freedomofpress / securedrop-builder

Packaging logic for building SecureDrop-related Debian packages

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securedrop-builder

securedrop-builder is the tool we use to build reproducible Python wheels for SecureDrop Workstation components.

Updating our bootstrapped build tools

We use the build toolchain to build our reproducible wheels. If we have to update the tools, use the following steps

# Ensure you are running in a cleanly boostrapped virtual environment
rm -rf .venv
make install-deps
source .venv/bin/activate
# Perform the required dependency operations using Poetry.
# Use "poetry update <foo>" to update an individual dependency per pyproject.toml
# Use "poetry lock --no-update" to pick up pyproject.toml additions/removals
# Use -C to run commands in the workstation-bootstrap directory, e.g.:
poetry -C workstation-bootstrap/ lock --no-update
# Now we are ready to build updated wheels:
./scripts/build-sync-wheels --project workstation-bootstrap --pkg-dir ./workstation-bootstrap
# Once the new wheels are ready, we recreate our sha256sums:
./scripts/sync-sha256sums ./workstation-bootstrap
# Sign the list of sha256sums
gpg --armor --output workstation-bootstrap/sha256sums.txt.asc --detach-sig  workstation-bootstrap/sha256sums.txt
# We can even verify if we want
./scripts/verify-sha256sum-signature ./workstation-bootstrap/
# Update the build-requirements.txt file
./scripts/update-requirements --pkg-dir ./workstation-bootstrap/ --project workstation-bootstrap

Make sure that your GPG public key is stored in pubkeys/, so CI can verify the signatures.

Updating Python wheels

When adding a new production dependency to a component, new wheels will need to be built plus updates to build-requirements.txt. This should be done after you have updated the dependencies in the component's pyproject.toml and poetry.lock files.

0. Enable the virtualenv

Create a fresh virtualenv and install the build tools from our bootstrapped wheels.

rm -rf .venv
make install-deps

The following steps needs to be done from the same virtual environment.

1. Try to update build-requirements.txt for the project

From the securedrop-builder directory, run the following, where <component> is what you're trying to update dependencies for, e.g. "client", "proxy", etc.

PKG_DIR=/home/user/code/securedrop-client/<component> make requirements

This will create/update the build-requirements.txt file in the project directory along with the binary wheel hashes from our own Python package index server.

If we are missing any wheels from our cache/build/server, it will let you know with a following message.

The following dependent wheel(s) are missing:
pytest==3.10.1

Please build the wheel by using the following command.
	PKG_DIR=/home/user/code/securedrop-client make build-wheels
Then add the newly built wheels and sources to the `wheels` subdirectory for the package.
After these steps, please rerun the command again.

The next step is to build the wheels. To do this step, you will need a maintainer to build the wheels and sign the updated sha256sums file with your individual key.

2. Build wheels

This must be done in an environment for building production artifacts:

PKG_DIR=/home/user/code/securedrop-client make build-wheels

This above command will let you know about any new wheels + sources. It will build/download sources from PyPI (by verifying it against the sha256sums from the poetry.lock of the project).

If your package contains compiled code (e.g. C or Rust extensions), it must be built for all Debian versions we support.

3. Commit changes to the wheels directory (if only any update of wheels)

Now add these built artifacts to version control, from the relevant package directory:

git add wheels/
git commit

Submit a PR containing the new wheels and updated files.

4. Update build-requirements.txt

After building and committing the new wheels, re-run the command from step 1:

PKG_DIR=/home/user/code/securedrop-client/<component> make requirements

This will update the build-requirements.txt file, commit and open a PR with these changes. Note that CI will likely fail until the PR from step 3 is merged.

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Packaging logic for building SecureDrop-related Debian packages

License:GNU General Public License v3.0


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