Packaging Meta Data Unit

The packaging meta-data unit describes system-level dependencies of a provider in a machine readable way. Dependencies can be specified separately for different distributions. Dependencies can also be specified for a common base distribution (e.g. for Debian rather than Ubuntu). The use of packaging meta-data units can greatly simplify management of dependencies of binary packages as it brings those decisions closer to the changes to the actual provider and makes package management largely automatic.

File format and location

Packaging meta-data units are regular plainbox units and are contained and shipped with plainbox providers. In other words, they are just the same as job and test plan units, for example.

Fields

Following fields may be used by a manifest entry unit.

os-id:
(mandatory) - the identifier of the operating system this rule applies to. This is the same value as the ID field in the file /etc/os-release. Typical values include debian, ubuntu or fedora.
os-version-id:
(optional) - the identifier of the specific version of the operating system this rule applies to. This is the same as the VERSION_ID field in the file /etc/os-release. If this field is not present then the rule applies to all versions of a given operating system.

The remaining fields are custom and depend on the packaging driver. The values for Debian are:

Depends:
(optional) - a comma separated list of dependencies for the binary package. The syntax is the same as in normal Debian control files (including package version dependencies). This field can be split into multiple lines, for readability, as newlines are discarded.
Suggests:
(optional) - same as Depends.
Recommends:
(optional) - same as Depends.

Matching Packaging Meta-Data Units

The base Linux distribution driver parses the /etc/os-release file, looks at the ID, ID_VERSION and optionally the ID_LIKE fields. They are used as a standard way to determine the distribution for which packaging meta-data is being collected for.

The id and version match strategy requires that both the os-id and os-dependencies fields are present and that they match the ID and ID_VERSION values. This strategy allows the test maintainer to express each dependency accurately for each operating system they wish to support.

The id match strategy is only used when the os-version is not defined. It is useful when a single definition is applicable to many subsequent releases. This is especially useful when job works well with sufficiently old version of a third party dependency and there is no need to repeatedly re-state the same dependency for each later release of the operating system.

The id_like match strategy is only used as a last resort and can be seen as a weaker id match strategy. This time the os-id field is compared to the ID_LIKE field (if present). It is useful for working with Debian derivatives, like Ubuntu.

Each matching packaging meta-data unit is then passed to the driver to generate packaging meta-data.

Example

This is an example packaging meta-data unit, as taken from the resource provider:

unit: packaging meta-data
os-id: debian
Depends:
 python3-checkbox-support (>= 0.2),
 python3 (>= 3.2),
Recommends:
 dmidecode,
 dpkg (>= 1.13),
 lsb-release,
 wodim

This will cause the binary provider package to depend on the appropriate version of python3-checkbox-support and python3 in both Debian, Ubuntu and, for example, Elementary OS. In addition the package will recommend some utilities that are used by some of the jobs contained in this provider.

Using Packaging Meta-Data in Debian

To make use of the packaging meta-data, follow those steps:

  • Ensure that /etc/os-release exists in your build chroot. On Debian it is a part of the base-files package which is not something you have to worry about but other distributions may use different strategies.

  • Mark the binary package that contains the provider with the X-Plainbox-Provider: yes header.

  • Add the ${plainbox:Depends}, ${plainbox:Recommends} and ${plainbox:Suggests} variables to the binary package that contains the provider.

  • Override the gen_control debhelper rule and run the python3 manage.py packaging command in addition to running dh_gencontrol:

    override_dh_gencontrol:
        python3 manage.py packaging
        dh_gencontrol