Hi everyone!
My name is Jon Trossbach and I am a first time contributor to the Fedora project. My first goal is to get fedocal working with Python 3.
I am currently trying to use this set of Ansible playbooks (https://pagure.io/fedora-infra/ansible) to deploy fedocal in a CentOS 7 virtual machine using VirtualBox and Vagrant but I can't get the playbook to finish without running into some errors. So I guess my first question is: am I using these Ansible playbooks for their intended purpose in trying to set up an individual development environment for fedocal? Or should I just follow the README in its github repository (https://github.com/fedora-infra/fedocal)? I've attempted both ways of setting up a development environment and can't seem to get either to work.
Once I know which way I should set up my development environment for fedocal I can share the spot where I'm getting stuck using that method. Thanks for your time in reading this.
sincerely, Jon Trossbach
On Tue, 2020-06-02 at 19:38 +0000, Jonathan Trossbach wrote:
Hi everyone!
My name is Jon Trossbach and I am a first time contributor to the Fedora project. My first goal is to get fedocal working with Python 3.
I am currently trying to use this set of Ansible playbooks ( https://pagure.io/fedora-infra/ansible) to deploy fedocal in a CentOS 7 virtual machine using VirtualBox and Vagrant but I can't get the playbook to finish without running into some errors. So I guess my first question is: am I using these Ansible playbooks for their intended purpose in trying to set up an individual development environment for fedocal?
Probably not. Those ansible plays are intended for the Fedora infrastructure environment specifically. Some people try to bear in mind 'generic' use of the playbooks when working there, but you can't rely on it. It may be best to treat the playbooks as a useful guide rather than literally trying to run them outside of the infra environment. The plays are also intended to set up real production instances, not development environments.
Or should I just follow the README in its github repository ( https://github.com/fedora-infra/fedocal)? I've attempted both ways of setting up a development environment and can't seem to get either to work.
What problem did you have with this approach?
Goor Morning,
AFAIK fedocal is already ported[1] and deployed[2] with python 3 on our instance
Regards,
[1]: https://pagure.io/fedocal/c/1f9d1bfd8cdad32758b01c30a8588585ef264a5a
[2]: https://pagure.io/fedora-infra/ansible/blob/master/f/roles/openshift-apps/fe...
20/6/3 00:18(e)an, Adam Williamson igorleak idatzi zuen:
On Tue, 2020-06-02 at 19:38 +0000, Jonathan Trossbach wrote:
Hi everyone!
My name is Jon Trossbach and I am a first time contributor to the Fedora project. My first goal is to get fedocal working with Python 3.
I am currently trying to use this set of Ansible playbooks ( https://pagure.io/fedora-infra/ansible) to deploy fedocal in a CentOS 7 virtual machine using VirtualBox and Vagrant but I can't get the playbook to finish without running into some errors. So I guess my first question is: am I using these Ansible playbooks for their intended purpose in trying to set up an individual development environment for fedocal?
Probably not. Those ansible plays are intended for the Fedora infrastructure environment specifically. Some people try to bear in mind 'generic' use of the playbooks when working there, but you can't rely on it. It may be best to treat the playbooks as a useful guide rather than literally trying to run them outside of the infra environment. The plays are also intended to set up real production instances, not development environments.
Or should I just follow the README in its github repository ( https://github.com/fedora-infra/fedocal)? I've attempted both ways of setting up a development environment and can't seem to get either to work.
What problem did you have with this approach?
infrastructure@lists.fedoraproject.org