What do you want in a package manager?

Vijay Khemka vijaykhemka at fb.com
Wed Jul 22 23:19:10 AEST 2020



On 7/21/20, 8:23 AM, "openbmc on behalf of Patrick Williams" <openbmc-bounces+vijaykhemka=fb.com at lists.ozlabs.org on behalf of patrick at stwcx.xyz> wrote:

    On Tue, Jul 21, 2020 at 12:57:00AM -0700, Nancy Yuen wrote:
    > I'm looking into package management for BMCs in our fleet.  I'm wondering
    > who else is interested in this, does it make sense for OpenBMC.  What kind
    > of features are important?  What kind of package format (rpm, deb,
    > something else)?

    We've similarly started playing with package management at Facebook.
    One of the reasons for us doing it is that we still have Python
    installed in the image and are running out of space, so we're moving
    some of the debug tools into packages that can be side-loaded as needed.
    We've also implemented 'ptest', which allows you to create packages
    containing your unit tests and run them on a real machine.

    We found that we had to switch to ipkg instead of rpm because the extra
    things rpm needed were too big to fit.  I recall it was on the order of
    5MB of content needed to make rpm work and ipkg was almost free. [1]

    One issue you'll want to be aware of, that many of our recipes have, is
    that they often are missing:

        PACKAGE_ARCH = "${MACHINE_ARCH}"

    This causes the package to be specified as relevant for a generic ARM
    system, matching the architecture revision of your underlying AST2xxx
    chip, rather than your particular machine.  Any package which can be
    customized for a particular machine (such as by machine-specific compile
    flags, or YAML/JSON files) should have the above variable set so that a
    package compiled for Witherspoon cannot be installed onto a Zaius.

    If you look under your Yocto build tree under `tmp/work` you'll see
    `arm1176jzs-openbmc-linux-gnueabi` and
    `witherspoon-openbmc-linux-gnueabi`.  I suspect at least most of the
    phosphor-* packages under the arm1176jzs subdirectory are likely candidates
    for having this PACKAGE_ARCH fixed.  We might want to simply add it to
    any '.bbappend' we do in a machine layer.
Yes this is true, almost every package goes in this except kernel. We should
have a fix for this.

    1. https://github.com/facebook/openbmc/commit/43430d38dfd0e5557f96940547594e01373f863e

    -- 
    Patrick Williams



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