NOTE: This repository is read-only and is used only to mirror the got-portable repository for CI purposes.
This is the portable version of got[1] (Game of Trees), using autotools to provide the library checks required for GoT's dependencies.
The following operating systems are supported:
- FreeBSD
- NetBSD
- DragonFlyBSD
- MacOS
- Linux
Note that the names of these libraries are indicative only; the names might vary.
Linux:
libncurses
(for tog(1))libbsd
(BSD's arc4random routines)libmd
(SHA256 routines)libuuid
(for UUID generation)libz
(for Z compression)pkg-config
(for searching libraries)bison
(for configuration file grammar)libtls
(may be known aslibretls
)
FreeBSD:
automake
pkgconf
libevent
(for gotwebd)libretls
NetBSD:
automake
libuuid
ncuresesw
libevent
(for gotwebd)libretls
DragonFlyBSD:
automake
pkgconf
openssl
libevent
(for gotwebd)libretls
Darwin (MacOS):
automake
bison
pkg-config
ncurses
openssl
ossp-uuid
libevent
(for gotwebd)libtls
To run the test suite:
$ make tests
- ed
NOTE: THIS ONLY WORKS AFTER make install
DUE TO HOW PATHS TO LIBEXEC
HELPERS ARE HARD-CODED INTO THE BINARIES.
$ ./autogen.sh
$ ./configure && make
$ sudo make install
The gotd server has an optional companion tool called gitwrapper.
A gotd server can be used without gitwrapper in the following cases:
-
The Git client's user account has gotsh configured as its login shell.
-
The Git client's user account sees gotsh installed under the names git-receive-pack and git-upload-pack, and these appear in $PATH before the corresponding Git binaries if Git is also installed. Setting up the user's $PATH in this way can require the use of SetEnv in sshd_config.
The above cases can be too restrictive. For example, users who have regular shell access to the system may expect to be able to serve Git repositories from their home directories while also accessing repositories served by gotd.
Once gitwrapper has been installed correctly it provides an out-of-the box experience where both gotd and Git "just work". However, this will require coordination with the system's Git installation and/or distribution package because the names of two specific Git programs will be overlapping: git-upload-pack and git-receive-pack
If the gitwrapper tool will be used then it must replace git-receive-pack and git-upload-pack in /usr/bin. This is usually achieved by replacing the regular Git binaries in /usr/bin with symlinks to gitwrapper:
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 1019928 Aug 24 00:16 /usr/bin/gitwrapper
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Aug 20 12:40 /usr/bin/git-receive-pack -> gitwrapper
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Aug 20 12:40 /usr/bin/git-upload-pack -> gitwrapper
The Git binaries remain available in Git's libexec directory, which is set when Git gets compiled. On Debian it defaults to /usr/lib/git-core. This same path must be given to Got's configure script at build time to allow gitwrapper to find Git's binaries:
./configure --with-gitwrapper-git-libexec-path=/usr/lib/git-core
Once gitwrapper is found in /usr/bin under the names git-receive-pack and git-upload-pack, any Git repositories listed in /etc/gotd.conf will be automatically served by gotd, and any Git repositories not listed in /etc/gotd.conf will be automatically served by regular Git's git-upload-pack and git-receive-pack. The client's login shell or $PATH no longer matter, and a peaceful co-existence of gotd and Git is possible.
We recommend that distribution packagers take appropriate steps to package gitwrapper as a required dependency of gotd. It is also possible to install gitwrapper without installing gotd. As long as /etc/gotd.conf does not exist or no repositories are listed in /etc/gotd.conf there will be no visible change in run-time behaviour for Git users since gitwrapper will simply run the standard Git tools. In the OpenBSD ports tree both the regular git package and the gotd package are depending on gitwrapper, and the git package no longer installs the git-receive-pack and git-upload-pack programs in /usr/local/bin.
got-portable
has two key branches:
main
which tracks got upstream untainted.portable
which provides the portable version of GoT based from code onmain
Patches for portable code fixes should be based from the portable
branch and
sent to the mailing list for review [2] or sent to me directly (see CONTACT).
Portable-specific patches should have a shortlog in the form of:
portable: AREA: description
Where AREA
relates to the change in question (for example, regress
,
libexec
, etc). In some cases, this can be omitted if it's a generic change.
This helps to delineate -portable
changes from upstream got
.
The read-only Github repository also runs CI checks using Cirrus-CI on Linux and FreeBSD.
The -portable
GoT repository uses the following workflow:
Github (gh) GoT (upstream)
^ ^
| |
| |
| |
| |
+--------> GoT-portable <------+
Here, got-portable
is a clone of the -portable
repository, locally on
disk. There are two remotes set up within that repository, via git-remote
:
upstream
-- which points to the official GoT repository;gh
-- which points to the mirrored-portable
repository so that CI can be run for cross-platform/test purposes [3]origin
-- our cloned copy from-portable
Within the -portable
repository are two key branches (there may be other
topic branches which represent on-going work):
-
main
-- this is the branch that tracks (without modification) those changes fromupstream
. This branch is continually reset toupstream/main
whenever changes occur. -
portable
-- this is the default branch of the-portable
repository which contains portable-specific changes to makeGoT
compile across different OSes.
When updating -portable
from upstream changes, the following actions happen:
- Changes from
upstream
are fetched. If there are no new changes, there's nothing else to do. - Changes from
gh
are fetch so that the result can be pushed out togh
. - The difference between the local copy of
main
andorigin/main
is used to represent the set of commits which have NOT yet been merged to-portable
. - A topic-branch called
syncup
is created from the HEAD of theportable
branch to hold the to-be-cherry-picked commits from step 3. - These commits are then cherry-picked to the
syncup
branch. - If there's any conflicts, they must be resolved.
- Once done, a sanity build is done in-situ to check there's nothing amiss.
- If that succeeds, the
syncup
branch is merged toportable
and pushed togh
for verification against CI. - If that fails, fixes continue and pushed up to
gh
as required. - Once happy, both the
main
andportable
branches can be merged toorigin
.
These steps are encapsulated in a script within -portable
. Link
Release for -portable
try and align as close to upstream GoT as much as
possible, even on the same day where that can happen. That being said,
sometimes a release of -portable
might happen outside of that cadence, where
a -portable
-specific issue needs addressing, for example.
Before creating a new release, check the version of GoT as found in
util/got-portable-ver.sh
-- as GOT_PORTABLE_VER
:
GOT_PORTABLE_VER=0.75
Here, the to be released version of got-portable
will be 0.75
.
Typically, this version is incremented directly after a release, such that
there's no need to change this value. The only exception would be if there
were an out-of-band release to -portable
. In such cases, that would take
the form:
0.75.1
Where the suffix of 1
, 2
, etc., can be used to denote any sub-releases
from the 0.75
version.
The variable GOT_RELEASE
needs be changed to yes
so that the
GOT_PORTABLE_VER is asserted correctly.
Once the version is verified, the following should be run from the portable
branch -- and the repository should not have any outstanding modifications to
the source:
make clean ; ./autogen && ./configure && make distcheck
If this succeeds, the tarball is in the CWD, as: got-portable-VERSION.tar.gz
This can then be copied to the got-www
repository and uploaded, along with
changing a couple of HTML pages therein to represent the new released version.
Additionally, the CHANGELOG file can be copied to the got-www
and committed.
Once all of that has been done, the repository should be tagged to indicate the release, hence:
git tag -a 0.75
This can then be pushed out to gh
and origin
.
After that point, the version of GOT_PORTABLE_VER
in
util/got-portable-ver.sh
should be changed to the next version, and
GOT_RELEASE
should be setg back to no
.
This port is incomplete in that only got(1) and tog(1) have been ported. gotweb has yet to be ported.
configure.ac should start defining AC_ENABLE arguments to allow for finer-grained control of where to search for includes/libraries, etc.
Thomas Adam thomas@xteddy.org
thomas_adam (#gameoftrees on irc.libera.chat)
[1] https://gameoftrees.org
[2] https://lists.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/mj_wwwusr?user=&passw=&func=lists-long-full&extra=gameoftrees
[3] https://github.com/ThomasAdam/got-portable