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                                                    -*- mode: indented-text -*-


			 Building in chroot environments with sbuild
			 -------------------------------------------

					  Roman Hodek, June 7th 2000


Starting with revision 1.133, sbuild can build packages also in a
chroot environment. (You also need buildd-addpkg >= 1.5). There are
different such environments for each distribution. The advantages of
this are:

 - You can build for different distributions on the same machine
   without headaches about shared library version or the like.

 - Badly programmed build procedures can't modify files on the build
   host.

 - The access time check for binaries used without a source dependency
   becomes a bit more reliable, because normal user activities can't
   cause an atime change.

It works like in the following outline:

 - For each distribution (stable, frozen, unstable), there's a
   separate installation in (e.g.) /usr/local/chroot/DIST. (This path
   isn't hardwired, but used in this documentation.)

 - The chroot environment can be prepared with buildd-setup-chroot.

 - If in the build directory a symlink chroot-DIST exists (and the
   build is for DIST), then sbuild will unpack the sources in
   chroot-DIST/build/USERNAME and build the package there.
   dpkg-buildpackage will be called under chroot, so that the whole
   build process can't access files outside the build root.

 - All apt and dpkg and similar operations are also chroot-ed, so only
   the chroot environment for that distribution is affected. That way,
   different shared lib versions can coexist on the same machine and
   the like. (It also reduces waiting time for parallel builds: If
   they're for different distributions, installations can happen at
   the same time and don't need to wait for each other.)

Ok, now a bit more slowly:

Best you prepare your chroot environments with the script
buildd-make-chroot. It does lots of things automatically. However,
manual fixes may be required. buildd-make-chroot is usually called
as:

  sudo buildd-make-chroot buildd DIST chroot-DIST http://optional.nearby.mirror/debian

This will call debootstrap 0.3.2 or higher to create a new chroot, and then set
it up for the buildd user specified.

Ok, after the chroot environments for all the distributions you want
are set up, you can start building in them. sbuild recognizes the
chroot environments by the existance of a chroot-DIST symlink in its
build directory (the dir where sbuild is started). If such a link
doesn't exist for the requested distribution, a normal build in the
host filesystem is performed like you're used to.

If, however, the symlink exists, it should point to the root of the
chroot environment. Sources are unpacked in
chroot-DIST/build/USERNAME. (The username is appended so that multiple
users can utilize the chroot environment at the same time without
mixing the source trees.) All checks for packages and package
installations are performed --of course-- in the chroot. After
building, the .debs and the .changes file are moved back to the normal
build directory. (If a build fails, the source tree isn't moved back
but remains in chroot-DIST/build/USERNAME.)

One point still worth mentioning is how the AddPkg directories are
handled. Those directories contain freshly built packages that might
be needed for building other packages before they're installed in the
archive. Since revision 1.5 of buildd-addpkg, the AddPkg packages are
separated by distribution, which is necessary to export them
selectivly into the chroot environments. For example, in the frozen
chroot, only AddPkg/stable and AddPkg/frozen will be mounted but not
AddPkg/unstable, because unstable packages may not be used for
building frozen packages. Likewise the stable chroot mounts only
AddPkg/stable, and the unstable one mounts all three.

The access from inside the chroot environments to the AddPkg packages
works over the local NFS mounts described above. The appropriate deb
lines in sources.list should have been created by buildd-setup-chroot.

The installation into an AddPkg directory by sbuild and buildd-addpkg
is done from outside the chroot environment.