Following the work started in the last hackweek, Improve OBS service scripts, I will try to migrate current service script for workers to systemd unit, and at the same time, try to get rid of the sysv code.

Looking for hackers with the skills:

obs systemd

This project is part of:

Hack Week 18 Hack Week 19

Activity

  • almost 5 years ago: a_faerber liked this project.
  • almost 5 years ago: fcrozat liked this project.
  • over 5 years ago: david_kang liked this project.
  • over 5 years ago: Pharaoh_Atem liked this project.
  • over 5 years ago: enavarro_suse started this project.
  • over 5 years ago: enavarro_suse liked this project.
  • over 5 years ago: hennevogel liked this project.
  • over 5 years ago: enavarro_suse added keyword "obs" to this project.
  • over 5 years ago: enavarro_suse added keyword "systemd" to this project.
  • over 5 years ago: enavarro_suse originated this project.

  • Comments

    • enavarro_suse
      almost 5 years ago by enavarro_suse | Reply

      • Remove system V scripts not used any more: https://github.com/openSUSE/open-build-service/pull/9072

      • Get rid of systemV: https://github.com/openSUSE/open-build-service/pull/9078

    Similar Projects

    Implement a full OBS api client in Rust by nbelouin

    Description

    I recently started to work on tooling for OBS using rust, to do so I started a Rust create to interact with OBS API, I only implemented a few routes/resources for what I needed. What about making it a full fledged OBS client library.

    Goals

    • Implement more routes/resources
    • Implement a test suite against the actual OBS implementation
    • Bonus: Create an osc like cli in Rust using the library

    Resources

    • https://github.com/suse-edge/obs-tools/tree/main/obs-client
    • https://api.opensuse.org/apidocs/


    Fix RSpec tests in order to replace the ruby-ldap rubygem in OBS by enavarro_suse

    Description

    "LDAP mode is not official supported by OBS!". See: config/options.yml.example#L100-L102

    However, there is an RSpec file which tests LDAP mode in OBS. These tests use the ruby-ldap rubygem, mocking the results returned by a LDAP server.

    The ruby-ldap rubygem seems no longer maintaned, and also prevents from updating to a more recent Ruby version. A good alternative is to replace it with the net-ldap rubygem.

    Before replacing the ruby-ldap rubygem, we should modify the tests so the don't mock the responses of a LDAP server. Instead, we should modify the tests and run them against a real LDAP server.

    Goals

    Goals of this project:

    • Modify the RSpec tests and run them against a real LDAP server
    • Replace the net-ldap rubygem with the ruby-ldap rubygem

    Achieving the above mentioned goals will:

    • Permit upgrading OBS from Ruby 3.1 to Ruby 3.2
    • Make a step towards officially supporting LDAP in OBS.

    Resources


    Git CI to automate the creation of product definition by gyribeiro

    Description

    Automate the creation of product definition

    Goals

    Create a Git CI that will:

    • automatically be triggered once a change (commit) in package list is done.
    • run tool responsible to update product definition based on the changes in package list
    • test the updated product definition in OBS
    • submit a pull request updating the product definition in the repository

    NOTE: this Git CI may also be triggered manually

    Resources

    • https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/
    • https://openbuildservice.org/2021/05/31/scm-integration/
    • https://github.com/openSUSE/openSUSE-release-tools


    Explore the integration between OBS and GitHub by pdostal

    Project Description

    The goals:

    1) When GitHub pull request is created or modified the OBS project will be forked and the build results reported back to GitHub. 2) When new version of the GitHub project will be published the OBS will redownload the source and rebuild the project.

    Goal for this Hackweek

    Do as much as possible, blog about it and maybe use it another existing project.

    Resources


    Research openqa-trigger-from-obs and openqa-trigger-from-ibs-plugin by qwang

    Description

    openqa-trigger-from-obs project is a framework that OSD is using it to automatically sync the defined images and repositories from OBS/IBS to its assets for testing. This framework very likely will be used for the synchronize to each location's openqa include openqa.qa2.suse.asia Beijing local procy scc scc-proxy.suse.asia(although it's not a MUST to our testing) it's now rewriting requests to openqa.qa2.suse.asia instead of openqa.suse.de, the assets/repo should be consistent the format Beijing local openQA is maintaining an own script but still need many manually activities when new build comes, and not consistent to OSD, that will request many test code change due to CC network change

    Goals

    Research this framework in case it will be re-used for Beijing local openQA, and will need to be setup and maintained by ourselves

    Resources

    https://github.com/os-autoinst/openqa-trigger-from-obs/tree/master https://gitlab.suse.de/openqa/openqa-trigger-from-ibs-plugin

    beijing :rainbow machine


    Explore simple and distro indipendent declarative Linux starting on Tumbleweed or Arch Linux by janvhs

    Description

    Inspired by mkosi the idea is to experiment with a declarative approach of defining Linux systems. A lot of tools already make it possible to manage the systems infrastructure by using description files, rather than manual invocation. An example for this are systemd presets for managing enabled services or the /etc/fstab file for describing how partitions should be mounted.

    If we would take inspiration from openSUSE MicroOS and their handling of the /etc/ directory, we could theoretically use systemd-sysupdate to swap out the /usr/ partition and create an A/B boot scheme, where the /usr/ partition is always freshly built according to a central system description. In the best case it would be possible to still utilise snapshots, but an A/B root scheme would be sufficient for the beginning. This way you could get the benefit of NixOS's declarative system definition, but still use the distros package repositories and don't have to deal with the overhead of Flakes or the Nix language.

    Goals

    • A simple and understandable system
    • Check fitness of mkosi or write a simple extensible image builder tool for it
    • Create a declarative system specification
    • Create a system with swappable /usr/ partition
    • Create an A/B root scheme
    • Swap to the new system without reboot (kexec?)

    Resources

    • Ideas that have been floating around in my head for a while
    • https://0pointer.net/blog/fitting-everything-together.html
    • GNOME OS
    • MicroOS
    • systemd mkosi
    • Vanilla OS