static analysis:
sairedis builds:
The SAI Redis provides a SAI redis service built on top of redis database. It contains two major components:
SAI library
that puts SAI objects into the redis database.syncd
that takes the SAI objects and puts them into the ASIC.
Before installing, add key and package sources:
sudo apt-key adv --keyserver apt-mo.trafficmanager.net --recv-keys 417A0893
echo 'deb http://apt-mo.trafficmanager.net/repos/sonic/ trusty main' | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/sonic.list
sudo apt-get update
Install dependencies:
sudo apt-get install redis-server -t trusty
sudo apt-get install libhiredis0.13 -t trusty
Install building dependencies:
sudo apt-get install libtool autoconf dh-exec
There are a few different ways you can install sairedis.
For your convenience, you can install prepared packages on Debian Jessie:
sudo apt-get install libsairedis syncd
Checkout the source: git clone https://github.com/sonic-net/sonic-sairedis.git
and install it yourself.
You will also need SAI submodule: git submodule update --init --recursive
Get SAI header files into /usr/include/sai. Put the SAI header files that you use to compile libsairedis into /usr/include/sai
Get ASIC SDK and SAI packages from your ASIC vendor and install them.
Install prerequisite packages:
sudo apt-get install libswsscommon libswsscommon-dev libhiredis-dev libzmq3-dev libpython-dev
Note: libswsscommon-dev requires libnl-3-200-dev, libnl-route-3-200-dev and libnl-nf-3-200-dev version >= 3.5.0. If these are not available via apt repositories, you can get them from the latest sonic-buildimage build.
Install SAI dependencies:
sudo apt-get install doxygen graphviz aspell
You can compile and install from source using:
./autogen.sh
./configure
make && sudo make install
You can also build a debian package using:
./autogen.sh
fakeroot debian/rules binary
If you do not have libsai, you can build a debian package using:
./autogen.sh
fakeroot debian/rules binary-syncd-vs
For general questions, setup help, or troubleshooting:
For bug reports or feature requests, please open an Issue.
See the contributors guide for information about how to contribute.
All contributors must sign an Individual Contributor License Agreement (ICLA) before contributions can be accepted. This process is managed by the Linux Foundation - EasyCLA and automated via a GitHub bot. If the contributor has not yet signed a CLA, the bot will create a comment on the pull request containing a link to electronically sign the CLA.
We're following basic GitHub Flow. If you have no idea what we're talking about, check out GitHub's official guide. Note that merge is only performed by the repository maintainer.
Guide for performing commits:
- Isolate each commit to one component/bugfix/issue/feature
- Use a standard commit message format:
[component/folder touched]: Description intent of your changes [List of changes] Signed-off-by: Your Name your@email.com
For example:
swss-common: Stabilize the ConsumerTable * Fixing autoreconf * Fixing unit-tests by adding checkers and initialize the DB before start * Adding the ability to select from multiple channels * Health-Monitor - The idea of the patch is that if something went wrong with the notification channel, we will have the option to know about it (Query the LLEN table length). Signed-off-by: user@dev.null
- Each developer should fork this repository and add the team as a Contributor
- Push your changes to your private fork and do "pull-request" to this repository
- Use a pull request to do code review
- Use issues to keep track of what is going on