distros.
This patch adds an `mkosi` based image building environment that builds
the packages in their respective distros, and then copies them out into
our releases directory.
You'll now want to `make tag && make mkosi && make release` to get a new
release out. We use a small hack to trick the `make release` portion to
not re-build the distro packages if they're already present in the
releases/ directory for that version.
This commit depends on a very recent version of mkosi (it was tested
with git master) and also depends on two currently unmerged patches:
https://github.com/systemd/mkosi/pull/363 and
https://github.com/systemd/mkosi/pull/365
A user seemed to experience a weird golang issue when they had deps from
both package managers installed. I won't block or fail their install,
but we can print a warning message so that someone sees it in their
logs.
The exec resource was an early addition to the project, and it was due
for some fixes and integration into our automated tests. This patch
fixes a number of issues, and makes it ready for more general use.
Per default, the Ruby gems renerate documentation in two distinct formats
during installation. By passing --no-ri and --no-rdoc, gem is instructed
to skip this step for both formats.
If the user needs documentation for any of the gems after all, they can
manually generate the docs themselves.
On Ubuntu, the apt-get install call to ruby, ruby-devel, and rubygems will
fail because there is no "rubygems" package in Ubuntu.
In Debian, this package is virtual only. In both cases, the ruby package
is sufficient. (See also https://packages.debian.org/jessie/rubygems)
This commit adds new make targets for rpm, deb, and pacman packages.
It also adds a phony target that uploads tarballs of the packages,
along with their signed (and unsigned) checksums to the github release
page. Once the current commit is tagged as a release, run `make release`
to build the packages and upload them to github.
While writing docs, I couldn't remember what the correct style was
supposed to be, and I remember someone complaining about this
previously, so I decided to add a linter! I excluded a bunch of annoying
style rules, but if we find more we can add those to the list too.
Hopefully this gives us a more consistent feel throughout.
This change aims to streamline the integrationtest suite and reduce friction when running (parts of) test suites.
Changes:
- add `test-testname` to makefile to easily run one suite
- made skipping tests first class citizen in test.sh (all available testsuites and the reasons they are skipped are now better exposed and discovered)
- suppress some output of gotest unless there is an error
- no longer build binary for examples and gotest suites
- removed .SILENT from makefile as it being applied to only some targets makes it feel weird (I just learned about this option btw, feel free to comment on this change)
- move individual tests out of `test.sh` and into `test-misc.sh`
- introduced the concept of testsuites to `test.sh`
- New docker command for quickly running tasks in a Linux environment.
- Updated docs with macOS specific details.
- Fixed some test issues.
- Add (fallible) macOS test target for Travis.
This is an initial implementation of the mgmt language. It is a
declarative (immutable) functional, reactive, domain specific
programming language. It is intended to be a language that is:
* safe
* powerful
* easy to reason about
With these properties, we hope this language, and the mgmt engine will
allow you to model the real-time systems that you'd like to automate.
This also includes a number of other associated changes. Sorry for the
large size of this patch.
pacman needs `--needed` to prevent reinstalling packages that are
already installed. Additionally I added `--asdeps` to allow later
cleanup of unneeded dependencies.
Bash has a built-in command, `command`, that will search the path and
return the full path to a command if it exists (or an exit code of 1 if
it does not), preventing the requirement of the `which` package.
This patch adds the option to print the license with a cli flag. It
uses go-bindata to store the license file. The file is generated by
running `make bindata` and the result is stored in the bindata
directory.
* Check and install libvirt with Homebrew
macOS does not have apt, dnf or yum. Add checking for homebrew for
installing libvirt.
* Use platform timeout for tests
* Add timeout detection to test/util.sh
* Use $timeout for shell test requiring timeout
On Nixos and GNUIX-SD, bash is chroot in package store path.
In my case : /nix/store/qvccmr6fsis4kqlvlk8pb1c8c0r0cwai-system-path/bin/bash
In any case, using `/usr/bin/env bash` is the recommended way to get bash
portable across UNIX-like systems.