6.8 KiB
Introduction
Mead is a Maven-based build system for Koji. It works by building your project via Maven, rendering a RPM spec file from a template, and then packaging everything as an RPM with the rendered spec file.
Tito has support for Mead in its tagging, building, and releasing capacities.
Setup
For a Maven project, Tito needs two things: a pom.xml
and a .tmpl
file.
The POM file should already be present since Maven itself requires one. The
.tmpl
file is a Cheetah template of your
RPM spec file that Mead fills in when it is building.
Tagging
Tito will increase the version in the pom.xml
for you when you tag.
However, it does not set the new version to a -SNAPSHOT
version as is the convention in many Maven projects.
Tito uses the maven-version plugin to increase the version.
Building
Tito attempts to mimic the Mead build process although it is not perfect.
Mead offers the ability to descend into different directories and run the
build from there. Tito does not do this. Instead, Tito ascends to the root
of the SCM checkout and runs a maven deploy
against the top-level POM file.
The artifacts are deployed to a temporary Maven repository under /tmp/tito
.
Tito then attempts to render the .tmpl
file for the package. The following
variables are available (these values are also provided by Mead when Koji
runs a build):
$artifacts
- A hash of the Maven generated artifacts with the file extensions as keys. For example: `{'.md5': 'my_project.jar.md5', '.jar': my_project.jar'}$all_artifacts
- All Maven generated artifacts in a list (including MD5 sums, pom files, etc)$all_artifacts_with_path
- All artifacts but with the full path to the artifact within the project$version
- The version of the top level project$revision
- The revision of the top_level project$epoch
- Currently always set toNone
$name
- The name of the top_level project
Note that the name
, version
, and revision
variables are not very useful
as they receive their values from the top-level POM file.
Once the spec file is rendered, Tito proceeds with a standard RPM build.
Assemblies
Tito attempts to use the maven-assembly plugin to build a project tarball so
its best if you have that plugin configured. Tito will fall back to a git archive
command, but the assembly plugin is the best way.
Builder Arguments
The Mead builder can take several arguments on the command line: maven_arg
and maven_property
. These arguments can be specified multiple times. The
maven_property
arguments are passed to Maven as -D
style properties and
the maven_arg
arguments are passed as command-line arguments. For example:
$ tito build --rpm --arg "maven_property=maven.test.skip=true" --arg "maven_arg=-X" -arg "maven_arg=-fae"
Other Cheetah Notes
- Dollar signs are meaningful in Cheetah. If your spec file contains shell
variables, you will need to surround the relevant block with
#raw
and#end raw
tags.
#raw
for selinuxvariant in %{selinux_variants}
do
make NAME=$selinuxvariant -f /usr/share/selinux/devel/Makefile
mv %{modulename}.pp %{modulename}.pp.$selinuxvariant
make NAME=$selinuxvariant -f /usr/share/selinux/devel/Makefile clean
done
#end raw
- Do not use line continuations (i.e. ending a line with
\
)! Cheetah doesn't like them for some reason. - Do not use non-ASCII characters anywhere in the Cheetah template (including names with non-ASCII characters in the changelog.) I ran into difficulties with the template failing to render when non-ASCII characters appeared in it.
- Always surround the entire
%changelog
section in#raw
and#end raw
tags so that people's changelog entries won't break the template.
Releasing
Configuring the DistGitMeadReleaser
The first thing to do is to create a section in your releasers.conf
for the
mead releaser. In addition to the releaser class and branch, you need to
provide values for mead_scm
and mead_push_url
. Mead does not build from
tarballs located in the Koji lookaside cache. Instead it builds from URLs
pointing to an SCM repository.
mead_scm
- The SCM URL used to checkout the codemead_target
- The SCM URL that Tito will use to push a copy of its tags to. AMEAD_SCM_USERNAME
value set in~/.titorc
can be used here.
For example:
[mead]
releaser = tito.release.DistGitMeadReleaser
branches = fedora-20
mead_scm = git://example.com/my_project.git
mead_push_url = git+ssh://MEAD_SCM_USERNAME@example.com/my_project.git
Configuring the Koji Build Process
The tito.release.DistGitMeadReleaser
releaser using Mead's maven-chain
functionality. The top-level package directory (the same directory with the
.tmpl
file) must have a .chain
file.
The chain file is an INI style file with each section as a different link in
the chain. The section title is in the "groupId-artifactId" format and
contains a value for scmurl
which is a pointer to the SCM containing the
code and a pointer to the git ref to use. For example
scmurl=git://example.com/my_project.git?app#app-1.2.3-1
Note that the SCM URL can be followed by a "?" and a subdirectory; and that the git ref is placed at the end after a "#".
Other options:
buildrequires
- a space delimited list of all sections that must be built beforehandtype
- set this towrapper
to add a wrapper RPM step. Wrapper RPM steps need to have abuildrequires
on the actual Maven build step.packages
- a space delimited list of additional YUM packages to install before buildingmaven_options
- command line flags to pass to Mavenproperties
- "key=value" list of properties to set with-D
For Tito, the .chain
file needs to have a few variables in it that will be
filled in to alleviate the need for setting the git ref by hand.
The variables passed in are
mead_scm
: The value ofmead_scm
inreleasers.conf
git_ref
: The git reference Tito is trying to buildmaven_properties
: The value of anymaven_properties
provided as builder argumentsmaven_options
: The value of anymaven_args
provided as builder arguments
Here's a short example that will ultimately produce an RPM named "app".
[org.example-foobar-parent]
scmurl=${mead_scm}#${git_ref}
maven_options=-N ${maven_options}
[org.example-foobar-common]
scmurl=${mead_scm}?common#${git_ref}
buildrequires=org.example-foobar-parent
packages=gettext
[org.example-app]
scmurl=${mead_scm}?app#${git_ref}
buildrequires=org.example-foobar-common
[app]
type=wrapper
scmurl=${mead_scm}?app#${git_ref}
buildrequires=org.example-app
During the release process, Tito will check in a rendered version of your chain file to dist-git (as well as upload a tarball of the source it is building to the lookaside cache). It will then fire off a build.