Contributor guide¶
The following outlines common directory locations:
Documentation
- Project documentationreleng_tool/api/
- API for supporting releng-tool extensionsreleng_tool/engine/
- Core implementationreleng_tool/ext/
- Extensions that are maintained in the official treereleng_tool/extract/
- Translate fetched content to a build’s working areareleng_tool/fetch/
- Support for fetching content from package sitesreleng_tool/tool/
- Definitions for host tools used by tool featurestest/
- Testing-related content for this project’s implementation
releng-tool is built on the Python language and aims to be the minimum
dependency for users of the tool. Specific features enabled by a developer’s
project may require additional tools (e.g. using Git to fetch sources
requires git
to be installed); however, a user should not be required to
install tools for features that are not being used.
Contributing¶
Developers are free to submit contributions for this project. Developers wishing to contribute should read this project’s CONTRIBUTING document. A reminder that any contributions must be signed off with the Developer Certificate of Origin.
Implementation (source, comments, commits, etc.) submitted to this project should be provided in English.
Root directory¶
A user invoking releng-tool will attempt to operate in a project root directory.
Any content managed by this tool (e.g. creating directories, downloading
sources, etc.) should all be performed inside the root directory. Some
exceptions exist where a user requests to adjust the download directory (e.g.
providing the --dl-dir
argument).
Fetching design¶
Packages can describe where external content should be fetched from. The most
common fetching method is a simple URI-style fetch such as downloading an
archive from an HTTP/FTP location. Assets acquired in this manner are downloaded
into the root directory’s download folder (e.g. <ROOT>/dl
). The extraction
phase will later use this folder to find package content to prepare against.
releng-tool also supports the fetching of content from version control systems.
Sources can either be fetched and placed into an archive, in a similar fashion
as fetching an archive from HTTP/FTP locations, or sources can be fetched into a
“cache directory” if supported (typically distributed version controlled
sources). For example, Git repositories (see also Git’s
--git-dir
will be stored in the root directory’s cache folder
(e.g. <ROOT>/cache
). During the extraction stage, target revisions will
be pulled from the cache location using the git
client.
Not all packages will fetch content (e.g. placeholder packages).
Extraction design¶
In most cases, the extraction phase will process archives (e.g. .tar.gz
,
.zip
, etc.) and place their contents into a package’s build working
directory. Implementation will vary for fetching implementation which stores
content into a cache directory. For example, Git and
Mercurial sources have their own extraction implementations to
pull content from their respective distributed file systems into a package’s
build working directory.
Host and Build environment¶
releng-tool attempts to minimize the impact of a host system’s environment on a project’s build. For example, the build phase of a package should not be pulling compiler flags provided from the host system’s environment. These flags should be provided from the package definition. Tools invoked by releng-tool will attempt to be invoked to ignore these external environment variables. Some exceptions apply such as environment variables dealing with authorization tokens.
Documentation¶
Improvements to this project’s documentation are always welcome – not only for adding/updating documentation for releng-tool features but also translations.
For users interested in documentation for this project, please see the following repository:
releng-tool – Documentation
https://github.com/releng-tool/releng-tool-docs