git clone https://github.com/joyent/smartos-live.git
cd smartos-live
./configure
gmake world
gmake live
ls output/
This repository is smartos-live, which builds a SmartOS platform image
containing the illumos core OS components; a set of "extra" mostly
third-party software required by illumos, by other SmartOS software, or
for system management; a collection of utilities comprising
SmartOS-specific functionality found in projects/local/
; and
implementation-specific overlays that deliver additional files verbatim.
- Components of SmartOS
- Building SmartOS
- Testing and Things to Think About
- Contributing
- Community
- Bug Reports
SmartOS is made up of several different components. These components are:
The smartos-live repository is
the root of SmartOS. It has logic for how to build all of the different
components that make up SmartOS and has components that are specific to
the SmartOS live image environment. For example, it has tools like
vmadm
and imgadm
.
In smartos-live, there is a directory called overlay that contains two different things:
-
Files that we use in place of the standard ones provided by another part of the system. This is often done for files that come from illumos-joyent so as to minimize the differences we have from upstream. For example, we have replacements for the
/etc/name_to_major
and/etc/driver_aliases
files. -
There are some additional files that are found here that don't currently have another, better home.
Historically, there were multiple overlays that were switched between when building the SmartOS platform for use in Triton or as a standalone image. Today, there is only one overlay used, the generic overlay.
When the platform image is built, the generic overlay directory is searched for files ahead of the normal proto area used by builder.
The illumos-joyent repository is the core of the operating system. It represents Joyent's child of illumos-gate. This has the core kernel, libraries, and user commands.
The illumos-joyent code can be found in the smartos-live tree under
projects/illumos
. The SmartOS build only supports using illumos-joyent
and not stock illumos-gate.
The illumos-extra repository contains a few different sets of software:
- Software which is held at a specific version that is required for the platform to build. For example, GNU binutils fall into this category.
- Software which is required for illumos-gate to build and is required at run time. This category includes things like OpenSSL and libz.
- Extra software that we want to exist in the platform image at run time. This category includes software like bash, curl, and Node.js.
illumos-extra serves to make sure that we have the specific versions of software that we require at build time. The theory is that given a basic working build machine of any illumos vintage, we can build the rest of the platform and get the specific patched versions of software we need from illumos-extra.
The illumos-extra code can be found in the smartos-live tree under
projects/illumos-extra
.
illumos-extra operates in a different fashion from the rest of the tree. Because it consists solely of third-party software, it operates in a different way. This software is often built using the GNU autotools.
Rather than modifying the software directly like we do in the rest of
the platform, we instead maintain a series of patches that we apply to a
stock release of the software, conventionally in a directory named
Patches
.
illumos-extra will build the software at least once, but possibly more times. For example, most software doesn't support building both a 32-bit and 64-bit version of itself. We also build software that's required to build the platform image against the host-system during a bootstrap phase. For each version, we'll create a directory that uses the name and version of the software appended with the bitness of the version and whether or not it's the bootstrap phase. For example, if we were building zlib-1.2.3.tar.gz, we'd see the following directories:
$ ls -1 libz/
...
zlib-1.2.3-32
zlib-1.2.3-32strap
zlib-1.2.3-64
zlib-1.2.3-64strap
zlib-1.2.3.tar.gz
...
Finally, while many tarballs are part of the repository, to keep down the ever increasing size of the repository, we are transitioning to having the contents stored externally and downloaded initially as part of the set up process.
There are a collection of extra projects that live in separate
repositories. Each of these projects lives in the projects/local
directory of the smartos-live root. The local projects system defines a
series of Makefile targets that a local project is required to implement.
The current set of local projects include:
- illumos-kvm
- illumos-kvm-cmd aka QEMU
- mdata-client
- ur-agent
The first step when building is to set up a build environment. The SmartOS build requires building on SmartOS. This can be done in VMware, on an existing SmartOS machine, or other virtualization. You must build inside of a non-global zone.
The SmartOS build currently uses the base-multiarch-lts 16.4.1
image
which has a UUID of bafa230e-e6ea-11e6-8438-c72c10ff2d1f
. To import
the image, you should run the imgadm command from the global zone:
# imgadm import bafa230e-e6ea-11e6-8438-c72c10ff2d1f
Importing bafa230e-e6ea-11e6-8438-c72c10ff2d1f (base-multiarch-lts@16.4.1) from "https://images.joyent.com"
Gather image bafa230e-e6ea-11e6-8438-c72c10ff2d1f ancestry
Must download and install 1 image (220.6 MiB)
Download 1 image [=======================================================================>] 100% 220.65MB 7.95MB/s 27s
Downloaded image bafa230e-e6ea-11e6-8438-c72c10ff2d1f (220.6 MiB)
...a230e-e6ea-11e6-8438-c72c10ff2d1f [=======================================================================>] 100% 220.65MB 18.76MB/s 11s
Imported image bafa230e-e6ea-11e6-8438-c72c10ff2d1f (base-multiarch-lts@16.4.1)
To create a zone, you need to create a joyent
branded zone with
vmadm
. We recommend that the zone have the following attributes:
- The brand set to
"joyent"
- The
image_uuid
set to"bafa230e-e6ea-11e6-8438-c72c10ff2d1f"
- At least 25 GiB of disk space specified in the
quota
property - At least 2-4 GiB of DRAM specified in the
max-physical-memory
property - 1.5-2x the amount of DRAM in the
max_swap
property - At least 1 network interface that can reach the Internet
- The
fs_allowed
property set to"ufs,pcfs,tmpfs"
For more information, please see the vmadm manual page and its EXAMPLES
section. Once written, you can validate your JSON file by running vmadm validate
. For example, if your JSON file was in /var/tmp/build.json you
would run:
# vmadm validate create -f /var/tmp/build.json
If there are problems, then it will tell you which portions of the JSON
are incorrect and need to be fixed. You can always check if a file is
valid JSON by using the json
command as json --validate -f /var/tmp/build.json
Once that's done, then you can create the VM using vmadm as:
# vmadm create -f /var/tmp/build.json
While you can build as the root user, we recommend that you create a user to do your day to day work as. If you do create that user there are two things that you should do:
- Make sure that the user has the 'Primary Administrator' privilege.
There are occasional parts of the build that require administrator
privileges and these will use
pfexec
to do so. To add a user to the primary administrator role, as the root user in the zone, you should run:
# usermod -P 'Primary Administrator' <user>
- Make sure that the user's shell is set to
/bin/bash
. There have occasionally been build issues when using different shells. Ultimately, those are bugs. If you do use another shell and encounter issues, please tell us.
The final prerequisite is to make sure that git
is installed. To do
that, you should run as your user:
$ pfexec pkgin -y in scmgit
...
$
With this, you should be all set in your new environment. The normal build process will make sure that any required packages are installed.
If you're running any of the release-engineering targets, the build will
also require Manta tools and updates-imgadm
to be available on $PATH
,
but most users are unlikely to need to build these targets.
Once the build zone has been configured, you can kick off a build in a few easy steps:
$ git clone git://github.com/joyent/smartos-live
$ cd smartos-live
$ ./configure
$ gmake live
This will produce a tarball that contains the platform. The platform
will be placed in the output
directory and a symlink to the latest
tarball will be there.
The configure script takes a few options that allow you to do a DEBUG
build, configure shadow compilers, etc. See ./configure -h
.
By default, running gmake live
produces a directory and a tarball in
the output
directory. This can be used in Triton with the sdcadm
commands and can be used to boot through ipxe
or other network boot
loaders.
It is also possible to create ISO and USB images. These images default to the VGA console. To make an ISO or USB image you can run from the root of the smartos-live repository:
$ ./tools/build_boot_image -r $ROOT
$ ./tools/build_boot_image -I -r $ROOT
$ ./tools/build_boot_image -I -r $ROOT -c ttyb # sets the default console to ttyb
These will create images in the output-usb
and output-iso
directories based on the latest platform image.
When you kick off a smartos-live build (running gmake live
), it will
build components in the following order:
- illumos-extra bootstrap phase against the build system
- illumos-joyent
- illumos-extra main phase against the proto area
- smartos-live src against the proto area
- local projects against the proto area
- assemble packaging manifests
- assemble the platform tgz
If you run gmake world
instead of gmake live
, then the build will
stop after all of the components have been built.
The following summarizes the primary targets used on a day to day basis:
world
: Builds all the componentslive
: Assembles the live image from the built componentscheck
: Runs various style and lint tools on code in smartos-liveclean
: Removes built artifacts and intermediate objectsupdate
: Updates all of the repositories to the latestiso
: Builds a CD-ROM ISO image, defaulting to the VGA consoleusb
: Builds a FAT 32 USB image, defaulting to the VGA console
This section is likely to only interest users who perform release builds of SmartOS, or the Triton Platform Image.
When performing release builds, the following are convenient targets which encapsulate the entire release process for a specific Triton and/or SmartOS build variety:
common-release
: depends oncheck
,live
andpkgsrc
targets and needs to be run before a subsequentmake
invocation of any of the-release
targets belowsmartos-release
: builds, publishes and uploads SmartOS artifactstriton-release
: builds, publishes and uploads a Triton platform imagetriton-and-smartos-release
: all of the above
The following are used by the targets listed above as part of the release engineering process when publishing release builds of the SmartOS and Triton platform image. There are varieties of each target for both build flavors.
*-publish
: stage bits from the output directory, preparing for upload*-bits-upload
: upload bits to either Manta, a remote filesystem and optionally, a Triton imgapi instance, defaulting toupdates.joyent.com
*-bits-upload-latest
: as above, except attempt to re-upload the latest built bits, useful in case of interrupted uploads
The bits-upload
tool comes from
eng.git which the build pulls in via
the deps/eng
"git submodule" from the top-level of the workspace.
The upload can be influenced by the following shell environment variables:
ENGBLD_DEST_OUT_PATH
: The path where we wish to upload bits. This is assumed to be relative to$MANTA_USER
if using a Manta path. Otherwise this can be set to a local (or NFS) path where we wish to upload build arifacts.ENGBLD_BITS_UPLOAD_LOCAL
: If set totrue
, this causes us to simplycp(1)
bits to$ENGBLD_DEST_OUT_PATH
rather than upload using Manta tools.ENGBLD_BITS_UPLOAD_IMGAPI
: If set totrue
, this causes the build to also attempt to upload any Triton images found in theoutput/bits
directory to an imgapi instance, which defaults toupdates.joyent.com
.
For Manta and imgapi uploads, the following environment variables are used to configure the upload:
MANTA_USER
MANTA_KEY_ID
MANTA_URL
UPDATES_IMGADM_URL
UPDATES_IMGADM_IDENTITY
UPDATES_IMGADM_CHANNEL
UPDATES_IMGADM_USER
For details on the default values of these variables, and how they are used, see bits-upload.sh
Finally, release engineers may find the script
build_jenkins
useful, intended to be run
directly as part of a Jenkins job, invoking the targets above.
To clean out all the built contents of the various repositories, there
is a top level 'clean' target. This will remove all of the built
artifacts, the proto area, and will descend into each component and
clean them up. For example, this will end up running dmake clobber
in
illumos-joyent to clean up all of its contents.
Occasionally, there are bugs which cause some files to be missed. If you
encounter that, you can use git's git clean -fdx
command to clean up.
However, please be careful when using this command as if you have new
files that aren't in the git repository, this will mistakenly remove
them. If you encounter cases where we're not properly removing files,
please report a bug.
To update all of the repositories that are part of the platform, you should first make sure that all of your changes have been committed. Once they have been, you can run the following from the root of the smartos-live repository:
$ gmake update
Which will go through and update every repository. If a repository has
changed, it will also remove the corresponding stamp file that controls
its building. If you have local changes in the repository, then it will
rebase your local changes (as though it had run git pull --rebase
) on
top of everything.
If you haven't updated in a while, you may want to clean your
repositories and kick off a full build again before performing
incremental building. Occasionally, there will be flag days that will
require you to rerun ./configure
before proceeding.
Most of the time, all development happens on the master
branch. All
SmartOS images are built from the master branch and the general theory
is that the master branch should always build, run, and be of a high
enough quality that we could cut a release at any time.
While developing, you may want to use local branches, sometimes there
are longer lived branches that exist for project development or for
releases. To automate the configuration of branches when creating the
projects
directory, create a file called configure-projects
in the
root of the smartos-live repository.
The configure-projects
file takes the format:
<path relative to ./projects>:<project branch>:[project git repo URL or path]
The special tokens cr
or origin
can be used in place of a full git
repo URL to denote either standard github.com or joyent gerrit URLs for that
project. If no URL is given, we default to github.com.
If you update the branch name that corresponds to a repository, rerun
./configure
to make sure that every branch is set to the correct
one, except that of smartos-live which needs to be changed manually.
Not all repositories have to be on the same branch. It's totally fine to mix and match.
Several variables can also be set in a shell script at the top of the
smartos-live repository called configure-build
and are sourced by configure
if this file exists. This allows you to override configure
script defaults,
or include additional pre-build customization.
If this file does not exist, the following defaults are set by configure
:
PUBLISHER="joyent"
RELEASE_VER="joyent_147"
SUNW_SPRO12_URL="https://download.joyent.com/pub/build/SunStudio.tar.bz2"
ON_CLOSED_BINS_URL="https://download.joyent.com/pub/build/illumos/on-closed-bins.i386.tar.bz2"
ON_CLOSED_BINS_ND_URL="https://download.joyent.com/pub/build/illumos/on-closed-bins-nd.i386.tar.bz2"
ILLUMOS_ADJUNCT_TARBALL_URL="https://download.joyent.com/pub/build/adjuncts/"
OVERLAYS="generic"
By default, all of SmartOS is built non-debug. It is possible to build a debug build of SmartOS. This debug build primarily changes things by creating a debug build of illumos. A debug build of illumos will result in various things such as:
- Additional assertions
- Additional log messages
- Kernel memory debugging being enabled by default
- Several daemons will enable user land memory debugging
Note, the overhead of some things like kernel memory debugging is non-trivial. Debug builds should not be used for performance testing. In addition, there will be substantially more memory used as a result.
However, for development and bring up, a debug build can be invaluable.
To enable a debug build in a fresh build environment, you can specify
arguments when running ./configure
to take care of it. For example, you
would modify the normal workflow as follows:
$ git clone git://github.com/joyent/smartos-live
$ cd smartos-live
$ ./configure -d
$ gmake live
If you have an existing build environment, you can modify the
illumos.sh
file that is generated to cause it to perform a debug
build. However, if you have already built illumos, it is recommended
that you clobber it before doing anything else. For example:
$ gmake clobber
$ vi projects/illumos/illumos.sh
# Add -DF to the NIGHTLY_OPTIONS line
$ gmake live
The -D
flag indicates that a debug build should be performed while the
-F
flag indicates that we should not perform both a debug and
non-debug build. This is done because we do not set up the build to
support multiple proto-areas, this will end up just causing the system
to clobber one build with the other. For more information on the nightly
flags, see nightly(1ONBLD)
By default, the build will determine the maximum number of jobs to use
based on the DRAM and CPU available in the zone. However, there are
times where you may want to control this manually. To do this, you
should set the MAX_JOBS
environment variable.
Each of the different build phases is represented with a stamp file that
exists in the root of the smartos-live clone. These files are named based
on the directory. For example 0-illumos-stamp
and
0-subdir-mdata-client-stamp
.
If you remove one of these stamp files, the component will be rebuilt
and anything which depends on it will be. For example, if you remove
0-illumos-stamp
, it will end up causing illumos-extra to be rebuilt
(as it depends on the contents of illumos) and all of the local projects
will be rebuilt. Each of these components will be built incrementally.
They will not be rebuilt from scratch unless they are cleaned up.
The one project which is different here is illumos-extra. illumos-extra
has two stamps: the 0-strap-stamp
and the 0-extra-stamp
. The
0-strap-stamp
represents building the bootstrap phase of
illumos-extra. This is the version of illumos-extra which builds the
dependencies we need for the build. These are built against the host
build system. After illumos is built, we then move onto the primary
phase of illumos-extra where we build everything that we need against
the proto area. This represents the 0-extra-stamp
.
To rebuild most components you can simply remove the stamp file and build that stamp file again. For illumos and illumos-extra this may prove to be rather cumbersome. For incremental building of these components, we recommend that you first build the system completely before performing any incremental work.
If you are going to perform incremental building of illumos, you should
first familiarize yourself with the illumos Developer's
Guide. If you simply remove the
0-illumos-stamp
file, this will perform an incremental nightly build.
However, for most iterations, this can be cumbersome. Here, you can use
the bldenv(1ONBLD)
tool. To use bldenv
, follow the following steps
from the root of the smartos-live repository:
$ cd projects/illumos/usr/src
$ ./tools/proto/root_i386-nd/opt/onbld/bin/bldenv ../../illumos.sh
From here, you can follow the illumos Developer's
Guide
with respect to building individual components. If you build everything
that you need and it has no impact on other components in the broader
SmartOS build, then once you are complete, you can run gmake live
again.
For example, if you're iterating on a driver or command of some kind in
the platform then you can simply use dmake install
to get the build
artifacts into the proto area and then run gmake live
at the top level
of smartos-live to rebuild the platform image.
In addition, depending on what you're working on, you can also sometimes
copy over build artifacts over to the running system and use them out of
/var/tmp/
. For example, if you're iterating on a single command. Rather
than building the live image time and time again, a more common approach
is to use bldenv
and make that single command or library again and copy
it over to a running system to test against. Even if the vast majority
of development is done this way, it's still important to always test a
full build at the end.
The top-level tool ./tools/build_illumos
in the smartos-live
repository will execute an incremental nightly(1ONBLD) build. This will
perform the same actions as if you removed the 0-illumos-stamp
and ran
gmake 0-illumos-stamp
at the top-level. However, manually invoking it
will not cause dependent items to be rebuilt. This comes with the same
risks and rewards of using bldenv
.
If you're working on the bootstrap phase, make sure you're not using a cached
proto.strap
first. Using ./configure -r
will tell ./tools/build_strap
not
to download a pre-built tarball for proto.strap
, but instead do a full strap
build of illumos-extra. Remember to explicitly rm 0-strap-stamp
.
Working on illumos-extra can sometimes be frustrating if you're simply building it from the top-level via the stamp each time. This is because some parts of GCC and other software will often be rebuilt. It is possible to rebuild just a single directory by manually invoking what the Makefile would do. Note, that this manual process requires you to use the path of the repository that you're operating on.
The simplest way to figure out how to rebuild what you need is to examine the
make output from a build. For example, if you were iterating on gas and the root
of the smartos-live repository was at /home/rm/src/mdb_v8
, then you might run
a manual command like:
$ cd projects/illumos-extra/binutils
$ STRAP= \
CTFMERGE=/home/rm/src/mdb_v8/projects/illumos/usr/src/tools/proto/*/opt/onbld/bin/i386/ctfmerge \
CTFCONVERT=/home/rm/src/mdb_v8/projects/illumos/usr/src/tools/proto/*/opt/onbld/bin/i386/ctfconvert \
ALTCTFCONVERT=/home/rm/src/mdb_v8/projects/illumos/usr/src/tools/proto/*/opt/onbld/bin/i386/ctfconvert-altexec \
gmake DESTDIR=/home/rm/src/mdb_v8/proto install
Please do not take the above command and run it in your environment. This is meant to be an example. The actual illumos-extra per-directory invocation may have changed. This will also vary whether or not you're operating during the bootstrap phase or not.
By default, running the install
target will perform an incremental
build. If a partial build has been completed, the source will not be
extracted again and patches will not be applied. If you're changing any
patches that apply or configure options, you should use the clean
target inside of the target directory.
While working on vmadm
and imgadm
there often isn't a need to rebuild
the platform image every single time that you want to make a change. A
script called tools/rsync-to
exists which will synchronize all of your
local change from the smartos-live src/vm
and src/img
directories
and apply them to the target server by copying them into /var/tmp/
and
then performing a lofs mount.
When various pieces of software build, they are eventually installed
into a proto area. The proto area represents the file system layout of
what will become the platform image. For example, the contents of the
/usr
directory in the proto area will be used in the built platform
area. Note, the entire contents of the proto area are not included. The
specific set of files is determined by the manifests, which will be
discussed in a later section.
The root of the proto area is in the proto
directory under the root of
the smartos-live git clone.
Binaries in the proto area should be thought of as cross-compiled binaries. While in our case, we are building x86 on x86, the binaries and libraries should not be assumed to work on the existing system. That said, in many cases you can get away with it. However, testing out of the proto area is no substitute for doing full testing.
There are a lot of items which are installed into the proto area.
However, not everything installed into the proto area is actually placed
inside the live image. To determine the items that are a part of the
live image, each repository that makes up the platform has a manifest
file.
The manifest files for each repository are combined into one large
manifest file. This manifest file is used by the builder
program found
in smartos-live in the tools/builder
directory.
Each line of a manifest file contains a single file, directory, symlink,
or hardlink directive. Comments are done with the #
character. For example:
#
# This is a file:
# f path/to/file <perms> <user> <group>
# This is a directory:
# d path/to/dir <perms> <user> <group>
# This is a symlink:
# s <target>=<source>
# This is a hardlink:
# h <target>=<source>
# For example:
#
d usr 0755 root sys
d usr/bin 0755 root sys
f usr/bin/grep 0555 root bin
h usr/bin/egrep=usr/bin/grep
s usr/bin/coolgrep=usr/bin/grep
Something that we deliver should only ever be added to the manifest file
from the repository that builds it. For example, because illumos-joyent
delivers /usr/sbin/dtrace
it should be in the manifest file for
illumos-joyent and not any other repository. Keeping them separate this
way allows us to minimize build-time flag days that require updating
multiple repositories at once.
Device drivers represent a slight exception to the normal rules. While
they should be added to the standard manifest directory, they also need
to be added to two files in smartos-live. Specifically, the driver
should be listed in overlay/generic/etc/name_to_major
and assigned the
next free major number. Any aliases for the driver, devices which the
driver should attach to, should be added to
overlay/generic/etc/driver_aliases
.
A large part of development in the platform should be focused around testing. Some components such as vmadm and DTrace have extensive test suites. Other components often don't have as extensive test suites. Some components, such as device drivers, often have none.
You should always ask yourself what kinds of unit tests or regression tests can we add that would cover this behavior and add that to the general test suite wherever possible. Otherwise, the useful thing to do is to try and understand and think through all the different ways that your change interacts with the system. What components have been changed and what has been impacted.
For example, if changing a public header in the operating system, the impact can often be beyond just the software in the platform. That might impact all the third-party software that is built via pkgsrc and so it may be appropriate to compare pkgsrc bulk builds before and after the change.
If changing a device driver, you may need to track down multiple generations of said hardware to test against to verify that there aren't regressions.
One important thing to always think about is whether or not the thing that's changing is a public interface or not. If this is a standard command or a library function that's been documented or is part of a mapfile section, then it probably is.
When changing a public interface, you need to always pause and work through several cases and make sure that we aren't breaking backwards compatibility. Some questions to ask include ones like:
- If I take an old binary and use it against the new library, what happens?
- If I had written a shell script that used a command and the output changed, what will happen?
- What expectations come from standards or other system about these issues?
These are intended to help guide understand the impact and risk related to the change.
We have a hard rule: a public mapfile version should not be added directly to illumos-joyent. Instead, if you have a change that you need to make, it should be added to a private version and moved to a public version when it is upstreamed to illumos.
If the library in question is specific to illumos-joyent, then it's alright to version it. However, this is not true for the vast majority of libraries.
This repository uses cr.joyent.us (Gerrit) for new changes. Anyone can submit changes. To get started, see the cr.joyent.us user guide. This repository does not use GitHub pull requests.
All changes should have an associated issue. You can use the GitHub issue tracker. (Joyent employees use an internal JIRA exposed at https://smartos.org/bugview.)
In general, before putting something up for review, some amount of
testing should have already been done. Once you post it for review, then
you need to seek out reviewers. A good first step for finding reviewers
is to see who has worked on changes in similar areas. A good way to do
this is to use git log
in portions of the source tree and note who the
authors, reviewers, and approvers have been. This can often be a good
source of trying to figure out who to ask.
If you're not sure of who to ask or are having trouble finding someone, then consider asking in a public forum such as internal chat or IRC. Even if you're not sure if someone would make sense as a reviewer or not, don't hesitate to reach out and folks will help you find or suggest reviewers. For more information on where to reach out, see the community section.
When thinking about integrating, the following are questions that you or your approver should be asking yourself:
- Have I tested this in all the ways I can think of? Might this impact standalone SmartOS or Triton in some way?
- Have I documented any new commands or interfaces in manual pages?
- Have I built this both debug and non-debug?
- Have I reviewed the
git pbchk
output when working in bldenv in illumos-joyent? - Have I run any appropriate make check targets?
- Have I looked for memory leaks?
- Have I performed appropriate stress testing to try and find issues that might only arise after prolonged use?
- Is this a particularly risky change? If so, should I wait until the start of the next release cycle to put this back?
- Are there any heads up notices I need to send as part of this? For example, this might happen because of a flag day.
- Have I added a new tool that's required to run at build-time and tested this on older platform images?
You can interact with the SmartOS community in a number of ways. This includes:
-
The smartos-discuss mailing list. If you wish to send mail to the list you'll need to join, but you can view and search the archives online without being a member.
-
In the #smartos IRC channel on the Freenode IRC network.
If you encounter a problem, please reach out for assistance. You can file a github issue for any problem you encounter. When filing a bug, please include the platform version that you're running and a description of the problem.
If there was an operating system crash dump or a program generated a core dump, it would be greatly appreciated if you could make that available.
While there are multiple repositories that make up the smartos-live image, if you're in doubt about where to file a bug or just are uncertain, please file it on the SmartOS live issue tracker and we'll help from there. It's more important that the bug is recorded and we can work on solving it than it end up in the right location.