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= File Locations = | = File Locations = | ||
Erlang packages should | Erlang packages should be installed to %{_erllibdir}/%{realname}-%{version}. The handy macro %{erlang_appdir} has been provided as a shorthand expression of this path for spec files that define %{realname}. Large applications such as {{package|rabbitmq-server}} or {{package|riak}} install their content somewhere else for historical reasons. | ||
= Header files = | = Header files = | ||
Header files for erlang modules stored in ./include directory must be bundled with main package (not in a *-devel subpackage). They are used by system administrators sometimes [http://erlang.org/doc/man/shell.html right from the REPL console]. Headers from ./src directory normally shouldn't be packaged, however sometimes it's required. In this case you have to package | Header files for erlang modules stored in the source ./include directory must be bundled with the main package (not in a *-devel subpackage). They are used by system administrators sometimes [http://erlang.org/doc/man/shell.html right from the REPL console]. Headers from ./src directory normally shouldn't be packaged, however sometimes it's required. In this case you have to package them, but consider reporting an issue upstream about their include file placements. | ||
= Dependencies = | = Dependencies = |
Revision as of 16:11, 27 April 2016
THIS DOCUMENT IS WIP
This document seeks to document the conventions and customs surrounding the proper packaging of Erlang modules and applications in Fedora and EPEL. It does not intend to cover all situations, but to codify those practices which have served the Fedora Erlang community well.
Naming
Erlang packages should be named as erlang-something, expect for applications which can be named without the erlang- prefix (e.g. couchdb
, rabbitmq-server
, wings
).
Building
Rebar
is usually used to build Erlang packages, as it is the de-facto standard Erlang build tool. It is often bundled along with the sources, so the packager must ensure that the system installed rebar is used instead of the one included with the package. We recommend using our build macros for building (%{erlang_compile} or less generic %{rebar_compile}) to ensure that the correct rebar is used. However some old software cannot be built with rebar - this is an outstanding issue to be addressed.
Debug symbols / source installation / dialyzer
Erlang packages should not install their original sources. Instead packages should ensure that they are built with +debug_info flag. It does NOT impact the runtime performance of the application at all (beam loader disregards debug symbols before loading the build images into the VM). Dialyzer requires either this debug info or original sources. If the package was built with our recommended macros (%{erlang_compile} or less generic %{rebar_compile}), then the needed debug_info is generated automatically.
If the Erlang package doesn't contain any NIF-libraries, port-applications, or driver libraries, it must contain the "%global debug_package %{nil}" directive to suppress building an empty debuginfo sub-package. Unfortunately, this adds two additional rpmlint messages:
Auriga ~: rpmlint ~/rpmbuild/RPMS/x86_64/erlang-cowboy-2.0.0-0.1.pre.3.fc24.x86_64.rpm erlang-cowboy.x86_64: E: no-binary erlang-cowboy.x86_64: W: only-non-binary-in-usr-lib 1 packages and 0 specfiles checked; 1 errors, 1 warnings. Auriga ~:
What rpmlint it trying to say here is that we're installing arch-independent data into arch-dependent library space. This is expected, and these messages can be ignored for now.
File Locations
Erlang packages should be installed to %{_erllibdir}/%{realname}-%{version}. The handy macro %{erlang_appdir} has been provided as a shorthand expression of this path for spec files that define %{realname}. Large applications such as rabbitmq-server
or riak
install their content somewhere else for historical reasons.
Header files
Header files for erlang modules stored in the source ./include directory must be bundled with the main package (not in a *-devel subpackage). They are used by system administrators sometimes right from the REPL console. Headers from ./src directory normally shouldn't be packaged, however sometimes it's required. In this case you have to package them, but consider reporting an issue upstream about their include file placements.
Dependencies
Packager has to build a list of BuildRequires by hand. RPM builds a list of Requires automatically (expect for few rare cases). Please take a look at the Koji build log. If you see messages like the following one, then the packager either missed one of the BuildRequires, or the package contains an error.
error: invalid dependency (bad format): ERROR: Cant find lager:error/2 while processing '/builddir/build/BUILDROOT/erlang-ibrowse-4.2.4-1.fc25.x86_64/usr/lib64/erlang/lib/ibrowse-4.2.4/ebin/ibrowse.beam'
In this case the package contains an error, which was addressed upstream already. But it also might mean that the packager forgot to add "BuildRequires: erlang-lager". We can't give packager a hint on what's missing, but in the case of this message the poackager should try running "sudo dnf provides "*/lager.beam" first.
An example of spec-file
A typical Erlang package's spec-file looks like that. We're using %{realname} and %{upstream} macro in RPM scripts, so please fill it properly. Otherwise you have to do a lot of manual work.
%global realname foo %global upstream bar # Technically, we're noarch; but erlang whose directories we install into is not. # This should be removed if a package contains NIF, or driver. %global debug_package %{nil} Name: erlang-%{realname} Version: 1.2.3 Release: 1%{?dist} Summary: Erlang library for doing cool things Group: Development/Libraries License: ASL 2.0 URL: https://github.com/%{upstream}/%{realname} Source0: https://github.com/%{upstream}/%{realname}/archive/%{version}/%{realname}-%{version}.tar.gz # Normally erlang-rebar install almost everything required for building. But sometimes some extra packages required. # Please try building in Koji - you'll likely see some hints. BuildRequires: erlang-rebar # If the package contains NIF-library or driver, then you have to include one or both of the following lines. # This has to be done manually - we don't detect them automatically (for now). %{?__erlang_nif_version:Requires: %{__erlang_nif_version}} %{?__erlang_drv_version:Requires: %{__erlang_drv_version}} # Normally RPM detects Erlang dependencies automatically (if built with erlang-rebar). However in some rare cases it can't be detected. Requires: erlang-bar %description Erlang library for doing cool things. %prep %setup -q -n %{realname}-%{version} %build %{erlang_compile} %install %{erlang_install} # Additionally install some cool stuff required to run application properly cp -arv priv/ %{buildroot}%{erlang_appdir}/ %check %{erlang_test} %files %license LICENSE.txt %doc doc/ examples/ README.md %{erlang_appdir}/ * Wed Mar 16 2016 Peter Lemenkov <lemenkov@gmail.com> - 1.2.3-1 - Initial build