The utility for building of AlmaLinux distributions (repos, ISO images).
a72a38b278
This should help with debugging by providing better information on which Pungi version created the compose. In development, the version will show output of git describe, in production it asks which version is installed in site-packages/. The egg-info directory must be installed for this to work. It is no longer necessary to synchronize version in `setup.py` with `pungi/__init__.py`. Signed-off-by: Lubomír Sedlář <lsedlar@redhat.com> |
||
---|---|---|
bin | ||
doc | ||
pungi | ||
share | ||
tests | ||
.gitignore | ||
AUTHORS | ||
COPYING | ||
git-changelog | ||
GPL | ||
Makefile | ||
MANIFEST.in | ||
pungi.spec | ||
README.md | ||
RELEASE-NOTES | ||
setup.py | ||
TODO | ||
tox.ini |
Pungi
Pungi is a distribution compose tool.
Composes are release snapshots that contain release deliverables such as:
- installation trees
- RPMs
- repodata
- comps
- (bootable) ISOs
- kickstart trees
- anaconda images
- images for PXE boot
Tool overview
Pungi consists of multiple separate executables backed by a common library.
The main entry-point is the pungi-koji
script. It loads the compose
configuration and kicks off the process. Composing itself is done in phases.
Each phase is responsible for generating some artifacts on disk and updating
the compose
object that is threaded through all the phases.
Pungi itself does not actually do that much. Most of the actual work is delegated to separate executables. Pungi just makes sure that all the commands are invoked in the appropriate order and with correct arguments. It also moves the artifacts to correct locations.
Links
- Upstream GIT: https://pagure.io/pungi/
- Issue tracker: https://pagure.io/pungi/issues
- Questions can be asked on #fedora-releng IRC channel on FreeNode