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== Use of eatmydata ==
You can install the package [[DebianPts:libeatmydata|eatmydata]] to improve the speed of your builds.
{{{
git-pbuilder login --save-after-login
root@host:/# apt-get update
root@host:/# apt-get install eatmydata
}}}

This is a tutorial for git-pbuilder. See also cowbuilder. git-pbuilder is part of the package git-buildpackage and the usage is very similar to cowbuilder. git-pbuilder needs sudo rights!

Usage

Initialization and Variants

You can create base images for all architectures (mostly i386 or amd64) and distribution (mostly Squeeze, Wheezy or Testing/SID, Ubuntu xxx, ...) that your hardware can run on.

Normal Usage

The easiest usage is to call no further options, that will create a Testing/SID build environment with the architecture you are currently running on (if you are using i386, the environment will also be created for i386):

git-pbuilder create

The base build image is created in /var/cache/pbuilder/base.cow/

Creating other Architecture

If you want explicitly create a environment for i386 (and running on amd64) you have to tell that git-pbuilder:

ARCH=i386 git-pbuilder create

The base build image is created in /var/cache/pbuilder/base-sid-i386.cow/

Creating Packages for other Distributions

Mainly package creating is done in the Testing distribution, sometimes you want to create packages for the stable or old-stable release, so you have to tell this also while git-pbuilder is creating the environment. If you want to build for the Squeeze distribution then you have to call git-pbuilder like this:

DIST=squeeze git-pbuilder create

The base image is created in /var/cache/pbuilder/base-squeeze-[your-platform].cow/. The creating of a base image for the Wheezy Distribution is similar, just change the argument for DIST.

Using a Mirror

If you use git-pbuilder (or git-buildpackage) very offen it's better to use a local mirror to save downloadtime and reduce traffic. If you have set up a local Apt proxy the you can tell git-pbuilder to use it. Let's say you want to create a base image for Squeeze and architecture amd64 with a caching proxy with the IP 192.168.110.4 on port 3142 (like apt-cacher-ng), so it's a combination of all variants from above:

DIST=squeeze ARCH=amd64 git-pbuilder create --mirror=http://192.168.110.4:3142/ftp.de.debian.org/debian

The base build image is created in /var/cache/pbuilder/base-squeeze-amd64.cow/

Updating

If the date of creation of your build environment is quite older you have to update it before you can use it. To update the base image just run:

git-pbuilder update

The update for the possible other distributions or architectures is similar like the creation of it. Update the Squeeze environmnt for the same architecture you are currently running on would be:

DIST=squeeze git-pbuilder update

or for Squeeze on i386

DIST=squeeze ARCH=i368 git-pbuilder update

If you have used a mirror while creating the base images it will be used! So remember that if you have various networks you working, the update will fail if the mirror isn't reachable.

Installing Extra Packages

Sometimes you have to install extra packages to the base image. This is helpful if you work offline in some cases or you want to speed up the packaging. The workflow for that is similar to cowbuilder.

git-pbuilder login --save-after-login
# first step, update the package list
root@host:/# apt-get update
# then you can install any package
root@host:/# apt-get install vim screen less

You have to repeat this steps for every base image you use if you needs the same behaviour in your various build environments.

DIST=squeeze ARCH=amd64 git-pbuilder login --save-after-login
...

Tips

Use of eatmydata

You can install the package eatmydata to improve the speed of your builds.

git-pbuilder login --save-after-login
root@host:/# apt-get update
root@host:/# apt-get install eatmydata

Troubleshooting

Slow copying and removing of the COW directory

What cowbuilder does is:

cp -al /var/cache/pbuilder/base.cow /tmp/new
rm -rf /tmp/[new]

Of course cowbuilder uses a different location than /tmp/[new]. You need to optimize those 2 commands on your computer. They should take around 0.2s each. If not, try to use the ext3 filesystem, for more details, see our benchmarks.