Difference between revisions of "Autobuild"
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Autobuild is an in-house framework for maintaining and building libraries. It acts as director providing a common interface to build and package libraries, but it is not a build system like make or cmake. You will still need platform specific make, cmake, or project files to actually configure and build your library. Autobuild will, however, allow you invoke these commands and package the product with a common interface. (''for Linden old hands: Autobuild is designed as a replacement for the old [https://svn.lindenlab.com/svn/lindenlib/trunk lindenlib] policies, doing the right thing so you don't have to.'') | Autobuild is an in-house framework for maintaining and building libraries. It acts as director providing a common interface to build and package libraries, but it is not a build system like make or cmake. You will still need platform specific make, cmake, or project files to actually configure and build your library. Autobuild will, however, allow you invoke these commands and package the product with a common interface. (''for Linden old hands: Autobuild is designed as a replacement for the old [https://svn.lindenlab.com/svn/lindenlib/trunk lindenlib] policies, doing the right thing so you don't have to.'') | ||
{{KBcaution|Linden Lab Autobuild is not the same as or derived from [http://josefsson.org/autobuild/ GNU Autobuild], but they are similar enough to cause confusion.}} | {{KBcaution|Linden Lab Autobuild is not the same as or derived from [http://josefsson.org/autobuild/ GNU Autobuild], but they are similar enough to cause confusion.}} | ||
== Getting Autobuild == | == Getting Autobuild == |
Revision as of 18:37, 13 February 2011
Autobuild is an in-house framework for maintaining and building libraries. It acts as director providing a common interface to build and package libraries, but it is not a build system like make or cmake. You will still need platform specific make, cmake, or project files to actually configure and build your library. Autobuild will, however, allow you invoke these commands and package the product with a common interface. (for Linden old hands: Autobuild is designed as a replacement for the old lindenlib policies, doing the right thing so you don't have to.)
Important: Linden Lab Autobuild is not the same as or derived from GNU Autobuild, but they are similar enough to cause confusion. |
Getting Autobuild
Autobuild is available as a Mercurial repository:
https://bitbucket.org/lindenlab/autobuild
Running Autobuild
You can either run the autobuild command directly from the "bin" directory in a working copy of that repository, or install it as a normal python package by running
python setup.py install
from the top level directory of the working copy. You may need administrative privilege on your system to install into system command directories.
Running Autobuild
Usage:
autobuild [-v] [--help [HELP]] [--dry-run] [--quiet] [--verbose] [--debug] {installables,configure,package,edit,upload,manifest,build,install,print,source_environment,uninstall} ...
Sub Commands:
- build
- Builds platform targets.
- configure
- Configures platform targets.
- edit
- Manage build and package configuration.
- install
- Fetch and install package archives.
- installables
- Manipulate installable package entries in the autobuild configuration.
- manifest
- Manipulate manifest entries to the autobuild configuration.
- package
- Creates an archive of build output.
- Print configuration.
- source_environment
- Prints out the shell environment Autobuild-based buildscripts to use (by calling 'eval').
- uninstall
- Uninstall package archives.
- upload
- upload tool for autobuild
Options:
-v, --version --help [HELP] find all valid Autobuild Tools and show help --dry-run run tool in dry run mode if available --quiet minimal output --verbose verbose output --debug
Background and Tutorials
- Autobuild How To
- A tutorial introduction to using autobuild
- Autobuild Lexicon
- A list of terms and how they are used in the context of autobuild
- Autobuild Package Layout
- Describes the standard directory tree for packages managed with autobuild
- Autobuild Quick Start
- A basic walkthrough of how to add autobuild management to an existing software project
- Autobuild Class Model
- Describes the fundamental objects in the autobuild design and the relationships between them.
- Autobuild Package Examples
Contributing to Autobuild
Autobuild is open source. Improvements are most welcome.
- Discussion of and help with Autobuild are available on the opensource-dev mailing list and the #opensl channel on the freenode.org IRC network.
- Bug reports and feature suggestions are tracked in the Open Development project on jira.secondlife.com.
- Suggested patches for issues from the jira are reviewed on our code review system (see the documentation on how to use it).