Awesome
repositorio - A tool to mirror and administrate linux repositories.
repositorio is a tool to mirror and administrate linux repositories and to tag them.
This is the master branch of the development repository. In this branch you'll find all the new stuff that is work-in-progress.
Need help?
If you need help, feel free to join us on irc.freenode.net on channel #rex (this is the channel for all RexOps projects) or just post an issue in the tracker.
Supported Repositories
Right now yum, apt and yast (opensuse) repositories are supported. It is also possible to query errata for packages if an errata database is present. See errata chapter for more information.
Currently we're working on docker support, so that it is possible to build a private docker registry with repositorio. See docker chapter for more information.
YaST (OpenSuSE) repository support is only for mirroring. If you want to create custom repositories for your SuSE systems, repositorio will create yum repositories. You can add those repositories with the following command:
zypper ar -t YUM http://my-repo-server.domain.tld/head/my-repo/ my-repo
Configuration
To configure repositorio create a configuration file /etc/rex/repositorio.conf. For an example file please see repositorio.conf file in this repository.
RepositoryRoot = /data/repositories
<Log4perl>
config = log4perl.conf
</Log4perl>
# this will create the repository inside
# /data/repositories/head/rex-centos-6-x86-64/CentOS/6/rex/x86_64
<Repository rex-centos-6-x86-64>
url = http://nightly.rex.linux-files.org/CentOS/6/rex/x86_64
local = rex-centos-6-x86-64/CentOS/6/rex/x86_64
type = Yum
</Repository>
You also need to create a Log4perl configuration file. You can set the location in repositorio.conf file.
log4perl.rootLogger = DEBUG, FileAppndr1
log4perl.appender.FileAppndr1 = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.FileAppndr1.filename = /var/log/repositorio.log
log4perl.appender.FileAppndr1.layout = Log::Log4perl::Layout::SimpleLayout
Mirror a repository
To mirror a defined repository you can use the following command:
repositorio --mirror --repo=rex-centos-6-x86-64
To mirror every configured directory, you can use the all keyword.
repositorio --mirror --repo=all
To reload the metadata of a repository there is the --update-metadata option.
repositorio --mirror --repo=rex-centos-6-x86-64 --update-metadata
To reload all package files of a repository there is the --update-files option.
repositorio --mirror --repo=rex-centos-6-x86-64 --update-files
Managing a repository
If you need to create a custom repository, you can do this as well.
Just add the repository to your configuration file:
<Repository custom-centos-6-x86-64>
local = custom-centos-6-x86-64/CentOS/6/custom/x86_64/
type = Yum
</Repository
Initialize the repository:
repositorio --init --repo=custom-centos-6-x86-64
Now you can add and remove files from this directory.
repositorio --add-file=my-package-1.0.rpm --repo=custom-centos-6-x86-64
repositorio --remove-file=my-package-0.9.rpm --repo=custom-centos-6-x86-64
Tagging
Every repository is per default stored in the head tag. If you want to create stable tags for your production servers, you can do this with the --tag option.
A tag is just a hardlinked copy of the head tag.
repositorio --tag=production --repo=rex-centos-6-x86-64
Errata
It is also possible to query repositorio for the errata of a package. You can do this via command line and via a webservice. If you want to query errata you also need the errata database. Currently we provide CentOS (5, 6 and 7) and EPEL errata databases.
If you want to contribute scripts to generate errata databases for other distributions, feel free to send us a pull request or join us on irc (irc.freenode.net / #rex).
To configure a repository to serve also the errata, you need to configure the errata type for the repository.
<Repository centos-6-x86-64>
url = http://ftp.hosteurope.de/mirror/centos.org/6/os/x86_64/
local = centos-6-x86-64/CentOS/6/rex/x86_64/
type = Yum
errata = CentOS-6
</Repository>
To query the errata database you can run the following command:
repositorio --repo=some-repo --errata --package=openssl --arch=x86_64 --version=1.0.0-20.el6_2.3
If you want to query the webinterface, this will return a json structure containing all available updates:
curl -XGET \
http://your-server:3000/head/centos-6-x86-64/errata?package=openssl&arch=x86_64&version=1.0.0-20.el6_2.3
To update the errata database you can use the following command:
repositorio --repo=centos-6-x86-64 --update-errata
The following errata types are available:
- CentOS-5
- CentOS-6
- CentOS-7
- epel-5
- epel-6
- epel-7
Serving a directory
To serve a directory we advice you to use Apache or nginx. You can just point the document root to RepositoryRoot in your repositorio.conf file.
If you don't want to install a webserver, you can also use the build-in webserver to server repositories.
repositorio --repo=repo-name --server prefork
Docker
If you also want to manage your private docker registry with repositorio you can do this as well. Currently this feature is in an early development stage. We welcome any feedback and patches.
Current development stage:
- upload images (docker push) - done
- download images (docker pull) - done
- authentication (docker login) - done
- user management - open
- permissions to repositories - open
- search for images (docker search) - done
Configuration
To create a docker repository you need the following snippet inside your repositorio.conf file.
<Repository docker>
local = docker-images
type = Docker
</Repository>
And then you can initialize this repository as usual with:
repositorio --repo=docker --init
This will create a new folder docker-images inside your RepositoryRoot/head directory.
For the docker images it is not possible to use apache (or another webserver) to serve the content, so you need to start a small server that is included with repositorio.
repositorio --repo=docker --server prefork
This will start a preforking webserver. The server part is done with Mojolicious. Mojolicious is an easy to use Perl Webframework.
Now you can use repositorio as a docker registry.
First you need to create a user:
docker login -e some@mail.tld -p 'some-save-password' -u 'some-user' http://localhost:3000/v1/
The user is enabled immediately. Then you can push and pull images.
docker pull ubuntu
docker tag localhost:3000/ubuntu
docker push localhost:3000/ubuntu