2007-5-27pbuilder User's Manualpbuilder-docUsage and operationsdocumentation in progressJunichiUekawaIntroducing pbuilderAims of pbuilderpbuilder stands for
Personal Builder, and it is an automatic Debian Package Building system
for personal development workstation environments.
pbuilder aims to be an
easy-to-setup system
for auto-building Debian packages inside a clean-room
environment, so that it is possible to verify that
a package can be built on most Debian installations.
The clean-room environment is achieved through the use of
a base chroot image,
so that only minimal packages will be installed inside the
chroot.
The Debian distribution consists of free software
accompanied with source.
The source code within Debian's "main" section
must build within Debian "main",
with only the explicitly specified build-dependencies
installed.
The primary aim of pbuilder is different from other
auto-building systems in Debian in that its aim is not
to try to build as many packages as possible.
It does not try to guess
what a package needs, and in most cases it tries the
worst choice of all if there is a choice to be made.
In this way, pbuilder tries to ensure
that packages
tested against pbuilder will build properly in
most Debian installations, hopefully resulting
in a good overall Debian source-buildability.
The goal of making Debian buildable from source is somewhat
accomplished, and has seen good progress. In the past age of
Debian 3.0, there were many problems when building from
source. More recent versions of Debian is much better.
Using pbuilder
There are several simple commands for operation.
pbuilder create, pbuilder
update, and pbuilder build commands
are the typical commands used. Let us look at the commands
one by one.
Creating a base chroot image tar-ballpbuilder create
will create a base chroot image tar-ball (base.tgz).
All other commands will operate on the resulting base.tgz
If the Debian release to be created within chroot is not going
to be "sid" (which is the default), the distribution code-name
needs to be specified with the
command-line option.
debootstrapdebootstrap or cdebootstrap can be chosen
is used to create
the bare minimum Debian installation,
and then build-essential packages are installed on top
of the minimum installation using apt-get
inside the chroot.
For fuller documentation of command-line options, see
the pbuilder.8 manual page.
Some configuration will be required for /etc/pbuilderrc
for the mirror site
The mirror site should preferably be
a local mirror or a cache server,
so as not to overload the public mirrors with
a lot of access.
Use of tools such as apt-proxy would be advisable.
to use, and proxy configuration may be required to allow access
through HTTP.
See the pbuilderrc.5 manual page for details.
Updating the base.tgzpbuilder update
will update the base.tgz.
It will extract the chroot, invoke apt-get update
and apt-get dist-upgrade inside the
chroot, and then recreate the base.tgz (the base tar-ball.)
It is possible to switch the distribution which the
base.tgz is targeted at at this point.
Specify to change the distribution
to sid.
Only upgrading is supported.
Debian does not generally support downgrading (yet?).
For fuller documentation of command-line options, see
the pbuilder.8 manual page
Building a package using the base.tgz
To build a package inside the chroot, invoke
pbuilder build .
pbuilder will extract
the base.tgz to a temporary working directory,
enter the directory with chroot,
satisfy the build-dependencies inside chroot,
and build the package.
The built packages will be moved to a
directory specified with
the
command-line option.
The option can be
used to specify which base.tgz to use.
pbuilder will extract a fresh base chroot
image from base.tgz. (base.tgz is created with
pbuilder create, and updated with
pbuilder update). The chroot is populated
with build-dependencies by parsing debian/control and invoking
apt-get.
For fuller documentation of command-line options, see
the pbuilder.8 manual page
Facilitating Debian Developers' typing, pdebuildpdebuild is a little wrapper
script that does the most frequent of all tasks.
A Debian Developer may try to do debuild, and
build a package, inside a Debian source directory.
pdebuild will allow similar
control, and allow package to be built inside the chroot,
to check that the current source tree will build happily
inside the chroot.
pdebuild calls dpkg-source
to build the source packages, and then invokes
pbuilder on the resulting source package.
However, unlike debuild, the resulting deb files will be
found in the
directory.
See the pdebuild.1 manual page for more details.
There is a slightly different mode of operation available
in pdebuild since version 0.97. pdebuild usually runs
debian/rules clean outside of the chroot;
however, it is possible to change the behaviour to run it
inside the chroot with
the .
It will try to bind mount the working directory inside chroot,
and run dpkg-buildpackage inside.
It has the following characteristics, and is not yet the
default mode of operation.
Satisfies build-dependency inside the chroot before creating source package.
(which is a good point that default pdebuild could not do).
The working directory is modified
from inside the chroot.Building with pdebuild does not guarantee
that it works with pbuilder.If making the source package fails,
the session using the chroot is wasted
(chroot creation takes a bit of time, which should be improved with cowdancer).Does not work in the same manner as it used to;
for example,
does not have any effect.The build inside chroot is ran with the current user outside chroot.
Configuration Files
It is possible to specify all settings by command-line
options. However, for typing convenience, it is possible to
use a configuration file.
/etc/pbuilderrc and
${HOME}/.pbuilderrc
are read in when pbuilder is invoked.
The possible options are documented in
the pbuilderrc.5 manual page.
It is useful to use option to load up a preset
configuration file when switching between configuration files for
different distributions.
Please note ${HOME}/.pbuilderrc supersede system settings. For
example, if you are upgrading from sarge to etch, you may need to
adjust some part of your local setting just like new
/usr/share/pbuilder/pbuilderrc, e.g., "unset DEBOOTSTRAPOPTS", to cope
with the use of cdebootstrap. The same care is needed if you edited
old system setting in /etc/pbuilderrc.
Building packages as non-root inside the chrootpbuilder requires full root privilege
when it is satisfying the build-dependencies, but most packages do not
need root privilege to build, or even refused to build when they are built as root.
pbuilder can create a user which is only used
inside pbuilder and use that user id when
building, and use the fakeroot command
when root privilege is required.
BUILDUSERID configuration option should be set to a value for a user id that
does not already exist on the system, so that it is more difficult for
packages that are being built with
pbuilder to affect the environment outside the chroot.
When BUILDUSERNAME configuration option is also set,
pbuilder will use the specified user name and fakeroot for building packages,
instead of running as root inside chroot.
Even when using the fakerooting method, pbuilder will run with
root privilege when it is required.
For example, when installing
packages to the chroot, pbuilder will run under root privilege.
To be able to invoke pbuilder without being
root, you need to use user-mode-linux, as explained
in .
Using pbuilder for back-portingpbuilder can be used for back-porting software from
the latest Debian distribution to
the older stable distribution, by using a chroot that contains
an image of the older distribution, and building packages inside the
chroot.
There are several points to consider, and due to the following reasons,
automatic back-porting is usually not possible, and
manual interaction is required:
The package from the unstable distribution
may depend on packages or versions of packages which
are only available in unstable.
Thus, it may not be possible to satisfy Build-Depends:
on stable (without additional backporting work).The stable distribution may have bugs that have been
fixed in unstable which need to be worked around.The package in the unstable distribution may have
problems building even on unstable.Mass-building packagespbuilder can be automated, because its operations are
non-interactive.
It is possible to run pbuilder through multiple packages
non-interactively.
Several such scripts are known to exist.
Junichi Uekawa has been running such a script since 2001,
and has been filing bugs on packages that fail the
test of pbuilder. There were several problems with auto-building:
Build-Dependencies need to install non-interactively, but
some packages are so broken that they cannot install
without interaction (like postgresql).When a library package breaks, or gcc/gcj/g++ breaks,
or even bison, a large number of build failures are reported.
(gcj-3.0 which had no "javac", bison which got more strict, etc.)
Some people were quite hostile against build failure reports.
Most of the initial bugs have been resolved in the pbuilder
sweep done around 2002, but these transitional problems which
affect a large portion of Debian Archive do arise from time to
time. Regression tests have their values.
A script that was used by Junichi Uekawa in the initial run is now included in
the pbuilder distribution, as pbuildd.sh.
It is available in /usr/share/doc/pbuilder/examples/pbuildd/
and its configuration is in /etc/pbuilder/pbuildd-config.sh.
It should be easy enough to set up for people who are used to
pbuilder. It has been running for quite a while, and it should be
possible to set the application up on your system also.
This version of the code is not the most tested, but should function as a starter.
To set up pbuildd, there are some points to be aware of.
A file ./avoidlist needs to be available with the list of packages to avoid building. It will try building anything, even packages
which are not aimed for your architecture.Because you are running random build scripts, it is better to use
the fakeroot option of pbuilder, to avoid running the build
under root privilege.Because not all builds are guaranteed to finish in a finite time,
setting a timeout is probably necessary, or pbuildd may stall with
a bad build.
Some packages require a lot of disk space,
around 2GB seems to be sufficient for the largest packages for the time being.
If you find otherwise, please inform the maintainer of this documentation.
Auto-backporting scripts
There are some people who use pbuilder to automatically back-port
a subset of packages to the stable distribution.
I would like some information on how people are doing it,
I would appreciate any feedback or information on
how you are doing, or any examples.
Using pbuilder for automated testing of packagespbuilder can be used for automated testing of packages.
It has the feature of allowing hooks to be placed,
and these hooks can try to install packages inside
the chroot, or run them, or whatever else that
can be done. Some known tests and ideas:
Automatic install-remove-upgrade-remove-install-purge-upgrade-purge test-suite (distributed as an example, B91dpkg-i),
or just check that everything installs somewhat (execute_installtest.sh).Automatically running lintian (distributed as an example in
/usr/share/doc/pbuilder/examples/B90lintian).Automatic debian-test of the package?
The debian-test package has been removed from Debian.
A pbuilder implementation can be found as
debian/pbuilder-test directory, implemented through B92test-pkg script.
To use B92test-pkg script, first, add it to your hook directory.
It is possible to specify --hookdir
/usr/share/doc/pbuilder/examples command-line
option to include all example hooks as
well..
The test files are shell scripts
placed in
debian/pbuilder-test/NN_name (where
NN is number) following run-parts standard See run-parts(8). For example, no '.' in file
names!
for file names. After a successful build, packages are first
tested for installation and removal, and then each test is ran
inside the chroot. The current directory is the top directory
of the source-code. This means you can expect to be able to
use ./debian/ directory from inside your scripts.
Example scripts for use with pbuilder-test can be found in
/usr/share/doc/pbuilder/examples/pbuilder-testUsing pbuilder for testing builds with alternate compilers
Most packages are compiled with gcc
or g++
and using the default compiler version, which was gcc 2.95 for Debian GNU/Linux 3.0 (i386).
However, Debian 3.0 was distributed with other compilers, under package names
such as gcc-3.2 for gcc compiler
version 3.2.
It was therefore possible to try compiling packages against different
compiler versions.
pentium-builder provides an infrastructure for
using a different compiler for building packages than the default gcc, by
providing a wrapper script called gcc which calls the real gcc.
To use pentium-builder in pbuilder, it is possible to set up the
following in the configuration:
EXTRAPACKAGES="pentium-builder gcc-3.2 g++-3.2"
export DEBIAN_BUILDARCH=athlon
export DEBIAN_BUILDGCCVER=3.2
It will instruct pbuilder to install the pentium-builder package
and also the GCC 3.2 compiler packages inside the chroot,
and set the environment variables required for
pentium-builder to function.
Using User-mode-linux with pbuilder
It is possible to use user-mode-linux by invoking
pbuilder-user-mode-linux instead of
pbuilder.
pbuilder-user-mode-linux doesn't require root
privileges, and it uses the copy-on-write (COW) disk access
method of User-mode-linux which typically
makes it much faster than the traditional
pbuilder.
User-mode-linux is a somewhat less proven
platform than the standard Unix tools which
pbuilder relies on
(chroot, tar, and
gzip) but mature enough to support
pbuilder-user-mode-linux since its version
0.59. And since then,
pbuilder-user-mode-linux has seen a rapid
evolution.
The configuration of pbuilder-user-mode-linux
goes in three steps:
Configuration of user-mode-linuxConfiguration of rootstrapConfiguration of pbuilder-umlConfiguring user-mode-linux
user-mode-linux isn't completely trivial to set up. It would
probably be useful to acquaint yourself with it a bit before
attempting to use rootstrap or
pbuilder-user-mode-linux. For details,
read
/usr/share/doc/uml-utilities/README.Debian
and the user-mode-linux documentation. (It's in a separate
package, user-mode-linux-doc.)
user-mode-linux requires
the user to be in the uml-net group in order to configure the network
unless you are using slirp.
If you compile your own kernel, you may want to
verify that you enable TUN/TAP support,
and you might want to consider the SKAS patch.
Configuring rootstraprootstrap
is a wrapper around debootstrap.
It creates a Debian disk image for use with UML.
To configure rootstrap, there are several requirements.
Install the rootstrap package.
TUN/TAP only:
add the user to the uml-net group to allow access to the network
adduser dancer uml-net
TUN/TAP only:
Check that the kernel supports the TUN/TAP interface,
or recompile the kernel if necessary.
Set up /etc/rootstrap/rootstrap.conf.
For example,
if the current host is 192.168.1.2, changing following
entries to something like this seems to work.
transport=tuntap
interface=eth0
gateway=192.168.1.1
mirror=http://192.168.1.2:8081/debian
host=192.168.1.198
uml=192.168.1.199
netmask=255.255.255.0
Some experimentation with configuration and running
rootstrap ~/test.uml to actually
test it would be handy.
Using slirp requires less configuration.
The default configuration comes with a working example.
Configuring pbuilder-uml
The following needs to happen:
Install the pbuilder-uml package.
Set up the configuration file
/etc/pbuilder/pbuilder-uml.conf
in the following manner. It will be different for slirp.
MY_ETH0=tuntap,,,192.168.1.198
UML_IP=192.168.1.199
UML_NETMASK=255.255.255.0
UML_NETWORK=192.168.1.0
UML_BROADCAST=255.255.255.255
UML_GATEWAY=192.168.1.1
PBUILDER_UML_IMAGE="/home/dancer/uml-image"
Also, it needs to match the rootstrap configuration.
Make sure BUILDPLACE is writable by the user.
Change BUILDPLACE in the configuration file to a place
where the user has access.
Run pbuilder-user-mode-linux to create the image.Try running pbuilder-user-mode-linux build.Considerations for running pbuilder-user-mode-linuxpbuilder-user-mode-linux emulates most of pbuilder, but there
are some differences.
pbuilder-user-mode-linux does not support all options of pbuilder
properly yet. This is a problem, and will be addressed as
specific areas are discovered.
/tmp is handled differently inside
pbuilder-user-mode-linux. In
pbuilder-user-mode-linux,
/tmp is mounted as tmpfs inside UML,
so accessing files under /tmp from
outside user-mode-linux does not work. It affects options
like , and
when trying to build packages placed under
/tmp.
Parallel running of pbuilder-user-mode-linux
To run pbuilder-user-mode-linux in parallel
on a system, there are a few things to bear in mind.
The create and update methods must not be run when
a build is in progress, or the COW file will be invalidated.
If you are not using slirp, user-mode-linux processes which are
running in parallel need to have different IP addresses.
Just trying to run the pbuilder-user-mode-linux
several times will result in failure to access the network.
But something like the following will work:
for IP in 102 103 104 105; do
xterm -e pbuilder-user-mode-linux build --uml-ip 192.168.0.$IP \
20030107/whizzytex_1.1.1-1.dsc &
done
When using slirp, this problem does not exist.
Using pbuilder-user-mode-linux as a wrapper script to start up a virtual machine
It is possible to use
pbuilder-user-mode-linux for other uses
than just building Debian packages.
pbuilder-user-mode-linux
will let a user use a shell
inside the user-mode-linux pbuilder base
image, and pbuilder-user-mode-linux
will allow the user to
execute a script inside the image.
You can use the script to install ssh and add a new user,
so that it is possible to access inside the user-mode-linux through ssh.
Note that it is not possible to use a script from
/tmp due to the way
pbuilder-user-mode-linux mounts a tmpfs at
/tmp.
The following example script may be useful in starting a sshd
inside user-mode-linux.
#!/bin/bash
apt-get install -y ssh xbase-clients xterm
echo "enter root password"
passwd
cp /etc/ssh/sshd_config{,-}
sed 's/X11Forwarding.*/X11Forwarding yes/' /etc/ssh/sshd_config- > /etc/ssh/sshd_config
/etc/init.d/ssh restart
ifconfig
echo "Hit enter to finish"
read
Frequently asked questions
Here, known problems and frequently asked questions are
documented. This portion was initially available in README.Debian
file, but moved here.
pbuilder create fails
It often happens that pbuilder cannot create the latest chroot.
Try upgrading pbuilder and debootstrap.
It is currently only possible to create software that handles the
past. Future prediction is a feature which may be added later after
we have become comfortable with the past.
There are people who occasionally back port debootstrap to stable
versions; hunt for them.
When there are errors with the debootstrap phase,
the debootstrap script needs to be fixed.
pbuilder does not provide a way to work around debootstrap.
Directories that cannot be bind-mounted
Because of the way pbuilder works, there
are several directories which cannot be bind-mounted when
running pbuilder. The directories include
/tmp,
/var/cache/pbuilder, and system
directories such as /etc and
/usr. The recommendation is to use
directories under the user's home directory for bind-mounts.
Logging in to pbuilder to investigate build failure
It is possible to invoke a shell session after a build
failure. Example hook script are provided as
C10shell and
C11screen scripts. C10shell script will
start bash inside chroot, and C11screen script will start GNU
screen inside the chroot.
Logging in to pbuilder to modify the environment
It is sometimes necessary to modify the chroot environment.
login will remove the contents of the chroot after logout.
It is possible to invoke a shell using hook scripts.
pbuilder update executes 'E' scripts,
and a sample for invoking a shell
is provided as C10shell.
$ mkdir ~/loginhooks
$ cp C10shell ~/loginhooks/E10shell
$ sudo pbuilder update --hookdir ~/loginhooks/E10shell
It is also possible to add
and/or options
to the pbuilder login session
to accomplish the goal.
It is possible to add the option
to pbuilder-user-mode-linux session
as well.
Setting BUILDRESULTUID for sudo sessions
It is possible to set
BUILDRESULTUID=$SUDO_UID in pbuilderrc to set
the proper BUILDRESULTUID when using sudo.
Notes on usage of $TMPDIR
If you are setting $TMPDIR to an unusual value, of other than
/tmp, you will find that some errors may occur inside the chroot,
such as dpkg-source failing.
There are two options, you may install a hook to create that
directory, or set
export TMPDIR=/tmp
in pbuilderrc. Take your pick.
An example script is provided as
examples/D10tmp with pbuilder.
Creating a shortcut for running pbuilder with a specific distribution
When working with multiple chroots, it would be nice to work
with scripts that reduce the amount of typing. An example
script pbuilder-distribution.sh is
provided as an example. Invoking the script as
pbuilder-etch will invoke
pbuilder with a etch chroot.
Using environmental variables for running pbuilder
for specific distribution
This sectionThis part of the documentation contributed by Andres Mejia
This example was taken from a wiki (https://wiki.ubuntu.com/PbuilderHowto).
describes briefly a way to setup and use multiple pbuilder setups
by creating a pbuilderrc configuration in your home path ($HOME/.pbuilderrc)
and using the variable "DIST" when running pbuilder or pdebuild.
First, setup $HOME/.pbuilderrc to look like:
if [ -n "${DIST}" ]; then
BASETGZ="`dirname $BASETGZ`/$DIST-base.tgz"
DISTRIBUTION="$DIST"
BUILDRESULT="/var/cache/pbuilder/$DIST/result/"
APTCACHE="/var/cache/pbuilder/$DIST/aptcache/"
fi
Then, whenever you wish to use pbuilder for a particular distro, assign a value
to "DIST" that is one of the distros available for Debian or any Debian based
distro you happen to be running (i.e. whatever is found under
/usr/lib/debootstrap/scripts).
Here's some examples on running pbuilder or pdebuild:
DIST=gutsy sudo pbuilder create
DIST=sid sudo pbuilder create --mirror http://http.us.debian.org/debian
DIST=gutsy sudo pbuilder create \
--othermirror "deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu gutsy universe \
multiverse"
DIST=gutsy sudo pbuilder update
DIST=sid sudo pbuilder update --override-config --mirror \
http://http.us.debian.org/debian \
--othermirror "deb http://http.us.debian.org/debian sid contrib non-free"
DIST=gutsy pdebuild
Using special apt sources lists, and local packages
If you have some very specialised requirements on your
apt setup inside pbuilder,
it is possible to specify that through
the
option.
Try something like:
To use the local file system instead of HTTP, it is necessary to do
bind-mounting.
is a command-line option useful for such cases.
It might be convenient to use your built packages from inside the chroot.
It is possible to automate the task with the following configuration.
First, set up pbuilderrc to bindmount your build results directory.
BINDMOUNTS="/var/cache/pbuilder/result"
Then, add the following hook
# cat /var/cache/pbuilder/hooks/D70results
#!/bin/sh
cd /var/cache/pbuilder/result/
/usr/bin/dpkg-scanpackages . /dev/null > /var/cache/pbuilder/result/Packages
/usr/bin/apt-get update
This way, you can use deb file:/var/cache/pbuilder/resultHow to get pbuilder to run apt-get update before trying to satisfy build-dependency
You can use hook scripts for this.
D scripts are run before satisfying build-dependency.
This snippet comes from Ondrej Sury.
Different bash prompts inside pbuilder login
To make distinguishing bash prompts inside
pbuilder easier, it is possible to set
environment variables such as PS1 inside
pbuilderrc
With versions of bash more recent than 2.05b-2-15,
the value of the debian_chroot variable, if set,
is included in the value of PS1 (the Bash prompt)
inside the chroot.
In prior versions of bash,Versions of bash from and before Debian 3.0
setting PS1 in pbuilderrc worked.
example of debian_chroot
export debian_chroot="pbuild$$"
example of PS1
export PS1="pbuild chroot 32165 # "
Creating a chroot reminder
Bash prompts will help you remember that you are inside a
chroot. There are other cases where you may want other signs
of being inside a chroot. Check out the
examples/F90chrootmemo hook script. It
will create a file called /CHROOT inside
your chroot.
Using /var/cache/apt/archives for the package cache
For the help of low-bandwidth systems, it is possible to use
/var/cache/apt/archives as the package
cache. Just specify it instead of the default
/var/cache/pbuilder/aptcache.
It is however not possible to do so currently with the
user-mode-linux version of pbuilder,
because /var/cache/apt/archives is
usually only writable by root.
Use of dedicated tools such as apt-proxy is recommended, since
caching of packages would benefit the system outside the scope
of pbuilder.
pbuilder back ported to stable Debian releases
Currently stable back port of pbuilder is avialable at backports.org.
Warning about LOGNAME not being defined
You might see a lot of warning messages when running pbuilder.
dpkg-genchanges: warning: no utmp entry available and LOGNAME not defined; using uid of process (1234)
It is currently safe to ignore this warning message. Please
report back if you find any problem with having LOGNAME unset.
Setting LOGNAME caused a few problems when invoking
chroot. For example, dpkg requires getpwnam
to succeed inside chroot, which means LOGNAME and the related
user information have to be set up inside chroot.
Cannot Build-conflict against an essential packagepbuilder does not currently allow Build-Conflicts against
essential packages.
It should be obvious that essential packages should not be
removed from a working Debian system, and a source
package should not try to force removal of such packages
on people building the package.
Avoiding the "ln: Invalid cross-device link" message
By default, pbuilder uses hard links to
manage the pbuilder package cache. It is
not possible to make hard links across different devices; and
thus this error will occur, depending on your set up. If this
happens, set APTCACHEHARDLINK=no in your
pbuilderrc file.
Using fakechroot
It is possible to use fakechroot instead of
being root to run pbuilder; however,
several things make this impractical.
fakechroot overrides library loads and
tries to override default libc functions when providing the
functionality of virtual chroot. However,
some binaries do no use libc to function, or override the
overriding provided by fakechroot. One
example is ldd. Inside
fakechroot, ldd will
check the library dependency outside of the chroot, which is
not the expected behaviour.
To work around the problem, debootstrap has a
option. Use that, so
that ldd and ldconfig are overridden.
Make sure you have set your LD_PRELOAD path correctly, as described in
the fakechroot manpage.
Using debconf inside pbuilder sessions
To use debconf inside pbuilder, setting DEBIAN_FRONTEND to
readline in pbuilderrc should work.
Setting it to dialog should also work, but make sure
whiptail or dialog is installed inside the chroot.
nodev mount options hinder pbuilder activity
If you see messages such as this when building a chroot, you are mounting the file system with
the nodev option.
/var/lib/dpkg/info/base-files.postinst: /dev/null: Permission denied
You will also have problems if you mount the file system with
the noexec option, or nosuid.
Make sure you do not have these flags set when mounting the file system for
/var/cache/pbuilder or $BUILDPLACE.
This is not a problem when using user-mode-linux.
See
316135
for example.
pbuilder is slowpbuilder is often slow. The slowest part of
pbuilder is extracting the tar.gz every
time pbuilder is invoked. That can be
avoided by using pbuilder-user-mode-linux.
pbuilder-user-mode-linux uses COW file
system, and thus does not need to clean up and recreate the
root file system.
pbuilder-user-mode-linux is slower in
executing the actual build system, due to the usual
user-mode-linux overhead for system
calls. It is more friendly to the hard drive.
pbuilder with cowdancer is also an
alternative that improves speed of pbuilder startup.
Using pdebuild to sponsor package
To sign a package marking for sponsorship, it is possible to
use and
options of
pdebuild.
pdebuild XXXXXXXXWhy is there a source.changes file in ../?
When running pdebuild, pbuilder will run dpkg-buildpackage to create a
Debian source package to pass it on to pbuilder.
File named XXXX_YYY_source.changes is what remains from that process.
It is harmless unless you try to upload it to the Debian archive.
This behaviour is different when running through
amd64 and i386-mode
amd64 architectures are capable of running binaries in i386
mode. It is possible to use pbuilder to
run packages, using linux32 and
debootstrap option.
Specifically, a command-line option like the following will
work.
pbuilder create --distribution sid --debootstrapopts --arch --debootstrapopts i386 \
--basetgz /var/cache/pbuilder/base-i386.tgz --mirror http://ftp.jp.debian.org/debianlinux32 pbuilder build --basetgz /var/cache/pbuilder/base-i386.tgzHow to use ccache
To use ccache with
pbuilder, use the following for
configuration. Note that the directory used for CCACHE_DIR
needs to exist, and be writable by user within chroot. The
default user within chroot is uid=1234.
Example is provided as pbuilderrc.ccache.
export CCACHE_DIR="/var/cache/pbuilder/ccache"
export PATH="/usr/lib/ccache:${PATH}"
EXTRAPACKAGES=ccache
BINDMOUNTS="${CCACHE_DIR}"
This entry created thanks to a blog posting.
Using tmpfs for buildplace
To improve speed of operation, it is possible to use tmpfs for
pbuilder build location. Mount tmpfs to
/var/cache/pbuilder/build, and set
APTCACHEHARDLINK=no.
Using svn-buildpackage together with pbuilder
pdebuild command can be used with svn-buildpackage
--svn-builder command-line option.
Zack has posted an example on his blog.
alias svn-cowbuilder="svn-buildpackage --svn-builder='pdebuild --pbuilder cowbuilder"
Troubleshooting and developmentReporting bugs
To report bugs, it would be important to have a log of what's
going wrong. Most of the time, adding a
option and
re-running the session should do the trick. Please send the
log of such session along with your problem to ease the
debugging process.
Mailing list
There is a mailing list for pbuilder on
alioth (pbuilder-maint@lists.alioth.debian.org). You can
subscribe through the alioth web interface.
http://alioth.debian.org/mail/?group_id=30778.
IRC Channel
For coordination and communication,
IRC channel #pbuilder on irc.oftc.net is used.
Please log your intent there when you are going to
start doing some changes and committing some change.
Information for pbuilder developers
This section tries to document current development practices
and how things generally operate in development.
pbuilder is co-maintained with resources
provided by Alioth.
There is an Alioth project page at
http://alioth.debian.org/projects/pbuilder.
Home page is also available,
at
http://alioth.debian.org/projects/pbuilder
which shows this text.
git repository is available through http, git, or (if you have an
account on alioth, ) ssh.
git-clone git://git.debian.org/git/pbuilder/pbuilder.git
git-clone http://git.debian.org/git/pbuilder/pbuilder.git
git-clone ssh://git.debian.org/git/pbuilder/pbuilder.git
Test-suites are available in ./testsuite/ directory.
Changes are expected not to break the test-suites.
./run-test.sh is a basic test-suite, which puts a summary in
run-test.log, and run-test-cdebootstrap.log.
./run-test-regression.sh is a regression test-suite,
which puts the result in run-test-regression.log.
Currently, run-test.sh is ran automatically daily to ensure that pbuilder is working.
Directory structure of the testsuiteDirectoryMeaning./testsuite/Directory for testsuite./testsuite/run-test.shDaily regression test to test against Debian Archive changes breaking pbuilder../testsuite/run-test.logA summary of testsuite./testsuite/normal/Directory for testsuite results of running pbuilder with debootstrap./testsuite/cdebootstrap/Directory for testsuite results of running pbuilder with cdebootstrap./testsuite/run-regression.shRegression testsuite, ran every time change is made to pbuilder to make sure there is no regression../testsuite/run-regression.logSummary of test result./testsuite/regression/BugID-*.shRegression tests, exit 0 for success, exit 1 for failure./testsuite/regression/BugID-*Files used for the regression testsuite../testsuite/regression/log/BugID-*.sh.logOutput of the regression test, output from the script is redirected by run-regression.sh
When making changes, a description of the change targeted at
developers should be documented in
ChangeLogChangeLog is edited using emacs ChangeLog mode., and committed. A brief
summary of the change targeting end users should be documented
in debian/changelog, so that users can
see them.
It is important to note that the description of
debian/changelog is targeted at users,
and ChangeLog is targeted at developers.
For git commit messages, a cut-n-paste of
ChangeLog diff should be enough.
A TODO file is available in debian/TODO.
It's mostly not well-maintained, but hopefully it will be more
up-to-date when people start using it. emacs todoo-mode is
used in editing the file.
When releasing a new version of pbuilder,
the version is tagged with the git tag
X.XXX (version number).
This is done with ./git-tag.sh script available in the source tree.
Other uses of pbuilderUsing pbuilder for small experiments
There are cases when some small experimenting is required, and
you do not want to damage the main system,
like when installing experimental library packages,
or compiling with experimental compilers.
For such cases, the pbuilder login command is available.
pbuilder login is a debugging feature for
pbuilder itself, but it also allows users to have a temporary chroot.
Note that the chroot is cleaned after logging out of the shell,
and mounting file systems inside it is considered harmful.
Running little programs inside the chroot
To facilitate using pbuilder for other uses,
pbuilder execute is available.
pbuilder execute will take a script
specified in the command-line argument, and
invoke the script inside the chroot.
The script can be useful for sequences of operations such as
installing ssh and adding a new user inside the chroot.
Experimental or wish-list features of pbuilder
There are some advanced features, above that of the
basic feature of pbuilder, for some specific purposes.
Using LVM
LVM2 has a useful snapshot function that features Copy-on-write images.
That could be used for pbuilder just as it can be used for
the user-mode-linux pbuilder port.
lvmpbuilder script in the examples directory implements such port.
The scripts and documentation can be found under
/usr/share/doc/pbuilder/examples/lvmpbuilder/Using cowdancercowdancer allows copy-on-write semantics on
file system using hard links and hard-link-breaking-on-write
tricks. pbuilder using
cowdancer seems to be much faster and it is
one ideal point for improvement.
cowbuilder, a wrapper for
pbuilder for using
cowdancer is available from
cowdancer package since 0.14
Example command-lines for cowbuilder look like the following.
# cowbuilder --create --distribution sid
# cowbuilder --update --distribution sid
# cowbuilder --build XXX.dsc
It is also possible to use cowdancer with pdebuild command.
Specify with command-line option
or set it in PDEBUILD_PBUILDER configuration option.
$ pdebuild --pbuilder cowbuilder
Using cowdancer for sarge
This section is mostly obsolete now that etch is released,
but left for reference, and will be removed after lenny
release.
cowdancer was introduced after the release of Debian sarge;
if you want to build packages for sarge with cowbuilder, you
will need to workaround its unavailability.
One way to workaround the problem is to set APTCONFDIR in pbuilderrc
to point to a directory with a list of sources for APT which has both
sarge and sarge-backports.
$ cat sources.list
# sarge-backports
deb http://www.backports.org/debian sarge-backports main
deb-src http://www.backports.org/debian sarge-backports main
# sarge
deb http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian sarge main
deb-src http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian sarge main
It is recommended to "Pin" the cowdancer package appropriately in
this case, via the APT preferences mechanism.
$ cat preferences
Explanation: use cowdancer from backports
Package: cowdancer
Pin: release a=sarge-backports
Pin-Priority: 950
Using pbuilder without tar.gz
The
option of pbuilder
will allow usage of pbuilder in a different way
from conventional usage.
It will try to use an existing chroot,
and will not try to clean up after
working on it.
It is an operation mode more like
sbuild.
It should be possible to create base chroot images
for dchroot with the following commands:
# pbuilder create --distribution etch --no-targz --basetgz /chroot/etch
# pbuilder create --distribution lenny --no-targz --basetgz /chroot/lenny
# pbuilder create --distribution sid --no-targz --basetgz /chroot/sid
Using pbuilder in a vserver
It is possible to use pbuilder in a vserver
environment. This requires either vserver-patches in version 2.1.1-rc14
or higher, or a Linux kernel version 2.6.16 or higher.
To use pbuilder in a vserver, you need to set the
secure_mountCAPS in the
ccapabilities of this vserver.
Reference materialsDirectory structure outside the chroot
Directory Structure outside the chroot DirectoryMeaning/etc/pbuilderrcconfiguration file/usr/share/pbuilder/pbuilderrcDefault configuration/var/cache/pbuilder/base.tgzDefault location pbuilder uses for base.tgz, the tar-ball containing a basic Debian installation
with only the build-essential packages.
/var/cache/pbuilder/build/PID/Default location pbuilder uses for chroot/var/cache/pbuilder/aptcacheDefault location pbuilder will use as apt cache, to store deb packages required during pbuilder build./var/cache/pbuilder/resultDefault location pbuilder puts the deb files and other files created after build/var/cache/pbuilder/pbuilder-umlresultDefault location pbuilder-user-mode-linux puts the deb files and other files created after build /var/cache/pbuilder/pbuilder-mntDefault location pbuilder-user-mode-linux uses for mounting the COW file system, for chrooting./tmppbuilder-user-mode-linux will mount tmpfs for work.${HOME}/tmp/PID.cowpbuilder-user-mode-linux use this directory for location of COW file system.${HOME}/uml-imagepbuilder-user-mode-linux use this directory for user-mode-linux full disk image.
Directory structure inside the chroot
Directory Structure inside the chroot DirectoryMeaning/etc/mtab
symlink to /proc/mounts.
/tmp/builddDefault place used in pbuilder
to place the Debian package to be processed.
/tmp/buildd/packagename-version/
will be the root directory of the package being
processed. HOME environment variable is set to this
value inside chroot by pbuilder-buildpackage
/runThe
script passed as an argument to
pbuilder execute is passed on.
/tmp/hooks
The location of hooks.
/var/cache/apt/archivespbuilder copies the content of this directory to and from
the aptcache directory of outside chroot.
/tmp/XXXXpbuilder-user-mode-linux uses
a script in /tmp to bootstrap into
user-mode-linux
Minor archaeological detailsDocumentation history
This document was started on 28 Dec 2002 by
Junichi Uekawa, trying to document what is known
about pbuilder.
This documentation is available from the pbuilder source tar-ball,
and from the git repository of pbuilder (web-based access is possible).
A copy of this documentation can be found on the
Alioth project page for pbuilder.
There is also a PDF version.
The homepage for pbuilder is
http://pbuilder.alioth.debian.org/
hosted by alioth project.
Documentation is written using DocBook XML,
with emacs PSGML mode, and using wysidocbookxml for live
previewing.
Possibly inaccurate Background History of pbuilder
The following is a most possibly inaccurate account of how
pbuilder came to happen, and other attempts to
make something like pbuilder happen.
This part of the document was originally in the AUTHORS file,
to give credit to those who existed before pbuilder.
The Time Before pbuilder
There was once dbuild, which was a shell script to build
Debian packages from source. Lars Wirzenius wrote that
script, and it was good, short, and simple (probably).
There was nothing like build-depends then (I think), and it was simple.
It could have been improved, I could only find references and no actual source.
debbuild was probably written by James Troup. I don't know it
because I have never seen the actual code, I could only find some
references to it on the net, and mailing list logs.
sbuild is a perl script to build Debian packages from source.
It parses Build-Depends, and performs other miscellaneous checks,
and has a lot of hacks to actually get things building,
including a table of what package to use when virtual packages are
specified (does it do that still?).
It supports the use of a local database for packages which do not
have build-dependencies. It was written by Ronan Hodek,
and I think it was patched and fixed and extended by
several people. It is part of wanna-build, and used extensively
in the Debian buildd system. I think it was maintained
mostly by Ryan Murray.
Birth of pbuilder
wanna-build (sbuild) was (at the time of year 2001) quite
difficult to set up, and it was never a Debian
package. dbuild was something that predated Build-Depends.
Building packages from source using Build-Depends
information within a chroot sounded trivial; and
pbuilder was born. It was initially a shell script
with only a few lines, which called debootstrap
and chroot and dpkg-buildpackage in the same run,
but soon, it was decided that that's too slow.
Yes, and it took almost an year to get things somewhat
right, and in the middle of the process, Debian 3.0
was released. Yay.
Debian 3.0 wasn't completely buildable with pbuilder,
but the amount of packages which are not buildable
is steadily decreasing. (I hope)
And the second year of its life
Someone wanted pbuilder to not run as
root, and as User-mode-linux has become more useful as time
passed, I've started experimenting with
pbuilder-user-mode-linux.
pbuilder-user-mode-linux has not stayed
functional as much as I would have liked, and bootstrapping
user-mode-linux environment has been
pretty hard, due to the quality of user-mode-linux code or
packaging at that time, which kept on breaking network
support in one way or the other.
Fifth year of pbuilderpbuilder is now widely adopted as a 'almost standard' tool
for testing packages, and building packages in a pristine
environment. There are other similar tools that do similar
tasks, but they do not share the exact same goal. To
commemorate this fact, pbuilder is now co-maintained with
several people.
sbuild is now a well-maintained Debian package within
Debian, and with pbuilder being such a slow monster, some
people prefer the approach of sbuild. Development to use
LVM-snapshots, cowloop, or cowdancer is hoped to improve the
situation somewhat.