Buildbot Setup for Solaris Sparc
Setting up a BuildBot slave on Solaris
NOTE #1: It would probably make sense to create a seperate zone for the buildbot on your Solaris 10 system. That is left up to you!
NOTE #2: You might need to install the Zope Interface package for some of the Python pieces to work properly. Do this after installing Python 2.5. You can find information on the Zope Interface on their site.
Solaris 10 (SPARC)
Unless you want to spend time optimizing the underlying Solaris 10 (SPARC) installation, it is strongly suggested that you choose the "Entire" Software Group during the installation process. Once you have your Solaris 10 (SPARC) system on the network and able to access the Internet you can use the following suggestions to setup your buildbot:
- By default Solaris 10 comes packages with Python 2.6.x. For compatibility reasons, you need to install Python 2.5.x. The author found it easiest to use Sunfreeware (ftp://ftp.sunfreeware.com/pub/freeware/sparc/5.10/):
$ cd /tmp $ ftp ftp.sunfreeware.com Name: anonymous Password: (your email address) ftp> bin ftp> cd pub/freeware/sparc/5.10/ ftp> get python-2.5.4-sol10-sparc-local.gz ftp> quit $ gunzip python-2.5.4-sol10-sparc-local.gz $ pkgadd -d python-2.5.4-sol10-sparc-local
If you are unfamiliar with howto install packages from Sunfreeware please read their howto. - Setup your environment:
- Create a user:
$ useradd -d /export/home/buildbot -m buildbot
It is imperative that you not use Bash as the buildbot user's shell. It could have been a dependency issue but I literally spent several days trying to solve why the buildbot wasn't checking out code with bzr only to discover that using the default Solaris shell fixed the problem. If someone comes up with a solution please let us know on the mailing list. - Adjust the global profile (you could be more granular here but since I'm
setting up a dedicated system I wasn't):
$ vi /etc/profile LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/csw/lib:/usr/local/lib:/usr/sfw/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH # Add required libraries PYTHONPATH=/usr/local/lib/python2.5/site-packages:$PYTHONPATH # Makes Python 2.5 the default PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/etc:/usr/sfw/bin:$PATH # Puts "local" packages in your path export LOGNAME PATH PYTHONPATH LD_LIBRARY_PATH
- Create a user:
- Install the latest Twisted:
$ wget tmrc.mit.edu/mirror/twisted/Twisted/9.0/Twisted-9.0.0.tar.bz2 $ bunzip2 Twisted-9.0.0.tar.bz2 $ tar -xf Twisted-9.0.0.tar $ cd Twisted-9.0.0 $ python setup.py build install
- Install required packages from Sunfreeware:
automake, autoconf, gcc, m4, md5, openssl, libsigsegv, Tcl, Tk, perl, libtool, sed, libgcc, gcc, libintl, libiconv, zlib, binutils, groff, cmake
- Install the Bazaar DVCS:
- You can find a package on Google Code.
- Install the latest Bazaar for Solaris 10. At the time of this writing it was 1.14.1: http://bzrunix.googlecode.com/files/bzr-1.14.1-sol10-sparc-local.gz .
- Volunteer your buildbot to the Maria team. Follow the directions listed in the Volunteering to run a build slave section of the About Buildbot page.
- Create the buildbot as the buildbot user:
buildbot create-slave --usepty=0 /export/home/buildbot/maria-slave hasky.askmonty.org:9989 ${buildbotname} <passwd>
Replace ${buildbotname} with the buildbot name you received from the MariaDB developers. Replace <passwd> with the password they gave you. You can adjust these and other parameters anytime within the maria-slave/buildbot.tac file at anytime in the future. - Create a shared Bazaar repository in the buildbot build directory:
HOME=/export/home/buildbot; bzr init-repo maria-slave/${buildbotname}
Replace ${buildbotname} like you did in Step #7. - Attach the buildbot to the master (this assumes you are not logged in as buildbot):
sudo su - buildbot -c "/usr/bin/buildbot start /export/home/buildbot/maria-slave"
OPTIONAL: You can create a proper service by following (and modifying as necessary) these directions - Please ask on the #maria IRC channel on irc.freenode.net if you have problems or questions setting up your buildbot. Or ask on the on the maria-developers mailing list.
- Check the status of your buildbot through the BuildBot buildslaves page.
This howto was contributed by Adam Dutko. The original version is here.