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{{DISPLAYTITLE:Fedora Packaging Guidelines for Modules}}
#REDIRECT [[Module:Guidelines]]
<div style="float: right;" class="toclimit-2">__TOC__</div>
 
== Disclaimer ==
 
Note that this document is just a draft.  These aren't official, approved Fedora guidelines.  Neither is the modulemd format finalized with which we're working with here.
 
== Overview ==
 
The goal of this document is to describe how to create valid module files, document purposes of all the data fields in them, hint best practices and demonstrate some examples.
 
Each module is defined by a single YAML file and comprises of a number of key-value pairs describing the module's properties and components it contains.  Not everything needs to (or even should) be filled in by the module packager; some of the fields get populated later during the module build or distribution phase.  The module file format is commonly known as ''modulemd''.
 
The original format specification can be found in the [https://pagure.io/modulemd modulemd repository].
 
== Required fields ==
 
=== Document header and the data section ===
 
Every modulemd file '''MUST''' contain a modulemd document header which consists of the document type tag and the document format version, and a data section holding the module data.
 
  document: modulemd
  version: 0
  data:
      (...)
 
The version is an integer and is not currently used for anything; this will change later in the modulemd development phase.
 
=== Module name ===
 
Every module '''MUST''' define its name.  The format isn't strictly defined yet but will most likely follow the format of SRPM names.
 
  name: example
 
Note that unlike srpms/rpms the name of the module doesn't define the line-of-upgrade, on it's own. In the packaging world the name is the means by which you upgrade, to get bugfixes etc. In the modular world you can still only have a single module named "foo" but depending on your configuration your machine will only use certain versions of those modules.
 
=== Module version and release ===
 
Every module '''MUST''' also specify its version and release.  The format is similar to that for packaging, but the meaning is very different. In the packaging world the version is taken from upstream, and the release is taken from the distribution starting at 1 and incremented as changes happen. In the modular world the version represents the rpm data for the module, and the release represents the metadata within the module. Currently the plan is to have a date, hash and id for the version. However because of the line-of-upgrade differences, sorting should not be assumed in the same way it is in the packaging world.
 
  version: 20161201T1301Z.d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e.1.23
  release: 20161201T1301Z.68b329da9893e34099c7d8ad5cb9c940
 
The version field '''SHOULD''' be suffixed with the version of the main module component rpm version, where applicable.  For example a ''webserver'' module that contains the ''httpd-2.4.18'' webserver as its key component should use 2.4.18 as the suffix on it's version.  If this cannot be done, you '''SHOULD''' drop the suffix and just have a date and hash. The hash '''MUST''' be generated in a reproducible way from the contents of the rpms within the module.
 
The release field hash '''MUST''' be generated in a reproducible way from the data within the module file, so that if any data within the module changes the hash will change (and if it changes back the hash will change back). Obviously this has to ignore the release field.
 
=== Module summary and description ===
 
Every module '''MUST''' include human-readable short summary and description.  Both should be written in US English.
 
  summary: An example module
  description: >
      An example long description of an example module, written just
      to demonstrate the purpose of this field.
 
The summary is a one sentence concise description of the module and '''SHOULD NOT''' end in a period.
 
The description expands on this and '''SHOULD''' end in a period.  Description '''SHOULD NOT''' contain installation instructions or configuration manuals.
 
=== Module licensing ===
 
Every module '''MUST''' contain a license section and declare a list of the module's licenses.  Note these aren't the module's components' licenses.
 
  license:
      module:
          - MIT
 
Fedora content, such as SPEC files or patches not included upstream, uses the MIT license by default, unless the component packager declares otherwise.  Therefore MIT might be a reasonable default for most module authors as well.
 
See [[Fedora_Packaging_Guidelines_for_Modules#Module_content_licensing]] to see how to declare components' licenses.
 
== Optional fields ==
 
=== Module content licensing ===
 
If the module includes some RPM or non-RPM content, the packager '''MAY''' also define a list of content licenses.
 
  license:
      module:
          - MIT
      content:
          - GPL+
          - BSD
 
Not every module includes packages and therefore doesn't necessarily have to include this field.
 
Furthermore, the content licenses list should ideally be automatically filled by module build tools rather than the module author.
 
=== Module dependencies ===
 
Modules '''MAY''' depend on other modules.  These module relationships are listed in the depepdencies section.
 
'''Note:''' This section may change significantly in the future.
 
  dependencies:
      buildrequires:
          example-build-dependency: 20161201T1301Z.d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e.1.23-20161201T1301Z.68b329da9893e34099c7d8ad5cb9c940
      requires:
          example-runtime-dependency: 20161102T1401Z.d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e-20161102T1401Z.68b329da9893e34099c7d8ad5cb9c940
 
So far modulemd supports two kinds of dependencies:
 
* <code>buildrequires</code> for listing build dependencies of the module, i.e. modules that define the buildroot for building the module's components
* <code>requires</code> for listing runtime dependencies of the module, i.e. modules that need to be available on the target system for this module to work properly
 
Both these sections contain key-value pairs where keys are the required module names and values the minimum required version in the ''version-release'' format.
 
Either or both of these sections may be omitted.
 
=== Extensible module metadata block ===
 
Modules '''MAY''' also contain an extensible metadata block, a list of vendor-defined key-value pairs.
 
  xmd:
      user-defined-key: 42
      another-user-defined-key:
          - the first value of the list
          - the second value of the list
 
=== Module references ===
 
Modules '''MAY''' define links referencing various upstream resources, such as community website, project documentation or upstream bug tracker.
 
  references:
      community: http://www.example.com/
      documentation: http://www.example.com/docs/1.23/
      tracker: http://www.example.com/bugs/
 
=== Module components ===
 
Modules '''MAY''', and most modules do contain a components section defining the module's content.
 
  components:
      (...)
 
==== RPM content ====
 
Module RPM content is defined in the <code>rpms</code> subsection of <code>components</code> and typically consists of one or more <code>packages</code> described by their SRPM names and additional extra key-value pairs, some required and some optional, associated with them.
 
Besides <code>packages</code> the <code>rpms</code> section '''MAY''' also define the following keys:
 
* the <code>dependencies</code> switch which controls whether RPM-level dependencies should be automatically included, or ''bundled'', in the module if none of the modules required at runtime would provide these dependencies; this defaults to <code>False</code> and the value cannot be overridden for production module builds in Fedora.
* the <code>api</code> list of RPM binary package names that are considered the ''stable module API'', i.e. supported RPM components of this module that shouldn't break or disappear without a notice; binary RPM packages not listed here are considered ''internal details'' and other modules '''SHOULD NOT''' depend on them or even expect them to be shipped.  Modules with RPM content '''SHOULD''' define some RPM module API.
* the <code>filter</code> list of RPM binary packages that should NOT be included. If there is a hard requirement on one of the packages in the filter list, the package will get installed regardless of the filter. <code>filter</code> default is no package will be filtered.
  components:
      rpms:
          dependencies: False
          api:
              - foo
              - foo-devel
          filter:
              - foo-subpackage_1
              - foo-subpackage_2
          packages:
              foo:
                  rationale: The key component of this module
                  commit: abcdef1
                  repository: git://git.example.com/foo.git
                  cache: http://www.example.com/lookasidecache/
                  arches:
                      - i686
                      - x86_64
                  multilib:
                      - x86_64
 
The following key-value pairs extend the SRPM name:
 
* <code>rationale</code> - every component '''MUST''' declare why it was added to the module; this is currently a free form string and might change in the future.
* <code>commit</code> - the git hash or other commit ID in the <code>repository</code> that should be built and included in this module; recommended.  If not defined, the current HEAD or equivalent is used and the hash or other commit ID is recorded in the module by module build tools. So, for example, if we're looking at the <code>commit</code> for the Fedora httpd package, the git hash should come from the official Fedora httpd package repo.
* <code>repository</code> - specifies git or other VCS repository to use as the component's source; in Fedora, dist-git is used and this option cannot be overridden.
* <code>cache</code> - points to RPM lookaside cache; in Fedora this option cannot be overriden.
* <code>arches</code> - a list of architectures this component should be built for; defaults to all available architectures.
* <code>multilib</code> - a list of architectures where this component should be available as multilib, e.g. if <code>x86_64</code> is listed, x86_64 repositories will also include i686 builds.  Defaults to no multilib.
 
==== Non-RPM content ====
 
Non-RPM content isn't currently supported.
 
=== Module profiles ===
 
The module author '''MAY''' define lists of packages that would be installed by default when the module is enabled and the particular profile is selected.  Whether the packages actually get installed depends on the user's configuration.
 
Profile names are arbitrary strings.  There's currently only one special-purpose profile name defined — ''default''.  More special-purpose profile names might be defined in the future.
 
The ''default'' profile lists packages that would be installed unless the user's configuration dictates otherwise.  It's generally a good idea to define the ''default'' profile for application-style modules.
 
In the case of RPM content, the profile package lists reference binary RPM package names.  Non-RPM content isn't currently supported.
 
  profiles:
      default:
          rpms:
              - myapplication
              - myapplication-plugins
      minimal:
          rpms:
              - myapplication
 
== Examples ==
 
=== Minimal module ===
 
A minimal module ''example-1.23-1'', containing no packages, having no dependencies whatsoever and defining only the minimal set of required metadata.
 
  document: modulemd
  version: 0
  data:
      name: example
      version: 1.23
      release: 1
      summary: An example summary
      description: >
          An example description.
      license:
          module:
              - MIT
 
=== Minimal module with RPM content ===
 
A minimal module, ''example-1.23-1'', containing one RPM package with SRPM name ''foo''.  This module doesn't define any dependencies or optional metadata.
 
  document: modulemd
  version: 0
  data:
      name: example
      version: 20161201T1301Z.d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e.1.23
      release: 20161201T1301Z.68b329da9893e34099c7d8ad5cb9c940
      summary: An example summary
      description: >
          An example description.
      license:
          module:
              - MIT
      components:
          rpms:
              packages:
                  foo:
                      rationale: An example RPM component
 
=== Minimal module with RPM content but with the -docs subpackage excluded ===
 
A minimal module, ''example-nodoc-1.23-1'', containing one RPM package with SRPM name ''foo''.  A build of 'foo' creates binary packages 'foo-1.0-1' and the subpackage 'foo-doc-1.0-1'. Both would get included in the module when no filter would be used. This module doesn't define any dependencies or optional metadata.
 
  document: modulemd
  version: 0
  data:
      name: example
      version: 20161201T1301Z.d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e.1.23
      release: 20161201T1301Z.68b329da9893e34099c7d8ad5cb9c940
      summary: An example summary
      description: >
          An example description.
      license:
          module:
              - MIT
      components:
          rpms:
              packages:
                  foo:
                      rationale: An example RPM component
              filter:
                  - foo-doc
 
=== Minimal module with dependencies only (stack) ===
 
A minimal module, ''example-stack-1.23-1'', containing no packages or any optional metadata besides dependencies.  Modules of this type are referred to as ''stacks''.
 
  document: modulemd
  version: 0
  data:
      name: example-stack
      version: 20161201T1301Z.d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e.1.23
      release: 20161201T1301Z.68b329da9893e34099c7d8ad5cb9c940
      summary: An example summary
      description: >
          An example description.
      license:
          module:
              - MIT
      dependencies:
          requires:
              another-module: 0
              one-more: 22
 
=== Common Fedora module ===
 
A typical Fedora module defines all the mandatory metadata plus some useful references, has build and runtime dependencies and contains one or more packages built from specific commits in dist-git.  It relies on Fedora build tools to extract licensing information from the included component and populate the <code>data→license→content</code> list.
 
  document: modulemd
  version: 0
  data:
      name: common-module
      version: 20161102T1401Z.d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e
      release: 20161102T1401Z.68b329da9893e34099c7d8ad5cb9c940
      summary: An example of a common Fedora module
      description: This module demonstrates what most Fedora modules look like.
      license:
          module: [ MIT ]
      dependencies:
          buildrequires:
              base-runtime: 25
              common-build-tools: 0
          requires:
              base-runtime: 25
      references:
          community: http://www.example.com/common-package
          documentation: http://www.example.com/common-package/docs/5.67/
      profiles:
          default:
              rpms:
                  - common-package
                  - common-plugins
          development:
              rpms:
                  - common-package
                  - common-package-devel
                  - common-plugins
      components:
          rpms:
              api:
                  - common-package
                  - common-package-devel
                  - common-plugins
              packages:
                  common-package:
                      rationale: The key component of this module
                      commit: fd245a0
                  common-plugins:
                      rationale: Extensions for common-package
                      commit: ff09556
 
=== Complete module definition ===
 
See [https://pagure.io/modulemd/blob/master/f/spec.yaml the modulemd specification].
 
[[Category:Modularity]]
[[Category:Modularization]]

Latest revision as of 09:01, 9 June 2017

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