OE Layer Index web interface ============================ This is a small Django-based web application that provides a way to manage an index of OpenEmbedded metadata layers for use on top of OE-Core. There are two main methods of setting up this application - within a set of Docker containers, or standalone. The Docker-based setup is more suited for production whereas standalone is a bit easier for development. This document will consider only the Docker-based setup; for standalone please see README.devel. Docker Setup ------------ The dockersetup.py script will set up and configure a cluster of 5 or 6 docker containers: - layersapp: the application - layersdb: the database - layersweb: NGINX web server (as a proxy and for serving static content) - layerscelery: Celery (for running background jobs) - layersrabbit: RabbitMQ (required by Celery) - layerscertbot: Runs certbot to keep letsencrypt certificates up-to-date (optional, default disabled) The script will edit all necessary configuration files, build and launch all containers, and do the initial database setup. It is advised that you start with a .sql database file to prepopulate your database. The following instructions will walk you through the setup. 1) Install docker and docker-compose per instructions: https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/ ** Note: for latest docker-compose version follow the directions above, rather than using a perhaps outdated one provided by your distribution. 2) Run the setup script (dockersetup.py). You can optionally supply your hostname, proxy settings, a sql database file of layer mappings to import, and a host to container port mapping. For more information, run: ./dockersetup.py -h Example command to run containers with a proxy and with a database to import: ./dockersetup.py -d ~/databasedump.sql -p http://: NOTE: If you want email sending to work (required for user registration and password resets), you should use the -e/--email-host option to specify your outgoing email server. During the setup you will be asked for a username, email and password to set up a super user for the database. 3) Once the script completes, open a web browser and navigate to the URL printed out by the script. By default that would be: https://localhost:8081 4) If you have chosen to not supply a prepopulated database and are instead starting fresh, you should now follow the instructions in the "Database Setup" section of the main README. 5) If you need to rerun this script for any reason a second time, you'll need to choose between two modes: A) Updating (-u/--update) - updates the code and runs any database upgrades if applicable, or B) Reinstalling (-r/--reinstall) - deletes the containers and reinstalls from scratch. Be warned that this will throw away all data in the database. Note that updating with -u/--update will only work if the configuration changes originally made by dockersetup.py upon installation (e.g. passwords, hostname, etc.) are still present in the source tree. TROUBLESHOOTING: - Network issues behind a proxy when building container: On some systems (particularly where dnsmasq is installed), /etc/resolv.conf is set to 127.0.0.x, rather than your local DNS server. Docker will look there for your DNS server, and when it fails to find it it will default to using a public one (frequently 8.8.8.8). Many corporate proxies blocks public DNS servers, so you will need to manually supply the DNS server to docker using /etc/docker/daemon.json: {"dns": ["xx.xx.xx.xx] } Database Setup -------------- Once the application is running you'll need to do a bit of further setup within it: 1. For a fresh database (without importing any database dump) you will need layer data. To import the full set for the master branch from the public instance at layers.openembedded.org you can run the following: docker-compose run --rm layersapp /opt/layerindex/layerindex/tools/import_layers.py https://layers.openembedded.org Alternatively, you can populate the database manually - you'll need to add at least the openembedded-core layer to the database, or some equivalent that contains conf/bitbake.conf for the base system configuration. To add this, follow these steps: 1.1. With the server running, go to the admin page - http://localhost:8080/admin/ by default (the hostname must match what the web server is configured for i.e. what you specified when running dockersetup.py). Use the login/password for the admin account specified during setup. 1.2. Click on the "Submit Layer" button in the top right and enter the details for the core layer. To use the real openembedded-core layer, use these values: Layer name: openembedded-core Layer type: Base Summary: Core metadata Description: Core metadata Repository URL: git://git.openembedded.org/openembedded-core Repository subdirectory: meta Once you have filled in the required values, click on the "Submit Layer" button. NOTE: The name of the layer must be "openembedded-core", unless you change CORE_LAYER_NAME in settings.py to match whatever alternative name you use here. 1.3. The layer has been added but is not yet published. (For the public index this provides some protection against spam and malformed entries.) To publish it, click on the orange number next to your login name at the top right, click on the newly added layer entry, and then click on "Publish Layer". 2. If you need to support multiple branches of OpenEmbedded/BitBake where some require Python 2.x and others require Python 3.x, then you will need to set up "Python environment" records through the admin interface to correspond to these so that the right Python version gets used to parse the branch, and then set the "Update environment" field on each branch record to point to the appropriate environment. If you're using virtualenv you will need separate virtual environments set up for Python 2 and 3 which you should point to in the Python environment record. 3. Set the site name (as displayed in the top bar and page titles) by going into the admin interface (http://127.0.0.1:8000/admin/ or equivalent), clicking on "Sites" at the bottom, and editing the first entry, setting "Display name" to the desired name. 4. You may wish to customise some of the page templates to suit your installation, in particular: * templates/base.html * templates/layerindex/about.html Updating OpenEmbedded data -------------------------- You will likely want to update the OpenEmbedded layer information on a regular basis. To do that by fetching and parsing all layer repositories, run the following: Incremental update: docker-compose run --rm layersapp /opt/layerindex/layerindex/update.py Reload all data (should only be needed if the database structure has changed as part of an upgrade of the application code): docker-compose run --rm layersapp /opt/layerindex/layerindex/update.py -r Alternatively, you can update the data from an existing layer index instance (as per above during setup): docker-compose run --rm layersapp /opt/layerindex/layerindex/tools/import_layers.py https://layers.openembedded.org Upgrading from an earlier version --------------------------------- To upgrade the Docker-based setup from a previous release, simply run: ./dockersetup.py -u This will update the code and run any required database migrations. Support for OE-Classic ---------------------- The Layer index optionally provides a means to index OE-Classic on a one-off import basis and then compare what was there to what you have now in the indexed layers (with some graphs showing how much of it has been migrated/superseded). If you want to enable this, do the following: 1. From the admin interface, create a Branch record with the following values: - Name: oe-classic (must be exactly this!) - Bitbake branch: 1.12 - Enable updates: NOT ticked - Comparison: ticked - Update environment: if you have set up Python environments (for python2 vs python3 across different branches) then you'll need to select the python2 environment that you created here 2. Clone OE-Classic somewhere locally on the machine running the layer index: git clone git://git.openembedded.org/openembedded 3. Clone a bitbake somewhere locally and check out the 1.12 branch: git clone git://git.openembedded.org/bitbake -b 1.12 4. Run import_classic.py, specifying the path to OE-Classic and the bitbake you checked out: layerindex/tools/import_classic.py /path/to/bitbake112 /path/to/oeclassic 5. Update the migration status of OE-Classic recipes based on other layers in the database: layerindex/tools/update_classic_status.py If you refresh the main page of the website, the OE-Classic data should now show up at the bottom of the branch drop-down menu. On a periodic basis you can repeat the last step to update the migration status in case new recipes are brought across (or replacements are created). Users with sufficient permissions can also manually update the migration status on the OE-Classic recipe detail pages within the website, which is useful for example when there's a replacement recipe in another layer that doesn't have the same name, so the update_classic_status.py script wouldn't be able to pick it up. Setting up other distro comparisons ----------------------------------- The Layer Index also provides optional functionality to enable comparison with other distributions (currently RPM-based only) in a similar manner to OE-Classic comparison documented above. To set this up you need to perform the following steps: 1. From the admin interface, set up the appropriate entries: 1.1. Create a Branch with the following values: - Bitbake branch: - Enable updates: NOT enabled - Comparison: enabled 1.2. Create a Layer. Typically this would have the same name as the branch although that is not a requirement. The "Comparison" checkbox should be ticked. If the packages are in separate repositories (one per package, as is typical in RPM-based distributions such as Fedora) then in order to make the links through to files work correctly you may need to use repository web interface URLs similar to these: Repository web interface tree base URL: https://github.com/organisationname/%pathelement[0]%/tree/master/%pathelement[1:]% Repository web interface file base URL: https://github.com/organisationname/%pathelement[0]%/blob/master/%pathelement[1:]% 1.3. Create a LayerBranch to link the Branch and Layer that you created in the previous steps. You don't need to enter anything special here. 2. Run the import script, specifying the branch and layer names and the path to the base of the packages (where each subdirectory contains a package, notably a spec file describing the package): layerindex/tools/import_otherdistro.py import-pkgspec 3. Update the comparison status of recipes based on layers in the database: layerindex/tools/update_classic_status.py -l -b 4. Optionally enable the Update button in the UI by setting COMPARISON_UPDATE in settings.py to map each other distro branch to the command that should be run in the background when the button is pressed. For example: COMPARISON_UPDATE = [ { 'branch_name': 'otherlinux', 'update_command': 'layerindex/tools/import_otherdistro.py import-pkgspec otherlinux otherlinux /path/to/pkgs -u %update%; layerindex/tools/update_classic_status.py -b otherlinux -l otherlinux -u %update%', }, ] If you refresh the main page of the website, the other distro data should now show up at the bottom of the branch drop-down menu. On a periodic basis you can repeat steps 2 and 3 to refresh the data as changes occur on both sides. Users with sufficient permissions can also manually update the migration status on the other distro recipe detail pages within the website, which is useful for example when there's an equivalent recipe in another layer that doesn't have the same name, so the update_classic_status.py script wouldn't be able to pick it up. If you want to show links to additional upstream pages associated with packages in the other distro, you can add "Layer recipe extra URL" entries for each type of link you want to be shown. For example, Fedora provides a summary page for each package - acl's one is at https://apps.fedoraproject.org/packages/acl, so you would create a Layer Recipe Extra URL entry with the template URL "https://apps.fedoraproject.org/packages/%pn%" and then links would be shown for this under the detail page for each package in the other distro. If you have the rrs application enabled the link will also be shown in the "Distros" section of the maintenance detail page for the covering recipe. Security Considerations ----------------------- Some things to be aware of from a security perspective: * By default, anyone can register themselves an account. If you wish to disable new user registration and manage users manually through the admin interface instead, then add the following line to docker/settings.py: REGISTRATION_OPEN = False Then, assuming you have already run dockersetup.py to install the application, run the following command to update it: ./dockersetup.py -u * By default, dockersetup.py enables connection to the web server via HTTPS using a self-signed certificate; connections via HTTP are re-directed to HTTPS. However, the self-signed certificate is only intended to provide a minimum level of security, but will result in browser warnings and is not recommended for production - instead, obtain and use your own certificate/key pair corresponding to the domain which will be used to access the application in production, or alternatively if the application is accessible to the internet you can use Let's Encrypt. * If you provide your own certificates for HTTPS, you should probably also enable HSTS in your configuration. Refer to the Django Security guide for details on how to do that: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.11/topics/security/#ssl-https * To reset a forgotten account password, you can either use the password reset function ( /accounts/password_reset/ ) or alternatively from the backend you can run the following command: docker-compose exec layersapp /opt/layerindex/manage.py changepassword * The web-based password reset function will ask the user answers to security questions they selected and answered when they created the account. Admins can configure the selectable security questions in the admin interface under "Security questions"; however, be cautious about deleting or substantially changing a question if you already have user accounts that have given answers to that question, as doing so will invalidate the user-set answers. You can check this if you go to delete the security question in the admin interface - any user answers will show up as "Security question answers" listed to be deleted along with the question. Note: the superuser created during setup will not have answers to security questions set, so if you think you might need to use the password reset function later you will need to set these by logging into the application and then going to Edit Profile on the top-right user drop-down menu. * Security question answers are stored using the same mechanism as for passwords, i.e. a secure one-way hash; thus answers cannot be retrieved from the database once set. Additionally, if a user wants to change one of their answers via the Edit Profile function, they will be required to re-specify all of them. * Account lockout: this application will lock out the user in two ways: - By IP address (using django-axes) after too many invalid login attempts. (default 4, resets after an hour). The lockout can be removed immediately using the following command: docker-compose exec layersapp /opt/layerindex/manage.py axes_reset If you wish to disable this, remove or comment out "axes" in INSTALLED_APPS. For more information on configuring axes, see: https://django-axes.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ - By account for too many incorrect password reset attempts. To remove this lockout, log into the admin interface, go to Users, click on the the user, tick the Active checkbox and then save. * The REST API inherited from the OpenEmbedded layerindex upon which this application is based has been disabled, since it has no access controls on querying data (since the OE layer index operates entirely on publicly accessible information, whereas this application may not in actual usage). Backup and restore ------------------ To back up the database within the docker-based setup, you can run the following command (no need to substitute ${MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD}, it's already present within the container environment): docker-compose exec layersdb /bin/sh -c '/usr/bin/mysqldump -u root --password=${MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD} --max_allowed_packet=512M layersdb' | gzip > backup-`date +%Y_%m_%d_%H%M`.sql.gz To restore one of these backups you would run the following command (take care, this will overwrite the data immediately without prompting!): zcat backupfile.sql.gz | docker-compose exec -T layersdb /bin/sh -c '/usr/bin/mysql -u root --password=${MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD} layersdb' Maintenance ----------- The code for this application is maintained by the Yocto Project. The latest version of the code can always be found here: http://git.yoctoproject.org/cgit/cgit.cgi/layerindex-web/ Contributions are welcome. Please send patches / pull requests to yocto-patches@lists.yoctoproject.org with '[layerindex-web]' in the subject. License ------- This application is based upon the Django project template, whose files are covered by the BSD license and are copyright (c) Django Software Foundation and individual contributors. Bundled Bootstrap (including Glyphicons) is redistributed under the MIT license. Bundled jQuery is redistributed under the MIT license. Bundled Chart.js is redistributed under the MIT license. Bundled TableSorter is redistributed under the MIT license. Bundled and modified django-registration-templates is redistributed under the MIT license. All other content is copyright (C) 2013-2019 Intel Corporation and licensed under the MIT license (unless otherwise noted) - see COPYING.MIT for details.