7.4 KiB
Debian Support
- Overview
- TL;DR supporting package building instructions
- TL;DR package building instructions for Tahoe
- Building Debian Packages
- Using Pre-Built Debian Packages
- Building From Source on Debian Systems
Overview
One convenient way to install Tahoe-LAFS is with Debian packages. This document attempts to explain how to complete a desert island build for people in a hurry. It also attempts to explain more about our Debian packaging for those willing to read beyond the simple pragmatic packaging exercises.
TL;DR supporting package building instructions
There are only four supporting packages that are currently not available from the Debian apt repositories in Debian Lenny:
python-foolscap python-zfec argparse zbase32
First, we'll install some common packages for development:
sudo apt-get install -y build-essential debhelper cdbs python-central \
python-setuptools python python-dev python-twisted-core \
fakeroot darcs python-twisted python-nevow \
python-simplejson python-pycryptopp devscripts \
apt-file
sudo apt-file update
To create packages for Lenny, we'll also install stdeb:
sudo apt-get install python-all-dev
STDEB_VERSION="0.5.1"
wget http://pypi.python.org/packages/source/s/stdeb/stdeb-$STDEB_VERSION.tar.gz
tar xzf stdeb-$STDEB_VERSION.tar.gz
cd stdeb-$STDEB_VERSION
python setup.py --command-packages=stdeb.command bdist_deb
sudo dpkg -i deb_dist/python-stdeb_$STDEB_VERSION-1_all.deb
Now we're ready to build and install the zfec Debian package:
darcs get http://allmydata.org/source/zfec/trunk zfac
cd zfac/zfec/
python setup.py sdist_dsc
cd `find deb_dist -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 -type d` && \
dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -uc -us
sudo dpkg -i ../python-zfec_1.4.6-r333-1_amd64.deb
We need to build a pyutil package:
wget http://pypi.python.org/packages/source/p/pyutil/pyutil-1.6.1.tar.gz
tar -xvzf pyutil-1.6.1.tar.gz
cd pyutil-1.6.1/
python setup.py --command-packages=stdeb.command sdist_dsc
cd deb_dist/pyutil-1.6.1/
dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -uc -us
sudo dpkg -i ../python-pyutil_1.6.1-1_all.deb
We also need to install argparse and zbase32:
sudo easy_install argparse # argparse won't install with stdeb (!) :-(
sudo easy_install zbase32 # XXX TODO: package with stdeb
Finally, we'll fetch, unpack, build and install foolscap:
# You may not already have Brian's key:
# gpg --recv-key 0x1514A7BD
wget http://foolscap.lothar.com/releases/foolscap-0.5.0.tar.gz.asc
wget http://foolscap.lothar.com/releases/foolscap-0.5.0.tar.gz
gpg --verify foolscap-0.5.0.tar.gz.asc
tar -xvzf foolscap-0.5.0.tar.gz
cd foolscap-0.5.0/
python setup.py --command-packages=stdeb.command sdist_dsc
cd deb_dist/foolscap-0.5.0/
dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -uc -us
sudo dpkg -i ../python-foolscap_0.5.0-1_all.deb
TL;DR package building instructions for Tahoe
If you want to build your own Debian packages from the darcs tree or from a source release, do the following:
cd ~/
mkdir src && cd src/
darcs get --lazy http://allmydata.org/source/tahoe-lafs/trunk tahoe-lafs
cd tahoe-lafs
# set this for your Debian release name (lenny, sid, etc)
make deb-lenny-head
# You must have your dependency issues worked out by hand for this to work
sudo dpkg -i ../allmydata-tahoe_1.6.1-r4262_all.deb
You should now have a functional desert island build of Tahoe with all of the supported libraries as .deb packages. You'll need to edit the Debian-specific /etc/defaults/allmydata-tahoe
file to get Tahoe started. Data is by default stored in /var/lib/tahoelafsd/
and Tahoe runs as the 'tahoelafsd' user.
Building Debian Packages
The Tahoe source tree comes with limited support for building Debian packages on a variety of Debian and Ubuntu platforms. For each supported platform, there is a "deb-PLATFORM-head" target in the Makefile that will produce a Debian package from a darcs checkout, using a version number that is derived from the most recent darcs tag, plus the total number of revisions present in the tree (e.g. "1.1-r2678").
To create Debian packages from a Tahoe tree, you will need some additional tools installed. The canonical list of these packages is in the "Build-Depends" clause of misc/sid/debian/control
, and includes:
build-essential
debhelper
cdbs
python-central
python-setuptools
python
python-dev
python-twisted-core
In addition, to use the "deb-$PLATFORM-head" target, you will also need the "debchange
" utility from the "devscripts" package, and the "fakeroot" package.
Some recent platforms can be handled by using the targets for the previous release, for example if there is no "deb-hardy-head" target, try building "deb-gutsy-head" and see if the resulting package will work.
Note that we haven't tried to build source packages (.orig.tar.gz
+ dsc) yet, and there are no such source packages in our APT repository.
Using Pre-Built Debian Packages
The tahoe-lafs.org
site hosts an APT repository with Debian packages that are built after each checkin. The DownloadDebianPackages wiki page describes this repository.
The tahoe-lafs.org
APT repository also includes Debian packages of support libraries, like Foolscap, zfec, pycryptopp, and everything else you need that isn't already in Debian.
Building From Source on Debian Systems
Many of Tahoe's build dependencies can be satisfied by first installing certain Debian packages: simplejson is one of these. Some Debian/Ubuntu platforms do not provide the necessary .egg-info
metadata with their packages, so the Tahoe build process may not believe they are present. Some Tahoe dependencies are not present in most Debian systems (such as foolscap and zfec): debs for these are made available in the APT repository described above.
The Tahoe build process will acquire (via setuptools) most of the libraries that it needs to run and which are not already present in the build environment).
We have observed occasional problems with this acquisition process. In some cases, setuptools will only be half-aware of an installed Debian package, just enough to interfere with the automatic download+build of the dependency. For example, on some platforms, if Nevow-0.9.26 is installed via a Debian package, setuptools will believe that it must download Nevow anyways, but it will insist upon downloading that specific 0.9.26 version. Since the current release of Nevow is 0.9.31, and 0.9.26 is no longer available for download, this will fail.
http://tahoe-lafs.org/source/tahoe-lafs/deps/tahoe-lafs-dep-sdists/ contains source tarballs for Tahoe's dependent libraries. The Nevow-0.9.26-type problem can be mitigated by putting the right dependency in tahoe-deps
, or by downloading the "SUMO" distribution of Tahoe-LAFS, which includes all of these source tarballs.
If you encounter problems building a dependency from source, http://tahoe-lafs.org/source/tahoe-lafs/deps/tahoe-lafs-dep-eggs/ contains binary (.egg) distributions for various OS platforms and versions of Python.