dangerzone/docs/developer/doit.md
Alex Pyrgiotis 8e8a515b64
Allow using the container engine cache when building our image
Remove our suggestions for not using the container cache, which stemmed
from the fact that our Dangerzone image was not reproducible. Now that
we have switched to Debian Stable and the Dockerfile is all we need to
reproducibly build the exact same container image, we can just use the
cache to speed up builds.
2025-01-23 23:25:43 +02:00

53 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown

# Using the Doit Automation Tool
Developers can use the [Doit](https://pydoit.org/) automation tool to create
release artifacts. The purpose of the tool is to automate the manual release
instructions in `RELEASE.md` file. Not everything is automated yet, since we're
still experimenting with this tool. You can find our task definitions in this
repo's `dodo.py` file.
## Why Doit?
We picked Doit out of the various tools out there for the following reasons:
* **Pythonic:** The configuration file and tasks can be written in Python. Where
applicable, it's easy to issue shell commands as well.
* **File targets:** Doit borrows the file target concept from Makefiles. Tasks
can have file dependencies, and targets they build. This makes it easy to
define a dependency graph for tasks.
* **Hash-based caching:** Unlike Makefiles, doit does not look at the
modification timestamp of source/target files, to figure out if it needs to
run them. Instead, it hashes those files, and will run a task only if the
hash of a file dependency has changed.
* **Parallelization:** Tasks can be run in parallel with the `-n` argument,
which is similar to `make`'s `-j` argument.
## How to Doit?
First, enter your Poetry shell. Then, make sure that your environment is clean,
and you have ample disk space. You can run:
```bash
doit clean --dry-run # if you want to see what would happen
doit clean # you'll be asked to cofirm that you want to clean everything
```
Finally, you can build all the release artifacts with `doit`, or a specific task
with:
```
doit <task>
```
## Tips and tricks
* You can run `doit list --all -s` to see the full list of tasks, their
dependencies, and whether they are up to date.
* You can run `doit info <task>` to see which dependencies are missing.
* You can pass the following environment variables to the script, in order to
affect some global parameters:
- `CONTAINER_RUNTIME`: The container runtime to use. Either `podman` (default)
or `docker`.
- `RELEASE_DIR`: Where to store the release artifacts. Default path is
`~/release-assets/<version>`
- `APPLE_ID`: The Apple ID to use when signing/notarizing the macOS DMG.