A rewrite of the Serpent OS tooling in Rust, enabling a robust implementation befitting Serpent and Solus
The Rust re-implementations of moss
and boulder
have now exceeded the capabilities of the original PoC code bases.
It is recommended to use an up to date version of Rust via rustup
.
Current Milestone target: oxide-prealpha1
- Read support for
.stone
- Repository manipulation
- Plugin system for layered graph of dependencies
- Search support
- Transactions
- Installation support
- Removal support
-
sync
support (See: #73 (comment)) - Triggers
- GC / cleanups of latent states
- boulder ported
- Features (previously: Subscriptions)
# clone the serpent-os moss repo somewhere reasonable
mkdir -pv ~/repos/serpent-os/
cd ~/repos/serpent-os/
git clone https://github.com/serpent-os/tools.git
cd tools/
# Install a few prerequisites (this how you'd do it on Serpent OS)
sudo moss it binutils glibc-devel linux-headers clang tar
# remember to add ~/.cargo/bin to your $PATH if this is how you installed rustfmt
cargo install rustfmt
# from inside the moss clone, this will build boulder and moss
# and install them to ${HOME}/.local/bin/ by default
just get-started
# boulder and moss rely on so-called subuid and subgid support.
# IFF you do not already have this set up for your ${USER} in /etc/subuid and /etc/subuid
# you might want to do something similar to this:
sudo touch /etc/sub{uid,gid}
sudo usermod --add-subuids 1000000-1065535 --add-subgids 1000000-1065535 root
sudo usermod --add-subuids 1065536-1131071 --add-subgids 1065536-1131071 ${USER}
NB: If you want to build .stones with boulder on your non-serpent host system, you will need to specify the
location of the boulder data files (which live in ${HOME}/.local/share/boulder if you used just get-started
like above):
alias boulder="${HOME}/.local/bin/boulder --data-dir=${HOME}/.local/share/boulder/ --config-dir=${HOME}/.config/boulder/ --moss-root=${HOME}/.cache/boulder/"
See docs.serpentos.com.
NB: Remember to use the -D sosroot/
argument to specify a root directory, otherwise moss will happily
eat your current operating system.
just get-started
# create the sosroot/ directory
mkdir -pv sosroot/
# Add the volatile repo
moss -D sosroot/ repo add volatile https://dev.serpentos.com/volatile/x86_64/stone.index
# List packages
moss -D sosroot/ list available
# Install something
moss -D sosroot/ install systemd bash libx11-32bit
If you want to create systemd-nspawn roots or bootable VMs, please check out the img-tests repository.
Please ensure all tests are running locally without issue:
$ just test
# Prior to committing a change:
$ just test # includes the just lint target
# Prior to pushing anything, apply clippy fixes:
$ just fix
Then create a Pull Request with your changes.
moss-rs
is available under the terms of the MPL-2.0