Overview
- Base chroot environment for the creation of most binary packages which will be copied to the Binary Package Server.
- Packages, which don't need to be built, for example Oracle's Java SE Development Kit (JDK), can be fetched from the Mirror Server.
- Software stacks built upon specialized binary packages, require their own chroot environment. If possible, avoid this.
- For reproducibility, Portage and Profiles are frozen with the help of version control system (git in our case). This is only done on the Mirror Server.
- When building packages in a chroot environment, the portage and overlay versions need to set.
Portage Snapshotting
To be able to reliably rebuild packages, we are working with a snapshotted/versioned portage tree.
Updating the snapshot to latest
We are using emerge-webrsync
since it features an already determined version, checksum- and gpg-validation.
Warning
If you get the following instead then there is no newer snapshot available
Set the tag and push if there was an update:
The subtraction of 86400 (1 day in seconds) above is to account for the fact that the snapshot for a given day is taken at 00:45 UTC on the following day and the timestamp contained in the tarball therefore is one day ahead (see /usr/bin/emerge-webrsync).
The meaning of the tag is therefore: contains at least all changes from that day (and possibly a bit more).
Chroot Setup
Preparation
At least the following is required beforehand to ensure reproducible building:
- a versioned portage tree
- versioned overlays (if any)
Setup
- Create a staging root directory and extract a stage3 or stage4 tarball
- Mount proc, sys and dev (required for portage to control the tty, determine available storage space, etc.)
- Copy /etc/resolv.conf
- Checkout the versioned portage tree (since you probably won't have git yet in the tree)
- Enter the chroot
Note
We are deliberately using a special command for entering the chroot to avoid leaking environment variables