| 1 |
GLEP: 33 |
| 2 |
Title: Eclass Restructure/Redesign |
| 3 |
Version: $Revision: 1.5 $ |
| 4 |
Last-Modified: $Date: 2005/09/15 21:02:11 $ |
| 5 |
Author: Brian Harring <ferringb@gentoo.org>, John Mylchreest <johnm@gentoo.org> |
| 6 |
Status: Moribund |
| 7 |
Type: Standards Track |
| 8 |
Content-Type: text/x-rst |
| 9 |
Created: 29-Jan-2005 |
| 10 |
Post-History: 29-Jan-2005 6-Mar-2005 15-Sep-2005 5-Sep-2006 |
| 11 |
|
| 12 |
Status |
| 13 |
====== |
| 14 |
|
| 15 |
Approved by the Gentoo Council on 15 September 2005. As of Sept. 2006 |
| 16 |
this GLEP is on hold, pending future revisions. |
| 17 |
|
| 18 |
Abstract |
| 19 |
======== |
| 20 |
|
| 21 |
For any design, the transition from theoretical to applied exposes inadequacies |
| 22 |
in the original design. This document is intended to document, and propose a |
| 23 |
revision of the current eclass setup to address current eclass inadequacies. |
| 24 |
|
| 25 |
This document proposes several things- the creation of ebuild libraries, 'elibs', |
| 26 |
a narrowing of the focus of eclasses, a move of eclasses w/in the tree, the |
| 27 |
addition of changelogs, and a way to allow for simple eclass gpg signing. |
| 28 |
In general, a large scale restructuring of what eclasses are and how they're |
| 29 |
implemented. Essentially version two of the eclass setup. |
| 30 |
|
| 31 |
|
| 32 |
Terminology |
| 33 |
=========== |
| 34 |
|
| 35 |
From this point on, the proposed eclass setup will be called 'new eclasses', the |
| 36 |
existing crop (as of this writing) will be referenced as 'old eclasses'. The |
| 37 |
distinction is elaborated on within this document. |
| 38 |
|
| 39 |
|
| 40 |
Motivation and Rationale |
| 41 |
======================== |
| 42 |
|
| 43 |
Eclasses within the tree currently are a bit of a mess- they're forced to |
| 44 |
maintain backwards compatibility w/ all previous functionality. In effect, |
| 45 |
their api is constant, and can only be added to- never changing the existing |
| 46 |
functionality. This obviously is quite limiting, and leads to cruft accruing in |
| 47 |
eclasses as a eclasses design is refined. This needs to be dealt with prior to |
| 48 |
eclass code reaching a critical mass where they become unmanageable/fragile |
| 49 |
(recent pushes for eclass versioning could be interpreted as proof of this). |
| 50 |
|
| 51 |
Beyond that, eclasses were originally intended as a method to allow for ebuilds |
| 52 |
to use a pre-existing block of code, rather then having to duplicate the code in |
| 53 |
each ebuild. This is a good thing, but there are ill effects that result from |
| 54 |
the current design. Eclasses inherit other eclasses to get a single function- in |
| 55 |
doing so, modifying the the exported 'template' (default src_compile, default |
| 56 |
src_unpack, various vars, etc). All the eclass designer was after was reusing a |
| 57 |
function, not making their eclass sensitive to changes in the template of the |
| 58 |
eclass it's inheriting. The eclass designer -should- be aware of changes in the |
| 59 |
function they're using, but shouldn't have to worry about their default src_* |
| 60 |
and pkg_* functions being overwritten, let alone the env changes. |
| 61 |
|
| 62 |
Addressing up front why a collection of eclass refinements are being rolled into |
| 63 |
a single set of changes, parts of this proposal -could- be split into multiple |
| 64 |
phases. Why do it though? It's simpler for developers to know that the first |
| 65 |
eclass specification was this, and that the second specification is that, |
| 66 |
rather then requiring them to be aware of what phase of eclass changes is in |
| 67 |
progress. |
| 68 |
|
| 69 |
By rolling all changes into one large change, a line is intentionally drawn in |
| 70 |
the sand. Old eclasses allowed for this, behaved this way. New eclasses allow |
| 71 |
for that, and behave this way. This should reduce misconceptions about what is |
| 72 |
allowed/possible with eclasses, thus reducing bugs that result from said |
| 73 |
misconceptions. |
| 74 |
|
| 75 |
A few words on elibs- think of them as a clear definition between behavioral |
| 76 |
functionality of an eclass, and the library functionality. Eclass's modify |
| 77 |
template data, and are the basis for other ebuilds- elibs, however are *just* |
| 78 |
common bash functionality. |
| 79 |
|
| 80 |
Consider the majority of the portage bin/* scripts- these all are candidates for |
| 81 |
being added to the tree as elibs, as is the bulk of eutils. |
| 82 |
|
| 83 |
|
| 84 |
Specification |
| 85 |
============= |
| 86 |
|
| 87 |
The various parts of this proposal are broken down into a set of changes and |
| 88 |
elaborations on why a proposed change is preferable. It's advisable to the |
| 89 |
reader that this be read serially, rather then jumping around. |
| 90 |
|
| 91 |
|
| 92 |
Ebuild Libraries (elibs for short) |
| 93 |
---------------------------------- |
| 94 |
|
| 95 |
As briefly touched upon in Motivation and Rationale, the original eclass design |
| 96 |
allowed for the eclass to modify the metadata of an ebuild, metadata being the |
| 97 |
DEPENDS, RDEPENDS, SRC_URI, IUSE, etc, vars that are required to be constant, |
| 98 |
and used by portage for dep resolution, fetching, etc. Using the earlier |
| 99 |
example, if you're after a single function from an eclass (say epatch from |
| 100 |
eutils), you -don't- want the metadata modifications the eclass you're |
| 101 |
inheriting might do. You want to treat the eclass you're pulling from as a |
| 102 |
library, pure and simple. |
| 103 |
|
| 104 |
A new directory named elib should be added to the top level of the tree to serve |
| 105 |
as a repository of ebuild function libraries. Rather then relying on using the |
| 106 |
source command, an 'elib' function should be added to portage to import that |
| 107 |
libraries functionality. The reason for the indirection via the function is |
| 108 |
mostly related to portage internals, but it does serve as an abstraction such |
| 109 |
that (for example) zsh compatibility hacks could be hidden in the elib function. |
| 110 |
|
| 111 |
Elib's will be collections of bash functions- they're not allowed to do anything |
| 112 |
in the global scope aside from function definition, and any -minimal- |
| 113 |
initialization of the library that is absolutely needed. Additionally, they |
| 114 |
cannot modify any ebuild template functions- src_compile, src_unpack. Since they are |
| 115 |
required to not modify the metadata keys, nor in any way affect the ebuild aside |
| 116 |
from providing functionality, they can be conditionally pulled in. They also |
| 117 |
are allowed to pull in other elibs, but strictly just elibs- no eclasses, just |
| 118 |
other elibs. A real world example would be the eutils eclass. |
| 119 |
|
| 120 |
Portage, since the elib's don't modify metadata, isn't required to track elibs |
| 121 |
as it tracks eclasses. Thus a change in an elib doesn't result in half the tree |
| 122 |
forced to be regenerated/marked stale when changed (this is more of an infra |
| 123 |
benefit, although regen's that take too long due to eclass changes have been |
| 124 |
known to cause rsync issues due to missing timestamps). |
| 125 |
|
| 126 |
Elibs will not be available in the global scope of an eclass, or ebuild- nor during the |
| 127 |
depends phase (basically a phase that sources the ebuild, to get its metadata). Elib |
| 128 |
calls in the global scope will be tracked, but the elib will not be loaded till just before |
| 129 |
the setup phase (pkg_setup). There are two reasons for this- first, it ensures elibs are |
| 130 |
completely incapable of modifying metadata. There is no room for confusion, late loading |
| 131 |
of elibs gives you the functionality for all phases, except for depends- depends being the |
| 132 |
only phase that is capable of specifying metadata. Second, as an added bonus, late |
| 133 |
loading reduces the amount of bash sourced for a regen- faster regens. This however is minor, |
| 134 |
and is an ancillary benefit of the first reason. |
| 135 |
|
| 136 |
There are a few further restrictions with elibs--mainly, elibs to load can only be specified |
| 137 |
in either global scope, or in the setup, unpack, compile, test, and install phases. You can |
| 138 |
not load elibs in prerm, postrm, preinst, and postinst. The reason being, for \*rm phases, |
| 139 |
installed pkgs will have to look to the tree for the elib, which allows for api drift to cause |
| 140 |
breakage. For \*inst phases, same thing, except the culprit is binpkgs. |
| 141 |
|
| 142 |
There is a final restriction--elibs cannot change their exported api dependent on the api |
| 143 |
(as some eclass do for example). The reason mainly being that elibs are loaded once--not |
| 144 |
multiple times, as eclasses are. |
| 145 |
|
| 146 |
To clarify, for example this is invalid. |
| 147 |
:: |
| 148 |
|
| 149 |
if [[ -n ${SOME_VAR} ]]; then |
| 150 |
func x() { echo "I'm accessible only via tweaking some var";} |
| 151 |
else |
| 152 |
func x() { echo "this is invalid, do not do it."; } |
| 153 |
fi |
| 154 |
|
| 155 |
|
| 156 |
Regarding maintainability of elibs, it should be a less of a load then old |
| 157 |
eclasses. One of the major issues with old eclasses is that their functions are |
| 158 |
quite incestuous- they're bound tightly to the env they're defined in. This |
| 159 |
makes eclass functions a bit fragile- the restrictions on what can, and cannot |
| 160 |
be done in elibs will address this, making functionality less fragile (thus a |
| 161 |
bit more maintainable). |
| 162 |
|
| 163 |
There is no need for backwards compatibility with elibs- they just must work |
| 164 |
against the current tree. Thus elibs can be removed when the tree no longer |
| 165 |
needs them. The reasons for this are explained below. |
| 166 |
|
| 167 |
Structuring of the elibs directory will be exactly the same as that of the new |
| 168 |
eclass directory (detailed below), sans a different extension. |
| 169 |
|
| 170 |
As to why their are so many restrictions, the answer is simple- the definition of |
| 171 |
what elibs are, what they are capable of, and how to use them is nailed down as much as |
| 172 |
possible to avoid *any* ambiguity related to them. The intention is to make it clear, |
| 173 |
such that no misconceptions occur, resulting in bugs. |
| 174 |
|
| 175 |
The reduced role of Eclasses, and a clarification of existing Eclass requirements |
| 176 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 177 |
|
| 178 |
Since elibs are now intended on holding common bash functionality, the focus of |
| 179 |
eclasses should be in defining an appropriate template for ebuilds. For example, |
| 180 |
defining common DEPENDS, RDEPENDS, src_compile functions, src_unpack, etc. |
| 181 |
Additionally, eclasses should pull in any elibs they need for functionality. |
| 182 |
|
| 183 |
Eclass functionality that isn't directly related to the metadata, or src_* and |
| 184 |
pkg_* funcs should be shifted into elibs to allow for maximal code reuse. This |
| 185 |
however isn't a hard requirement, merely a strongly worded suggestion. |
| 186 |
|
| 187 |
Previously, it was 'strongly' suggested by developers to avoid having any code |
| 188 |
executed in the global scope that wasn't required. This suggestion is now a |
| 189 |
requirement. Execute only what must be executed in the global scope. Any code |
| 190 |
executed in the global scope that is related to configuring/building the package |
| 191 |
must be placed in pkg_setup. Metadata keys (already a rule, but now stated as |
| 192 |
an absolute requirement to clarify it) *must* be constant. The results of |
| 193 |
metadata keys exported from an ebuild on system A, must be *exactly* the same as |
| 194 |
the keys exported on system B. |
| 195 |
|
| 196 |
If an eclass (or ebuild for that matter) violates this constant requirement, it |
| 197 |
leads to portage doing the wrong thing for rsync users- for example, wrong deps |
| 198 |
pulled in, leading to compilation failure, or dud deps. |
| 199 |
|
| 200 |
If the existing metadata isn't flexible enough for what is required for a |
| 201 |
package, the parsing of the metadata is changed to address that. Cases where |
| 202 |
the constant requirement is violated are known, and a select few are allowed- |
| 203 |
these are exceptions to the rule that are required due to inadequacies in |
| 204 |
portage. Any case where it's determined the constant requirement may need to be |
| 205 |
violated the dev must make it aware to the majority of devs, along with the portage |
| 206 |
devs. This should be done prior to committing. |
| 207 |
|
| 208 |
It's quite likely there is a way to allow what you're attempting- if you just go |
| 209 |
and do it, the rsync users (our user base) suffer the results of compilation |
| 210 |
failures and unneeded deps being pulled in. |
| 211 |
|
| 212 |
After that stern reminder, back to new eclasses. Defining INHERITED and ECLASS |
| 213 |
within the eclass is no longer required. Portage already handles those vars if |
| 214 |
they aren't defined. |
| 215 |
|
| 216 |
As with elibs, it's no longer required that backwards compatibility be maintained |
| 217 |
indefinitely- compatibility must be maintained against the current tree, but |
| 218 |
just that. As such new eclasses (the true distinction of new vs old is |
| 219 |
elaborated in the next section) can be removed from the tree once they're no |
| 220 |
longer in use. |
| 221 |
|
| 222 |
|
| 223 |
The end of backwards compatibility... |
| 224 |
------------------------------------- |
| 225 |
|
| 226 |
With current eclasses, once the eclass is in use, its api can no longer be |
| 227 |
changed, nor can the eclass ever be removed from the tree. This is why we still |
| 228 |
have *ancient* eclasses that are completely unused sitting in the tree, for |
| 229 |
example inherit.eclass. The reason for this, not surprisingly, is a portage |
| 230 |
deficiency: on unmerging an installed ebuild, portage used the eclass from the |
| 231 |
current tree. |
| 232 |
|
| 233 |
For a real world example of this, if you merged a glibc 2 years back, whatever |
| 234 |
eclasses it used must still be compatible, or you may not be able to unmerge the |
| 235 |
older glibc version during an upgrade to a newer version. So either the glibc |
| 236 |
maintainer is left with the option of leaving people using ancient versions out |
| 237 |
in the rain, or maintaining an ever increasing load of backwards compatibility |
| 238 |
cruft in any used eclasses. |
| 239 |
|
| 240 |
Binpkgs suffer a similar fate. Merging of a binpkg pulls needed eclasses from |
| 241 |
the tree, so you may not be able to even merge a binpkg if the eclasses api has |
| 242 |
changed. If the eclass was removed, you can't even merge the binpkg, period. |
| 243 |
|
| 244 |
The next major release of portage will address this- the environment that the |
| 245 |
ebuild was built in already contains the eclasses functions, as such the env can |
| 246 |
be re-used rather then relying on the eclass. In other words, binpkgs and |
| 247 |
installed ebuilds will no longer go and pull needed eclasses from the tree, |
| 248 |
they'll use the 'saved' version of the eclass they were built/merged with. |
| 249 |
|
| 250 |
So the backwards compatibility requirement for users of the next major portage |
| 251 |
version (and beyond) isn't required. All the cruft can be dropped. |
| 252 |
|
| 253 |
The problem is that there will be users using older versions of portage that don't |
| 254 |
support this functionality- these older installations *cannot* use the |
| 255 |
new eclasses, due to the fact that their portage version is incapable of |
| 256 |
properly relying on the env- in other words, the varying api of the eclass will |
| 257 |
result in user-visible failures during unmerging. |
| 258 |
|
| 259 |
So we're able to do a clean break of all old eclasses, and api cruft, but we need |
| 260 |
a means to basically disallow access to the new eclasses for all portage versions |
| 261 |
incapable of properly handling the env requirements. |
| 262 |
|
| 263 |
Unfortunately, we cannot just rely on a different grouping/naming convention within |
| 264 |
the old eclass directory. The new eclasses must be inaccessible, and portage throws |
| 265 |
a snag into this- the existing inherit function that is used to handle existing |
| 266 |
eclasses. Basically, whatever it's passed (inherit kernel or inherit |
| 267 |
kernel/kernel) it will pull in (kernel.eclass, and kernel/kernel.eclass |
| 268 |
respectively). So even if the new eclasses were implemented within a |
| 269 |
subdirectory of the eclass dir in the tree, all current portage versions would |
| 270 |
still be able to access them. |
| 271 |
|
| 272 |
In other words, these new eclasses would in effect, be old eclasses since older |
| 273 |
portage versions could still access them. |
| 274 |
|
| 275 |
|
| 276 |
Tree restructuring |
| 277 |
------------------ |
| 278 |
|
| 279 |
There are only two way to block the existing (as of this writing) inherit |
| 280 |
functionality from accessing the new eclasses- either change the extension of |
| 281 |
eclasses to something other then 'eclass', or to have them stored in a separate |
| 282 |
subdirectory of the tree then eclass. |
| 283 |
|
| 284 |
The latter is preferable, and the proposed solution. Reasons are- the current |
| 285 |
eclass directory is already overgrown. Structuring of the new eclass dir |
| 286 |
(clarified below) will allow for easier signing, ChangeLogs, and grouping of |
| 287 |
eclasses. New eclasses allow for something akin to a clean break and have new |
| 288 |
capabilities/requirements, thus it's advisable to start with a clean directory, |
| 289 |
devoid of all cruft from the old eclass implementation. |
| 290 |
|
| 291 |
If it's unclear as to why the old inherit function *cannot* access the new |
| 292 |
eclasses, please reread the previous section. It's unfortunately a requirement |
| 293 |
to take advantage of all that the next major portage release will allow. |
| 294 |
|
| 295 |
The proposed directory structure is ${PORTDIR}/include/{eclass,elib}. |
| 296 |
Something like ${PORTDIR}/new-eclass, or ${PORTDIR}/eclass-ng could be used |
| 297 |
(although many would cringe at the -ng), but such a name is unwise. Consider the |
| 298 |
possibility (likely a fact) that new eclasses someday may be found lacking, and |
| 299 |
refined further (version three as it were). Or perhaps we want to add yet more |
| 300 |
functionality with direct relation to sourcing new files, and we would then need |
| 301 |
to further populate ${PORTDIR}. |
| 302 |
|
| 303 |
The new-eclass directory will be (at least) 2 levels deep- for example: |
| 304 |
|
| 305 |
:: |
| 306 |
kernel/ |
| 307 |
kernel/linux-info.eclass |
| 308 |
kernel/linux-mod.eclass |
| 309 |
kernel/kernel-2.6.eclass |
| 310 |
kernel/kernel-2.4.eclass |
| 311 |
kernel/ChangeLog |
| 312 |
kernel/Manifest |
| 313 |
|
| 314 |
No eclasses will be allowed in the base directory- grouping of new eclasses will |
| 315 |
be required to help keep things tidy, and for the following reasons. Grouping |
| 316 |
of eclasses allows for the addition of ChangeLogs that are specific to that |
| 317 |
group of eclasses, grouping of files/patches as needed, and allows for |
| 318 |
saner/easier signing of eclasses- you can just stick a signed |
| 319 |
Manifest file w/in that grouping, thus providing the information portage needs |
| 320 |
to ensure no files are missing, and that nothing has been tainted. |
| 321 |
|
| 322 |
The elib directory will be structured in the same way, for the same reasons. |
| 323 |
|
| 324 |
Repoman will have to be extended to work within new eclass and elib groups, and |
| 325 |
to handle signing and committing. This is intentional, and a good thing. This |
| 326 |
gives repoman the possibility of doing sanity checks on elibs/new eclasses. |
| 327 |
|
| 328 |
Note these checks will not prevent developers from doing dumb things with eclass- |
| 329 |
these checks would only be capable of doing basic sanity checks, such as syntax checks. |
| 330 |
There is no way to prevent people from doing dumb things (exempting perhaps repeated |
| 331 |
applications of a cattle prod)- these are strictly automatic checks, akin to repoman's |
| 332 |
dependency checks. |
| 333 |
|
| 334 |
|
| 335 |
The start of a different phase of backwards compatibility |
| 336 |
--------------------------------------------------------- |
| 337 |
|
| 338 |
As clarified above, new eclasses will exist in a separate directory that will be |
| 339 |
intentionally inaccessible to the inherit function. As such, users of older |
| 340 |
portage versions *will* have to upgrade to merge any ebuild that uses elibs/new |
| 341 |
eclasses. A depend on the next major portage version would transparently handle |
| 342 |
this for rsync users. |
| 343 |
|
| 344 |
There still is the issue of users who haven't upgraded to the required portage |
| 345 |
version. This is a minor concern frankly- portage releases include new |
| 346 |
functionality, and bug fixes. If they won't upgrade, it's assumed they have |
| 347 |
their reasons and are big boys, thus able to handle the complications themselves. |
| 348 |
|
| 349 |
The real issue is broken envs, whether in binpkgs, or for installed packages. |
| 350 |
Two options exist- either the old eclasses are left in the tree indefinitely, or |
| 351 |
they're left for N months, then shifted out of the tree, and into a tarball that |
| 352 |
can be merged. |
| 353 |
|
| 354 |
Shifting them out of the tree is advisable for several reasons- less cruft in |
| 355 |
the tree, but more importantly the fact that they are not signed (thus an angle |
| 356 |
for attack). Note that the proposed method of eclass signing doesn't even try |
| 357 |
to address them. Frankly, it's not worth the effort supporting two variations |
| 358 |
of eclass signing, when the old eclass setup isn't designed to allow for easy |
| 359 |
signing. |
| 360 |
|
| 361 |
If this approach is taken, then either the old eclasses would have to be merged |
| 362 |
to an overlay directory's eclass directory (ugly), or to a safe location that |
| 363 |
portage's inherit function knows to look for (less ugly). |
| 364 |
|
| 365 |
For users who do not upgrade within the window of N months while the old |
| 366 |
eclasses are in the tree, as stated, it's assumed they know what they are doing. |
| 367 |
If they specifically block the new portage version, as the ebuilds in the tree |
| 368 |
migrate to the new eclasses, they will have less and less ebuilds available to |
| 369 |
them. If they tried injecting the new portage version (lying to portage, |
| 370 |
essentially), portage would bail since it cannot find the new eclass. |
| 371 |
For ebuilds that use the new eclasses, there really isn't any way to sidestep |
| 372 |
the portage version requirement- same as it has been for other portage features. |
| 373 |
|
| 374 |
What is a bit more annoying is that once the old eclasses are out of the tree, |
| 375 |
if a user has not upgraded to a portage version supporting env processing, they |
| 376 |
will lose the ability to unmerge any installed ebuild that used an old |
| 377 |
eclass. Same cause, different symptom being they will lose the ability to merge |
| 378 |
any tbz2 that uses old eclasses also. |
| 379 |
|
| 380 |
There is one additional case that is a rarity, but should be noted- if a user |
| 381 |
has suffered significant corruption of their installed package database (vdb). This is |
| 382 |
ignoring the question of whether the vdb is even usable at this point, but the possibility |
| 383 |
exists for the saved envs to be non usable due to either A) missing, or B) corrupted. |
| 384 |
In such a case, even with the new portage capabilities, they would need |
| 385 |
the old eclass compat ebuild. |
| 386 |
|
| 387 |
Note for this to happen requires either rather... unwise uses of root, or significant |
| 388 |
fs corruption. Regardless of the cause, it's quite likely for this to even become an |
| 389 |
issue, the system's vdb is completely unusable. It's a moot issue at that point. |
| 390 |
If you lose your vdb, or it gets seriously damaged, it's akin to lobotomizing portage- |
| 391 |
it doesn't know what's installed, it doesn't know of its own files, and in general, |
| 392 |
a rebuilding of the system is about the only sane course of action. The missing env is |
| 393 |
truly the least of the users concern in such a case. |
| 394 |
|
| 395 |
Continuing with the more likely scenario, users unwilling to upgrade portage will |
| 396 |
*not* be left out in the rain. Merging the old eclass compat ebuild will provide |
| 397 |
the missing eclasses, thus providing that lost functionality. |
| 398 |
|
| 399 |
Note the intention isn't to force them to upgrade, hence the ability to restore the |
| 400 |
lost functionality. The intention is to clean up the existing mess, and allow us |
| 401 |
to move forward. The saying "you've got to break a few eggs to make an omelet" |
| 402 |
is akin, exempting the fact we're providing a way to make the eggs whole again |
| 403 |
(the king's men would've loved such an option). |
| 404 |
|
| 405 |
|
| 406 |
Migrating to the new setup |
| 407 |
-------------------------- |
| 408 |
|
| 409 |
As has been done in the past whenever a change in the tree results in ebuilds |
| 410 |
requiring a specific version of portage, as ebuilds migrate to the new eclasses, |
| 411 |
they should depend on a version of portage that supports it. From the users |
| 412 |
viewpoint, this transparently handles the migration. |
| 413 |
|
| 414 |
This isn't so transparent for devs or a particular infrastructure server however. |
| 415 |
Devs, due to them using cvs for their tree, lack the pregenerated cache rsync |
| 416 |
users have. Devs will have to be early adopters of the new portage. Older |
| 417 |
portage versions won't be able to access the new eclasses, thus the local cache |
| 418 |
generation for that ebuild will fail, ergo the depends on a newer portage |
| 419 |
version won't transparently handle it for them. |
| 420 |
|
| 421 |
Additionally, prior to any ebuilds in the tree using the new eclasses, the |
| 422 |
infrastructure server that generates the cache for rsync users will have to |
| 423 |
either be upgraded to a version of portage supporting new eclasses, or patched. |
| 424 |
The former being much more preferable then the latter for the portage devs. |
| 425 |
|
| 426 |
Beyond that, an appropriate window for old eclasses to exist in the tree must be |
| 427 |
determined, and prior to that window passing, an ebuild must be added to the tree |
| 428 |
so users can get the old eclasses if needed. |
| 429 |
|
| 430 |
For eclass devs to migrate from old to new, it is possible for them to just |
| 431 |
transfer the old eclass into an appropriate grouping in the new eclass directory, |
| 432 |
although it's advisable they cleanse all cruft out of the eclass. You can |
| 433 |
migrate ebuilds gradually over to the new eclass, and don't have to worry about |
| 434 |
having to support ebuilds from X years back. |
| 435 |
|
| 436 |
Essentially, you have a chance to nail the design perfectly/cleanly, and have a |
| 437 |
window in which to redesign it. It's humbly suggested eclass devs take |
| 438 |
advantage of it. :) |
| 439 |
|
| 440 |
|
| 441 |
Backwards Compatibility |
| 442 |
======================= |
| 443 |
|
| 444 |
All backwards compatibility issues are addressed in line, but a recap is offered- |
| 445 |
it's suggested that if the a particular compatibility issue is |
| 446 |
questioned/worried over, the reader read the relevant section. There should be |
| 447 |
a more in depth discussion of the issue, along with a more extensive explanation |
| 448 |
of the potential solutions, and reasons for the chosen solution. |
| 449 |
|
| 450 |
To recap: |
| 451 |
:: |
| 452 |
|
| 453 |
New eclasses and elib functionality will be tied to a specific portage |
| 454 |
version. A DEPENDs on said portage version should address this for rsync |
| 455 |
users who refuse to upgrade to a portage version that supports the new |
| 456 |
eclasses/elibs and will gradually be unable to merge ebuilds that use said |
| 457 |
functionality. It is their choice to upgrade, as such, the gradual |
| 458 |
'thinning' of available ebuilds should they block the portage upgrade is |
| 459 |
their responsibility. |
| 460 |
|
| 461 |
Old eclasses at some point in the future should be removed from the tree, |
| 462 |
and released in a tarball/ebuild. This will cause installed ebuilds that |
| 463 |
rely on the old eclass to be unable to unmerge, with the same applying for |
| 464 |
merging of binpkgs dependent on the following paragraph. |
| 465 |
|
| 466 |
The old eclass-compat is only required for users who do not upgrade their |
| 467 |
portage installation, and one further exemption- if the user has somehow |
| 468 |
corrupted/destroyed their installed pkgs database (/var/db/pkg currently), |
| 469 |
in the process, they've lost their saved environments. The eclass-compat |
| 470 |
ebuild would be required for ebuilds that required older eclasses in such a |
| 471 |
case. Note, this case is rare also- as clarified above, it's mentioned |
| 472 |
strictly to be complete, it's not much of a real world scenario as elaborated |
| 473 |
above. |
| 474 |
|
| 475 |
|
| 476 |
Copyright |
| 477 |
========= |
| 478 |
|
| 479 |
This document has been placed in the public domain. |