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Developers HOW TO
See Set up the development environment in the README.
Let's start with building the Transmission package from start to finish:
git clone https://github.com/SynoCommunity/spksrc.git
cd spksrc/
make setup
cd spk/transmission
make arch-88f6281
There are alternatives to this command to run a build.
-
You cloned the repository;
-
Created a settings file with
make setup
; -
Went into the directory of the SPK for transmission;
-
Started building the SPK for the architecture 88f6281;
- To list all available architectures use
ls toolchain
from within thespksrc
directory. Remove the prefixsyno-
to have the actual architecture. - An overview of which architecture is used per Synology model can be found on the wiki page Architecture per Synology model.
- To list all available architectures use
At the end of the process, the SPK will be available in spksrc/packages/
.
-
First spksrc will read
spksrc/spk/transmission/Makefile
; -
Download the adequate toolchain for the chosen architecture;
-
Recursively:
- Process dependencies if any;
- Download the source in
spksrc/distrib/
; - Extract the source;
-
configure
; -
make
; -
make install
.
-
Package all the requirements into a SPK under
spksrc/packages/
:- Binaries;
- Installer script;
- Start/Stop/Status script;
- Package icon;
- Help files (optional);
- Resource files (optional);
- Service configure file (optional);
- Wizards (optional);
Creating an SPK usually starts with cross-compiling the underlying package and its dependencies. To do so, you can copy an existing Makefile from another package. For example:
-
Copy a standard cross package like
spksrc/cross/transmission/Makefile
in your new package directoryspksrc/cross/newpackage/
; -
Edit the Makefile variables so it fits your new package;
-
Empty variables
DEPENDS
andCONFIGURE_ARGS
in the Makefile; -
Create the digests file with
make digests
to verify the download link and create the digests file with file hashes to validate the file content (callmake clean
before callingmake digests
again after failed downloads). -
Create a digests file for every new or updated cross package.
-
Try to cross-compile and fix issues as they come (missing dependencies, configure arguments, patches):
-
cd spksrc/cross/newpackage/
; -
make arch-x64
; - Use
make clean
to clean up the whole working directory after a failed attempt. - Compile for any arm arch to validate cross compilation.
-
make arch-armv7
;
-
Once you have been able to successfully cross-compile the package:
-
Create a PLIST file with the same syntax as
spksrc/cross/transmission/PLIST
but based on the auto-generated PLIST for your new package atspksrc/cross/newpackage/work-88f6281/newpackage.plist
;- For more background, see PLIST files.
-
Compile for all supported processor architectures:
-
make all-supported
;
-
-
Define incompatible archs with
UNSUPPORTED_ARCHS
(optinal) and document the reason for it.
The next step is to create the SPK itself:
- Copy a standard SPK directory like
spksrc/spk/transmission
; into your new SPK directoryspksrc/spk/newspk
; - Edit the Makefile so it fits the new SPK;
- Build and test to make sure the package works. Take into consideration that package updates should work correctly.
- Install your package via
sudo synopkg install <path to .spk file (packages/newspk_ARCH-OS_...)>
- Install your package via
- Compile and build rules
- Makefile variables
- PLIST files
- SynoCommunity Used Ports
- Synology Used Ports
- UI Develop
- Using Wheels to distribute Python packages
After all that hard work, you should submit a pull request to have your work merged with the main repository on GitHub and published in SynoCommunity's repository.
To be confident your contribution will be accepted
- Successfully build for current archs with
make all-supported
. - Look for make output
Stripping ... failed!
because of invalid directives in PLIST files - Custom targets follow naming convention
INSTALL_TARGET = newpackage_install
- Any useless elements (files, variables, targets) from previous trials have been cleaned
Make changes directly in the master branch as follows:
- Clone spksrc
git clone https://github.com/SynoCommunity/spksrc.git
if not done already; - Make sure your local clone is up-to-date:
git pull
; - Run
make setup
to create a local configuration file; - Do stuff...
- Once you're happy with your changes, continue with Merging with spksrc to get your changes merged with spksrc.
Create a feature branch as follows:
- Clone spksrc
git clone https://github.com/SynoCommunity/spksrc.git
if not done already; - Run
make setup
to create a local configuration file; - Create a new branch:
git checkout -b newfeature
; - Do stuff...
- Once you're happy with your changes, continue with Merging with spksrc to get your changes merged with spksrc.
Update your remote branch, and open a Pull Request:
- Push your changes to your remote repository with
git push
; - Open a Pull Request and use the template to tell us what you've created;
- We'll review the PR, and once accepted, merge your PR into master.
Merge with master and push
- Go back in master branch:
git checkout master
; - Make sure your local clone is up-to-date:
git pull
; - Merge your new feature branch with master:
git merge newfeature
; - Push local master to remote:
git push
.
If you are not familiar with git or GitHub, please refer to the excellent GitHub help pages.
The following expect you are running from a Debian/Ubuntu host and not from within a Docker image. Also it is expected that youhave cloned the spksrc
repository and created a new development branch.
You will find the Dockerfile
under the main spksrc
directory. Once you have changed the file to meet your needs you can now generate an updated docker image (may need $ sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
for proper user permissions):
$ docker build - < Dockerfile
...bash
Successfully built 882a0451f1bb
You can now access the docker image:
$ docker run -it -v $(pwd):/spksrc 882a0451f1bb /bin/bash
As an example you can build a python310
package or what ever you are interested at testing:
root@2ff602f23b71:/spksrc# cd spk/python310
root@2ff602f23b71:/spksrc/spk/python310/# make all-supported
(OPTIONAL) For removing all docker images afterwards:
$ docker container rm -f $(docker container ls -aq)
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