9f2d647bad
This abstraction allows the session code to be shared between the TLS client and (upcoming) server code. Session management is no longer implemented in TlsClient so the HttpClient was updated to free and create sessions as needed. No test changes were required for HttpClient so the functionality should be unchanged. Mechanical changes to the TLS tests were required to use TlsSession where appropriate rather than TlsClient. There should be no change in functionality other than how sessions are managed, i.e. using tlsClientOpen()/tlsSessionFree() rather than just tlsClientOpen(). |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
example | ||
lib/pgBackRestDoc | ||
resource | ||
xml | ||
.gitignore | ||
doc.pl | ||
FORMAT.md | ||
manifest.xml | ||
README.md | ||
RELEASE.md | ||
release.pl |
pgBackRest
Building Documentation
General Builds
The pgBackRest documentation can output a variety of formats and target several platforms and PostgreSQL versions.
This will build all documentation with defaults:
./doc.pl
The user guide can be built for different platforms: centos6
, centos7
, and debian
. This will build the HTML user guide for CentOS/RHEL 7:
./doc.pl --out=html --include=user-guide --var=os-type=centos7
Documentation generation will build a cache of all executed statements and use the cache to build the documentation quickly if no executed statements have changed. This makes proofing text-only edits very fast, but sometimes it is useful to do a full build without using the cache:
./doc.pl --out=html --include=user-guide --var=os-type=centos6 --no-cache
Each os-type
has a default container image that will be used as a base for creating hosts. For centos6
/centos7
these defaults are generally fine, but for debian
it can be useful to change the image.
./doc.pl --out=html --include=user-guide --var=os-type=debian --var=os-image=debian:9
The following is a sample CentOS/RHEL 7 configuration that can be used for building the documentation.
# Install docker
sudo yum install -y yum-utils device-mapper-persistent-data lvm2
sudo yum-config-manager --add-repo https://download.docker.com/linux/centos/docker-ce.repo
sudo yum install -y docker-ce
sudo systemctl start docker
# Install tools
sudo yum install -y git wget
# Install latex (for building PDF)
sudo yum install -y texlive texlive-titlesec texlive-sectsty texlive-framed texlive-epstopdf ghostscript
# Install Perl modules that do not have CentOS packages via CPAN
sudo yum install -y yum cpanminus
sudo yum groupinstall -y "Development Tools" "Development Libraries"
sudo cpanm install --force XML::Checker::Parser
# Add documentation test user
sudo groupadd test
sudo adduser -gtest -n testdoc
sudo usermod -aG docker testdoc
Building with Packages
A user-specified package can be used when building the documentation. Since the documentation exercises most pgBackRest functionality this is a great way to smoke-test packages.
The package must be located within the pgBackRest repo and the specified path should be relative to the repository base. test/package
is a good default path to use.
Ubuntu 16.04:
./doc.pl --out=html --include=user-guide --no-cache --var=os-type=debian --var=os-image=ubuntu:16.04 --var=package=test/package/pgbackrest_2.08-0_amd64.deb
CentOS/RHEL 6:
./doc.pl --out=html --include=user-guide --no-cache --var=os-type=centos6 --var=package=test/package/pgbackrest-2.08-1.el6.x86_64.rpm
CentOS/RHEL 7:
./doc.pl --out=html --include=user-guide --no-cache --var=os-type=centos7 --var=package=test/package/pgbackrest-2.08-1.el7.x86_64.rpm
Packages can be built with test.pl
using the following configuration on top of the configuration given for building the documentation.
# Install recent git
sudo yum remove -y git
sudo yum install -y https://centos7.iuscommunity.org/ius-release.rpm
sudo yum install -y git2u-all
# Install Perl modules
sudo yum install -y perl-ExtUtils-ParseXS perl-ExtUtils-Embed perl-ExtUtils-MakeMaker perl-YAML-LibYAML
# Install dev libraries
sudo yum install -y libxml2-devel openssl-devel
# Add test user with sudo privileges
sudo adduser -gtest -n test
sudo usermod -aG docker test
sudo chmod 750 /home/test
sudo echo 'test ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL' > /etc/sudoers.d/pgbackrest
# Add pgbackrest user required by tests
sudo adduser -gtest -n pgbackrest