Well that is embarrassing. I think the proper thing is to just quickly
ship a -rc2, so I will open a backport of this.
$ curl https://releases.lix.systems/manifest.nix
# This file was generated by releng/create_release.xsh in Lix
{
aarch64-linux = "/nix/store/mrbknq000af7iaqhk53bnpk1fvfrc1xp-lix-2.90.0-rc1";
aarch64-darwin = "/nix/store/z1bdccwsk34iv491aygh0mm1lgpf7yy1-lix-2.90.0-rc1";
x86_64-darwin = "/nix/store/xqvfpdhzck44v6kyhgi9f8v0xybksb6a-lix-2.90.0-rc1";
x86_64-linux = "/nix/store/h2ml0nx4477r84y82jgm8y80jpr72gqw-lix-release-tarballs";
}
Change-Id: I9cf007c850c2faf995a3a9d92457517b8501d1a1
For now we just need to put the release notes in the final spot. We will
have to fix the date on both 2.90 and 2.91 branches, but such as it is.
Release created with releng/create_release.xsh
Closes: lix-project/lix#318
Change-Id: I38e79b40e7f632c8a286f2f09865a84dc93eca90
There were two bugs I found:
1. If the build isn't already done in the store, nix-store --realise
does not know how to build it. You have to just give it the
derivation and I guess it will realise all outputs, which is fine.
2. cp without -T will not overwrite an existing manual directory,
creating a path manual/manual.
Change-Id: Ibebfd136a266da5330944a985e636ebb776f1909
I am *reasonably* confident that this releng infrastructure can actually
build a Lix 2.90 and release it successfully. Let's make it possible to
do, and add some cute colours to the confirmation message.
Change-Id: I85e498b6fb49ffc5e75c0a72c5e45fb1f69030d3
For example, when releasing from release-2.90, if `main` has a 2.91 tag
ancestor, we know that 2.91 was released, so we should *not* tag latest.
Change-Id: Ia56b17a2ee03bbec74b7c271c742858c690d450d
If we don't want to have separate registry tags by architecture (EWWWW),
we need to be able to build multiarch docker images. This is pretty
simple, and just requires making a manifest pointing to each of the
component images.
I was *going* to just do this API prodding with manifest-tool, but it
doesn't support putting metadata on the outer manifest, which is
actually kind of a problem because it then doesn't render the metadata
on github. So I guess we get a simple little containers API
implementation that is 90% auth code.
Change-Id: I8bdd118d4cbc13b23224f2fb174b232432686bea
This can release x86_64-linux binaries to staging, with ephemeral keys.
I think it's good enough to review at least at this point, so we don't
keep adding more stuff to it to make it harder to review.
Change-Id: Ie95e8f35d1252f5d014e819566f170b30eda152e