GLEP 33: Eclass Restructure/Redesign
Author | Brian Harring <[email protected]>, John Mylchreest <[email protected]> |
---|---|
Type | Standards Track |
Status | Deferred |
Version | 1 |
Created | 2005-01-29 |
Last modified | 2014-01-17 |
Posting history | 2005-01-29, 2005-03-06, 2005-09-15, 2006-09-05 |
GLEP source | glep-0033.rst |
Contents
Status
Approved by the Gentoo Council on 2005-09-15. As of September 2006 this GLEP is on hold, pending future revisions.
Abstract
For any design, the transition from theoretical to applied exposes inadequacies in the original design. This document is intended to document, and propose a revision of the current eclass setup to address current eclass inadequacies.
This document proposes several things- the creation of ebuild libraries, 'elibs', a narrowing of the focus of eclasses, a move of eclasses w/in the tree, the addition of changelogs, and a way to allow for simple eclass gpg signing. In general, a large scale restructuring of what eclasses are and how they're implemented. Essentially version two of the eclass setup.
Terminology
From this point on, the proposed eclass setup will be called 'new eclasses', the existing crop (as of this writing) will be referenced as 'old eclasses'. The distinction is elaborated on within this document.
Motivation and Rationale
Eclasses within the tree currently are a bit of a mess- they're forced to maintain backwards compatibility w/ all previous functionality. In effect, their api is constant, and can only be added to- never changing the existing functionality. This obviously is quite limiting, and leads to cruft accruing in eclasses as a eclasses design is refined. This needs to be dealt with prior to eclass code reaching a critical mass where they become unmanageable/fragile (recent pushes for eclass versioning could be interpreted as proof of this).
Beyond that, eclasses were originally intended as a method to allow for ebuilds to use a pre-existing block of code, rather then having to duplicate the code in each ebuild. This is a good thing, but there are ill effects that result from the current design. Eclasses inherit other eclasses to get a single function- in doing so, modifying the the exported 'template' (default src_compile, default src_unpack, various vars, etc). All the eclass designer was after was reusing a function, not making their eclass sensitive to changes in the template of the eclass it's inheriting. The eclass designer -should- be aware of changes in the function they're using, but shouldn't have to worry about their default src_* and pkg_* functions being overwritten, let alone the env changes.
Addressing up front why a collection of eclass refinements are being rolled into a single set of changes, parts of this proposal -could- be split into multiple phases. Why do it though? It's simpler for developers to know that the first eclass specification was this, and that the second specification is that, rather then requiring them to be aware of what phase of eclass changes is in progress.
By rolling all changes into one large change, a line is intentionally drawn in the sand. Old eclasses allowed for this, behaved this way. New eclasses allow for that, and behave this way. This should reduce misconceptions about what is allowed/possible with eclasses, thus reducing bugs that result from said misconceptions.
A few words on elibs- think of them as a clear definition between behavioral functionality of an eclass, and the library functionality. Eclass's modify template data, and are the basis for other ebuilds- elibs, however are just common bash functionality.
Consider the majority of the portage bin/* scripts- these all are candidates for being added to the tree as elibs, as is the bulk of eutils.
Specification
The various parts of this proposal are broken down into a set of changes and elaborations on why a proposed change is preferable. It's advisable to the reader that this be read serially, rather then jumping around.
Ebuild Libraries (elibs for short)
As briefly touched upon in Motivation and Rationale, the original eclass design allowed for the eclass to modify the metadata of an ebuild, metadata being the DEPENDS, RDEPENDS, SRC_URI, IUSE, etc, vars that are required to be constant, and used by portage for dep resolution, fetching, etc. Using the earlier example, if you're after a single function from an eclass (say epatch from eutils), you -don't- want the metadata modifications the eclass you're inheriting might do. You want to treat the eclass you're pulling from as a library, pure and simple.
A new directory named elib should be added to the top level of the tree to serve as a repository of ebuild function libraries. Rather then relying on using the source command, an 'elib' function should be added to portage to import that libraries functionality. The reason for the indirection via the function is mostly related to portage internals, but it does serve as an abstraction such that (for example) zsh compatibility hacks could be hidden in the elib function.
Elib's will be collections of bash functions- they're not allowed to do anything in the global scope aside from function definition, and any -minimal- initialization of the library that is absolutely needed. Additionally, they cannot modify any ebuild template functions- src_compile, src_unpack. Since they are required to not modify the metadata keys, nor in any way affect the ebuild aside from providing functionality, they can be conditionally pulled in. They also are allowed to pull in other elibs, but strictly just elibs- no eclasses, just other elibs. A real world example would be the eutils eclass.
Portage, since the elib's don't modify metadata, isn't required to track elibs as it tracks eclasses. Thus a change in an elib doesn't result in half the tree forced to be regenerated/marked stale when changed (this is more of an infra benefit, although regen's that take too long due to eclass changes have been known to cause rsync issues due to missing timestamps).
Elibs will not be available in the global scope of an eclass, or ebuild- nor during the depends phase (basically a phase that sources the ebuild, to get its metadata). Elib calls in the global scope will be tracked, but the elib will not be loaded till just before the setup phase (pkg_setup). There are two reasons for this- first, it ensures elibs are completely incapable of modifying metadata. There is no room for confusion, late loading of elibs gives you the functionality for all phases, except for depends- depends being the only phase that is capable of specifying metadata. Second, as an added bonus, late loading reduces the amount of bash sourced for a regen- faster regens. This however is minor, and is an ancillary benefit of the first reason.
There are a few further restrictions with elibs--mainly, elibs to load can only be specified in either global scope, or in the setup, unpack, compile, test, and install phases. You can not load elibs in prerm, postrm, preinst, and postinst. The reason being, for *rm phases, installed pkgs will have to look to the tree for the elib, which allows for api drift to cause breakage. For *inst phases, same thing, except the culprit is binpkgs.
There is a final restriction--elibs cannot change their exported api dependent on the api (as some eclass do for example). The reason mainly being that elibs are loaded once--not multiple times, as eclasses are.
To clarify, for example this is invalid.
if [[ -n ${SOME_VAR} ]]; then func x() { echo "I'm accessible only via tweaking some var";} else func x() { echo "this is invalid, do not do it."; } fi
Regarding maintainability of elibs, it should be a less of a load then old eclasses. One of the major issues with old eclasses is that their functions are quite incestuous- they're bound tightly to the env they're defined in. This makes eclass functions a bit fragile- the restrictions on what can, and cannot be done in elibs will address this, making functionality less fragile (thus a bit more maintainable).
There is no need for backwards compatibility with elibs- they just must work against the current tree. Thus elibs can be removed when the tree no longer needs them. The reasons for this are explained below.
Structuring of the elibs directory will be exactly the same as that of the new eclass directory (detailed below), sans a different extension.
As to why there are so many restrictions, the answer is simple- the definition of what elibs are, what they are capable of, and how to use them is nailed down as much as possible to avoid any ambiguity related to them. The intention is to make it clear, such that no misconceptions occur, resulting in bugs.
The reduced role of Eclasses, and a clarification of existing Eclass requirements
Since elibs are now intended on holding common bash functionality, the focus of eclasses should be in defining an appropriate template for ebuilds. For example, defining common DEPENDS, RDEPENDS, src_compile functions, src_unpack, etc. Additionally, eclasses should pull in any elibs they need for functionality.
Eclass functionality that isn't directly related to the metadata, or src_* and pkg_* funcs should be shifted into elibs to allow for maximal code reuse. This however isn't a hard requirement, merely a strongly worded suggestion.
Previously, it was 'strongly' suggested by developers to avoid having any code executed in the global scope that wasn't required. This suggestion is now a requirement. Execute only what must be executed in the global scope. Any code executed in the global scope that is related to configuring/building the package must be placed in pkg_setup. Metadata keys (already a rule, but now stated as an absolute requirement to clarify it) must be constant. The results of metadata keys exported from an ebuild on system A, must be exactly the same as the keys exported on system B.
If an eclass (or ebuild for that matter) violates this constant requirement, it leads to portage doing the wrong thing for rsync users- for example, wrong deps pulled in, leading to compilation failure, or dud deps.
If the existing metadata isn't flexible enough for what is required for a package, the parsing of the metadata is changed to address that. Cases where the constant requirement is violated are known, and a select few are allowed- these are exceptions to the rule that are required due to inadequacies in portage. Any case where it's determined the constant requirement may need to be violated the dev must make it aware to the majority of devs, along with the portage devs. This should be done prior to committing.
It's quite likely there is a way to allow what you're attempting- if you just go and do it, the rsync users (our user base) suffer the results of compilation failures and unneeded deps being pulled in.
After that stern reminder, back to new eclasses. Defining INHERITED and ECLASS within the eclass is no longer required. Portage already handles those vars if they aren't defined.
As with elibs, it's no longer required that backwards compatibility be maintained indefinitely- compatibility must be maintained against the current tree, but just that. As such new eclasses (the true distinction of new vs old is elaborated in the next section) can be removed from the tree once they're no longer in use.
The end of backwards compatibility...
With current eclasses, once the eclass is in use, its api can no longer be changed, nor can the eclass ever be removed from the tree. This is why we still have ancient eclasses that are completely unused sitting in the tree, for example inherit.eclass. The reason for this, not surprisingly, is a portage deficiency: on unmerging an installed ebuild, portage used the eclass from the current tree.
For a real world example of this, if you merged a glibc 2 years back, whatever eclasses it used must still be compatible, or you may not be able to unmerge the older glibc version during an upgrade to a newer version. So either the glibc maintainer is left with the option of leaving people using ancient versions out in the rain, or maintaining an ever increasing load of backwards compatibility cruft in any used eclasses.
Binpkgs suffer a similar fate. Merging of a binpkg pulls needed eclasses from the tree, so you may not be able to even merge a binpkg if the eclasses api has changed. If the eclass was removed, you can't even merge the binpkg, period.
The next major release of portage will address this- the environment that the ebuild was built in already contains the eclasses functions, as such the env can be re-used rather then relying on the eclass. In other words, binpkgs and installed ebuilds will no longer go and pull needed eclasses from the tree, they'll use the 'saved' version of the eclass they were built/merged with.
So the backwards compatibility requirement for users of the next major portage version (and beyond) isn't required. All the cruft can be dropped.
The problem is that there will be users using older versions of portage that don't support this functionality- these older installations cannot use the new eclasses, due to the fact that their portage version is incapable of properly relying on the env- in other words, the varying api of the eclass will result in user-visible failures during unmerging.
So we're able to do a clean break of all old eclasses, and api cruft, but we need a means to basically disallow access to the new eclasses for all portage versions incapable of properly handling the env requirements.
Unfortunately, we cannot just rely on a different grouping/naming convention within the old eclass directory. The new eclasses must be inaccessible, and portage throws a snag into this- the existing inherit function that is used to handle existing eclasses. Basically, whatever it's passed (inherit kernel or inherit kernel/kernel) it will pull in (kernel.eclass, and kernel/kernel.eclass respectively). So even if the new eclasses were implemented within a subdirectory of the eclass dir in the tree, all current portage versions would still be able to access them.
In other words, these new eclasses would in effect, be old eclasses since older portage versions could still access them.
Tree restructuring
There are only two way to block the existing (as of this writing) inherit functionality from accessing the new eclasses- either change the extension of eclasses to something other then 'eclass', or to have them stored in a separate subdirectory of the tree then eclass.
The latter is preferable, and the proposed solution. Reasons are- the current eclass directory is already overgrown. Structuring of the new eclass dir (clarified below) will allow for easier signing, ChangeLogs, and grouping of eclasses. New eclasses allow for something akin to a clean break and have new capabilities/requirements, thus it's advisable to start with a clean directory, devoid of all cruft from the old eclass implementation.
If it's unclear as to why the old inherit function cannot access the new eclasses, please reread the previous section. It's unfortunately a requirement to take advantage of all that the next major portage release will allow.
The proposed directory structure is ${PORTDIR}/include/{eclass,elib}. Something like ${PORTDIR}/new-eclass, or ${PORTDIR}/eclass-ng could be used (although many would cringe at the -ng), but such a name is unwise. Consider the possibility (likely a fact) that new eclasses someday may be found lacking, and refined further (version three as it were). Or perhaps we want to add yet more functionality with direct relation to sourcing new files, and we would then need to further populate ${PORTDIR}.
The new-eclass directory will be (at least) 2 levels deep- for example:
- ::
- kernel/ kernel/linux-info.eclass kernel/linux-mod.eclass kernel/kernel-2.6.eclass kernel/kernel-2.4.eclass kernel/ChangeLog kernel/Manifest
No eclasses will be allowed in the base directory- grouping of new eclasses will be required to help keep things tidy, and for the following reasons. Grouping of eclasses allows for the addition of ChangeLogs that are specific to that group of eclasses, grouping of files/patches as needed, and allows for saner/easier signing of eclasses- you can just stick a signed Manifest file w/in that grouping, thus providing the information portage needs to ensure no files are missing, and that nothing has been tainted.
The elib directory will be structured in the same way, for the same reasons.
Repoman will have to be extended to work within new eclass and elib groups, and to handle signing and committing. This is intentional, and a good thing. This gives repoman the possibility of doing sanity checks on elibs/new eclasses.
Note these checks will not prevent developers from doing dumb things with eclass- these checks would only be capable of doing basic sanity checks, such as syntax checks. There is no way to prevent people from doing dumb things (exempting perhaps repeated applications of a cattle prod)- these are strictly automatic checks, akin to repoman's dependency checks.
The start of a different phase of backwards compatibility
As clarified above, new eclasses will exist in a separate directory that will be intentionally inaccessible to the inherit function. As such, users of older portage versions will have to upgrade to merge any ebuild that uses elibs/new eclasses. A depend on the next major portage version would transparently handle this for rsync users.
There still is the issue of users who haven't upgraded to the required portage version. This is a minor concern frankly- portage releases include new functionality, and bug fixes. If they won't upgrade, it's assumed they have their reasons and are big boys, thus able to handle the complications themselves.
The real issue is broken envs, whether in binpkgs, or for installed packages. Two options exist- either the old eclasses are left in the tree indefinitely, or they're left for N months, then shifted out of the tree, and into a tarball that can be merged.
Shifting them out of the tree is advisable for several reasons- less cruft in the tree, but more importantly the fact that they are not signed (thus an angle for attack). Note that the proposed method of eclass signing doesn't even try to address them. Frankly, it's not worth the effort supporting two variations of eclass signing, when the old eclass setup isn't designed to allow for easy signing.
If this approach is taken, then either the old eclasses would have to be merged to an overlay directory's eclass directory (ugly), or to a safe location that portage's inherit function knows to look for (less ugly).
For users who do not upgrade within the window of N months while the old eclasses are in the tree, as stated, it's assumed they know what they are doing. If they specifically block the new portage version, as the ebuilds in the tree migrate to the new eclasses, they will have less and less ebuilds available to them. If they tried injecting the new portage version (lying to portage, essentially), portage would bail since it cannot find the new eclass. For ebuilds that use the new eclasses, there really isn't any way to sidestep the portage version requirement- same as it has been for other portage features.
What is a bit more annoying is that once the old eclasses are out of the tree, if a user has not upgraded to a portage version supporting env processing, they will lose the ability to unmerge any installed ebuild that used an old eclass. Same cause, different symptom being they will lose the ability to merge any tbz2 that uses old eclasses also.
There is one additional case that is a rarity, but should be noted- if a user has suffered significant corruption of their installed package database (vdb). This is ignoring the question of whether the vdb is even usable at this point, but the possibility exists for the saved envs to be non usable due to either A) missing, or B) corrupted. In such a case, even with the new portage capabilities, they would need the old eclass compat ebuild.
Note for this to happen requires either rather... unwise uses of root, or significant fs corruption. Regardless of the cause, it's quite likely for this to even become an issue, the system's vdb is completely unusable. It's a moot issue at that point. If you lose your vdb, or it gets seriously damaged, it's akin to lobotomizing portage- it doesn't know what's installed, it doesn't know of its own files, and in general, a rebuilding of the system is about the only sane course of action. The missing env is truly the least of the users concern in such a case.
Continuing with the more likely scenario, users unwilling to upgrade portage will not be left out in the rain. Merging the old eclass compat ebuild will provide the missing eclasses, thus providing that lost functionality.
Note the intention isn't to force them to upgrade, hence the ability to restore the lost functionality. The intention is to clean up the existing mess, and allow us to move forward. The saying "you've got to break a few eggs to make an omelet" is akin, exempting the fact we're providing a way to make the eggs whole again (the king's men would've loved such an option).
Migrating to the new setup
As has been done in the past whenever a change in the tree results in ebuilds requiring a specific version of portage, as ebuilds migrate to the new eclasses, they should depend on a version of portage that supports it. From the users viewpoint, this transparently handles the migration.
This isn't so transparent for devs or a particular infrastructure server however. Devs, due to them using cvs for their tree, lack the pregenerated cache rsync users have. Devs will have to be early adopters of the new portage. Older portage versions won't be able to access the new eclasses, thus the local cache generation for that ebuild will fail, ergo the depends on a newer portage version won't transparently handle it for them.
Additionally, prior to any ebuilds in the tree using the new eclasses, the infrastructure server that generates the cache for rsync users will have to either be upgraded to a version of portage supporting new eclasses, or patched. The former being much more preferable then the latter for the portage devs.
Beyond that, an appropriate window for old eclasses to exist in the tree must be determined, and prior to that window passing, an ebuild must be added to the tree so users can get the old eclasses if needed.
For eclass devs to migrate from old to new, it is possible for them to just transfer the old eclass into an appropriate grouping in the new eclass directory, although it's advisable they cleanse all cruft out of the eclass. You can migrate ebuilds gradually over to the new eclass, and don't have to worry about having to support ebuilds from X years back.
Essentially, you have a chance to nail the design perfectly/cleanly, and have a window in which to redesign it. It's humbly suggested eclass devs take advantage of it. :)
Backwards Compatibility
All backwards compatibility issues are addressed in line, but a recap is offered- it's suggested that if the a particular compatibility issue is questioned/worried over, the reader read the relevant section. There should be a more in depth discussion of the issue, along with a more extensive explanation of the potential solutions, and reasons for the chosen solution.
To recap:
New eclasses and elib functionality will be tied to a specific portage version. A DEPENDs on said portage version should address this for rsync users who refuse to upgrade to a portage version that supports the new eclasses/elibs and will gradually be unable to merge ebuilds that use said functionality. It is their choice to upgrade, as such, the gradual 'thinning' of available ebuilds should they block the portage upgrade is their responsibility. Old eclasses at some point in the future should be removed from the tree, and released in a tarball/ebuild. This will cause installed ebuilds that rely on the old eclass to be unable to unmerge, with the same applying for merging of binpkgs dependent on the following paragraph. The old eclass-compat is only required for users who do not upgrade their portage installation, and one further exemption- if the user has somehow corrupted/destroyed their installed pkgs database (/var/db/pkg currently), in the process, they've lost their saved environments. The eclass-compat ebuild would be required for ebuilds that required older eclasses in such a case. Note, this case is rare also- as clarified above, it's mentioned strictly to be complete, it's not much of a real world scenario as elaborated above.
Copyright
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/.