commit | e7878f9c1d7afe021412d7f8ea10f698859eb0f8 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Kevin Sweeney <kevints@apache.org> | Wed Sep 02 17:45:46 2015 -0700 |
committer | Kevin Sweeney <kevints@apache.org> | Wed Sep 02 17:45:46 2015 -0700 |
tree | b62940199c593737ebd5e31be955b219eac5b8c2 | |
parent | f46147cdedba09e717703bb7b6542bce97c88323 [diff] |
Remove openjdk runtime requirement. This addresses one of my +0s. Testing Done: Using a clean vagrant environment installed aurora, then installed the oracle jdk, then uninstalled java-1.8.0-openjdk-headless (that aurora brought in transitively). RPM didn't complain and when I restarted the scheduler it was running under the new JVM. ``` [vagrant@localhost ~]$ curl -s http://localhost:8081/vars | grep 'jvm_prop_java_vendor ' jvm_prop_java_vendor Oracle Corporation [vagrant@localhost ~]$ ``` Reviewed at https://reviews.apache.org/r/38080/
This repository maintains configuration and tooling for building binary distributions of Apache Aurora.
Binaries are built within Docker containers that provide the appropriate build environment for the target platform. You will need to have a working Docker installation before proceeding.
Fetch a source distribution, such as an official one.
Run the builder script, providing the distribution platform and the source distribution archive you downloaded in (1). The example below will build Aurora 0.9.0 debs for Ubuntu Trusty.
./build-artifact.sh builder/deb/ubuntu-trusty \ ~/Downloads/apache-aurora-0.9.0.tar.gz \ 0.9.0
When this completes, debs will be placed in dist/builder/deb/ubuntu-trusty/
.
There are only two requirements for a ‘builder’ to satisfy:
Dockerfile
to provide the repeatable build environmentbuild.sh
script that creates artifactsPlease see the makeup of other builders for examples.