virtual-appliance/appliances/teamplayer/Makefile

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TP_REPO ?= https://bitbucket.org/marduk/teamplayer
TP_BRANCH ?= default
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
TP_USER = teamplayer
TP_HOME = /opt/teamplayer
TP_DB = /var/lib/teamplayer
2015-01-07 14:07:38 +01:00
PGVER = 9.4
INSTALL = install
AVAHI := NO
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
M4_DEFS += -D TP_USER=$(TP_USER) -D TP_HOME=$(TP_HOME) -D TP_DB=$(TP_DB) -D HOSTNAME=$(HOSTNAME)
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
M4C = $(M4) $(M4_DEFS)
rcdefault := /etc/runlevels/default
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
post_files = bash_profile settings_local.py start-teamplayer stop-teamplayer
post_files += local.start local.stop issue nginx.conf teamplayer.service
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
preinstall:
postinstall: $(post_files) $(SCROBBLER_AUTH) urls.py
2015-01-07 14:07:38 +01:00
$(inroot) $(EMERGE) -n $(USEPKG) dev-db/postgresql:$(PGVER)
$(inroot) passwd -d postgres
2011-01-20 04:00:50 +01:00
echo 'PG_INITDB_OPTS="--locale=en_US.UTF-8"' >> $(CHROOT)/etc/conf.d/postgresql-$(PGVER)
$(inroot) eselect postgresql set $(PGVER)
$(inroot) rm -rf /var/lib/postgresql/$(PGVER)/data
The great systemd commit. This change converts the appliances from openrc to systemd. In addition, systemd needs to at least be be installed on the build machine as we now use systemd-nspawn instead of chroot/bind mounts do to the fact that systemd-nspawn is much more robust and lese prone to errors. In addition: * All stage4 tarballs and images are now stored in the images/ directory by default. * A package dir is now required and is set up in the packages/ directory by default. * The portage directory is not unpacked in the chroot every time anymore and is instead bind-mounted from a directory by systemd-nspawn. This is the portage/ directory by default. * In addition there is a distfiles/ directory (by default) which is bind-mounted in the chroot. It does what you'd probably expect. * The Makefile learned new target, eclean, which will run eclean-dist and eclean-pkg to clean out obsolete distfiles and binary packages. * The REMOVE_PORTAGE_TREE option is removed as portage is no longer installed. * The unused/untested PRUNE_CRITICAL functionality has been removed. I have no idea if it worked and if it didn't I didn't want to fix it. * As appliances are always using systemd, UDEV is no longer optional. * Timezones and hostnames are now handled by systemd (systemd-firstboot). * Stage4 tarballs are now directly importable as systemd containers (and probably docker too though I haven't tested that yet). * A number of packages (for example dhcpd, acpid) have been removed from the appliances when systemd provides equivalent functionality. * We no longer override etc-update.conf. There's no reason. * A number of Makefile targets, checkpoints, temp files, etc have been removed as they are no longer needed.
2015-02-22 16:32:16 +01:00
$(inroot) bash -c "echo y |$(EMERGE) --config postgresql:$(PGVER)"
$(inroot) systemctl enable postgresql-$(PGVER).service
ifeq ($(AVAHI),YES)
$(inroot) $(EMERGE) -n $(USEPKG) net-dns/avahi
$(inroot) rm -f /etc/avahi/services/*
cp teamplayer.service $(CHROOT)/etc/avahi/services
The great systemd commit. This change converts the appliances from openrc to systemd. In addition, systemd needs to at least be be installed on the build machine as we now use systemd-nspawn instead of chroot/bind mounts do to the fact that systemd-nspawn is much more robust and lese prone to errors. In addition: * All stage4 tarballs and images are now stored in the images/ directory by default. * A package dir is now required and is set up in the packages/ directory by default. * The portage directory is not unpacked in the chroot every time anymore and is instead bind-mounted from a directory by systemd-nspawn. This is the portage/ directory by default. * In addition there is a distfiles/ directory (by default) which is bind-mounted in the chroot. It does what you'd probably expect. * The Makefile learned new target, eclean, which will run eclean-dist and eclean-pkg to clean out obsolete distfiles and binary packages. * The REMOVE_PORTAGE_TREE option is removed as portage is no longer installed. * The unused/untested PRUNE_CRITICAL functionality has been removed. I have no idea if it worked and if it didn't I didn't want to fix it. * As appliances are always using systemd, UDEV is no longer optional. * Timezones and hostnames are now handled by systemd (systemd-firstboot). * Stage4 tarballs are now directly importable as systemd containers (and probably docker too though I haven't tested that yet). * A number of packages (for example dhcpd, acpid) have been removed from the appliances when systemd provides equivalent functionality. * We no longer override etc-update.conf. There's no reason. * A number of Makefile targets, checkpoints, temp files, etc have been removed as they are no longer needed.
2015-02-22 16:32:16 +01:00
$(inroot) systemctl enable avahi-daemon.service
endif
$(inroot) $(EMERGE) -1n $(USEPKG) dev-python/virtualenv dev-vcs/mercurial
$(inroot) getent passwd $(TP_USER) || \
$(inroot) useradd -c "Teamplayer Server" -G postgres -U -d $(TP_HOME) $(TP_USER)
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
rm -rf $(CHROOT)/$(TP_HOME)
mkdir -p $(CHROOT)/$(TP_HOME)
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
cp bash_profile $(CHROOT)$(TP_HOME)/.bash_profile
$(inroot) virtualenv $(TP_HOME)
$(inroot) bash -c ". $(TP_HOME)/bin/activate ; LANG=en_US.utf8 pip install hg+$(TP_REPO)@$(TP_BRANCH)"
$(inroot) bash -c ". $(TP_HOME)/bin/activate ; pip install psycopg2 uwsgi Whoosh setproctitle"
$(inroot) bash -c ". $(TP_HOME)/bin/activate ; django-admin.py startproject project $(TP_HOME)"
chmod +x $(CHROOT)/$(TP_HOME)/manage.py
$(inroot) ln -sf ../manage.py $(TP_HOME)/bin/manage
cp urls.py $(CHROOT)/$(TP_HOME)/project/urls.py
$(M4C) settings_local.py >> $(CHROOT)/$(TP_HOME)/project/settings_local.py
ifdef SCROBBLER_AUTH
cat $(SCROBBLER_AUTH) >> $(CHROOT)/$(TP_HOME)/project/settings_local.py
endif
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
mkdir -p $(CHROOT)$(TP_HOME)/bin
$(M4C) start-teamplayer > $(CHROOT)$(TP_HOME)/bin/start-teamplayer
chmod +x $(CHROOT)$(TP_HOME)/bin/start-teamplayer
$(M4C) stop-teamplayer > $(CHROOT)$(TP_HOME)/bin/stop-teamplayer
chmod +x $(CHROOT)$(TP_HOME)/bin/stop-teamplayer
$(inroot) $(INSTALL) -d -o $(TP_USER) -g $(TP_USER) $(TP_DB)
$(inroot) $(INSTALL) -d -o $(TP_USER) -g $(TP_USER) $(TP_DB)/songs
$(inroot) mkdir -p $(TP_HOME)/library
$(inroot) chown -R $(TP_USER):$(TP_USER) $(TP_HOME)
$(inroot) $(INSTALL) -d -o $(TP_USER) -g $(TP_USER) $(TP_DB)/mpd
$(inroot) $(INSTALL) -d -o $(TP_USER) -g $(TP_USER) /var/log/teamplayer
$(M4C) local.start > $(CHROOT)/etc/local.d/teamplayer.start
$(M4C) local.stop > $(CHROOT)/etc/local.d/teamplayer.stop
$(inroot) chmod +x /etc/local.d/teamplayer.start
$(inroot) chmod +x /etc/local.d/teamplayer.stop
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
cp issue $(CHROOT)/etc/issue
$(M4C) nginx.conf > $(CHROOT)/etc/nginx/nginx.conf
$(inroot) gpasswd -a nginx teamplayer
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
The great systemd commit. This change converts the appliances from openrc to systemd. In addition, systemd needs to at least be be installed on the build machine as we now use systemd-nspawn instead of chroot/bind mounts do to the fact that systemd-nspawn is much more robust and lese prone to errors. In addition: * All stage4 tarballs and images are now stored in the images/ directory by default. * A package dir is now required and is set up in the packages/ directory by default. * The portage directory is not unpacked in the chroot every time anymore and is instead bind-mounted from a directory by systemd-nspawn. This is the portage/ directory by default. * In addition there is a distfiles/ directory (by default) which is bind-mounted in the chroot. It does what you'd probably expect. * The Makefile learned new target, eclean, which will run eclean-dist and eclean-pkg to clean out obsolete distfiles and binary packages. * The REMOVE_PORTAGE_TREE option is removed as portage is no longer installed. * The unused/untested PRUNE_CRITICAL functionality has been removed. I have no idea if it worked and if it didn't I didn't want to fix it. * As appliances are always using systemd, UDEV is no longer optional. * Timezones and hostnames are now handled by systemd (systemd-firstboot). * Stage4 tarballs are now directly importable as systemd containers (and probably docker too though I haven't tested that yet). * A number of packages (for example dhcpd, acpid) have been removed from the appliances when systemd provides equivalent functionality. * We no longer override etc-update.conf. There's no reason. * A number of Makefile targets, checkpoints, temp files, etc have been removed as they are no longer needed.
2015-02-22 16:32:16 +01:00
$(inroot) systemctl enable nginx.service
#$(inroot) ln -sf /etc/init.d/ntpd $(rcdefault)/ntpd
$(inroot) $(EMERGE) --depclean --with-bdeps=n
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
clean: