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Balena Base Contracts

The collection of contracts and partials across the balena system.

Contracts

Each contract is a .json file inside the contracts/ directory. The convention is to store one contract per file, located in contracts/<type>/<slug>.json.

Partials

This directory contains partials that apply to certain combinations of contracts. The convention is to store a partial in partials/<combination>/<combination instantiation>/<partial>.tpl. Here are some examples:

partials/sw.os+arch.sw/debian+amd64/installation.tpl
partials/sw.os+arch.sw/debian/installation.tpl
partials/hw.device-type/ts4900/remove-install-media.tpl

The combination section defines the types of contracts that come into play for a particular partials subtree, separated by a + symbol. If the combination is sw.os+arch.sw, then it means that the subtree will take into account the combination of operating systems and architectures. Note that there can be combinations of a single type.

The combination instantiation section defines a subtree for a specific set of contracts that match the combination type. If the combination is sw.os+arch.sw, a valid combination instantiation can be debian+amd64, which is the subtree that will be selected when matching the Debian GNU/Linux contract with the amd64 architecture contract.

Note that a combination instantiation may use @ symbols to define subtrees for a specific version of one or more contracts in the combination. For example, debian@wheezy+amd64 will be the subtree containing partials for the combination of Debian Wheezy and amd64.

You can also omit trailing portions of the combination instantiation to implement wildcards. If the combination is sw.os+arch.sw and the instantiation is debian, it means that such subtree will apply to the combination of Debian GNU/Linux with any architecture.

The partial tree is then traversed from specific to general, until a match is found. This is the path that the contract system will follow when searching for the download template on the sw.os+arch.sw combination:

sw.os+arch.sw/<os>@<version>+<arch>@<version>/download.tpl
sw.os+arch.sw/<os>@<version>+<arch>/download.tpl
sw.os+arch.sw/<os>+<arch>@<version>/download.tpl
sw.os+arch.sw/<os>+<arch>/download.tpl
sw.os+arch.sw/<os>/download.tpl

Instruction Partials

With a recent change, several changes were made to the overall contract spec to be able to work around problems happening and being able generate accurate provisioning instructions for device types using contracts. Some information is present below:

flashProtocol

If there is a flashProtocol defined then we know that we need to flash directly to the device. This process will require no storage media to be attached. After identifying which protocols etcher can or can't support will determine flash protocol for that device type and subsequently the instructions for the device type as well.

Example, in this case jetsonFlash is not supported by etcher so we will need to give jetson flashing specific instructions:

    "flashProtocol": "jetsonFlash",
    "media": {
      "defaultBoot": "internal",
      "altBoot": []
    },

On the other hand, another example of a flashProtocol that Etcher does supports would be RPIBOOT which is a flash protocol utilized by balena Fin.

defaultBoot

Defines the medium from which the device boots at runtime.

If the defaultBoot is internal and there is an alternative boot method like sdcard and no flashProtocol defined, then we know this is an installation where we need to flash to the sdcard with etcher and that sd card will have a flasher image to write to the internal storage

    "media": {
      "defaultBoot": "internal",
      "altBoot": ["sdcard"]
    },

If the defaultBoot is something not internal and there is no flashProtocol then we know the device will need to boot off of an external media in which we flash BalenaOS onto directly like a raspberry pi might have this definition:

    "media": {
      "defaultBoot": "sdcard",
      "altBoot": []
    },

There are other defaultBoot implementations as well that are available.

altBoot

altBoot describes the list of external mediums from which the device can be provisioned, if any of them are available for the DT.

Contribute

Dependencies

You can perform a set of static analysis checks to find the most common types of errors by running:

npm test

License

The project is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license.

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