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Dedicated User Environment (DUE)

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Copyright 2022,2023 Nvidia Corporation. All rights reserved.

DUE is a wrapper for Docker and Podman to create user friendly Linux build environments.

The TL:DR

Start with a Docker image for your target Linux based operating system
+
DUE configuration utilities
+
configuration for your build target

= DUE image.

The due launcher application will run this image with defaults specified by the image itself, so that building your software, regardless of the target's architecture or operating system, can be as easy as:

due --build

See ./docs/GettingStarted.md to get started creating and running an example image.
Or run ./due --help to jump right in with the comprehensive command line help and examples.

The elevator pitch

Need to build for Debian 8 armel, but only have an x86 host with Fedora 36?
DUE supports building for different architectures and OS versions.

Tired of users missing a step in configuring the build dependencies for your software? Supply a "template" to configure a Docker image and now everybody is using DUE to build in identical environments.

Painfully aware you're building in a container because the configuration you'd get from your home directory isn't present, and you have to copy files around? DUE lets you be yourself in a container.

Talks and tutorial videos

Building ONIE
DebConf 20 talk on building everything with DUE
Package build demo from DebConf 20

The L:DR

If you're building software, odds are it requires some level of build environment configuration. Docker containers can be used to replicate that environment, and DUE can be used to make that experience not suck. A listing of the problems DUE solves requires a bit of context to explain how the design requirements were determined, so bear with me while I get in to a bit of:

History

Dedicated User Environment came out of build environment work I'd done at Cumulus Networks (now part of Nvidia)
to create a consistent build environment for developers building for different architectures and releases of Debian Linux,
using software that, for licensing reasons, could never be upstreamed.

The scope of things to build expanded for me when I also took on the position of Open Network Install Environment project lead, working with the Open Compute Foundation, and needed to support pull requests, debug and image build testing for what is essentially a tiny operating system.
Since I was already using Docker for Debian package builds, and a Dockerfile build environment had already been created for ONIE, This left me wondering why there wasn't a set "template" that could be used to set up dedicated build environments? Especially for distributed open source projects where developers can't be sharing the same hardware, but could use a common development environment for debug. This approach turned out to be wildly successful in reducing support requests and seamlessly providing backwards compatibility for older components of the ONIE code base. After Nvidia acquired Cumulus, DUE was upgraded to provide kernel build environments for different releases of Red Hat and SUSE Linux distributions. Currently the latest release of DUE supports both and is now installable as an .rpm file in addition to a .deb.

Design

Design requirements

(Or, what am I trying to solve here?)

  1. Easy build environment setup by using a "template" for build environments. Whoever wrote the software I'm trying to build has already solved the problem of setting up things to build - why have developers solve the problem again?

  2. Easy setup leads to identical build environments for debugging build issues. There is no more comparing versions of packages installed between systems to debug build problems because everybody is using the same environment.

  3. Preserve build environments. I hate it when a software update breaks my ability to build something. Changes are almost always well intentioned, but mid-development is frequently not the time to tackle compatibility issues. For example, older platform builds on ONIE haven't been updated for modern kernels, and may never be, but providing an age-appropriate build container will allow for rebuilding them with bug fixes, should anyone be inclined.

  4. Create a build environment that feels 'natural'. I don't want to have to be 'build user' or 'root' in a container that has none of my configuration, where I have to copy files around to get them out of the container. I want to feel like I'm still on my host system - with a contextual indicator being the only thing to remind medo that I'm not.

  5. I want builds to "just work" without a 'but'. If I'm currently building for Debian 10 and need to build for Ubuntu 16, it's almost the same thing, 'but' package versions are different. DUE can provide build environments that behave the same way, regardless of target or host software versions.

  6. It has to be easy to use, because I'll be encouraging people with priorities other than designing build environments to use it, and, apart from being friendly, the less the end user has to do, the less support I'll have to do.

  7. It has to be easy to modify, since developer requirements will vary. By writing it with Bash scripts the code resembles the commands the developers would want to run anyway.

  8. It has to work on shared user systems. Many users should be able to run containers off the same image without colliding.

  9. It should work with build automation. I want developers using the same environment my automated build code will use so that bugs caused by environmental discrepancies can be avoided. This is a variant of #2, but I think it's significant enough to warrant its own mention.

  10. The framework for this should be commonly available so that developers can distribute their own templates and know that end users can easily obtain the framework to turn those templates into build environments.

Getting started

See ./docs/GettingStarted.md for instructions to build and run containers with DUE.

Further reading

See ./docs/Troubleshooting.md and ./docs/FAQ.md

Build environment support through templates

Currently DUE supports the following templates which demonstrate different image build configurations. All of them come with an easily modified duebuild script which provides a default build behavior for the target operating system.
See their README.md files under the ./templates directory, or run ./due --create --help-examples for a quick summary.

example

This is a bare minimum install of DUE which can work offline once the originating container has been downloaded to the host system. It is a jumping off point for creating your own templates, or a useful test configuration for debugging common image creation issues.

debian-package

As the name implies, this template contains configuration for building Debian packages. The user specifies the Debian based release (Debian 9, Ubuntu 18.04, etc ), and occasionally architecture ( arm32v5/debian:buster ), to create a directory with a Dockerfile and some additional files. One of those additional files is a default build script, duebuild, which will handle resolving build dependencies, allowing a build to be invoked by just running the container without logging in to it.

ONIE

The Open Network Install Environment is an example of configuring a build environment for a particular target. There are a number of build dependencies that have to be present, and at the moment, the ONIE code prefers Debian 9 (Stretch) and does not build with the tools provided by Debian 10 (Buster). Being able to create a Debian Stretch container with all the dependencies already available saves developers from sorting out if they have the right packages/versions, as well as also providing a standard environment where build issues can be debugged.

FRR

The Free Range Routing project provides commercial grade network routing. In addition to having all the packages required to build, this template uses an APT repository key and additional sources.list entry to pull build dependencies from the FRR package repository. It also uses a relative path link to copy the duebuild script from the debian-package template, should you be building FRR for a Debian distribution.

redhat

This includes the fedora-package, and rhel-package templates which support RPM package and kernel builds for Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise Linux, respectively, providing an easy build experience for any version or architecture of those operating systems.

suse

This includes the opensuse-package and sles-package templates which support RPM package and kernel buildsfor OpenSUSE and SLES, which are just different enough from Red Hat to require their own customization to support all of DUE's features.

Additional Base Images

...can be found at https://hub.docker.com