Automates the creation and managment of aptly mirrors and snapshots based on toml input files.
Important: Currently under heavy development:
- For for the old version switch to the master branch
- Main branch builds contain alpha packages, see Artifacts
Aptly is great tool for creating Debian repositories. But as soon as it's required to maintain repositories for different environments it gets very complicated fast.
This is where Pyaptly comes in.
First of all, a single config.toml
can be used to define mirrors
, snapshots
and publishes
instead of using command line arguments.
The definition includes exactly how the entities are created and updated.
Secondly, aptly isn't really layed out to have retention policies. Updating a snapshot
will lose the information of the previous state.
That means it's hard to roll back to a previous state if required.
This problem is fixed by using fix timestamps in snapshot names.
That behaviour also allows to define a fixed update spacing. It's possible to say for example "only update this snapshot once a week".
Initialize a new aptly server.
pyaptly mirror mirrors.toml create
pyaptly mirror mirrors.toml update
pyaptly snapshot mirrors.toml create
pyaptly publish mirrors.toml create
Update mirrors and snapshots and switch publish endpoints with
automatic-update: true
to the new snapshots.
pyaptly mirror mirrors.toml update
pyaptly snapshot mirrors.toml create
pyaptly publish mirrors.toml create
pyaptly publish mirrors.toml update
Manually trigger a switch to the new snapshots for the publish endpoint ubuntu/stable.
pyaptly publish mirrors.toml update -n ubuntu/stable
The most interesting mode for users is not --debug
but --info
which shows
all commands executed.
> pyaptly legacy -- --info --config pyaptly/tests/repo.toml repo create
Command call
cmd: gpg --no-default-keyring --keyring trustedkeys.gpg --list-keys --with-colons -> 0
stdout: 'tru::1:1709575833:0:3:1:5
pub:-:255:22:2841988729C7F3FF:1701882080:::-:::scESC:::::ed25519:::0:
fpr:::::::::6380C07FF6496016E01CF4522841988729C7F3FF:
uid:-::::1701882080::5BBE9C7E7AA5EEE3538F66274125D69FA727FD1E::Pyaptly Test 01 <test01@pyaptly.nowhere>::::::::::0:
sub:-:255:18:0A1CBEF26FE4F36E:1701882080::::::e:::::cv25519::
fpr:::::::::9EE64E40A5E3530D3E18A97C0A1CBEF26FE4F36E:
pub:-:255:22:EC54D33E5B5EBE98:1701882297:::-:::scESC:::::ed25519:::0:
fpr:::::::::660D45228AB6B59CCE48AFB3EC54D33E5B5EBE98:
uid:-::::1701882297::F3EF71B78669C0FC259A4078151BDC5815A6015D::Pyaptly Test 02 <test02@pyaptly.nowhere>::::::::::0:
sub:-:255:18:042FE0F5BB743B60:1701882297::::::e:::::cv25519::
fpr:::::::::AE58B62134E02AF8E5D55FF4042FE0F5BB743B60:'
Command call
cmd: aptly repo list -raw -> 0
stderr: 'Config file not found, creating default config at /root/.aptly.conf'
Command call
cmd: aptly mirror list -raw -> 0
Command call
cmd: aptly snapshot list -raw -> 0
Command call
cmd: aptly publish list -raw -> 0
Command call
cmd: aptly repo -architectures=amd64,i386 -distribution=stable -component=main create centrify -> 0
stdout: 'Local repo [centrify] successfully added.
You can run 'aptly repo add centrify ...' to add packages to repository.'
Commands that fail are always displayed in red on a tty, but that actually only happens if something is broken.