On Sunday 21 June 2009 03:33:33 Goswin von Brederlow wrote: <snip> > > Overall, I think that reprepro does a good job of maintaining a local > > repository, and we shouldn't reimplement what it does. Reprepro also > > seems flexible enough to implement most of the backend with simple > > commands and options. I've never tried to implement a new apt-method > > before, so I think that would take a bit more research from me. > > I totally agree that reprepro as the cache/storage backend would be > great use of existing software. > > The problem I have with it being an apt method is that the apt method > runs on a different host than the reprepro. That would require ssh > logins from all participating clients or something to alter the > reprepro filter. > > MfG > Goswin
I've started on writing the reprepro frontend part of the program. The frontend isn't really complete, but I think it's a pretty good start. I decided to make a system user "repserve" that will control reprepro. This makes it easier to generate and use a gpg key with an unencrypted private key. Since the key should only be readable by the repserve user, and since the application is designed to make personal, partial mirrors, I think that this strategy should be sufficient for how it will be mainly used. The repserve user's home is at /var/lib/repserve Running "repserve intialize" should create the gpg key, export the key to /var/www/repserve/archive.gpg, and create the initial repserve.conf file. I don't know what to do about gathering entropy so that the key can be made more automatically. Instead of directly configuring reprepro, I've put the main configuration in a python config file (read by ConfigParser). I've made code that parses this config file (~/repserve.conf), and generates the reprepro configuration from this. This should make it easier to generate some of the more commonly used configurations for reprepro. I've made it so that the configuration can be filled from the contents of a sources.list file. Every 'deb' line uses dpkg --print-architecture to determine the arch to use. The deb-src lines use the "source" arch in reprepro. There is an --arch option that will let you specify the arch to use for the 'deb' entries, so it can be used like so: repserve addsources /etc/apt/sources.list repserve --arch=i386 addsources /etc/apt/sources.list Sources can also be fed from stdin: cat /etc/apt/sources.list | repserve --arch=c64 addsources or cat /etc/apt/sources.list | ssh repse...@mirror repserve addsources I have made a simple function that tries to guess the name of the repository from the method. So a method like http://security.debian.org/ gets the name "security", etc. This function doesn't work all that well yet, at it doesn't try to look at the names of the official mirrors to figure out if it's a debian mirror, and use the name "debian" for those. If a name isn't guessed, it tries to use "repos1", "repos2", etc. Adding additional sources will use the same repository name for each method already contained in the config file, so once you set a name, it should stay set. Changing the upstream mirror in the sources.list may cause an extra repository to be made if the mirror isn't identified in the guessing function. For each source in the sources.list, the Release file is retrieved and parsed. From the Release file the extra options such as Origin, Version, etc. are used. This make a better reprepro configuration without having to manually fill out all those fields. The release files are currently being retrieved using urllib2, but should be using python-apt. I haven't had time to mess with this yet, as I wanted to get other parts working first. The reprepro configuration isn't created automatically after adding sources, in case some of those repository names need to be changed. The reprepro configuration is created by: repserve reconfigure Each unique url in the sources list defines a separate repository. Each section in the repserve.conf file corresponds to a repository and the dist (codename). Each repository is split between the basedir and outdir, which makes it easier to use the outdirs in apache, or maybe ftpd (the default outdir parent is /var/www/repserve). The basedirs are located in /var/lib/repserve/repos-db/ . I have started making the bare minimum code to help manage filterlists. Since it hasn't really been decided how those lists are to be generated, and which repository is going to use which filterlist, I'm somewhat stuck here. I've tried to keep things flexible, so once something is decided, it should be relatively easy to implement. Reprepro isn't really being used yet. Only the configuration is being managed so far, which has been the most difficult part. There is some code that handles running reprepro, but it hasn't really been used yet. Only update and export are handled now, but it shouldn't be too difficult get this part going. I have been more concerned with getting reprepro configured in a way that makes it easy to use as a backend with a simple frontend configuration. I'm not really happy with the name "repserve", but I picked it out of the air, because I needed to start with something. I would like to use another name, but I can't think of one that will work. I'm open to suggestion here. I'm also open to suggestion concerning anything that I've written above, although some suggestions should be accompanied by a patch or example. I would really like to gather suggestions on how to name the repositories. I think that my guessing function is a good start, but it could use a lot of improvement. When the guessing gets good enough, the function could raise a warning when a name couldn't be guessed, so the user can then edit the repserve.conf to fix the problem. All the code is here: svn://svn.berlios.de/paella/repserve/trunk I would like to move the code to it's own project space, but I need to name it something before that happens. I have been playing around with germinate a bit, in case we want to make a short list of manually selected packages, and use germinate to resolve the dependencies and create the filterlists. I don't expect this part to be working properly anytime soon. -- Thanks: Joseph Rawson
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