tito.props (5) - Linux Manuals

tito.props: directives for tito(5) how to build package.

NAME

tito.props - directives for

tito(5) how to build package.

SYNOPSIS

None

DESCRIPTION

Project settings can be stored in files:

GITROOT/.tito/tito.props

GITROOT/SOME/PACKAGE/tito.props

The global .tito/tito.props is generally where settings are defined. For some multi-project git repositories, individual packages can override these settings by placing a tito.props in the project directory. (i.e. same location as it's .spec file)

SECTIONS

tito.props can contain several sections:

BUILDCONFIG

This section and a couple of it's properties are required. You can use following variables:

builder

The fully qualified Builder class implementation to use. You can either specify builders shipped with tito(5) (see BUILDERS section below), or a custom builder located within the directory your lib_dir option points to. This property is required.

tagger

The fully qualified Tagger class implementation to use. You can either specify taggers shipped with tito(5) (see TAGGERS section below), or a custom tagger located within the directory your lib_dir option points to. This property is required.

lib_dir

Optional property defining a directory to be added to the Python path when executing tito. Allows you to store custom implementations of Builder, Tagger, and Releaser.

changelog_format

This option is used to control the formatting of entries when generating changelog entries. The default value is "%s (%ae)". See PRETTY FORMATS in git-log(1) for more information.

changelog_with_email

If set to 0, then entries in changelog (subject of commits) are not followed by email of committer. Default is 1. This option is deprecated and provided for backwards-compatibility only. New configurations should consider changelog_format instead.

changelog_do_not_remove_cherrypick

If set to 0, it will not remove from cherry picked commits the part "(cherry picked from commit ...)"

tag_suffix

An optional specification of a suffix to append to all tags created by tito for this repo. Can be useful for situations where one git repository is inheriting from another, but tags are created in both. The suffix will be an indicator as to which repo the tag originated in. (i.e. tag_suffix = -mysuffix)

tag_commit_message_format

This option is used control the text of git commit message that is used when new tag is generated. You can use "%(name)s", "%(release_type)s" and "%(version)s" placeholders.

KOJI AND COPR

disttag

Dist tag variable, which is passed to rpmbuild for packages build in this tag.

blacklist

Space separated list of packages, which should not be built in this tag.

whitelist

If whitelist is present, only packages listed here can be built in this tag. This also override blacklist.

scl

Specify name of Software Collection into which package should be build.

VERSION_TEMPLATE

Allows the user to write out a template file containing version and/or release and add it to git during the tagging process.

template_file

Path to a file conforming to a Python string.Template, as described at http://docs.python.org/2/library/string.html#template-strings. Path is relative to root of the entire git checkout, as this is likely to be stored in the top level .tito directory. The variables $version and $release are available inside the template.

destination_file

Specifies a file to write, relative to the directory for the package being tagged.

Example:

[version_template]
destination_file = version.txt
template_file = .tito/templates/version.rb

REQUIREMENTS

tito

If tito is older then specified version, it will refuse to continue.

TAGCONFIG

require_package

Comma separated list of packages, which needs to be installed prior tagging. If those packages are not installed, tito will refuse to continue.

BUILDERS

tito.builder.Builder

Basic package builder. It create tar.gz of whole directory and create src.rpm and build rpm using some supported method.

tito.builder.NoTgzBuilder

Builder for packages that do not require the creation of tarball. Usually these package have source files checked directly into git.

tito.builder.UpstreamBuilder

Builder for packages that are based off an upstream git tag. Commits applied in downstream git become patches applied to the upstream tarball. For example - you are building package foo-1.2-3... Tar.gz file is created from commit, which is tagged by foo-1.2-1 and the diff between release 1 and 3 is put in spec file as Patch0.

tito.builder.GemBuilder

Builder for packages that list a .gem as Source0, the .gemspec shares a directory hierarchy with the .spec file and the upstream does not want to check .gem files into their git repository.

tito.distributionbuilder.DistributionBuilder

Behave similar as tito.builder.UpstreamBuilder, but patch is created for every release. Therefore package from previous example will end up with tar.gz file created from tag foo-1.2-1 and with Patch0: foo-1.2-1-to-foo-1.2-2.patch Patch1: foo-1.2-1-to-foo-1.2-3.patch

tito.builder.FetchBuilder

See doc/builders.mkd.

[builder]
fetch_strategy = tito.builder.fetch.ArgSourceStrategy

ArgSourceStrategy here could be replaced with a custom strategy if you were to have one in your lib_dir.

tito.builder.GitAnnexBuilder

See doc/builders.mkd.

Builder for packages with existing tarballs checked in using git-annex, e.g. referencing an external source (web remote). This builder will "unlock" the source files to get the real contents, include them in the SRPM, then restore the automatic git-annex symlinks on completion.

TAGGERS

All taggers which inherit from tito.tagger.VersionTagger (all to this date), will update file GITROOT/.tito/packages/name-of-package and put there one line which consist of version-release of package, space delimiter, path to package directory relative to GITROOT.

tito.tagger.VersionTagger

Standard tagger class, used for tagging packages build from source in git. Release will be tagged by incrementing the package version, and the actual "Release" will be always set to 1.

tito.tagger.ReleaseTagger

Keep version and increment release.

tito.zstreamtagger.zStreamTagger

It is used for EUS packages.

tito.rheltagger.RHELTagger

Tagger which is based on ReleaseTagger and uses Red Hat Enterprise Linux changelog format:

• Resolves: #1111 - description

• Related: #1111 - description

RELEASER

You can create section with the name same as releaser target and there you can specify this option:

remote_git_name

This is useful for FedoraGitReleaser and DistGitReleaser and will allow you to specify name of remote dist-git branch.

For example let say you have in releaser.conf: [git-sat] releaser = tito.release.DistGitReleaser branches = satellite-6.0-rhel-6

and then in package directory you can create tito.props with content: [git-sat] remote_git_name = ruby193-rubygem-simple-navigation And it will push package into ruby193-rubygem-simple-navigation dist-git despite the fact that it is in /rubygem-simple-navigation directory. And project name (as taken from spec file) is rubygem-simple-navigation.

EXAMPLE

[buildconfig]
builder = tito.builder.Builder
tagger = tito.tagger.VersionTagger

[koji]
autobuild_tags = dist-5E-sw-1.2-candidate dist-f12-sw-1.2-candidate dist-f13-sw-1.2-candidate

[dist-5E-sw-1.2-candidate]
disttag = .el5

[dist-f12-sw-1.2-candidate]
disttag = .fc12
blacklist=jabberd-selinux

[dist-f13-sw-1.2-candidate]
disttag = .fc13
blacklist=jabberd-selinux

[requirements]
tito=0.3.0

AUTHORS

Devan Goodwin <dgoodwin [at] rm-rf.ca>

James Bowes <jbowes [at] repl.ca>

Jan Pazdziora

Jesus M Rodriguez <jesusr [at] redhat.com>

Pall Sigurdsson <palli [at] opensource.is>

Miroslav Suchý <msuchy [at] redhat.com>

and: Adam Miller, Alex Wood, Aron Parsons, Brenton Leanhardt, Ivan Nečas, John Eckersberg, Kenny MacDermid, Lukáš Zapletal, Luke Meyer, Marian Csontos, Martin Bačovský, Michael Stead, Mike McCune, mscherer, Paul Morgan, Sean P. Kane, Steve Ashcrow Milner

SEE ALSO

tito(8) titorc(5)