/rpmpack

rpmpack (tar2rpm) - package rpms in pure golang or cli

Primary LanguageGoApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

rpmpack (tar2rpm) - package rpms the easy way

Disclaimer

This is not an official Google product, it is just code that happens to be owned by Google.

Overview

tar2rpm is a tool that takes a tar and outputs an rpm. rpmpack is a golang library to create rpms. Both are written in pure go, without using rpmbuild or spec files. API documentation for rpmpack can be found in GoDoc.

Installation

$ go get -u github.com/google/rpmpack/...

This will make the tar2rpm tool available in ${GOPATH}/bin, which by default means ~/go/bin.

Usage of the binary (tar2rpm)

tar2rpm takes a tar file (from stdin or a specified filename), and outputs an rpm.

Usage:
  tar2rpm [OPTION] [FILE]
Options:
  -file FILE
        write rpm to FILE instead of stdout
  -name string
        the package name
  -release string
        the rpm release
  -version string
        the package version

Usage of the library (rpmpack)

API documentation for rpmpack can be found in GoDoc.

import "github.com/google/rpmpack"
...
r, err := rpmpack.NewRPM(rpmpack.RPMMetaData{Name: "example", Version: "3"})
if err != nil {
  ...
}
r.AddFile(rpmpack.RPMFile{
    Name: "/usr/local/hello",
    Body: []byte("content of the file"),
})
if err := r.Write(w); err != nil {
  ...
}

Usage in the bazel build system (pkg_tar2rpm)

There is a working example inside example_bazel

In WORKSPACE

load("@bazel_tools//tools/build_defs/repo:git.bzl", "git_repository")
git_repository(
    name = "rpmpack",
    remote = "https://github.com/google/rpmpack.git",
   branch = "master",
)

# The following will load the requirements to build rpmpack
http_archive(
    name = "io_bazel_rules_go",
    sha256 = "69de5c704a05ff37862f7e0f5534d4f479418afc21806c887db544a316f3cb6b",
    urls = [
        "https://mirror.bazel.build/github.com/bazelbuild/rules_go/releases/download/v0.27.0/rules_go-v0.27.0.tar.gz",
        "https://github.com/bazelbuild/rules_go/releases/download/v0.27.0/rules_go-v0.27.0.tar.gz",
    ],
)

http_archive(
    name = "bazel_gazelle",
    sha256 = "62ca106be173579c0a167deb23358fdfe71ffa1e4cfdddf5582af26520f1c66f",
    urls = [
        "https://mirror.bazel.build/github.com/bazelbuild/bazel-gazelle/releases/download/v0.23.0/bazel-gazelle-v0.23.0.tar.gz",
        "https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel-gazelle/releases/download/v0.23.0/bazel-gazelle-v0.23.0.tar.gz",
    ],
)

load("@io_bazel_rules_go//go:deps.bzl", "go_register_toolchains", "go_rules_dependencies")
load("@bazel_gazelle//:deps.bzl", "gazelle_dependencies")

go_rules_dependencies()

go_register_toolchains(version = "1.16")

gazelle_dependencies()

load("@com_github_google_rpmpack//:deps.bzl", "rpmpack_dependencies")

rpmpack_dependencies()

In BUILD or BUILD.bazel

load("@bazel_tools//tools/build_defs/pkg:pkg.bzl", "pkg_tar")
load("@com_github_google_rpmpack//:def.bzl", "pkg_tar2rpm")

pkg_tar(
    name = "rpmtest-tar",
    srcs = [":content1.txt"],
    mode = "0644",
    ownername = "root.root",
    package_dir = "var/lib/rpmpack",
)

pkg_tar2rpm(
    name = "rpmtest",
    data = ":rpmtest-tar",
    pkg_name = "rpmtest",
    release = "3.4",
    version = "1.2",
    prein = "echo \"This is preinst\" > /tmp/preinst.txt",
)

Features

  • You put files into the rpm, so that rpm/yum will install them on a host.
  • Simple.
  • No spec files.
  • Does not build anything.
  • Does not try to auto-detect dependencies.
  • Does not try to magically deduce on which computer architecture you run.
  • Does not require any rpm database or other state, and does not use the filesystem.

Downsides

  • Is not related to the team the builds rpmlib.
  • May easily wreak havoc on rpm based systems. It is surprisingly easy to cause rpm to segfault on corrupt rpm files.
  • Many features are missing.
  • All of the artifacts are stored in memory, sometimes more than once.
  • Less backwards compatible than rpmbuild.

Philosophy

Sometimes you just want files to make it to hosts, and be managed by the package manager. rpmbuild can use a spec file, together with a specific directory layout and local database, to build/install/package your files. But you don't need all that. You want something similar to tar.

As the project progresses, we must maintain the complexity/value ratio. This includes both code complexity and interface complexity.

Disclaimer

This is not an official Google product, it is just code that happens to be owned by Google.