mirror of
https://github.com/scylladb/scylladb.git
synced 2026-06-05 14:33:08 +00:00
7052028752cb306137fa12c86b425162136596f0
Before installing python files to their final location in install.sh, replace them with a thunk so that they can work with our python3 interpreter. The way the thunk works, they will also work without our python3 interpreter so unconditionally fixing them up is always safe. I opt in this patch for fixing up just at install time to simplify developer's life, who won't have to worry about this at all. Note about the rpm .spec file: since we are relying on specific format for the shebangs, we shouldn't let rpmbuild mess with them. Therefore, we need to disable a global variable that controls that behavior (by definition, Fedora rpmbuild will rewrite all shebangs to /usr/bin/python3) Signed-off-by: Glauber Costa <glauber@scylladb.com>
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
Scylla
Quick-start
$ git submodule update --init --recursive
$ sudo ./install-dependencies.sh
$ ./configure.py --mode=release
$ ninja-build -j4 # Assuming 4 system threads.
$ ./build/release/scylla
$ # Rejoice!
Please see HACKING.md for detailed information on building and developing Scylla. Note: GCC >= 8.1.1 is require to compile Scylla.
Running Scylla
- Run Scylla
./build/release/scylla
- run Scylla with one CPU and ./tmp as data directory
./build/release/scylla --datadir tmp --commitlog-directory tmp --smp 1
- For more run options:
./build/release/scylla --help
Building Fedora RPM
As a pre-requisite, you need to install Mock on your machine:
# Install mock:
sudo yum install mock
# Add user to the "mock" group:
usermod -a -G mock $USER && newgrp mock
Then, to build an RPM, run:
./dist/redhat/build_rpm.sh
The built RPM is stored in /var/lib/mock/<configuration>/result directory.
For example, on Fedora 21 mock reports the following:
INFO: Done(scylla-server-0.00-1.fc21.src.rpm) Config(default) 20 minutes 7 seconds
INFO: Results and/or logs in: /var/lib/mock/fedora-21-x86_64/result
Building Fedora-based Docker image
Build a Docker image with:
cd dist/docker
docker build -t <image-name> .
Run the image with:
docker run -p $(hostname -i):9042:9042 -i -t <image name>
Contributing to Scylla
Description
Languages
C++
72.1%
Python
26.7%
CMake
0.3%
GAP
0.3%
Shell
0.3%