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{{Warning|This article is a work-in-progress referring to functionality in Gentoo's Portage that is being evaluated. It does not apply to the current Funtoo Portage version. Please do not update your configuration yet.}} | {{Warning|This article is a work-in-progress referring to functionality in Gentoo's Portage that is being evaluated. It does not apply to the current Funtoo Portage version. Please do not update your configuration yet.}} | ||
<div style="float: right;"> | |||
__TOC__ | |||
</div> | |||
Starting with Portage-2.3.8, a switch to a new repository configuration framework is complete and users may want to update their configuration files. This document aims to describe the goals for the new framework and how to use it. | Starting with Portage-2.3.8, a switch to a new repository configuration framework is complete and users may want to update their configuration files. This document aims to describe the goals for the new framework and how to use it. | ||
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PORTDIR_OVERLAY="/var/src/bleh-overlay /var/src/games-overlay /var/src/extra-overlay"}} | PORTDIR_OVERLAY="/var/src/bleh-overlay /var/src/games-overlay /var/src/extra-overlay"}} | ||
Above, you've added three overlays on top of your Portage tree in {{f|/usr/portage}}. The {{c|extra-overlay}} is the top-most overlay, which can override ebuilds and eclasses in all overlays and trees underneath it. As you can see, the old overlay system created a single, monolithic repository by stacking repositories and overlays on top of each other. As the stack became bigger and bigger, the interactions between the various items in the stack could become more complex. For example, maybe you wanted an ebuild from games-overlay, but extra-overlay happened to also contain a modified version of that ebuild. What if bleh-overlay's ebuilds were affected in some bad way by ebuilds in games-overlay, for example? The interactions between the various overlays may not always be obvious, and could cause problems. | Above, you've added three overlays on top of your Portage tree in {{f|/usr/portage}}. The {{c|extra-overlay}} is the top-most overlay, which can override ebuilds and eclasses in all overlays and trees underneath it. As you can see, the old overlay system created a single, monolithic repository by stacking repositories and overlays on top of each other. As the stack became bigger and bigger, the interactions between the various items in the stack could become more complex. For example, maybe you wanted an ebuild from games-overlay, but extra-overlay happened to also contain a modified version of that ebuild. What if the dependencies for bleh-overlay's ebuilds were affected in some bad way by ebuilds in games-overlay, for example? The interactions between the various overlays may not always be obvious, and could cause problems. | ||
With the new repository layout, bleh-overlay, games-overlay and extra-overlay can contain a {{f|metadata/layout.conf}} file which specifies that they "sit on top of" the "gentoo" repository. Or -- said another way -- and using the new terminology for overlays: "their ''master'' is ''gentoo''." | With the new repository layout, bleh-overlay, games-overlay and extra-overlay can contain a {{f|metadata/layout.conf}} file which specifies that they "sit on top of" the "gentoo" repository. Or -- said another way -- and using the new terminology for overlays: "their ''master'' is ''gentoo''." | ||
What this means is that each overlay can inherit things like eclasses from the gentoo repository in {{f|/usr/portage}} without having any interaction with each other. In many ways, this is much improved behavior and massively reduces the possibility of those overlays interacting in strange and unfortunate ways, which was possible with the older "monolithic stack" system implemented via {{c|PORTDIR_OVERLAY}}. Of course, with the new masters system, it is possible for an overlay to have multiple masters, which works similarly to having a stack of overlays underneath -- but in this case, it is intentional and explicitly specified by the {{f|metadata/layout.conf}} file maintained by the overlay's maintainer, rather than a side-effect of how the overlays are hooked into Portage on the local system. | What this means is that each overlay can inherit things like eclasses from the gentoo repository in {{f|/usr/portage}} without having any interaction with each other. In many ways, this is much improved behavior and massively reduces the possibility of those overlays interacting in strange and unfortunate ways, which was possible with the older "monolithic stack" system implemented via {{c|PORTDIR_OVERLAY}}. Of course, with the new masters system, it is possible for an overlay to have multiple masters, which works similarly to having a stack of overlays underneath -- but in this case, it is intentional and explicitly specified by the {{f|metadata/layout.conf}} file maintained by the overlay's maintainer, rather than a side-effect of how the overlays are hooked into Portage on the local system. | ||
[editor: a sample layout.conf file would be useful please] | |||
{{SectionNeedsUpdates}} | |||
== Portage configuration == | == Portage configuration == | ||
=== New repository layout === | === New repository layout === | ||
The repository configuration should be stored in <code>/etc/portage/repos.conf</code>. It can be either a single file or a directory containing one or more ''.conf'' files. | The repository configuration should be stored in <code>/etc/portage/repos.conf</code>. It can be either a single file or a directory containing one or more ''.conf'' files. This configuration file specifies the various repositories on your system, and also allows you to override settings that are in each repository's/overlay's {{f|metadata/layout.conf}} file. | ||
The default configuration is installed as <code>/usr/share/portage/config/repos.conf</code>: | The default configuration is installed as <code>/usr/share/portage/config/repos.conf</code>: | ||
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{{2Col|{{c|eapi}}|}} | {{2Col|{{c|eapi}}|}} | ||
{{2Col|{{c|eclass_db}}|Initialized to a portage.eclass_cache.cache object that allows Portage to resolve eclasses for this repository.}} | {{2Col|{{c|eclass_db}}|Initialized to a portage.eclass_cache.cache object that allows Portage to resolve eclasses for this repository.}} | ||
{{2Col|{{c|eclass_locations}}|}} | {{2Col|{{c|eclass_locations}}|Eclasses used by given repository can be located in this repository or in master repositories. This variable is not configurable on user side}} | ||
{{2Col|{{c|find_invalid_path_char}}|A python function used to find invalid paths?}} | {{2Col|{{c|find_invalid_path_char}}|A python function used to find invalid paths?}} | ||
{{2Col|{{c|local_config}}|Indicates whether there is local repos.conf configuration that applies to this repository.}} | {{2Col|{{c|local_config}}|Indicates whether there is local repos.conf configuration that applies to this repository.}} | ||
{{2Col|{{c|manifest_hashes}}|List of hashes to generate/check in Manifest files. SHA1 SHA512 WHIRLPOOL for example.}} | {{2Col|{{c|manifest_hashes}}|List of hashes to generate/check in Manifest files. SHA1 SHA512 WHIRLPOOL for example.}} | ||
{{2Col|{{c|missing_repo_name}}|}} | {{2Col|{{c|missing_repo_name}}|set internally to True or False. Set to True when there is no {{c|${repository_location}/profiles/repo_name}} and no repo-name in {{c|${repository_location}/metadata/layout.conf}}. Set to False, otherwise.}} | ||
{{2Col|{{c|name}}|The name of the repository from the configuration file; i.e. "gentoo".}} | {{2Col|{{c|name}}|The name of the repository from the configuration file; i.e. "gentoo".}} | ||
{{2Col|{{c|profile_formats}}|Defaults to '(portage-2)' (a tuple)}} | {{2Col|{{c|profile_formats}}|Defaults to '(portage-2)' (a tuple)}} | ||
{{2Col|{{c|portage1_profiles}}|}} | {{2Col|{{c|portage1_profiles}}|Internal variable in Python code. There are no corresponding attributes in repos.conf / layout.conf (e.g."portage1-profiles") for this. Explained below}} | ||
{{2Col|{{c|portage1_profiles_compat}}|}} | {{2Col|{{c|portage1_profiles_compat}}|Internal variable in Python code. There are no corresponding attributes in repos.conf / layout.conf (e.g."portage1-profiles-compat") for this. Explained below}} | ||
{{2Col|{{c|sign_commit}}| Provides ability to sign commits in a given repo. Accept false or true value. For git, this require a key configured by `git config user.signingkey key_id` }} | {{2Col|{{c|sign_commit}}| Provides ability to sign commits in a given repo. Accept false or true value. For git, this require a key configured by `git config user.signingkey key_id` }} | ||
{{2Col|{{c|sign_manifest}}| Accept false or true value. Same functionality as sign_commit}} | {{2Col|{{c|sign_manifest}}| Accept false or true value. Same functionality as sign_commit}} | ||
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{{2Col|{{c|user_location}}|Appears to be the same as {{c|location}}, with symlinks resolved.}} | {{2Col|{{c|user_location}}|Appears to be the same as {{c|location}}, with symlinks resolved.}} | ||
{{TableEnd}} | {{TableEnd}} | ||
Details on profile formats: | |||
These variables are internal python code variables that serves to have support for certain settings to be directories (package.use, package.mask..etc) | |||
{{file|name=portage1_profiles|lang=python|desc=|portage1_profiles|body= | |||
self.portage1_profiles = eapi_allows_directories_on_profile_level_and_repository_level(eapi) or \ | |||
any(x in _portage1_profiles_allow_directories for x in layout_data['profile-formats']) | |||
}} | |||
{{file|name=portage1_profiles_compat|lang=python|desc=|portage1_profiles_compat|body= | |||
self.portage1_profiles_compat = not eapi_allows_directories_on_profile_level_and_repository_level(eapi) and \ | |||
layout_data['profile-formats'] == ('portage-1-compat',) | |||
}} | |||
Both variables accepts True or False value. Here are possible variations these variables turns to, depending on {{c|profile_formats}} entry in layout.conf: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
If EAPI of repository == 5-progress; then portage1_profiles=True portage1_profiles_compat=False | |||
If EAPI of repository == 5 and profile-formats=[pms]; then portage1_profiles=False portage1_profiles_compat=False | |||
If EAPI of repository == 5 and profile-formats == [portage-1]; then portage1_profiles=True portage1_profiles_compat=False | |||
If EAPI of repository == 5 and profile-formats == [portage-2]; then portage1_profiles=True portage1_profiles_compat=False | |||
If EAPI of repository == 5 and profile-formats == [portage-1-compat]; then portage1_profiles=True portage1_profiles_compat=True | |||
}} | |||
=== Migrating existing configurations === | === Migrating existing configurations === |
Latest revision as of 19:10, October 11, 2015
This article is a work-in-progress referring to functionality in Gentoo's Portage that is being evaluated. It does not apply to the current Funtoo Portage version. Please do not update your configuration yet.
Starting with Portage-2.3.8, a switch to a new repository configuration framework is complete and users may want to update their configuration files. This document aims to describe the goals for the new framework and how to use it.
Repository layout design
One of the most important changes is the switch from the old overlay layout to a new cleaner repository system. The new layout is more flexible and more predictable. For example, repositories can now use resources (eclasses, for example) provided by other repositories. (Editor: How?)
The old layout was based on the concept of one main tree and optionally a number of overlays. The main tree provided base system ebuilds, eclasses, profiles, while overlays mostly were able to provide their own ebuilds. The ebuild provided by overlays overrode the ebuilds in main tree to the extent of making it impossible to install the main tree version. Overlays could also provide eclasses for their own ebuilds and package.* entries that applied to all overlays and to the main tree. The Package Manager is responsible for updating the main tree, while overlays are managed externally.
The new layout is based on the concept of one or more configurable repositories. Each repository can either be stand-alone or depend upon other repositories. Users can install more repositories at they will, the repositories providing their own ebuilds, eclasses and profiles as necessary and/or using them from other repositories. Users can explicitly choose the repository they want to install packages from. The Package Manager can update all repositories.
Old vs. New Design
Let's contrast the old vs. new repository configuration in a bit more detail. In the past, you might configure your system to use a main Portage tree, with a few overlays, as follows:
/etc/make.conf
PORTDIR_OVERLAY="/var/src/bleh-overlay /var/src/games-overlay /var/src/extra-overlay"
Above, you've added three overlays on top of your Portage tree in /usr/portage
. The extra-overlay
is the top-most overlay, which can override ebuilds and eclasses in all overlays and trees underneath it. As you can see, the old overlay system created a single, monolithic repository by stacking repositories and overlays on top of each other. As the stack became bigger and bigger, the interactions between the various items in the stack could become more complex. For example, maybe you wanted an ebuild from games-overlay, but extra-overlay happened to also contain a modified version of that ebuild. What if the dependencies for bleh-overlay's ebuilds were affected in some bad way by ebuilds in games-overlay, for example? The interactions between the various overlays may not always be obvious, and could cause problems.
With the new repository layout, bleh-overlay, games-overlay and extra-overlay can contain a metadata/layout.conf
file which specifies that they "sit on top of" the "gentoo" repository. Or -- said another way -- and using the new terminology for overlays: "their master is gentoo."
What this means is that each overlay can inherit things like eclasses from the gentoo repository in /usr/portage
without having any interaction with each other. In many ways, this is much improved behavior and massively reduces the possibility of those overlays interacting in strange and unfortunate ways, which was possible with the older "monolithic stack" system implemented via PORTDIR_OVERLAY
. Of course, with the new masters system, it is possible for an overlay to have multiple masters, which works similarly to having a stack of overlays underneath -- but in this case, it is intentional and explicitly specified by the metadata/layout.conf
file maintained by the overlay's maintainer, rather than a side-effect of how the overlays are hooked into Portage on the local system.
[editor: a sample layout.conf file would be useful please]
This section is in need of updates.
Portage configuration
New repository layout
The repository configuration should be stored in /etc/portage/repos.conf
. It can be either a single file or a directory containing one or more .conf files. This configuration file specifies the various repositories on your system, and also allows you to override settings that are in each repository's/overlay's metadata/layout.conf
file.
The default configuration is installed as /usr/share/portage/config/repos.conf
:
/usr/share/portage/config/repos.conf
[DEFAULT]
main-repo = gentoo
[gentoo]
location = /usr/portage
sync-type = git
sync-uri = git://github.com/funtoo/ports-2012.git
auto-sync = yes
The configuration uses format similar to Windows .ini files. Each section heading (repository name in square brackets) signifies a single repository, followed by one or more key-value option pairs. This file is internal configuration file installed with portage ebuild and should not be modified. Instead, the configuration in /etc/portage/repos.conf
can override the defaults in this file.
The following settings are valid in the [DEFAULT]
section:
main-repo | Specifies the "main" repository name. |
eclass-overrides | Primarily intended for use by eclass developers, this allows one to specify a space-delimited list of repositories (by name) to look for eclasses to satisfy eclass references for ebuilds in this repository, or in this case (since we are in the [DEFAULT] section, all repositories. Portage will look in the specified override repository and use the eclass if it exists; if not found, it will use the eclass in this repository. |
force | Space-delimited list of settings that should be respected by repoman. |
For defining individual repositories, use the repos.conf
configuration options listed below. Note that in the configuration file, hyphens are used instead of underscores for configuration variables -- the options below are listed using underscores, because that is how Portage stores these options internally.
Option | Description |
---|---|
aliases | Other names that can be used to refer to this repository elsewhere. Alias names prefixed with a - will cause the alias, if already defined in i.e layout.conf , to be discarded. |
auto_sync | Specifies whether emerge --sync should update the repository. Defaults to yes if sync-type is specified, no otherwise. |
eclass_overrides | Similar to eclass_overrides in the [DEFAULT] section (see above), but applies only to this repository. |
force | Similar to force in the [DEFAULT] section (see above), but applies only to this repository. |
format | Currently unused. |
location | Obligatory. Specifies the directory where repository is/will be stored. If Portage knows how to sync the repository and the location does not exist, it will be created on next emerge --sync. Otherwise, the directory must exist. |
masters | This setting is typically used by repository maintainers and is set in a repository's layout.conf file. This setting contains a space-separated list of repository names which are considered 'masters' of this repository, or in other words, what this repository is designed to run 'on top of' (like an overlay). That means that when ebuilds are merged from this repository, the masters will be searched for eclasses, and in addition, profiles/package.* files will be inherited as well. Inheritance order is as follows: if repository C specifies masters of "B E", then eclasses will be searched for first in C, and if not found, then E, and if not found, then B. So, in other words, eclass search order when emerging ebuilds from repository C will be as if B is the primary repository, overlaid by E, and then overlaid by the current repository, C. For masking inheritance, things are a bit more complicated. If ~ is the function for applying masks, so that A~B means A's masks are modified by B's masks, then the masking order for repository C would be (B~C)~(E~C) . In other words, for mask inheritance, C's masks are applied to each master's masks, before they are combined. While this may seem overly complex, it allows C's package.unmask , etc. to be applied properly to each master, and prevents B and E from clobbering each other. This can be explored in more detail in pym/portage/package/ebuild/_config/MaskManager.py , starting with line for repo in repositories.repos_with_profiles(): |
priority | Specifies the priority used for ordering ebuilds from different repositories. If two repositories provide an ebuild with matching versions, the repository with higher priority will be used. |
sync_cvs_repo | When using CVS, the repository name needs to be specified separately from the URI in sync_uri . This is done using this variable. |
sync_depth | Specifies --depth for git clone. Used only on initial sync. Defaults to 1. Can be set to 0 to force full clone (not pass --depth at all). |
sync_type | Specifies syncing/update method. Can be one of: cvs, git, rsync, svn. |
sync_umask | Specifies the umask used when updating/syncing the repository. |
sync_uri | Specifies remote URI from which the repository will be cloned/synced. Can use any syntax valid for a particular syncing method. |
sync_user | Specifies the user:group used to update/sync the repository. If FEATURES="usersync" is used, then defaults to the credentials of the directory owner. |
Additionally a [DEFAULT]
section may be specified. Options in this section are used as defaults for all repositories.
Internals
Additionally, the following options are available, or exist internally as part of the new repository configuration. Note that internally in Portage, repository configuration variables use intermediate underscores, but in configuration files, hyphens are used instead. Many of these need to be documented:
_eapis_banned | Used for repoman checks only. When set in layout.conf, tells repoman to print fatal errors if a given repo including ebuilds matching an eapis-banned entry. |
_eapis_deprecated | Same as banned. Tells repoman to print only a warning for ebuilds using EAPI matching eapis-deprecated entry. |
_masters_orig | Value of masters attribute read from layout.conf in repository, unaffected by potential override in user's repos.conf, only for internal usage |
allow_missing_manifest | Option that allows the repository to be happy even if Manifest files are missing. |
allow_provide_virtual | Appears to have no function at the moment. |
cache_formats | The cache formats supported in the metadata tree. There is the old "pms" format and the newer "md5-dict" format. |
create_manifest | Enables 'allow_create" in Manifest object which presumably allows Manifests to be created. |
disable_manifest | Internal feature that disables parsing of Manifest file at all, by enabling "from_scratch" in Manifest object. |
eapi | |
eclass_db | Initialized to a portage.eclass_cache.cache object that allows Portage to resolve eclasses for this repository. |
eclass_locations | Eclasses used by given repository can be located in this repository or in master repositories. This variable is not configurable on user side |
find_invalid_path_char | A python function used to find invalid paths? |
local_config | Indicates whether there is local repos.conf configuration that applies to this repository. |
manifest_hashes | List of hashes to generate/check in Manifest files. SHA1 SHA512 WHIRLPOOL for example. |
missing_repo_name | set internally to True or False. Set to True when there is no ${repository_location}/profiles/repo_name and no repo-name in ${repository_location}/metadata/layout.conf . Set to False, otherwise. |
name | The name of the repository from the configuration file; i.e. "gentoo". |
profile_formats | Defaults to '(portage-2)' (a tuple) |
portage1_profiles | Internal variable in Python code. There are no corresponding attributes in repos.conf / layout.conf (e.g."portage1-profiles") for this. Explained below |
portage1_profiles_compat | Internal variable in Python code. There are no corresponding attributes in repos.conf / layout.conf (e.g."portage1-profiles-compat") for this. Explained below |
sign_commit | Provides ability to sign commits in a given repo. Accept false or true value. For git, this require a key configured by `git config user.signingkey key_id` |
sign_manifest | Accept false or true value. Same functionality as sign_commit |
thin_manifest | Whether or not the repository supports "thin" manifests, i.e. "mini-manifests" -- Manifests without entries for local files. |
update_changelog | Accept false or true value. Indicates if repo set repoman's --echangelog=y/n option automatically. |
user_location | Appears to be the same as location , with symlinks resolved. |
Details on profile formats: These variables are internal python code variables that serves to have support for certain settings to be directories (package.use, package.mask..etc)
portage1_profiles
(python source code) self.portage1_profiles = eapi_allows_directories_on_profile_level_and_repository_level(eapi) or \
any(x in _portage1_profiles_allow_directories for x in layout_data['profile-formats'])
portage1_profiles_compat
(python source code) self.portage1_profiles_compat = not eapi_allows_directories_on_profile_level_and_repository_level(eapi) and \
layout_data['profile-formats'] == ('portage-1-compat',)
Both variables accepts True or False value. Here are possible variations these variables turns to, depending on profile_formats
entry in layout.conf:
If EAPI of repository == 5-progress; then portage1_profiles=True portage1_profiles_compat=False If EAPI of repository == 5 and profile-formats=[pms]; then portage1_profiles=False portage1_profiles_compat=False If EAPI of repository == 5 and profile-formats == [portage-1]; then portage1_profiles=True portage1_profiles_compat=False If EAPI of repository == 5 and profile-formats == [portage-2]; then portage1_profiles=True portage1_profiles_compat=False If EAPI of repository == 5 and profile-formats == [portage-1-compat]; then portage1_profiles=True portage1_profiles_compat=True
Migrating existing configurations
The new configuration format provides replacement for existing configuration done through /etc/portage/make.conf
and environment variables. While the variables are still supported for backwards compatibility, users are recommended to move to the new configuration scheme. Funtoo portage ebuild is planned to make the migration unattended (repos.conf installed automatically to ease the config steps) with the following file:
/etc/portage/repos.conf/gentoo.conf
[gentoo]
location = /usr/portage
sync-type = git
sync-uri = git://github.com/funtoo/ports-2012.git
auto-sync = yes
The following replacements are provided for existing variables:
PORTDIR | Used to specify main tree location. Replaced by location key in the section corresponding to the default repository ([gentoo] by default). |
PORTDIR_OVERLAY | Used to specify locations of overlays. Each of the paths needs to be replaced with a separate repository section, with the path placed in location key. Additionally, priority may be used to force specific ordering of ebuild overrides. |
SYNC | Used to specify URI for syncing the main repository, also implied a protocol for doing that. Replaced by the sync-uri and sync-type keys in the default repository section. |
SYNC_UMASK | Used to specify umask for syncing repositories. Replaced by sync-umask key in repository configuration. Can be specified in [DEFAULT] section to apply to all repositories. |
SYNC_USER | Used to specify user credentials for syncing repositories. Replaced by sync-user key in repository configuration. Can be specified in [DEFAULT] section to apply to all repositories. |
/etc/portage/make.conf
- Example old make.conf file# user changed PORTDIR location
PORTDIR="/usr/portage"
PORTDIR_OVERLAY="/root/git/foo /root/git/bar"
SYNC="git://github.com/funtoo/ports-2012.git"
SYNC_USER="oleg"
SYNC_UMASK="022"
/etc/portage/repos.conf
- Replacement repos.conf file[DEFAULT]
sync-user = oleg
sync-umask = 022
[gentoo]
location = /usr/portage
sync-type = git
sync-uri = git://github.com/funtoo/ports-2012.git
[foo]
location = /root/git/foo
priority = 1
[bar]
location = /root/git/bar
priority = 2
Notice a [foo] and [bar]. This is a repository name. Let's take a look in /root/git/foo/profiles/repo_name
.
root # cat /root/git/foo/profiles/repo_name foo root # cat /root/git/bar/profiles/repo_name bar
The repos.conf
configuration can be further extended with sync-type and sync-uri for overlays to get emerge --sync updating them automatically.
Let's see a real example of tree and overlays added.
/etc/portage/repos.conf
- Replacement repos.conf file[gentoo]
location = /usr/portage
sync-type = git
sync-uri = git://github.com/funtoo/ports-2012.git
[funtoo-overlay]
location = /root/git/funtoo-overlay
[funtoo-gnome]
location = /root/git/funtoo-gnome-overlay
funtoo-overlay and funtoo-gnome-overlay are an overlays added on top of regular portage tree. How to migrate? Portage ebuild is made to perform unattended migration. /etc/portage/repos.conf/gentoo.conf
automatically created. Also, it trying to detect existing overlays and change repos.conf
accordingly and ask users to run dispatch-conf
or etc-update
for configuration file update.