Advanced Tagging¶
Some users incorporate non-trivial workflows that can require advanced tagging techniques. These workflows can be handled in the Factory Definition.
Terminology¶
Platform Build - A build created by a change to the LmP (lmp-manifest.git or meta-subscriber-overrides.git). This is the base OS image.
Container Build - A build created by a change to containers.git.
Target - This an entry in a factory’s TUF targets.json file. It represents what should be thought of as an immutable combination of the Platform build’s OSTree hash + the output of a Container build.
Tag - A Target has a “custom” section where with a list of Tags. The tags can be used to say things like “this is a development build” or this is a “production” build.
Scenario 1: A new platform build that re-uses containers¶
A Factory is set up with the normal master
branch:
lmp:
tagging:
refs/heads/master:
- tag: master
containers:
tagging:
refs/heads/master:
- tag: master
You’d like to introduce a new stable
branch from the LmP but have it use
the latest containers from master. This can be done with:
lmp:
tagging:
refs/heads/master:
- tag: master
refs/heads/stable:
- tag: stable
inherit: master
containers:
tagging:
refs/heads/master:
- tag: master
- tag: stable
Consider this pseudo targets example:
targets:
build-1:
ostree-hash: DEADBEEF
compose-apps: foo:v1, bar:v1
tags: stable
build-2:
ostree-hash: GOODBEEF
compose-apps: foo:v2, bar:v2
tags: master
If a change to the stable branch was pushed to the LmP, a new
target, build-3, would be added. The build logic would then look through
the targets list to find the most recent master
target so that
it can copy those compose-apps. This would result in a new target:
build-3:
ostree-hash: NEWHASH
compose-apps: foo:v2, bar:v2
tags: stable
On the other hand, there might also be a new container build for master
.
In this case the build logic will produce two new targets:
build-4: # for stable it will be based on build-3
ostree-hash: NEWHASH
compose-apps: foo:v3, bar:v3
tags: stable
build-4: # for master, it will be based on build-2
ostree-hash: GOODBEEF
compose-apps: foo:v3, bar:v3
tags: master
Scenario 2: Multiple container builds using the same platform¶
This scenario is the reverse of the previous one. A factory might have a
platform build tagged with master
. However, there are two versions of
containers being worked on: master
and foo
. This could be handled
with:
lmp:
tagging:
refs/heads/master:
- tag: master
- tag: foo
containers:
tagging:
refs/heads/master:
- tag: master
refs/heads/foo:
- tag: foo
inherit: master
Scenario 3: Multiple teams, different cadences¶
Some organizations may have separate core platform and application teams. In this scenario, it may be desirable to let each team move at their own decoupled paces. Furthermore, the application team might have stages(branches) of development they are working on. This could be handled with something like:
lmp:
tagging:
refs/heads/master:
- tag: master
containers:
tagging:
refs/heads/master:
- tag: master
refs/heads/dev:
- tag: dev
inherit: master
refs/heads/qa:
- tag: qa
inherit: master
This scenario is going to produce master
tagged builds that have no
containers, but can be generically verified. Then each containers.git branch
will build Targets and grab the latest master
tag to base its platform
on. NOTE: Changes to master
don’t cause new container builds. In
order to get a container’s branch updated to the latest master
a user
would need to push an empty commit to containers.git to trigger a new build:
# from branch qa
git commit --allow-empty -m 'Pull in latest platform changes from master'