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Introduction

This tool provides a mechanism for building binaries for the Cloud Foundry buildpacks.

Currently supported binaries

  • NodeJS
  • Ruby
  • JRuby
  • Python
  • PHP
  • Nginx
  • Apache HTTPD Server
  • Go
  • Glide
  • Godep
  • Bundler

Usage

The scripts are meant to be run as root on a Cloud Foundry stack.

Running within Docker

To run binary-builder from within the cflinuxfs3 rootfs, use Docker:

docker run -w /binary-builder -v `pwd`:/binary-builder -it cloudfoundry/cflinuxfs3 bash
export STACK=cflinuxfs3
./bin/binary-builder --name=[binary_name] --version=[binary_version] --(md5|sha256)=[checksum_value]

This generates a gzipped tarball in the binary-builder directory with the filename format binary_name-binary_version-linux-x64.

For example, if you were building ruby 2.2.3, you'd run the following commands:

$ docker run -w /binary-builder -v `pwd`:/binary-builder -it cloudfoundry/cflinuxfs3:ruby-2.2.4 ./bin/binary-builder --name=ruby --version=2.2.3 --md5=150a5efc5f5d8a8011f30aa2594a7654
$ ls
ruby-2.2.3-linux-x64.tgz

Building PHP

To build PHP, you also need to pass in a YAML file containing information about the various PHP extensions to be built. For example

docker run -w /binary-builder -v `pwd`:/binary-builder -it cloudfoundry/cflinuxfs3 bash
export STACK=cflinuxfs3
./bin/binary-builder --name=php7 --version=7.3.14 --sha256=6aff532a380b0f30c9e295b67dc91d023fee3b0ae14b4771468bf5dda4cbf108 --php-extensions-file=./php7-extensions.yml

For an example of what this file looks like, see: php7-base-extensions.yml and the various php*-extensions-patch.yml files in that same directory. Patch files adjust the base-extensions.yml file by adding/removing extensions. The --php-extensions-file argument will need the base-extensions file with one of the patch files applied. That normally happens automatically through the pipeline, so if you are building manually you need to manually create this file.

TIP If you are updating or building a specific PHP extension, remove everything except that specific extension from your --php-extensions-file file. This will decrease the build times & make it easier for you to test your changes.

Building nginx

Nginx uses GPG keys to verify the source tarball, so you'll need something like the following code to build the NGinx binary:

version=1.15.9
gpg_signature_url="http://nginx.org/download/nginx-${version}.tar.gz.asc"
gpg_signature=`curl -sL ${gpg_signature_url}`

docker run -w /binary-builder -v `pwd`:/binary-builder \
  -it cloudfoundry/cflinuxfs3 ./bin/binary-builder \
  --name=nginx-static --gpg-rsa-key-id=A1C052F8 \
  --version=$version --gpg-signature="${gpg_signature}"

Contributing

Find our guidelines here.

Reporting Issues

Open an issue on this project

Active Development

The project backlog is on Pivotal Tracker

Running the tests

The integration test suite includes specs that test the functionality for building PHP with Oracle client libraries. These tests are tagged :run_oracle_php_tests and require access to an S3 bucket containing the Oracle client libraries. This is configured using the environment variables AWS_ACCESS_KEY and AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY.

Optionally provide AWS_ASSUME_ROLE_ARN to assume a role.

If you do not need to test this functionality, exclude the tag :run_oracle_php_tests when you run rspec.