Mercurial > emacs
view admin/notes/elpa @ 112338:aee2f052ef17
* notes/bzr (Installing changes from gnulib): New section.
Need for this suggested by Stefan Monnier.
author | Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> |
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date | Mon, 17 Jan 2011 14:11:13 -0800 |
parents | ee55b6620594 |
children |
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NOTES ON THE EMACS PACKAGE ARCHIVE Here are instructions on uploading files to the package archive at elpa.gnu.org, for Emacs maintainers. (If you are not a maintainer, contact us if you want to submit a package.) 1. You will need login access to elpa.gnu.org. You will also need to get the FSF sysadmins to allow ssh access through the FSF firewall for your local machine. Ensure that your uid, USER, is in the `elpa' group on elpa.gnu.org; this gives you write access to the bzr repository from which the packages are managed. 2. Go to your bzr repository on your local machine. Of, if you don't have one (you should, if you're tracking Emacs bzr), make one: cd $DEVHOME bzr init-repo elpa/ cd elpa Create a branch for elpa: bzr branch bzr+ssh://USER@elpa.gnu.org/home/elpa/package-repo package-repo Bind the branch: cd package-repo/ echo "public_branch = bzr+ssh://USER@elpa.gnu.org/home/elpa/package-repo" >> .bzr/branch/branch.conf bzr bind bzr+ssh://USER@elpa.gnu.org/home/elpa/package-repo Now you should be able to do `bzr up' and `bzr commit'. 3. Changes in bzr do not immediately propagate to the user-facing tree (i.e., what users see when they do `M-x list-packages'). That tree is created by a (daily) cron job that does "bzr export". If for some reason you need to refresh the user-facing tree immediately, run /home/elpa/bin/package-update.sh as the "elpa" user. The Org mode dailies are not part of the repository. After the package-update.sh script creates the user-facing tree, it copies the daily tarfile hosted on orgmode.org directly into that tree. 4. FIXME: How to actually upload a package file.