From bd64b2481d2e1cd4f4ca11dddfbe95e098dc447b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?Isma=C3=ABl=20Bouya?= Date: Wed, 24 Feb 2021 01:07:11 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Remove old files --- doc/manual/api.xml | 334 ------------------- doc/manual/declarative-projects.xml | 196 ----------- doc/manual/hacking.xml | 39 --- doc/manual/installation.xml | 338 ------------------- doc/manual/introduction.xml | 267 --------------- doc/manual/manual.xml | 70 ---- doc/manual/projects.xml | 496 ---------------------------- 7 files changed, 1740 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 doc/manual/api.xml delete mode 100644 doc/manual/declarative-projects.xml delete mode 100644 doc/manual/hacking.xml delete mode 100644 doc/manual/installation.xml delete mode 100644 doc/manual/introduction.xml delete mode 100644 doc/manual/manual.xml delete mode 100644 doc/manual/projects.xml diff --git a/doc/manual/api.xml b/doc/manual/api.xml deleted file mode 100644 index db5ba07e..00000000 --- a/doc/manual/api.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,334 +0,0 @@ - - - Using the external API - - - To be able to create integrations with other services, Hydra exposes - an external API that you can manage projects with. - - - - The API is accessed over HTTP(s) where all data is sent and received - as JSON. - - - - Creating resources requires the caller to be authenticated, while - retrieving resources does not. - - - - The API does not have a separate URL structure for it's endpoints. - Instead you request the pages of the web interface as - application/json to use the API. - - -
- List projects - - - To list all the projects of the Hydra install: - - - -GET / -Accept: application/json - - - - This will give you a list of projects, where each - project contains general information and a list - of its job sets. - - - - Example - - - -curl -i -H 'Accept: application/json' \ - https://hydra.nixos.org - - - - Note: this response is truncated - - - -GET https://hydra.nixos.org/ -HTTP/1.1 200 OK -Content-Type: application/json - -[ - { - "displayname": "Acoda", - "name": "acoda", - "description": "Acoda is a tool set for automatic data migration along an evolving data model", - "enabled": 0, - "owner": "sander", - "hidden": 1, - "jobsets": [ - "trunk" - ] - }, - { - "displayname": "cabal2nix", - "name": "cabal2nix", - "description": "Convert Cabal files into Nix build instructions", - "enabled": 0, - "owner": "simons@cryp.to", - "hidden": 1, - "jobsets": [ - "master" - ] - } -] - -
- -
- Get a single project - - - To get a single project by identifier: - - - -GET /project/:project-identifier -Accept: application/json - - - - Example - - - -curl -i -H 'Accept: application/json' \ - https://hydra.nixos.org/project/hydra - - - -GET https://hydra.nixos.org/project/hydra -HTTP/1.1 200 OK -Content-Type: application/json - -{ - "description": "Hydra, the Nix-based continuous build system", - "hidden": 0, - "displayname": "Hydra", - "jobsets": [ - "hydra-master", - "hydra-ant-logger-trunk", - "master", - "build-ng" - ], - "name": "hydra", - "enabled": 1, - "owner": "eelco" -} - - -
- -
- Get a single job set - - - To get a single job set by identifier: - - - -GET /jobset/:project-identifier/:jobset-identifier -Content-Type: application/json - - - - Example - - - -curl -i -H 'Accept: application/json' \ - https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/hydra/build-ng - - - -GET https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/hydra/build-ng -HTTP/1.1 200 OK -Content-Type: application/json - -{ - "errormsg": "evaluation failed due to signal 9 (Killed)", - "fetcherrormsg": null, - "nixexprpath": "release.nix", - "nixexprinput": "hydraSrc", - "emailoverride": "rob.vermaas@gmail.com, eelco.dolstra@logicblox.com", - "jobsetinputs": { - "officialRelease": { - "jobsetinputalts": [ - "false" - ] - }, - "hydraSrc": { - "jobsetinputalts": [ - "https://github.com/NixOS/hydra.git build-ng" - ] - }, - "nixpkgs": { - "jobsetinputalts": [ - "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs.git release-14.12" - ] - } - }, - "enabled": 0 -} - -
- -
- List evaluations - - - To list the evaluations of a - job set by identifier: - - - -GET /jobset/:project-identifier/:jobset-identifier/evals -Content-Type: application/json - - - - Example - - - -curl -i -H 'Accept: application/json' \ - https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/hydra/build-ng/evals - - - - Note: this response is truncated - - - -GET https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/hydra/build-ng/evals -HTTP/1.1 200 OK -Content-Type: application/json - -{ - "evals": [ - { - "jobsetevalinputs": { - "nixpkgs": { - "dependency": null, - "type": "git", - "value": null, - "uri": "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs.git", - "revision": "f60e48ce81b6f428d072d3c148f6f2e59f1dfd7a" - }, - "hydraSrc": { - "dependency": null, - "type": "git", - "value": null, - "uri": "https://github.com/NixOS/hydra.git", - "revision": "48d6f0de2ab94f728d287b9c9670c4d237e7c0f6" - }, - "officialRelease": { - "dependency": null, - "value": "false", - "type": "boolean", - "uri": null, - "revision": null - } - }, - "hasnewbuilds": 1, - "builds": [ - 24670686, - 24670684, - 24670685, - 24670687 - ], - "id": 1213758 - } - ], - "first": "?page=1", - "last": "?page=1" -} - -
- -
- Get a single build - - - To get a single build by its id: - - - -GET /build/:build-id -Content-Type: application/json - - - - Example - - - -curl -i -H 'Accept: application/json' \ - https://hydra.nixos.org/build/24670686 - - - -GET /build/24670686 -HTTP/1.1 200 OK -Content-Type: application/json - -{ - "job": "tests.api.x86_64-linux", - "jobsetevals": [ - 1213758 - ], - "buildstatus": 0, - "buildmetrics": null, - "project": "hydra", - "system": "x86_64-linux", - "priority": 100, - "releasename": null, - "starttime": 1439402853, - "nixname": "vm-test-run-unnamed", - "timestamp": 1439388618, - "id": 24670686, - "stoptime": 1439403403, - "jobset": "build-ng", - "buildoutputs": { - "out": { - "path": "/nix/store/lzrxkjc35mhp8w7r8h82g0ljyizfchma-vm-test-run-unnamed" - } - }, - "buildproducts": { - "1": { - "path": "/nix/store/lzrxkjc35mhp8w7r8h82g0ljyizfchma-vm-test-run-unnamed", - "defaultpath": "log.html", - "type": "report", - "sha256hash": null, - "filesize": null, - "name": "", - "subtype": "testlog" - } - }, - "finished": 1 -} - -
- -
- - diff --git a/doc/manual/declarative-projects.xml b/doc/manual/declarative-projects.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 59178e23..00000000 --- a/doc/manual/declarative-projects.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,196 +0,0 @@ -
- -Declarative projects - - - Hydra supports declaratively configuring a project's jobsets. This - configuration can be done statically, or generated by a build job. - - - - Hydra will treat the project's declarative input as a static definition - if and only if the spec file contains a dictionary of dictionaries. - If the value of any key in the spec is not a dictionary, it will - treat the spec as a generated declarative spec. - - -
- - Static, Declarative Projects - - Hydra supports declarative projects, where jobsets are configured - from a static JSON document in a repository. - - - - To configure a static declarative project, take the following steps: - - - - - Create a Hydra-fetchable source like a Git repository or local path. - - - - - In that source, create a file called spec.json, - and add the specification for all of the jobsets. Each key is jobset - and each value is a jobset's specification. For example: - - -{ - "nixpkgs": { - "enabled": 1, - "hidden": false, - "description": "Nixpkgs", - "nixexprinput": "nixpkgs", - "nixexprpath": "pkgs/top-level/release.nix", - "checkinterval": 300, - "schedulingshares": 100, - "enableemail": false, - "emailoverride": "", - "keepnr": 3, - "inputs": { - "nixpkgs": { - "type": "git", - "value": "git://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs.git master", - "emailresponsible": false - } - } - }, - "nixos": { - "enabled": 1, - "hidden": false, - "description": "NixOS: Small Evaluation", - "nixexprinput": "nixpkgs", - "nixexprpath": "nixos/release-small.nix", - "checkinterval": 300, - "schedulingshares": 100, - "enableemail": false, - "emailoverride": "", - "keepnr": 3, - "inputs": { - "nixpkgs": { - "type": "git", - "value": "git://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs.git master", - "emailresponsible": false - } - } - } -} - - - - - - Create a new project, and set the project's declarative input type, - declarative input value, and declarative spec file to point to the - source and JSON file you created in step 2. - - - - - Hydra will create a special jobset named .jobsets. - When the .jobsets jobset is evaluated, this static - specification will be used for configuring the rest of the project's - jobsets. - -
- -
- - Generated, Declarative Projects - - Hydra also supports generated declarative projects, where jobsets are - configured automatically from specification files instead of being - managed through the UI. A jobset specification is a JSON object - containing the configuration of the jobset, for example: - - - { - "enabled": 1, - "hidden": false, - "description": "js", - "nixexprinput": "src", - "nixexprpath": "release.nix", - "checkinterval": 300, - "schedulingshares": 100, - "enableemail": false, - "emailoverride": "", - "keepnr": 3, - "inputs": { - "src": { "type": "git", "value": "git://github.com/shlevy/declarative-hydra-example.git", "emailresponsible": false }, - "nixpkgs": { "type": "git", "value": "git://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs.git release-16.03", "emailresponsible": false } - } - } - - - To configure a declarative project, take the following steps: - - - - - Create a jobset repository in the normal way (e.g. a git repo with - a release.nix file, any other needed helper - files, and taking any kind of hydra input), but without adding it - to the UI. The nix expression of this repository should contain a - single job, named jobsets. The output of the - jobsets job should be a JSON file containing an - object of jobset specifications. Each member of the object will - become a jobset of the project, configured by the corresponding - jobset specification. - - - - - In some hydra-fetchable source (potentially, but not necessarily, - the same repo you created in step 1), create a JSON file - containing a jobset specification that points to the jobset - repository you created in the first step, specifying any needed - inputs (e.g. nixpkgs) as necessary. - - - - - In the project creation/edit page, set declarative input type, - declarative input value, and declarative spec file to point to the - source and JSON file you created in step 2. - - - - - Hydra will create a special jobset named .jobsets, - which whenever evaluated will go through the steps above in reverse - order: - - - - - Hydra will fetch the input specified by the declarative input type - and value. - - - - - Hydra will use the configuration given in the declarative spec - file as the jobset configuration for this evaluation. In addition - to any inputs specified in the spec file, hydra will also pass the - declInput argument corresponding to the input - fetched in step 1. - - - - - As normal, hydra will build the jobs specified in the jobset - repository, which in this case is the single - jobsets job. When that job completes, hydra - will read the created jobset specifications and create - corresponding jobsets in the project, disabling any jobsets that - used to exist but are not present in the current spec. - - - -
-
diff --git a/doc/manual/hacking.xml b/doc/manual/hacking.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 20cac842..00000000 --- a/doc/manual/hacking.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,39 +0,0 @@ - - -Hacking - -This section provides some notes on how to hack on Hydra. To -get the latest version of Hydra from GitHub: - -$ git clone git://github.com/NixOS/hydra.git -$ cd hydra - - - -To build it and its dependencies: - -$ nix-build release.nix -A build.x86_64-linux - - - -To build all dependencies and start a shell in which all -environment variables (such as PERL5LIB) are set up so -that those dependencies can be found: - -$ nix-shell - -To build Hydra, you should then do: - -[nix-shell]$ ./bootstrap -[nix-shell]$ configurePhase -[nix-shell]$ make - -You can run the Hydra web server in your source tree as follows: - -$ ./src/script/hydra-server - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/installation.xml b/doc/manual/installation.xml deleted file mode 100644 index c9bb0291..00000000 --- a/doc/manual/installation.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,338 +0,0 @@ - - - Installation - - - This chapter explains how to install Hydra on your own build farm server. - - -
- Prerequisites - - To install and use Hydra you need to have installed the following dependencies: - - - Nix - PostgreSQL - many Perl packages, notably Catalyst, EmailSender, - and NixPerl (see the Hydra - expression in Nixpkgs for the complete - list) - - - At the moment, Hydra runs only on GNU/Linux - (i686-linux and - x86_64_linux). - - - - For small projects, Hydra can be run on any reasonably modern - machine. For individual projects you can even run Hydra on a - laptop. However, the charm of a buildfarm server is usually that - it operates without disturbing the developer's working - environment and can serve releases over the internet. In - conjunction you should typically have your source code - administered in a version management system, such as - subversion. Therefore, you will probably want to install a - server that is connected to the internet. To scale up to large - and/or many projects, you will need at least a considerable - amount of diskspace to store builds. Since Hydra can schedule - multiple simultaneous build jobs, it can be useful to have a - multi-core machine, and/or attach multiple build machines in a - network to the central Hydra server. - - - - Of course we think it is a good idea to use the NixOS GNU/Linux - distribution for your buildfarm server. But this is not a - requirement. The Nix software deployment system can be - installed on any GNU/Linux distribution in parallel to the - regular package management system. Thus, you can use Hydra on a - Debian, Fedora, SuSE, or Ubuntu system. - - -
- -
- Getting Nix - - - If your server runs NixOS you are all set to continue with - installation of Hydra. Otherwise you first need to install Nix. - The latest stable version can be found one the Nix web - site, along with a manual, which includes installation - instructions. - -
- -
- Installation - - - - - The latest development snapshot of Hydra can be installed - by visiting the URL http://hydra.nixos.org/view/hydra/unstable - and using the one-click install available at one of the build - pages. You can also install Hydra through the channel by - performing the following commands: - - -nix-channel --add http://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/hydra/master/channel/latest -nix-channel --update -nix-env -i hydra - - - - Command completion should reveal a number of command-line tools - from Hydra, such as hydra-queue-runner. - -
- -
- Creating the database - - Hydra stores its results in a PostgreSQL database. - - - - To setup a PostgreSQL database with hydra - as database name and user name, issue the following commands on - the PostgreSQL server: - - -createuser -S -D -R -P hydra -createdb -O hydra hydra - - Note that $prefix is the location of Hydra - in the nix store. - - - - Hydra uses an environment variable to know which database should - be used, and a variable which point to a location that holds - some state. To set these variables for a PostgreSQL database, - add the following to the file ~/.profile of - the user running the Hydra services. - - -export HYDRA_DBI="dbi:Pg:dbname=hydra;host=dbserver.example.org;user=hydra;" -export HYDRA_DATA=/var/lib/hydra - - You can provide the username and password in the file - ~/.pgpass, e.g. - - -dbserver.example.org:*:hydra:hydra:password - - Make sure that the HYDRA_DATA directory - exists and is writable for the user which will run the Hydra - services. - - - - Having set these environment variables, you can now initialise - the database by doing: - -hydra-init - - - - To create projects, you need to create a user with - admin privileges. This can be done using - the command hydra-create-user: - - -$ hydra-create-user alice --full-name 'Alice Q. User' \ - --email-address 'alice@example.org' --password foobar --role admin - - - Additional users can be created through the web interface. - - -
- -
- Upgrading - - If you're upgrading Hydra from a previous version, you - should do the following to perform any necessary database schema migrations: - -hydra-init - - -
- -
- Getting Started - - - To start the Hydra web server, execute: - -hydra-server - - When the server is started, you can browse to - http://localhost:3000/ to start configuring - your Hydra instance. - - - - The hydra-server command launches the web - server. There are two other processes that come into play: - - - - The evaluator is responsible for - periodically evaluating job sets, checking out their - dependencies off their version control systems (VCS), and - queueing new builds if the result of the evaluation changed. - It is launched by the hydra-evaluator - command. - - - The queue runner launches builds (using - Nix) as they are queued by the evaluator, scheduling them - onto the configured Nix hosts. It is launched using the - hydra-queue-runner command. - - - - All three processes must be running for Hydra to be fully - functional, though it's possible to temporarily stop any one of - them for maintenance purposes, for instance. - - -
- -
- Serving behind reverse proxy - - - To serve hydra web server behind reverse proxy like - nginx or httpd some - additional configuration must be made. - - - - Edit your hydra.conf file in a similar way to - this example: - - -using_frontend_proxy 1 -base_uri example.com - - base_uri should be your hydra servers proxied URL. - - If you are using Hydra nixos module then setting hydraURL - option should be enough. - - - - - - If you want to serve Hydra with a prefix path, for example - http://example.com/hydra then you need to configure your - reverse proxy to pass X-Request-Base to hydra, with - prefix path as value. - - For example if you are using nginx, then use configuration similar to following: - -server { - listen 433 ssl; - server_name example.com; - .. other configuration .. - location /hydra/ { - - proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:3000; - proxy_redirect http://127.0.0.1:3000 https://example.com/hydra; - - proxy_set_header Host $host; - proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr; - proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for; - proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme; - proxy_set_header X-Request-Base /hydra; - } -} - - -
-
- Using LDAP as authentication backend (optional) - - Instead of using Hydra's built-in user management you can optionally use LDAP to manage roles and users. - - - - The hydra-server accepts the environment - variable HYDRA_LDAP_CONFIG. The value of - the variable should point to a valid YAML file containing the - Catalyst LDAP configuration. The format of the configuration - file is describe in the - - Catalyst::Authentication::Store::LDAP documentation. - An example is given below. - - - - Roles can be assigned to users based on their LDAP group membership - (use_roles: 1 in the below example). - For a user to have the role admin assigned to them - they should be in the group hydra_admin. In general - any LDAP group of the form hydra_some_role - (notice the hydra_ prefix) will work. - - - -credential: - class: Password - password_field: password - password_type: self_check -store: - class: LDAP - ldap_server: localhost - ldap_server_options.timeout: 30 - binddn: "cn=root,dc=example" - bindpw: notapassword - start_tls: 0 - start_tls_options - verify: none - user_basedn: "ou=users,dc=example" - user_filter: "(&(objectClass=inetOrgPerson)(cn=%s))" - user_scope: one - user_field: cn - user_search_options: - deref: always - use_roles: 1 - role_basedn: "ou=groups,dc=example" - role_filter: "(&(objectClass=groupOfNames)(member=%s))" - role_scope: one - role_field: cn - role_value: dn - role_search_options: - deref: always - -
-
- - diff --git a/doc/manual/introduction.xml b/doc/manual/introduction.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 956732f1..00000000 --- a/doc/manual/introduction.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,267 +0,0 @@ - - - Introduction - -
- About Hydra - - - Hydra is a tool for continuous integration testing and software - release that uses a purely functional language to describe build jobs - and their dependencies. Continuous integration is a simple technique - to improve the quality of the software development process. An - automated system continuously or periodically checks out the source - code of a project, builds it, runs tests, and produces reports for the - developers. Thus, various errors that might accidentally be committed - into the code base are automatically caught. Such a system allows - more in-depth testing than what developers could feasibly do manually: - - - Portability testing: The - software may need to be built and tested on many different - platforms. It is infeasible for each developer to do this - before every commit. - - - Likewise, many projects have very large test sets - (e.g., regression tests in a compiler, or stress tests in a - DBMS) that can take hours or days to run to completion. - - - Many kinds of static and dynamic analyses can be - performed as part of the tests, such as code coverage runs and - static analyses. - - - It may also be necessary to build many different - variants of the software. For instance, - it may be necessary to verify that the component builds with - various versions of a compiler. - - - Developers typically use incremental building to - test their changes (since a full build may take too long), but - this is unreliable with many build management tools (such as - Make), i.e., the result of the incremental build might differ - from a full build. - - - It ensures that the software can be built from the - sources under revision control. Users of version management - systems such as CVS and Subversion often forget to place - source files under revision control. - - - The machines on which the continuous integration - system runs ideally provides a clean, well-defined build - environment. If this environment is administered through - proper SCM techniques, then builds produced by the system can - be reproduced. In contrast, developer work environments are - typically not under any kind of SCM control. - - - In large projects, developers often work on a - particular component of the project, and do not build and test - the composition of those components (again since this is - likely to take too long). To prevent the phenomenon of ``big - bang integration'', where components are only tested together - near the end of the development process, it is important to - test components together as soon as possible (hence - continuous integration). - - - It allows software to be - released by automatically creating - packages that users can download and install. To do this - manually represents an often prohibitive amount of work, as - one may want to produce releases for many different platforms: - e.g., installers for Windows and Mac OS X, RPM or Debian - packages for certain Linux distributions, and so on. - - - - - - - In its simplest form, a continuous integration tool sits in a - loop building and releasing software components from a version - management system. For each component, it performs the - following tasks: - - - - It obtains the latest version of the component's - source code from the version management system. - - - It runs the component's build process (which - presumably includes the execution of the component's test - set). - - - It presents the results of the build (such as error - logs and releases) to the developers, e.g., by producing a web - page. - - - - - Examples of continuous integration tools include Jenkins, - CruiseControl Tinderbox, Sisyphus, Anthill and BuildBot. These - tools have various limitations. - - - - They do not manage the build - environment. The build environment consists of the - dependencies necessary to perform a build action, e.g., - compilers, libraries, etc. Setting up the environment is - typically done manually, and without proper SCM control (so it - may be hard to reproduce a build at a later time). Manual - management of the environment scales poorly in the number of - configurations that must be supported. For instance, suppose - that we want to build a component that requires a certain - compiler X. We then have to go to each machine and install X. - If we later need a newer version of X, the process must be - repeated all over again. An ever worse problem occurs if - there are conflicting, mutually exclusive versions of the - dependencies. Thus, simply installing the latest version is - not an option. Of course, we can install these components in - different directories and manually pass the appropriate paths - to the build processes of the various components. But this is - a rather tiresome and error-prone process. - - - They do not easily support variability in software - systems. A system may have a great deal of build-time - variability: optional functionality, whether to build a debug or - production version, different versions of dependencies, and so on. - (For instance, the Linux kernel now has over 2,600 build-time - configuration switches.) It is therefore important that a continuous - integration tool can easily select and test different instances from - the configuration space of the system to reveal problems, such as - erroneous interactions between features. In a continuous integration - setting, it is also useful to test different combinations of versions - of subsystems, e.g., the head revision of a component against stable - releases of its dependencies, and vice versa, as this can reveal - various integration problems. - - - - - - - Hydra, is a continuous integration tool - that solves these problems. It is built on top of the Nix package manager, - which has a purely functional language for describing package - build actions and their dependencies. This allows the build - environment for projects to be produced automatically and - deterministically, and variability in components to be expressed - naturally using functions; and as such is an ideal fit for a - continuous build system. - - -
- -
- About Us - - - Hydra is the successor of the Nix Buildfarm, which was developed - in tandem with the Nix software deployment system. Nix was - originally developed at the Department of Information and - Computing Sciences, Utrecht University by the TraCE project - (2003-2008). The project was funded by the Software Engineering - Research Program Jacquard to improve the support for variability - in software systems. Funding for the development of Nix and - Hydra is now provided by the NIRICT LaQuSo Build Farm project. - -
- -
- About this Manual - - - This manual tells you how to install the Hydra buildfarm - software on your own server and how to operate that server using - its web interface. - -
- - -
- License - - - Hydra is free software: you can redistribute it and/or - modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as - published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of - the License, or (at your option) any later version. - - - - Hydra is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, - but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of - MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the - GNU General - Public License for more details. - -
- -
- Hydra at <literal>nixos.org</literal> - - - The nixos.org installation of Hydra runs at - http://hydra.nixos.org/. - - That installation is used to build software components from the - Nix, - NixOS, - GNU, - Stratego/XT, - and related projects. - - - - If you are one of the developers on those projects, it is likely - that you will be using the NixOS Hydra server in some way. If - you need to administer automatic builds for your project, you - should pull the right strings to get an account on the - server. This manual will tell you how to set up new projects and - build jobs within those projects and write a release.nix file to - describe the build process of your project to Hydra. You can - skip the next chapter. - - - - If your project does not yet have automatic builds within the - NixOS Hydra server, it may actually be eligible. We are in the - process of setting up a large buildfarm that should be able to - support open source and academic software projects. Get in - touch. - -
- -
- Hydra on your own buildfarm - - - If you need to run your own Hydra installation, explains how to download and - install the system on your own server. - -
- -
- - diff --git a/doc/manual/manual.xml b/doc/manual/manual.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 75e53152..00000000 --- a/doc/manual/manual.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,70 +0,0 @@ - - - - - Hydra User's Guide - - Draft - - - - - Eelco - Dolstra - - - Delft University of Technology - Department of Software Technology - - Author - - - - Rob - Vermaas - - - Delft University of Technology - Department of Software Technology - - Author - - - - Eelco - Visser - - - Delft University of Technology - Department of Software Technology - - Author - - - - Ludovic - Courtès - - Author - - - - - - 2009-2013 - Eelco Dolstra - - - March 2010 - - - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/projects.xml b/doc/manual/projects.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 05791765..00000000 --- a/doc/manual/projects.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,496 +0,0 @@ - - - Creating and Managing Projects - - - Once Hydra is installed and running, the next step is to add - projects to the build farm. We follow the example of the Patchelf - project, a software tool written in C and using the GNU - Build System (GNU Autoconf and GNU Automake). - - - - Log in to the web interface of your Hydra installation using the - user name and password you inserted in the database (by default, - Hydra's web server listens on localhost:3000). - Then follow the "Create Project" link to create a new project. - - -
- Project Information - - - A project definition consists of some general information and a - set of job sets. The general information identifies a project, - its owner, and current state of activity. - - Here's what we fill in for the patchelf project: - - -Identifier: patchelf - - - The identifier is the identity of the - project. It is used in URLs and in the names of build results. - - - - The identifier should be a unique name (it is the primary - database key for the project table in the database). If you try - to create a project with an already existing identifier you'd - get an error message from the database. - - So try to create the project after entering just the general - information to figure out if you have chosen a unique name. - Job sets can be added once the project has been created. - - -Display name: Patchelf - - - The display name is used in menus. - - -Description: A tool for modifying ELF binaries - - - The description is used as short - documentation of the nature of the project. - - -Owner: eelco - - - The owner of a project can create and edit - job sets. - - -Enabled: Yes - - - Only if the project is enabled are builds - performed. - - - - Once created there should be an entry for the project in the - sidebar. Go to the project page for the Patchelf - project. - -
- -
- Job Sets - - - A project can consist of multiple job sets - (hereafter jobsets), separate tasks that - can be built separately, but may depend on each other (without - cyclic dependencies, of course). Go to the Edit - page of the Patchelf project and "Add a new jobset" by providing - the following "Information": - - -Identifier: trunk -Description: Trunk -Nix expression: release.nix in input patchelfSrc - - - This states that in order to build the trunk - jobset, the Nix expression in the file - release.nix, which can be obtained from - input patchelfSrc, should be - evaluated. (We'll have a look at - release.nix later.) - - - - - To realize a job we probably need a number of inputs, which can - be declared in the table below. As many inputs as required can - be added. For patchelf we declare the following inputs. - - -patchelfSrc -'Git checkout' https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf - -nixpkgs 'Git checkout' https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs - -officialRelease Boolean false - -system String value "i686-linux" - - -
- -
- Building Jobs -
- -
- Build Recipes - - - Build jobs and build recipes for a jobset are - specified in a text file written in the Nix language. The - recipe is actually called a Nix expression in - Nix parlance. By convention this file is often called - release.nix. - - - - The release.nix file is typically kept under - version control, and the repository that contains it one of the - build inputs of the corresponding–often called - hydraConfig by convention. The repository for - that file and the actual file name are specified on the web - interface of Hydra under the Setup tab of the - jobset's overview page, under the Nix - expression heading. See, for example, the jobset - overview page of the PatchELF project, and - the corresponding Nix file. - - - - Knowledge of the Nix language is recommended, but the example - below should already give a good idea of how it works: - - - - <filename>release.nix</filename> file for GNU Hello - -let - pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {}; - - jobs = rec { - - tarball = - pkgs.releaseTools.sourceTarball { - name = "hello-tarball"; - src = <hello>; - buildInputs = (with pkgs; [ gettext texLive texinfo ]); - }; - - build = - { system ? builtins.currentSystem }: - - let pkgs = import <nixpkgs> { inherit system; }; in - pkgs.releaseTools.nixBuild { - name = "hello"; - src = jobs.tarball; - configureFlags = [ "--disable-silent-rules" ]; - }; - }; -in - jobs - - - - - shows what a - release.nix file for GNU Hello - would look like. GNU Hello is representative of many GNU - and non-GNU free software projects: - - - it uses the GNU Build System, namely GNU Autoconf, - and GNU Automake; for users, it means it can be installed - using the usual - ./configure && make install - procedure; - - it uses Gettext for internationalization; - it has a Texinfo manual, which can be rendered as PDF - with TeX. - - - The file defines a jobset consisting of two jobs: - tarball, and build. It - contains the following elements (referenced from the figure by - numbers): - - - - - - This defines a variable pkgs holding - the set of packages provided by Nixpkgs. - - - Since nixpkgs appears in angle brackets, - there must be a build input of that name in the Nix search - path. In this case, the web interface should show a - nixpkgs build input, which is a checkout - of the Nixpkgs source code repository; Hydra then adds this - and other build inputs to the Nix search path when - evaluating release.nix. - - - - - - This defines a variable holding the two Hydra - jobs–an attribute set in Nix. - - - - - - This is the definition of the first job, named - tarball. The purpose of this job is to - produce a usable source code tarball. - - - - - The tarball job calls the - sourceTarball function, which (roughly) - runs autoreconf && ./configure && - make dist on the checkout. The - buildInputs attribute specifies - additional software dependencies for the - jobThe package names used in - buildInputs–e.g., - texLive–are the names of the - attributes corresponding to these - packages in Nixpkgs, specifically in the all-packages.nix - file. See the section entitled “Package Naming” in the - Nixpkgs manual for more information.. - - - - - The tarball jobs expects a - hello build input to be available in the - Nix search path. Again, this input is passed by Hydra and - is meant to be a checkout of GNU Hello's source code - repository. - - - - - - This is the definition of the build - job, whose purpose is to build Hello from the tarball - produced above. - - - - - The build function takes one - parameter, system, which should be a string - defining the Nix system type–e.g., - "x86_64-linux". Additionally, it refers - to jobs.tarball, seen above. - - - Hydra inspects the formal argument list of the function - (here, the system argument) and passes it - the corresponding parameter specified as a build input on - Hydra's web interface. Here, system is - passed by Hydra when it calls build. - Thus, it must be defined as a build input of type string in - Hydra, which could take one of several values. - - - The question mark after system defines - the default value for this argument, and is only useful when - debugging locally. - - - - - The build job calls the - nixBuild function, which unpacks the - tarball, then runs ./configure && make - && make check && make install. - - - - - - Finally, the set of jobs is returned to Hydra, as a Nix - attribute set. - - - - -
- -
- Building from the Command Line - - - It is often useful to test a build recipe, for instance before - it is actually used by Hydra, when testing changes, or when - debugging a build issue. Since build recipes for Hydra jobsets - are just plain Nix expressions, they can be evaluated using the - standard Nix tools. - - - - To evaluate the tarball jobset of , just run: - - -$ nix-build release.nix -A tarball - - - However, doing this with as is will - probably yield an error like this: - - -error: user-thrown exception: file `hello' was not found in the Nix search path (add it using $NIX_PATH or -I) - - - The error is self-explanatory. Assuming - $HOME/src/hello points to a checkout of - Hello, this can be fixed this way: - - -$ nix-build -I ~/src release.nix -A tarball - - - Similarly, the build jobset can be evaluated: - - -$ nix-build -I ~/src release.nix -A build - - - The build job reuses the result of the - tarball job, rebuilding it only if it needs to. - - -
- -
- Adding More Jobs - - - illustrates how to write the most - basic jobs, tarball and - build. In practice, much more can be done by - using features readily provided by Nixpkgs or by creating new jobs - as customizations of existing jobs. - - - - For instance, test coverage report for projects compiled with GCC - can be automatically generated using the - coverageAnalysis function provided by Nixpkgs - instead of nixBuild. Back to our GNU Hello - example, we can define a coverage job that - produces an HTML code coverage report directly readable from the - corresponding Hydra build page: - - -coverage = - { system ? builtins.currentSystem }: - - let pkgs = import nixpkgs { inherit system; }; in - pkgs.releaseTools.coverageAnalysis { - name = "hello"; - src = jobs.tarball; - configureFlags = [ "--disable-silent-rules" ]; - }; - - - As can be seen, the only difference compared to - build is the use of - coverageAnalysis. - - - - Nixpkgs provides many more build tools, including the ability to - run build in virtual machines, which can themselves run another - GNU/Linux distribution, which allows for the creation of packages - for these distributions. Please see the - pkgs/build-support/release directory - of Nixpkgs for more. The NixOS manual also contains information - about whole-system testing in virtual machine. - - - - Now, assume we want to build Hello with an old version of GCC, and - with different configure flags. A new - build_exotic job can be written that simply - overrides the relevant arguments passed to - nixBuild: - - -build_exotic = - { system ? builtins.currentSystem }: - - let - pkgs = import nixpkgs { inherit system; }; - build = jobs.build { inherit system; }; - in - pkgs.lib.overrideDerivation build (attrs: { - buildInputs = [ pkgs.gcc33 ]; - preConfigure = "gcc --version"; - configureFlags = - attrs.configureFlags ++ [ "--disable-nls" ]; - }); - - - The build_exotic job reuses - build and overrides some of its arguments: it - adds a dependency on GCC 3.3, a pre-configure phase that runs - gcc --version, and adds the - --disable-nls configure flags. - - - - This customization mechanism is very powerful. For instance, it - can be used to change the way Hello and all - its dependencies–including the C library and compiler used to - build it–are built. See the Nixpkgs manual for more. - - -
- - - -
- Email Notifications - - Hydra can send email notifications when the status of a build changes. This provides - immediate feedback to maintainers or committers when a change causes build failures. - - - - The simplest approach to enable Email Notifications is to use the ssmtp package, which - simply hands off the emails to another SMTP server. For details on how to configure ssmtp, - see the documentation for the networking.defaultMailServer option. - To use ssmtp for the Hydra email notifications, add it to the path option of the Hydra services - in your /etc/nixos/configuration.nix file: - -systemd.services.hydra-queue-runner.path = [ pkgs.ssmtp ]; -systemd.services.hydra-server.path = [ pkgs.ssmtp ]; - - -
- -
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