.Dd $Mdocdate: April 24 2023 $ .Dt PORTING 7 .Os Telodendria Project .Sh NAME .Nm porting .Nd Some guidelines for packaging Telodendria for your operating system. .Sh DESCRIPTION .Pp Telodendria is distributed at source code, and does not offer a convenient install process. This is intentional; the Telodendria project is primarily concerned with developing Telodendria itself, not packaging it for the hundreds of different operating systems and Linux distributions that exist. It is my firm belief that distributing an open source project is not the job of the open source developer; that's the reason software distributions exist, to collect and distribute software. .Pp It would be impossible to single-handedly package Telodendria for every platform, because each platform has very different expectations for software. Even different Linux distributions have different conventions for where manual pages, binaries, and configuration files go. .Pp That being said, this page aims to assist those who want to package Telodendria for their operating system or software distribution. .Pp See .Xr td 1 for instructions on how to build Telodendria. Only proceed with packaging Telodendria after you have successfully built it on your operating system. .Pp To package Telodendria, you should collect the following files, and figure out where they should be installed for your system: .Bl -bullet .It The telodendria server binary itself: .Pa build/telodendria .It All manual pages in the .Pa man/ directory that are prefixed with "telodendria". These are the user documentation pages. All pages that do not have the "telodendria" prefix are intended only for developers, and so do not need to be installed to the system. .It An init script. People that wish to install Telodendria to their system expect it to be integrated enough that Telodendria can be easily started at boot, and otherwise managed by the system's daemon tools, be it systemd, or another init system. Consult your system's documentation for writing an init script. Do note that Telodendria does not fork itself to the background; the init script should do that. Note that the init script probably requires a few things: .Bl -bullet .It A dedicated system user under which Telodendria should run. Telodendria can either be started as that user, or started as root and configured to automatically drop to that user. .It A default data directory, in which all Telodendria data, including the configuration and logs, will be stored. A good default on Unix-like system is probably .Pa /var/telodendria . .El .El .Pp Optionally, it may be helpful to provide these as well: .Bl -bullet .It A sample Telodendria configuration. This should be placed in the examples directory on your system, if such a directory exists. You can use or adapt any of the configuration files in .Pa contrib/ , or write your own specifically for your package. .El .Pp Once you have collected the files that need to be installed, make sure your package performs the following tasks on install: .Bl -bullet .It If necessary, depending on the config used, create a new system user for the Telodendria daemon to run as. .It If conventional for your system, enable the Telodendria init script so that Telodendria is started on system boot. .It Insruct the user to carefully read the .Xr telodendria-setup 7 , .Xr telodendria-admin 7 , and .Xr telodendria-config 7 manual pages before starting Telodendria. .El .Pp The goal of a package should be to get everything as ready-to-run as possible. The user should be able to start Telodendria right away and begin configuring it. .Pp Remember to publicly document the setup of Telodendria on your platform so that users can easily get things running. If you're packaging Telodendria for a containerization system such as Docker, you can omit the things that containers typically do not have, such as the init script and man pages. .Pp Also remember that your port should feel like it belongs on your target system. Follow all of your system's conventions when placing files on the filesystem, so your users know what to expect. The goal is not necessarily to have a unified experience across all operating systems, rather, you should cater to the opinions of your operating system. Telodendria is architected in such a way that it does not impose the developers opinions of where things should go, and since the configuration lives in the database, it is fairly self-contained. .Pp .Sh SEE ALSO .Xr telodendria-contributing 7 , .Xr td 1 , .Xr telodendria 7