Difference between revisions of "Solaris Build Environment"
Line 57: | Line 57: | ||
mkdir /usr/local /usr/local/src |
mkdir /usr/local /usr/local/src |
||
From https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/dejagnu/ fetch the latest dejagnu; untar it in /usr/local/src |
From https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/dejagnu/ fetch the latest dejagnu; untar it in /usr/local/src |
||
− | chown -R root /usr/local/src/dejagnu-''version'' |
+ | chown -R root:root /usr/local/src/dejagnu-''version'' |
cd /usr/local/src/dejagnu-''version'' |
cd /usr/local/src/dejagnu-''version'' |
||
./configure && gmake install |
./configure && gmake install |
Revision as of 11:31, 23 January 2017
This page contains notes on the setup of a Solaris buildbot worker for MIT krb5.
Our current Solaris build hardware is a Sun Fire V240 running Solaris 10 U10.
Solaris 10 includes a variety of free software tools in /usr/sfw, but not the full set of dependencies needed to checkout, build, and test the krb5 tree. We have chosen to use OpenCSW to add most of the dependencies, and local builds in /usr/local for the remaining few.
Contents
Set up a useful shell
A root login by default uses a very minimal shell (/bin/sh) with a very minimal path (/usr/sbin:/usr/bin). For any operations performed as root, we begin by starting a functional shell as follows:
bash export PATH=/opt/csw/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sfw/bin:/usr/ccs/bin export MANPATH=/opt/csw/share/man:/usr/share/man:/usr/sfw/share/man
For now, we are not modifying /etc/passwd or root's dotfiles to make this happen automatically.
Set up OpenCSW
Installing the pkgutil command (it will be placed in /opt/csw/bin) and update its catalog as follows:
pkgadd -d http://get.opencsw.org/now pkgutil -U
"pkgutil -l" lists installed packages. "pkgutil -a string" looks up string in the catalog. "pkgutil -i packagename" installs a package; the -y flag can be used to skip prompts. "pkgutil -U" followed by "pkgutil -yu" updates all installed packages.
Install required OpenCSW packages
pkgutil -y -i git pkgutil -y -i libssl_dev mkdir /opt/csw/sbin/sparcv9 # to work around an apparent bug in openldap package pkgutil -y -i openldap pkgutil -y -i openldap_back_bdb pkgutil -y -i openldap_client pkgutil -y -i openldap_dev pkgutil -y -i autoconf pkgutil -y -i tcl pkgutil -y -i tcl_dev pkgutil -y -i expect pkgutil -y -i bind_utils pkgutil -y -i bison pkgutil -y -i python27 pkgutil -y -i buildbot_slave pkgutil -y -i emacs pkgutil -y -i gdb edit /etc/passwd and change the home directory of "games" to /
We have decided not to support the Solaris 10 native LDAP library and tools (Solaris 11 ships with OpenLDAP and Solaris 12 will make it the default), so we install OpenLDAP from OpenCSW. OpenSSL 0.9 is present in /usr/sfw/lib, but we need 1.0 or later for PKINIT so we install the OpenCSW version. The bison in /usr/sfw/bin is also too old for our x-deltat.y file. buildbot_slave requires Python 2.7 but does not list it as a formal dependency. emacs and gdb are not needed to build krb5, but are handy to have around for manual testing and debugging work.
buildbot 0.9 changes its terminology to refer to "workers" rather than "slaves". At the time of this writing, OpenCSW only includes buildbot 0.8.4; when it switches to buildbot 0.9, the package we need will likely change to buildbot_worker.
One of the above packages appears to create a "games" account with the home directory set to /opt/csw. This would ordinarily allow ssh access by the Kerberos principal games@ATHENA.MIT.EDU. We change the home directory of this account to / so that /.k5login governs access.
Local builds of remaining dependencies
dejagnu is not present in OpenCSW, so we need to build it ourselves:
mkdir /usr/local /usr/local/src From https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/dejagnu/ fetch the latest dejagnu; untar it in /usr/local/src chown -R root:root /usr/local/src/dejagnu-version cd /usr/local/src/dejagnu-version ./configure && gmake install
Set up buildbot
Create and switch to the buildbot account:
useradd -d /var/lib/buildbot -u 101 -s /bin/bash -m buildbot su - buildbot touch .k5login edit .profile and add: PATH=/usr/local/bin:/opt/csw/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/sfw/bin:/usr/ccs/bin MANPATH=/usr/local/share/man:/opt/csw/share/man:/usr/share/man:/usr/sfw/share/man USER=buildbot export PATH MANPATH USER
Principals may be added to .k5login, but make sure it exists so that the Kerberos principal "buildbot" does not have access to the account.
Set up ssh for the ssh tunnel to krbdev.mit.edu:
mkdir .ssh ssh-keygen -q -N -f .ssh/id_rsa -t rsa cat .ssh/id_rsa.pub In a separate shell, log into krbdev.mit.edu, "su -s /bin/bash - buildbot" and add the contents of id_rsa.pub to .ssh/authorized_keys Edit .ssh/known_hosts (new file) and add: krbdev.mit.edu,18.9.62.43 ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAABIwAAAQEAmV2SWbD5nZah7F0nhzEpBtmdiNa38TTDx58i/HhENlT3yV4xpwyHcqBSObUR+wQlW+LfBRgyGeXEZAoiEMG4kQk93P+JKEsK5G/X9QF2LICsoMSZKW31S1K4axqtlhesFnnlXzZZkWQhYhG3He8DXBBw+2AMWR6jfTnM634fGpl5Vo76r7QuxL09RpnSEZyihR/6n8IG8EaAyX4Rbj23pkLlj6DjfWoYd1CmjN+JKiZ9q/yXHQMW+/yMo+JhmAPwgBVjQkc/pDfVFffavWzRPJ39ZUbRRNBSHU0lweXLcCIq6K4P+Mvt/WKwsFNxASNOOmkbWVDfNflT8L1maFCr7w==
Create the slave directory:
buildslave create-slave /var/lib/buildbot/slaves/s01 127.0.0.1:9989 s01 password
where password should match the entry for s01 in slaves.py on krbdev.mit.edu.
As root, create /etc/init.d/buildslave with the contents:
#!/sbin/sh case "$1" in start) su buildbot -c 'ssh -l buildbot -N -L9989:127.0.0.1:9989 krbdev.mit.edu &' su - buildbot -c 'buildslave start --quiet /var/lib/buildbot/slaves/s01' ;; stop) su buildbot -c '/opt/csw/bin/buildslave stop --quiet /var/lib/buildbot/slaves/s01' ;; esac exit 0
Make it executable with "chmod u+x /etc/init.d/buildslave". Create the following links:
ln -s /etc/init.d/buildslave /etc/rc2.d/S99buildslave ln -s /etc/init.d/buildslave /etc/rc2.d/K00buildslave
We do not currently stop the ssh tunnel automatically, because it isn't easy to do. The ssh tunnel must be manually restarted if it breaks; on other workers, we use a cron job which runs "ssh -oExitOnForwardFailure=yes ...", but the Solaris 10 ssh does not support that option. The start rule will display an unwanted copy of /etc/motd; an alternative would be to explicitly set the path when running buildbot, instead of relying on buildbot's .profile.
Create user accounts
By default, /home on Solaris is controlled by the automounter. To avoid needing to change the automounter configuration, we create user accounts with home directories in /export/home. For example:
useradd -u 3622 -d /export/home/ghudson -s /bin/bash -m ghudson
Creating an account allows the Kerberos principal of the same name in the ATHENA.MIT.EDU realm to log in on that account. Matching the local UID to the Moira UID may be unnecessary as long as we do not make use of remote filesystems on this machine.
To set a reasonable path for development work, the user can edit .profile to add:
PATH=/usr/local/bin:/opt/csw/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/sfw/bin:/usr/ccs/bin MANPATH=/usr/local/share/man:/opt/csw/share/man:/usr/share/man:/usr/sfw/share/man export PATH MANPATH
The following shell function, or a variant of it, may be useful for configuring a build with the correct paths. This variant is designed to work in a separate build directory placed next to the src directory within a checkout.
k5configure() { ../src/configure --enable-maintainer-mode --prefix=$HOME/inst --with-ldap CFLAGS=-g CPPFLAGS="-I/opt/csw/include" LDFLAGS="-L/opt/csw/lib -R/opt/csw/lib" "$@"; }
To do
- t_kdb.py does not know how to find the OpenCSW slapd. Making a copy of /opt/csw/libexec/slapd won't work, because it is a script which chooses an executable based on the architecture and the path to the script.
- We should install the SunPro compiler and do automated builds with that compiler as well as gcc.