Fall 2009 SBR600 Weekly Schedule
Please note:
- The schedule here is tentative.
- Week-by-week details will be filled in as the course progresses.
Contents
- 1 Week 1 (September 8) - Introduction
- 2 Week 2 (September 15) - Overview of the Build and Release Processs
- 3 Week 3 (September 22) - Creating RPM Packages I
- 4 Week 4 (September 29) - Creating RPM Packages II
- 5 Week 5 (October 6) - Compositing
- 6 Week 6 (October 13) - Distributing
- 7 Week 7 (October 20) - Server Farms I
- 8 Study Week (October 27)
- 9 Week 8 (November 3) - Server Farms II
- 10 Week 9 (November 10) - Distributed Processing
- 11 Week 10 (November 17) - Virtualization
- 12 Week 11 (November 24) - Monitoring & Management
- 13 Week 12 (December 1) - Presentations
- 14 FUDCon (December 5-7)
- 15 Week 13 (December 8) - Wrap-Up
- 16 Exam Week (December 15)
Week 1 (September 8) - Introduction
Tuesday
- Welcome
- Introductions
- Intro to Build & Release
- Brief overview of the process
- Versioning & repository systems
- Compilation
- Testing
- Packaging
- Compositing
- Release
- Distribution
- Mirroring
- These steps vary according to the particular project/product. For example, when distributing software physically, "Release" means performing a RTM, where the final "gold disk" is sent to the duplicating house to be mass-produced; but when distributing software electronically, "Release" means sending the software to the online distribution system. The sequence of steps also varies between projects/products.
- Brief overview of the process
- Course Layout
- Project-based course
- Working with Open Source
- Working with the Fedora Project
- Communication Tools
- Course Outline
- Visit the CDOT Area
Thursday
- Make
- Makefile Basics
- Targets, Dependencies, and Commands
- Implied rules (e.g., .o files)
- Examples
- Building software from a source tarball using a makefile
Readings/Resources
- Two simple makefile examples
ToDo
Communication Lab: By Wednesday, September 9, Set up your accounts (wiki, IRC, FAS2).
- Create a blog post which will appear on the OpenSource@Seneca Planet, containing:
- A portion of an IRC conversation you've had with someone on a Fedora or Seneca IRC channel.
- A link to your User page on the Seneca wikis
- A link to your User page on the Fedora wiki
- Note: don't just dump this stuff in a blog post, add some introductory text as well!
- Add an entry to the Fall 2009 SBR600 Participants page
Register for:
Lab 1: By Tuesday, September 15:
- Build 2 packages from Source
- The NLED editor from http://cdot.senecac.on.ca
- Any package that uses a configure script -- SourceForge might be a good place to look for such packages.
- Blog about the experience.
Week 2 (September 15) - Overview of the Build and Release Processs
Tuesday
- Discussion of issues related to building
- -jX flag to enable multiple jobs
- Introduction to RPM
Thursday
- Telephone conference with Jesse Keating, Fedora Release Engineer
- MP3 recording of the call
ToDo
- Finish tasks from week 1 if not already completed.
- Remember, marking in this course is done on the basis of blog posts which appear on the planet.
- You should have two blog posts on the planet by now: One with a link to your Seneca and Fedora user pages plus a snippet of IRC conversation, and one with a reflection on your experience compiling software from source code.
Week 3 (September 22) - Creating RPM Packages I
RPM Packages
- Purpose
- What's in an RPM package file
- Metadata
- What the package provides
- Dependencies
- Packager, date, license, summary, description, ...
- Digital signature
- Software
- Data
- Fonts
- Icons
- Sample data
- Documentation
- Configuration files
- Setup scripts
- Pre-install
- Post-install
- Pre-uninstall
- Post-uninstall
- Triggers
- Metadata
The RPM Database
- Purpose of the database
- Querying the RPM database
- rpm -q
Creating Packages
- Packaging scenarios
- Setting up a Packaging Environment
- Needed packages
- rpm-build
- rpmdevtools
- rpmlint
- Setting up the RPM tree
- run
rpmdev-setuptree
- run
- Needed packages
- Taking a look at existing source RPMS (useful as examples)
- Installing
-
yumdownloader --source nameofpackage
-
rpm -i nameofpackage.src.rpm
- Source will be in ~/rpmbuild/SOURCES and specfile will be in ~/rpmbuild/SPECS
-
- Examine the specfile
- Rebuild on the local machine
-
rpmbuild --rebuild nameofpackage.src.rpm
-
- Building from the spec file
-
cd ~/rpmbuild/SPECS; rpmbuild -ba nameofpackage.spec
-
- Installing
Writing a specfile
- Run
rpmdev-newspec packagename
in ~/rpmbuild/SPECS - Edit the skeleton specfile.
- Test it:
rpmbuild -ba packagename.spec
- If successful, output will be binary RPM(s) in ~/rpmbuild/RPMS and source RPM in ~/rpmbuild/SRPMS
- Can install binary RPM with:
rpm -i rpmname
- Can install binary RPM with:
- If unsuccessful, read the error messages carefully.
- If successful, output will be binary RPM(s) in ~/rpmbuild/RPMS and source RPM in ~/rpmbuild/SRPMS
- Check it with rpmlint:
rpmlint packagename*
- Remember to check the spec file as well as the binary and source RPMs.
- Correct any errors found.
Layout of a specfile
- Basic Sections
- preamble - basic metadata
- %prep - commands to prepare the package for building
- %build - commands to build the package
- %install - commands to install the built files
- %check - commands to check/test the built files (optional, often not included)
- %clean - commands to clean up the disk space
- %files - list of files to be included in the pacakge
- %changelog - record of the package's change-history
- Scriptlets
- %pre -- run before installation
- %post -- run after installation
- %preun -- run before uninstallation
- %postun -- run after uninstallation
- Note that during upgrade, the installation of the new package is considered to happen before the removal of the old package.
- Macros
- %{_tmppath}
- %{buildroot}
- %{_bindir}
- %{_datadir}
- %{_mandir}
- %{_smp_flags}
- %setup
- %configure
- %makeinstall
Creating a Simple Package
- NLED
- Writing the specfile
- Testing the specfile
- Using rpmlint
Resources
See also "Fedora Linux" chapter 5 (see Seneca Library website > eBooks > View All > Safari > Fedora Linux).
TODO:
- Take the software you compiled last week and package it (not Nled!). Blog about the experience. Include a link to your source RPM (and optionally your binary RPM) from your blog. Please complete this by Monday, September 28.
Week 4 (September 29) - Creating RPM Packages II
Week 5 (October 6) - Compositing
Guest Speakers: Ben Hearsum and Armen Zambrano
- Ben Hearsum and Armen Zambrano Gasparnian from the Mozilla build team will discuss what Build & Release means in the Mozilla context.
Week 6 (October 13) - Distributing
Week 7 (October 20) - Server Farms I
Study Week (October 27)
- FSOSS 2009
- Please plan on attending at least the Friday sessions.
- Register via the FSOSS web site (student registration is $15 in advance) -- or you can volunteer to get in for free.
- Toronto Open Source Week
Week 8 (November 3) - Server Farms II
Week 9 (November 10) - Distributed Processing
Week 10 (November 17) - Virtualization
Week 11 (November 24) - Monitoring & Management
Week 12 (December 1) - Presentations
FUDCon (December 5-7)
- FUDCon Toronto 2009 consists of:
- An unconference at SEQ on Saturday
- A FUDPub social night at Dave & Busters on Saturday night
- A hackfest at SEQ on Sunday
- Skating at Nathan Phillips Square on Sunday night
- A hackfest at TEL on Sunday
- An unconference at SEQ on Saturday
- Please plan on attending the Saturday Unconference.
Week 13 (December 8) - Wrap-Up
Exam Week (December 15)
- There is no exam in this course.