Installation
This chapter explains how to install Hydra on your own build farm server.
Prerequisites
To install and use Hydra you need to have installed the following dependencies:
NixPostgreSQLmany Perl packages, notably Catalyst, EmailSender,
and NixPerl (see the Hydra
expression in Nixpkgs for the complete
list)
At the moment, Hydra runs only on GNU/Linux
(i686-linux and
x86_64_linux).
For small projects, Hydra can be run on any reasonably modern
machine. For individual projects you can even run Hydra on a
laptop. However, the charm of a buildfarm server is usually that
it operates without disturbing the developer's working
environment and can serve releases over the internet. In
conjunction you should typically have your source code
administered in a version management system, such as
subversion. Therefore, you will probably want to install a
server that is connected to the internet. To scale up to large
and/or many projects, you will need at least a considerable
amount of diskspace to store builds. Since Hydra can schedule
multiple simultaneous build jobs, it can be useful to have a
multi-core machine, and/or attach multiple build machines in a
network to the central Hydra server.
Of course we think it is a good idea to use the NixOS GNU/Linux
distribution for your buildfarm server. But this is not a
requirement. The Nix software deployment system can be
installed on any GNU/Linux distribution in parallel to the
regular package management system. Thus, you can use Hydra on a
Debian, Fedora, SuSE, or Ubuntu system.
Getting Nix
If your server runs NixOS you are all set to continue with
installation of Hydra. Otherwise you first need to install Nix.
The latest stable version can be found one the Nix web
site, along with a manual, which includes installation
instructions.
Installation
The latest development snapshot of Hydra can be installed
by visiting the URL http://hydra.nixos.org/view/hydra/unstable
and using the one-click install available at one of the build
pages. You can also install Hydra through the channel by
performing the following commands:
nix-channel --add http://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/hydra/master/channel/latest
nix-channel --update
nix-env -i hydra
Command completion should reveal a number of command-line tools from Hydra:
hydra-build hydra-init hydra-update-gc-roots
hydra-eval-jobs hydra-queue-runner
hydra-evaluator hydra-server
Creating the database
Hydra stores its results in a PostgreSQL database.
To setup a PostgreSQL database with hydra
as database name and user name, issue the following commands on
the PostgreSQL server:
createuser -S -D -R -P hydra
createdb -O hydra hydra
Note that $prefix is the location of Hydra
in the nix store.
Hydra uses an environment variable to know which database should
be used, and a variable which point to a location that holds
some state. To set these variables for a PostgreSQL database,
add the following to the file ~/.profile of
the user running the Hydra services.
export HYDRA_DBI="dbi:Pg:dbname=hydra;host=dbserver.example.org;user=hydra;"
export HYDRA_DATA=/var/lib/hydra
You can provide the username and password in the file
~/.pgpass, e.g.
dbserver.example.org:*:hydra:hydra:password
Make sure that the HYDRA_DATA directory
exists and is writable for the user which will run the Hydra
services.
Having set these environment variables, you can now initialise
the database by doing:
hydra-init
To create projects, you need to create a user with
admin privileges. This can be done using
the command hydra-create-user:
$ hydra-create-user alice --full-name 'Alice Q. User' \
--email-address 'alice@example.org' --password foobar --role admin
Additional users can be created through the web interface.
UpgradingIf you're upgrading Hydra from a previous version, you
should do the following to perform any necessary database schema migrations:
hydra-initGetting Started
To start the Hydra web server, execute:
hydra-server
When the server is started, you can browse to
http://localhost:3000/ to start configuring
your Hydra instance.
The hydra-server command launches the web
server. There are two other processes that come into play:
The evaluator is responsible for
peridically evaluating job sets, checking out their
dependencies off their version control systems (VCS), and
queueing new builds if the result of the evaluation changed.
It is launched by the hydra-evaluator
command.
The queue runner launches builds (using
Nix) as they are queued by the evaluator, scheduling them
onto the configured Nix hosts. It is launched using the
hydra-queue-runner command.
All three processes must be running for Hydra to be fully
functional, though it's possible to temporarily stop any one of
them for maintenance purposes, for instance.