Skip to content

zelinh/opensearch-build

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

OpenSearch Build

python groovy manifests codecov

Releasing OpenSearch

Please refer to the release process document for detailed information on how to release the OpenSearch and OpenSearch Dashboards software.

Releases and Versions

The OpenSearch project releases as versioned distributions of OpenSearch, OpenSearch Dashboards, and the OpenSearch plugins. It follows semantic versioning. Software, such as Data Prepper, clients, and the Logstash output plugin, are versioned independently of the OpenSearch Project. They also may have independent releases from the main project distributions. The OpenSearch Project may also release software under alpha, beta, release candidate, and generally available labels. The definition of when to use these labels is derived from the Wikipedia page on Software release lifecycle. Below is the definition of when to use each label.

Release labels:

  • Alpha - The code is released with instructions to build. Built distributions of the software may not be available. Some features many not be complete. Additional testing and development work is planned. Distributions will be postfixed with -alphaX where "X" is the number of the alpha version (e.g., "2.0-alpha1").
  • Beta - Built distributions of the software are available. All features are completed. Additional testing and development work is planned. Distributions will be postfixed with -betaX where "X" is the number of the beta version (e.g., "2.0.0-beta1").
  • Release Candidate - Built distributions of the software are available. All features are completed. Code is tested and minimal validation remains. At this stage the software is potentially stable and will release unless significant bugs emerge. Distributions will be postfixed with -rcX where "X" is the number of the release candidate version (e.g., "2.0.0-rc1").
  • Generally Available - Built distributions of the software are available. All features are completed and documented. All testing is completed. Distributions for generally available versions are not postfixed with an additional label (e.g., "2.0.0").

Onboarding a New Plugin

Plugin owners can follow the Onboarding Process to onboard their plugins to the release process.

Building and Testing an OpenSearch Distribution

See wiki

Testing the Distribution

See wiki

Signing Artifacts

For all types of signing within OpenSearch project we use opensearch-signer-client (in progress of being open-sourced) which is a wrapper around internal signing system and is only available for authenticated users. The input requires a path to the build manifest or directory containing all the artifacts or a single artifact.

Usage:

./sign.sh builds/opensearch/manifest.yml

The tool currently supports following platforms for signing.

PGP

Anything can be signed using PGP signing eg: tarball, any type of file, etc. A .sig file will be returned containing the signature. OpenSearch and OpenSearch dashboards distributions, components such as data prepper, etc. as well as maven artifacts are signed using PGP signing. See this page for how to verify signatures.

Windows

Windows signing can be used to sign windows executables such as .msi, .msp, .msm, .cab, .dll, .exe, .appx, .appxbundle, .msix, .msixbundle, .sys, .vxd, .ps1, .psm1, and any PE file that is supported by Signtool.exe. Various windows artifacts such as SQL OBDC, opensearch-cli, etc are signed using this method. Windows code signing uses EV (Extended Validated) code signing certificates.

Types of signing/Details Digest Cipher Key Size
PGP SHA1 AES-128 2048
Windows SHA256 RSA
RPM SHA512 RSA 4096

Signing RPM artifacts

RPM artifacts are signed via a legacy shell script which uses a macros template. See this commit for more information and this issue to add RPM artifact signing functionality to the above signing system. Currently we are only signing OpenSearch and OpenSearch dashboards RPM distributions using this method.

See src/sign_workflow for more information.

Making a Release

Releasing for Linux and Windows

The Linux / Windows release is managed by a team at Amazon following this release template (e.g. opensearch-build#2649).

Releasing for FreeBSD

The FreeBSD ports and packages for OpenSearch are managed by a community OpenSearch Team at FreeBSD. When a new release is rolled out, this team will update the port and commit it to the FreeBSD ports tree. Anybody is welcome to help the team by providing patches for upgrading the ports following the FreeBSD Porter's Handbook instructions.

Releasing for macOS

At this moment there's no official macOS distribution. However, this project does support building and assembling OpenSearch for macOS. See opensearch-build#37 and #38 for more details.

Utilities

Checking Out Source

The checkout workflow checks out source code for a given manifest for further examination.

./checkout.sh manifests/1.3.0/opensearch-1.3.0.yml

See src/checkout_workflow for more information.

Cross-Platform Builds

You can perform cross-platform builds. For example, build and assemble a Windows distribution on macOS.

export JAVA_HOME=$(/usr/libexec/java_home) # required by OpenSearch install-plugin during assemble
./build.sh manifests/1.3.0/opensearch-1.3.0.yml --snapshot --platform windows
./assemble.sh builds/opensearch/manifest.yml

This will produce dist/opensearch-1.3.0-SNAPSHOT-windows-x64.zip on Linux and macOS.

Sanity Checking the Bundle

This workflow runs sanity checks on every component present in the bundle, executed as part of the manifests workflow in this repository. It ensures that the component GitHub repositories are correct and versions in those components match the OpenSearch version.

The following example sanity-checks components in the OpenSearch 1.3.0 manifest.

./ci.sh manifests/1.3.0/opensearch-1.3.0.yml --snapshot

See src/ci_workflow for more information.

Auto-Generating Manifests

The manifests workflow reacts to version increments in OpenSearch and its components by extracting Gradle properties from project branches. When a new version is found, a new input manifest is added to manifests, and a pull request is opened (e.g. opensearch-build#491).

Show information about existing manifests.

./manifests.sh list

Check for updates and create any new manifests.

./manifests.sh update

See src/manifests_workflow for more information.

Deploying Infrastructure

This project uses jenkins as the build infrastructure for building, testing and releasing the artifacts. The infrastructure is deployed using CDK and code can be found in opensearch-ci repository.

Contributing

See developer guide and how to contribute to this project.

Getting Help

If you find a bug, or have a feature request, please don't hesitate to open an issue in this repository.

For more information, see project website and documentation. If you need help and are unsure where to open an issue, try forums.

Code of Conduct

This project has adopted the Amazon Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ, or contact opensource-codeofconduct@amazon.com with any additional questions or comments.

Security

If you discover a potential security issue in this project we ask that you notify OpenSearch Security directly via email to security@opensearch.org. Please do not create a public GitHub issue.

License

This project is licensed under the Apache v2.0 License.

Copyright

Copyright OpenSearch Contributors. See NOTICE for details.

About

🧰 OpenSearch / OpenSearch-Dashboards Build Scripts

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 68.5%
  • Shell 10.1%
  • Groovy 9.6%
  • Dockerfile 6.5%
  • HTML 3.9%
  • PowerShell 1.1%
  • Other 0.3%