Source for building https://dist.ipfs.tech
Table of Contents
Clone the repo and use Docker via ./dockerized <cmd>
wrapper.
If you don't want to run ./dockerized
build, install
the following dependencies via your favorite package manager:
go
npm
(v7.13.0+ with nodejs v16.2.0+)jq
(v1.6+)ipfs
awk
There is a .tool-versions
file for the asdf version
manager, which the Docker build environment will also use.
There is a ./dockerize
script, you can run it without arguments and be in a
shell with the correct software installed in an Ubuntu 20.04 in a directory
that is mapped to the present working directory
Note that we use host networking so you must run an IPFS daemon locally as the build process assumes a fairly long-lived ipfs node has the CIDs (we give them to the collab cluster to pin)
You can also do ./dockerized <COMAND>
, for instance:
./dockerized make clean
./dockerized ./dist.sh add-version go-ipfs v0.9.0
./dockerized make publish
Note that you can't use bash in the command, so
./dockerized make clean && ./dist.sh go-ipfs add-version v0.9.0
# Does not work
and
./dockerized "make clean && ./dist.sh go-ipfs add-version v0.9.0"
# Does not work
Add a new version or a new distribution with ./dist.sh
then let CI run make publish
to update DNSLink at dist.ipfs.tech.
Run:
> ./dist.sh add-version <dist> <version>
This will add the version to dists/<dist>/versions
, set it as the current version in dists/<dist>/current
, and build it locally.
Example:
> ./dist.sh add-version fs-repo-99-to-100 v1.0.1
To produce a signed, official build for use in DNSLink at dist.ipfs.tech
:
- Run
./dist.sh add-version
locally. - Commit created changes to
dists/<dist>
and open a PR againstipfs/distributions
. - Wait for Github Action to finish PR build. It runs
./dockerized
build, then signs macOS binaries and spits out updated root CID at the end. - If everything looks good, merge PR and wait for CI running on
master
to update the DNSlink atdist.ipfs.tech
.
Run:
> ./dist.sh new-go-dist <dist> <git-repo> [sub_package]
And follow the prompts.
The optional sub_package
argument is used to specify a module within a repo. The script looks to see if the subpackage is tagged separately from the repo by looking for sub_package/version
tags. Example:
> ./dist.sh new-go-dist fs-repo-99-to-100 github.com/ipfs/fs-repo-migrations fs-repo-99-to-100
- If the distribution should not show up on the website (e.g. go-ipfs migrations) add a
no-site
file into thedists/<repo>
folder. - Manually create a repo-owner file
- Reminder that for submodules the version numbers will look like fs-repo-x-to-y/v1.0.0
To produce a CID (<NEW_HASH>
) that includes binaries for all versions defined in ./dists/
, in the root of the repository, run:
> make publish
- This will build any new binaries defined by dist and the website to the
releases
dir, add it to ipfs and patch it into the existing DAG for the published/ipns/dist.ipfs.tech
. - Versions that are already present on the website will be reused, speeding up the build.
- Updated CID (
<NEW_HASH>
) will be printed at the end. That's the new hash fordist.ipfs.tech
. We also append it to a file calledversions
in the repo root (not checked into git).
After the local build is done, make a quick inspection:
- Load the dists website in your browser to make sure everything looks right:
http://localhost:8080/ipfs/<NEW_HASH>
. - Compare
<NEW_HASH>
with the currentdist.ipfs.tech
to make sure nothing is amiss:ipfs object diff /ipns/dist.ipfs.tech /ipfs/<NEW_HASH>
Finally,
- Commit your changes and make a PR. Specifically, the changes to
dists/<dist>/versions
anddists/<dist>/current
. - Wait for Github Action on your PR to build signed binaries.
<NEW_SIGNED_HASH>
will be different than one from local build. - Confirm that Github Action triggered by
master
branch push updated the DNSLink fordist.ipfs.tech
.
The goal is to generate a file hierarchy that looks like this:
File | Description |
---|---|
releases/index.html |
listing of all bundles available |
releases/<dist> |
all versions of <dist> |
releases/<dist>/versions |
textual list of all versions of <dist> |
releases/<dist>/<version> |
dist version |
releases/<dist>/<version>/<dist>_<version>_<platform>.tar.gz |
archive for <platform> |
releases/<dist>/<version>/<dist>_<version>_<platform>.tar.gz.cid |
text file with CID of the archive |
releases/<dist>/<version>/<dist>_<version>_<platform>.tar.gz.sha512 |
text file with SHA-512 of the archive |
releases/<dist>/<version>/dist.json |
json file describing all archives in this release. |
releases/<dist>/<version>/build-info |
information about the build and build machine |
releases/<dist>/<version>/build-log-* |
logs from the platforms that failed to build. |
releases/<dist>/<version>/results |
list of platforms successfully built |
Definitions:
<dist>
is a distribution, meaning a program or library we release.<version>
is the version of the<dist>
.<platform>
is a supported platform of<dist>@<version>
So for example, if we had <dist>
go-ipfs
and fs-repo-migrations
, we might see a hierarchy like:
.
├── fs-repo-migrations
│ ├── v1.3.0
│ │ ├── build-info
│ │ ├── dist.json
│ │ ├── fs-repo-migrations_v1.3.0_darwin-386.tar.gz
│ │ ├── fs-repo-migrations_v1.3.0_darwin-amd64.tar.gz
│ │ ├── fs-repo-migrations_v1.3.0_freebsd-386.tar.gz
│ │ ├── fs-repo-migrations_v1.3.0_freebsd-amd64.tar.gz
│ │ ├── fs-repo-migrations_v1.3.0_freebsd-arm.tar.gz
│ │ ├── fs-repo-migrations_v1.3.0_linux-386.tar.gz
│ │ ├── fs-repo-migrations_v1.3.0_linux-amd64.tar.gz
│ │ ├── fs-repo-migrations_v1.3.0_linux-arm.tar.gz
│ │ ├── fs-repo-migrations_v1.3.0_windows-386.zip
│ │ ├── fs-repo-migrations_v1.3.0_windows-amd64.zip
│ │ └── results
│ └── versions
├── go-ipfs
│ ├── v0.4.9
│ │ ├── build-info
│ │ ├── build-log-freebsd-386
│ │ ├── build-log-freebsd-arm
│ │ ├── dist.json
│ │ ├── go-ipfs_v0.4.9_darwin-386.tar.gz
│ │ ├── go-ipfs_v0.4.9_darwin-amd64.tar.gz
│ │ ├── go-ipfs_v0.4.9_freebsd-amd64.tar.gz
│ │ ├── go-ipfs_v0.4.9_linux-386.tar.gz
│ │ ├── go-ipfs_v0.4.9_linux-amd64.tar.gz
│ │ ├── go-ipfs_v0.4.9_linux-arm.tar.gz
│ │ ├── go-ipfs_v0.4.9_windows-386.zip
│ │ ├── go-ipfs_v0.4.9_windows-amd64.zip
│ │ └── results
│ └── versions
└── index.html
85 directories, 943 files
We call this the distribution index, the listing of all distributions, their versions, and platform assets.
Running ./dockerized make publish
will produce binaries using the same
runtime as CI. The main difference between local build and official CI one is
signing step on platforms such as darwin
(macOS).
Signatures are attached at the end of macOS binaries, which means
*_darwin-*.tar.gz
produced by CI will have additional bytes when compared
with local build.
Issues and PRs welcome! Please check out the issues.
MIT © IPFS