orr mimics rvm and helps you to switch between different ruby versions on your openSUSE installation.

It's developing on github in hennevogel/orr.

  • info show information for current ruby ✓
  • search show available ruby versions ✓
  • use setup current shell to use a specific ruby version ✓
  • list show currently installed versions ✓
  • implode removes all ruby installations (except the default one), removes orr and all other traces
  • do runs a named ruby file against specified and/or all rubies
  • install install one or many ruby versions ✓
  • upgrade install new ruby, copy gems, make gems pristine, remove old ruby
  • reinstall remove ruby, install it, make gems pristine
  • uninstall, remove uninstall one or many ruby versions ✓

Looking for hackers with the skills:

ruby zypper rpm minitest clamp

This project is part of:

Hack Week 16 Hack Week 17

Activity

  • over 5 years ago: hennevogel disliked this project.
  • over 5 years ago: hennevogel liked this project.
  • over 6 years ago: hennevogel left this project.
  • over 6 years ago: hennevogel started this project.
  • over 6 years ago: hennevogel left this project.
  • over 6 years ago: hennevogel started this project.
  • over 6 years ago: hennevogel left this project.
  • about 7 years ago: hennevogel added keyword "ruby" to this project.
  • about 7 years ago: hennevogel added keyword "zypper" to this project.
  • about 7 years ago: hennevogel added keyword "rpm" to this project.
  • about 7 years ago: hennevogel added keyword "minitest" to this project.
  • about 7 years ago: hennevogel added keyword "clamp" to this project.
  • about 7 years ago: hennevogel started this project.
  • about 7 years ago: randybb liked this project.
  • over 7 years ago: hennevogel originated this project.

  • Comments

    Be the first to comment!

    Similar Projects

    Recipes catalog and calculator in Rails 8 by gfilippetti

    My wife needs a website to catalog and sell the products of her upcoming bakery, and I need to learn and practice modern Rails. So I'm using this Hack Week to build a modern store using the latest Ruby on Rails best practices, ideally up to the deployment.

    TO DO

    • Index page
    • Product page
    • Admin area -- Supplies calculator based on orders -- Orders notification
    • Authentication
    • Payment
    • Deployment

    Day 1

    As my Rails knowledge was pretty outdated and I had 0 experience with Turbo (wich I want to use in the app), I started following a turbo-rails course. I completed 5 of 11 chapters.

    Day 2

    Continued the course until chapter 8 and added live updates & an empty state to the app. I should finish the course on day 3 and start my own project with the knowledge from it.

    Hackweek 24

    For this Hackweek I'll continue this project, focusing on a Catalog/Calculator for my wife's recipes so she can use for her Café.

    Day 1


    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


    "autoremove" functionality for zypper by e_bischoff

    The purpose would be to have the equivalent of Ubuntu's "apt-get autoremove" functionality.

    When you install package P, it might draw in dependancies D1, D2, ... Dn automatically.

    When you later uninstall P, the dependancies D1, D2, ..., Dn might remain on your system.

    If you keep installing and uninstalling packages, after a while your system remains cluttered with things you don't need.

    The idea would be to mark all dependancies that were installed but not explicitely requested as "installed automatically". Then a command like "zypper autoremove" could remove them at once if they are not needed anymore.

    Approaches seen online

    After scouring forms for solutions these are some alias's used to replicate the functionality

    1. zypper packages --unneeded | awk -F'|' 'NR==0 || NR==1 || NR==2 || NR==3 || NR==4 {next} {print $3}' | grep -v Name | sudo xargs zypper remove --clean-deps

    2. This one is a script and has bashisms bash mapfile -t unneeded < <(zypper --quiet pa --unneeded | awk '$1 == "i" { print $5, "-", $7 }') (( ${#unneeded@]} )) && sudo zypper --quiet rm --clean-deps --details "${unneeded@]}"

    3. sudo zypper rm $(zypper pa --unneeded | awk '/i / {print $3}' FS='|' | uniq | tr -d ' ')

    Based on testing zypper packages --orphaned provides packages that are not in any repo, even if a user has explicitly installed them, so --orphaned may not be the way to go, instead focusing on --unneeded


    Ansible for add-on management by lmanfredi

    Description

    Machines can contains various combinations of add-ons and are often modified during the time.

    The list of repos can change so I would like to create an automation able to reset the status to a given state, based on metadata available for these machines

    Goals

    Create an Ansible automation able to take care of add-on (repo list) configuration using metadata as reference

    Resources

    Results

    Created WIP project Ansible-add-on-openSUSE


    Switch software-o-o to parse repomd data by hennevogel

    Currently software.opensuse.org search is using the OBS binary search for everything, even for packages inside the openSUSE distributions. Let's switch this to use repomd data from download.opensuse.org


    A CLI for Harvester by mohamed.belgaied

    [comment]: # Harvester does not officially come with a CLI tool, the user is supposed to interact with Harvester mostly through the UI [comment]: # Though it is theoretically possible to use kubectl to interact with Harvester, the manipulation of Kubevirt YAML objects is absolutely not user friendly. [comment]: # Inspired by tools like multipass from Canonical to easily and rapidly create one of multiple VMs, I began the development of Harvester CLI. Currently, it works but Harvester CLI needs some love to be up-to-date with Harvester v1.0.2 and needs some bug fixes and improvements as well.

    Project Description

    Harvester CLI is a command line interface tool written in Go, designed to simplify interfacing with a Harvester cluster as a user. It is especially useful for testing purposes as you can easily and rapidly create VMs in Harvester by providing a simple command such as: harvester vm create my-vm --count 5 to create 5 VMs named my-vm-01 to my-vm-05.

    asciicast

    Harvester CLI is functional but needs a number of improvements: up-to-date functionality with Harvester v1.0.2 (some minor issues right now), modifying the default behaviour to create an opensuse VM instead of an ubuntu VM, solve some bugs, etc.

    Github Repo for Harvester CLI: https://github.com/belgaied2/harvester-cli

    Done in previous Hackweeks

    • Create a Github actions pipeline to automatically integrate Harvester CLI to Homebrew repositories: DONE
    • Automatically package Harvester CLI for OpenSUSE / Redhat RPMs or DEBs: DONE

    Goal for this Hackweek

    The goal for this Hackweek is to bring Harvester CLI up-to-speed with latest Harvester versions (v1.3.X and v1.4.X), and improve the code quality as well as implement some simple features and bug fixes.

    Some nice additions might be: * Improve handling of namespaced objects * Add features, such as network management or Load Balancer creation ? * Add more unit tests and, why not, e2e tests * Improve CI * Improve the overall code quality * Test the program and create issues for it

    Issue list is here: https://github.com/belgaied2/harvester-cli/issues

    Resources

    The project is written in Go, and using client-go the Kubernetes Go Client libraries to communicate with the Harvester API (which is Kubernetes in fact). Welcome contributions are:

    • Testing it and creating issues
    • Documentation
    • Go code improvement

    What you might learn

    Harvester CLI might be interesting to you if you want to learn more about:

    • GitHub Actions
    • Harvester as a SUSE Product
    • Go programming language
    • Kubernetes API