building with alternative project (pac='_repository')
and multibuild did not work correctly, because the buildflavor
was not submitted to the src server.
With commit 2390823d649a3b0b6bf3b7bd07713c4426932bed in open-build-service
it is now possible to submit the build flavor like this: _repository:<flavor>
The obs commit also enables osc buildinfo --alternative-prject -M <flavor>
to show the correct buildinfo for the flavor.
* new function create_text_meter with fallback selection
* NoPBTextMeter.start() will print the basename (if not stated otherise with
basename = None)
* The callers that should use an alternare TextMeter class now call create_text_meter()
* The callers that should not use and alternate TextMeter (because of different handling,
like build.py) call create_text_meter(use_pb_fallback=False)
* the warning 'Please install the progressbar module' is now only shown once
improvements
Get rid of the urlgrabber dependency. The current implementation of the
progress bar is quite "noisy" if the line length exceeds the size of
the terminal window, but that's something we could fix later. (The
superfluous error message will be fixed in a subsequent commit.)
yet another option, but
* only very old build scripts don't know it, we should just require a recent one
* build script is ignoring it for chroot case
so why bother with another option?
write oscrc to the default location for user-specific configuration.
If XDG_CONFIG_HOME is not set use ~/.config/osc/oscrc which is basically the same.
If there is already a ~/.oscrc use this one (for compat reasons). Existing user
installations should not get affected by this commit.
The order is the following:
Given config with -c
config defined in OSC_CONFIG
existing ~/.oscrc
default XDG_CONFIG_HOME/osc/oscrc
If build-root contains %(package) substitution, --local-package builds
would substitute absolute path there. This is different than the rule used
in osc chroot (uses relative path), causing the chroot to fail by default.
This commit removes the directory part from both build-root substitutions.
Now, the fullfilename is calculated using the canonname of a
bdep instead of using the bdep's binary attribute (the canonname
and binary attribute can differ (e.g. ConsoleKit-64bit-0.4.6-3.2.ppc.rpm
vs. ::import::ppc64::ConsoleKit-64bit-0.4.6-3.2.ppc.rpm))
Currently --jobs sets only -smp flag for VM, in some cases we want
to pass threads as well. So the command line would like -smp 4,threads=4
Signed-off-by: Dinar Valeev <dvaleev@suse.com>
Some distributions have no initrd images compatible with KVM builds and
sometimes we need to use not system kernel version.
New options in configuration file:
- build-kernel -- kernel used for VM builds
- build-initrd -- initrd image used for VM builds
This commit allows for 'osc build' to do local builds of type livebuild.
Debian livebuild is the native Debian live image building system.
Signed-off-by: Jan Blunck <jblunck@infradead.org>
It is possible that two different build types use the same package type.
Therefore we need to make get_built_files() work on the build type.
Signed-off-by: Jan Blunck <jblunck@infradead.org>
raw_input has been removed and equals to input in py3. Unfortunatelly no
__future__ statement exists for that. Ensure all modules uses
osc.core.raw_input except osc.cmdln, where there is NameError way
implemented.
The most visible change in python3 - removal of print statement and all
the crufty
print >> sys.stderr, foo,
The from __future__ import print_function makes it available in python
2.6
Some modules (httplib, StringIO, ...) were renamed in python3. This
patch try to import the proper symbols from python3 and then fallback to
python2 in a case ImportError will appear.
There is one exception, python 2.7 got the io module with StringIO, but
it allow unicode arguments only. Therefor the old module is poked before
new one.
this patch
1.) removes the iteritems/itervalues, which were dropped in py3
items/values are used instead
2.) add an extra list() in a cases the list-based access is needed
(included appending, indexing and so)
3.) changes a sorting idiom in few places
instead of
foo = dict.keys()
foo.sort()
for i in foo:
there is a recommended
for i in sorted(dict.keys()):
4.) in one occassion it removes a if dict.has_key() by simpler
dict.get(key, default)
Basically it's just a wrapper around subprocess.call which raises an ExtRuntimeError
exception if subprocess.call raised an OSError with errno set to ENOENT (unfortunately
the OSError's filename attribute is set to None therefore we cannot print a meaningful
error message (that's why an ExtRuntimeError is raised)).
Replaced all occurrences of subprocess.call with a corresponding run_external call.