Worldcitizen (Talk | contribs) (→Running OSC the first time) |
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When you're using pub meego osc you should use: | When you're using pub meego osc you should use: | ||
| - | exec osc -Ahttps://api'''.pub'''.meego.com "$@" instead of exec osc -Ahttps://api.meego.com "$@" | + | exec osc -Ahttps://api'''.pub'''.meego.com "$@" |
| + | instead of | ||
| + | exec osc -Ahttps://api.meego.com "$@" | ||
The first time, OSC will ask you some questions: | The first time, OSC will ask you some questions: | ||
Contents |
Once you've successfully used the the MeeGo / OBS Web Interface, we'll show you how you can check out packages from the Meego project for local modification and building.
You will need to install some tools in order to access and build packages. This includes the command line client 'osc', and packages that it relies on.
The easiest method is to use your distribution's package manager to pull the osc package and its requirements. Package repositories for many distributions are available here.
For example, with Fedora 12: # cd /etc/yum.repos.d # wget http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/Tools/Fedora_12/openSUSE:Tools.repo # wget http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/Tools:/MeeGo/Fedora_12/openSUSE:Tools:MeeGo.repo # yum install osc
The upstream OBS Tutorial describes more generalities about using the tools.
Prepare to run OSC.
Tip: To use a different source of packages and build server access, you can easily create a wrapper script to do this for you: $ cat > ~/bin/losc #!/bin/bash exec osc -Ahttps://api.meego.com "$@" $ chmod +x ~/bin/losc
When you're using pub meego osc you should use:
exec osc -Ahttps://api.pub.meego.com "$@"
instead of
exec osc -Ahttps://api.meego.com "$@"
The first time, OSC will ask you some questions:
$ losc ls Your user account / password are not configured yet. You will be asked for them below, and they will be stored in /home/james/.oscrc for future use. Creating osc configuration file /home/james/.oscrc ... Username: <login> Password: <password> done *** certificate verify failed at depth 0 Subject: /O=build.linux.com/OU=Domain Control Validated/CN=build.linux.com Issuer: /C=US/ST=Arizona/L=Scottsdale/O=GoDaddy.com, Inc./OU=http://certificates.godaddy.com/repository/CN=Go Daddy Secure Certification Authority/serialNumber=07969287 Valid: May 14 21:46:46 2010 GMT - Apr 26 21:10:19 2012 GMT Fingerprint(MD5): C13D91AB12008D2F9FD901A8FADDFC75 Fingerprint(SHA1): 144018EC455C20F395F18879DFD75E5B500B84F0 Reason: unable to get local issuer certificate Reason: certificate not trusted Reason: unable to verify the first certificate The server certificate failed verification Would you like to 0 - quit (default) 1 - continue anyways 2 - trust the server certificate permanently 9 - review the server certificate Enter choice [0129]: 2
At this point the configuration is complete and osc completes the 'ls' command, listing available build targets. You should see your home project listed, ex: home:<login>
OSC may be customized using the file $HOME/.oscrc. Some hints:
To make it easier to run needed things as root, configure for sudo
In $HOME/.oscrc set: su-wrapper = sudo And then run 'visudo' and add the line: <yourlogin> ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/build
If you tend to build for several different architectures/projects, it can be helpful to keep each build-root seperate, in $HOME/.oscrc, set:
build-root = /var/tmp/build-root/%(project)s-%(arch)s-%(package)s
This guide gave an introduction on how to set up and initialize the 'osc' tool. Next you will check out your project from the server and build it. Click here to open the 2nd part.