toolkit/iso/py
2022-05-21 23:20:15 -07:00
..
configs Final commit for 5/21 2022-05-21 23:20:15 -07:00
sig Final Commit for 5/21 2022-05-21 00:10:37 -07:00
util Final commit for 5/21 2022-05-21 23:20:15 -07:00
.gitignore start python conversion 2022-05-20 01:13:57 -07:00
common.py Final commit for 5/21 2022-05-21 23:20:15 -07:00
README.md Final commit for 5/21 2022-05-21 23:20:15 -07:00
sync-from-peridot Final commit for 5/21 2022-05-21 23:20:15 -07:00
test2.py start python conversion 2022-05-20 01:13:57 -07:00
test.py Final Commit for 5/21 2022-05-21 00:10:37 -07:00

iso

scripts

  • sync-variant-pungi
  • sync-variant-peridot
  • sync-from-pungi
  • sync-from-peridot
  • sync-sig
  • build-all-iso
  • sign-repos-only

wrappers

  • lorax-generators
  • sync-generators

rules

imports

When making a script, you must import common. This is insanely bad practice, but we would prefer if we started out this way:

from common import *
import argparse

Whatever is imported in common will effectively be imported in your scripts as well, but there is nothing stopping you from defining them again, even out of habit. argparse is there because you better have a very, very good reason to not be writing scripts that are major version specific.

If you are writing something that could be arch specific based on the major version (which is likely), make sure to import the util module and use it arch checker appropriately. Small (but weak) example.

from util import Checks

rlvars = rldict['9']
r = Checks(rlvars, arch)
r.check_valid_arch()

script names and permissions

  • Callable scripts should not end in .py
  • They should have at least 775 or +x permissions