There is a lot of context and state management needed when using
pmbootstrap, sometimes it can be a lot to keep in your head. Let's print
the output of "pmbootstrap status" when stuff goes wrong, this might
help remind people if e.g. their pmaports checkout is on the wrong
branch, or they're building for the wrong device.
Additionally, don't print the "run pmbootstrap log for details" message
if pmbootstrap was called with --details-to-stdout
Signed-off-by: Caleb Connolly <caleb@postmarketos.org>
Keeping the Config class in types seemed kinda weird and was just done
as a workaround to some cyclical imports. But now things are more in
shape let's move it to core.
Signed-off-by: Caleb Connolly <caleb@postmarketos.org>
Introduce a Deviceinfo class and use it rather than the dictionary. This
gives us sweet sweet autocomplete, and lays the foundation for having a
proper deviceinfo validator in the future.
Additionally, continue refactoring out args...
Signed-off-by: Caleb Connolly <caleb@postmarketos.org>
Cease merging pmbootstrap.cfg into args, implement a Context type to let
us pull globals out of thin air (as an intermediate workaround) and rip
args out of a lot of the codebase.
This is just a first pass, after this we can split all the state that
leaked over into Context into types with narrower scopes (like a
BuildContext(), etc).
Signed-off-by: Caleb Connolly <caleb@postmarketos.org>
Introduce a new module: pmb.core to contain explicitly typed pmbootstrap
API. The first component being Suffix and SuffixType. This explicitly
defines what suffixes are possible, future changes should aim to further
constrain this API (e.g. by validating against available device
codenames or architectures for buildroot suffixes).
Additionally, migrate the entire codebase over to using pathlib.Path.
This is a relatively new part of the Python standard library that uses a
more object oriented model for path handling. It also uses strong type
hinting and has other features that make it much cleaner and easier to
work with than pure f-strings. The Chroot class overloads the "/"
operator the same way the Path object does, allowing one to write paths
relative to a given chroot as:
builddir = chroot / "home/pmos/build"
The Chroot class also has a string representation ("native", or
"rootfs_valve-jupiter"), and a .path property for directly accessing the
absolute path (as a Path object).
The general idea here is to encapsulate common patterns into type hinted
code, and gradually reduce the amount of assumptions made around the
codebase so that future changes are easier to implement.
As the chroot suffixes are now part of the Chroot class, we also
implement validation for them, this encodes the rules on suffix naming
and will cause a runtime exception if a suffix doesn't follow the rules.
Reimplement "pmbootstrap status" to be just a simple and useful status
overview. The previous version ran a bunch of checks every time, and
would fail on these even if pmaports was used for normal development:
* "non-official" branch checked out in pmaports
* pmaports.git is not clean
The information about aports.git was also considered not so useful upon
revisiting this command, since it is only used for "pmbootstrap
aportgen". Most users don't need this, and if the user runs this
command, it will tell if aports.git is outdated.
All of the above made the previous version unpleasant to use and I
suspect most people stopped using the command after trying it out a few
times and seeing the irrelevant but loud NOK complaints.
New version:
$ pmbootstrap status
Channel: edge (pmaports: master_staging_systemd)
Device: qemu-amd64 (x86_64, kernel: virt)
UI: console
systemd: no (default for selected UI)
Old version (without --details it only shows NOK checks):
$ pmbootstrap status --details
[00:55:20] *** CONFIG ***
[00:55:20] Device: qemu-amd64 (x86_64, "QEMU amd64")
[00:55:20] Kernel: virt
[00:55:20] User Interface: console
[00:55:20]
[00:55:20] *** GIT REPOS ***
[00:55:20] Path: /home/user/.local/var/pmbootstrap/cache_git
[00:55:20] - aports_upstream (master)
[00:55:20] - pmaports (master)
[00:55:20]
[00:55:20] *** CHECKS ***
[00:55:20] [OK ] Chroots zapped recently (or non-existing)
[00:55:20] [OK ] aports_upstream: on official channel branch
[00:55:20] [OK ] aports_upstream: workdir is clean
[00:55:20] [OK ] aports_upstream: tracking proper remote branch 'origin/master'
[00:55:20] [OK ] aports_upstream: up to date with remote branch
[00:55:20] [OK ] aports_upstream: remote information updated recently (via git fetch/pull)
[00:55:20] [OK ] pmaports: on official channel branch
[00:55:20] [OK ] pmaports: workdir is clean
[00:55:20] [OK ] pmaports: tracking proper remote branch 'origin/master'
[00:55:20] [OK ] pmaports: up to date with remote branch
[00:55:20] [OK ] pmaports: remote information updated recently (via git fetch/pull)
[00:55:20]
[00:55:20] NOTE: chroot is still active (use 'pmbootstrap shutdown' as necessary)
[00:55:20] DONE!
Use the timestamp of .git/FETCH_HEAD in each git repository, to
determine if too much time has passed since the last fetch/pull.
Modify pmb.helpers.git.clone, so FETCH_HEAD is always created if it does
not exist (because "git clone" would not create it).
Related: #1829
Extend "pmbootstrap status" with checks for all git repositories,
derived from relevant checks in pmb.helpers.git.pull (using shared
code):
* on official branch
* workdir is clean
* tracking proper remote
* up to date
Related: #1829
Add new "pmbootstrap status" command, which does a quick health check
for the work dir. As first health check, verify that the chroots are not
too old. Replace the reminder text at the end of "pmbootstrap init" to
tell users to run "pmbootstrap status" instead of "pmbootstrap zap" once
a day before working with pmbootstrap.
Related: #1829