# Rusty's Unreliable Guide to The Terrible World of Reproducible Builds 1. The reproducible build system currently only supports Ubuntu 18.04.1. 2. It requires manual steps. 3. The input is a source zipfile, the output is a .tar.xz. ## Step 1: Creating a Build Machine Download the Ubuntu Desktop ISO image for 18.04.1. I got it from http://old-releases.ubuntu.com/releases/18.04.1/ubuntu-18.04.1-desktop-amd64.iso The `sha256sum` of this file should be `5748706937539418ee5707bd538c4f5eabae485d17aa49fb13ce2c9b70532433`. Do a standard install, but make sure to *uncheck* 'Download updates while installing Ubuntu' in the installer (or simply deprive it of a network connection as I do below). I did the following to install under kvm: qemu-img create ubuntu-18.04.01.raw 10G kvm -m 2G -cdrom ~/Downloads/ubuntu-18.04.1-desktop-amd64.iso ubuntu-18.04.01.raw -nic none You can choose a 'Minimal installation': it shouldn't matter. Once the installation is over, it'll want to restart. Then make sure you disable updates: 1. Left-click on the bottom left 9-dots menu 2. Type "update" 3. Click on the "Software & Up.." box icon. 4. Click on the "Updates" tab at the top of that app. 5. Uncheck "Important security updates", "Recommended updates" and "Unsupported updates". You'll have to re-enter your password. 6. Hit "Close". 7. If asked, hit "Reload". If you didn't have a network connection, you'll want to add one for the next steps; for me, this meant powering off the build machine and restarting: kvm -m 2G ubuntu-18.04.01.raw -nic user And then ran `sudo apt-get update` after I'd logged in. ## Step 2: Create the Source Zipfile Create the source zip that the Build Machine will need, using ./tools/build-release.sh zipfile For testing (ie. when you're not on a proper released version), you can use --force-version=, --force-mtime= and even --force-unclean. The will place a file into `release/`, eg. `clightning-v0.7.0rc2.zip`. ### Example If you are on the git commit v0.7.0rc2 (1dcc4823507df177bf11ca60ab7da988205139b1): ``` $ sha256sum release/clightning-v0.7.0rc2.zip 3c980858024b8b429333e7ee5a545c499ac6c25d0f1d11bb45fafce00c99ebba release/clightning-v0.7.0rc2.zip ``` ## Step 3: Put the Zipfile Onto The Build Machine You can upload it somewhere and download it into the machine, or various virtualization solutions or a USB stick for a physical machine. I simply started a server on my host, like so: cd release && python3 -m http.server --bind 127.0.0.1 8888 Inside my KVM build machine I did: wget http://10.0.2.2:8888/clightning-v0.7.0rc2.zip ## Step 4: Do the Build 1. `unzip clightning-v0.7.0rc2.zip` 2. `cd clightning-v0.7.0rc2` 3. `tools/repro-build.sh` (use the same `--force-mtime` if testing). It will download the packages needed to build, check they're identitcal to the versions we expect, install them then build the binaries and create a tar.xz file. 4. The output will be in that top-level directory. ### Example: If you built from our example zipfile: ``` $ sha256sum clightning-v0.7.0rc2-Ubuntu-18.04.tar.xz c9b4d9530b9b41456f460c58e3ffaa779cdc1c11fb9e3eaeea0f364b62de3d96 clightning-v0.7.0rc2-Ubuntu-18.04.tar.xz ``` ## Step 5: Get the Built Result Off the Build Machine Again, there are many ways, but for my KVM settings the simplest was: On the host: nc -l -p 8888 > clightning-v0.7.0rc2-Ubuntu-18.04.tar.xz On the guest: nc -q0 10.0.2.2 8888 < clightning-v0.7.0rc2-Ubuntu-18.04.tar.xz ## Step 5: Tell the World You can find my example artifacts on https://ozlabs.org/~rusty/clightning-repro if you want to see why your build produced a different result from mine. Happy hacking! Rusty.