gnuboot/website
Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli 08b9e449e9
Add a minimal GNU Boot manual.
Currently GNU Boot has no manual, and it needs one to organize better
the information it provides to users and/or contributors.

Since we need to start somewhere, beside adding the manual license, we
describe a bit what the GNU Boot project is, and also ask for help for
completing the manual.

The GFDL 1.3 comes from the gnulib source code at the commit
d64d66cc4897d605f543257dcd038524a0a55215 ("autoupdate").

The beginning and the end of the document are also very similar to the
GNU Hello manual from the commit
24225d705684322f482135e8a2d679485fce0811 ("maint: remove the obsolete
gettext module") as they were copied and modified from that.

The 'dircategory Kernel' was chosen to be the same than GRUB, so they
both appear in the same group in the Emacs info reader ('info'
command in Emacs).

As for the "Overview" of GNU Boot it also contains background
information that will be needed later on and that needs to be
introduced right from the start:

- If people reading the manual do not understand what a boot software
  is, all the rest will be too complicated to explain.

- We also need to explain where GNU Boot is physically located on the
  computer from the start as we plan not to use the 'ROM' terminology
  as it's confusing: ROM means read-only-memory, and so there is no
  point of providing GNU Boot ROM images if the nonfree boot software
  can't be replaced.

Signed-off-by: Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli <GNUtoo@cyberdimension.org>
Acked-by: Adrien Bourmault <neox@gnu.org>
2024-11-25 16:39:16 +01:00
..
history website: remove history/git-history.jpg 2024-11-12 12:16:24 +01:00
hwdumps website: move hwdumps out of the pages directory. 2024-06-11 20:30:00 +02:00
img Remove old logos, and make the website point to the new ones. 2024-06-16 12:55:14 +02:00
pages Add a minimal GNU Boot manual. 2024-11-25 16:39:16 +01:00
.gitignore Add a minimal GNU Boot manual. 2024-11-25 16:39:16 +01:00
COPYING Merge website and website-build. 2024-06-11 20:29:47 +02:00
Makefile.am Add a minimal GNU Boot manual. 2024-11-25 16:39:16 +01:00
README Add a minimal GNU Boot manual. 2024-11-25 16:39:16 +01:00
autogen.sh Merge website and website-build. 2024-06-11 20:29:47 +02:00
build.sh website: Remove news generation. 2024-09-08 17:37:11 +02:00
check.sh website: make the website prefix (software/gnuboot) configurable. 2024-06-11 20:29:57 +02:00
configure.ac Add a minimal GNU Boot manual. 2024-11-25 16:39:16 +01:00
force-bordeaux-substitute.scm website: use Guix v1.4.0. 2024-11-24 14:23:24 +01:00
index.html.tmpl website: make the website prefix (software/gnuboot) configurable. 2024-06-11 20:29:57 +02:00
lighttpd.conf.tmpl website: add history page of the GNU Boot git repositories. 2024-08-30 16:04:55 +02:00
serve.sh website: serve.sh: update copyright headers. 2024-09-06 17:39:04 +02:00
site.cfg.tmpl website: Remove news generation. 2024-09-08 17:37:11 +02:00

README

+==============+
| Introduction |
+==============+
This directory contains both the website in pages/ and build code to
easily build and deploy the GNU Boot website with very few commands.

+==============+
| Dependencies |
+==============+

Without Guix
-------------
If you don't want to install Guix just to test the website, you will
need to install the following dependencies (tested under Trisquel 11):

* autoconf
* automake
* coreutils
* gawk
* git
* graphicsmagick
* graphviz
* grep
* gzip
* lighttpd
* make
* pandoc
* sed
* tar
* texinfo
* texlive-binaries
* texlive-plain-generic

You can then use the following commands to build the website:
$ ./autogen.sh
$ ./configure --disable-guix
$ make serve

With Guix
---------
And if you want to use Guix instead you only need the following
dependencies instead:

* autoconf
* automake
* coreutils
* guix
* make
* tar

But for making sure that the build doesn't take days with Guix, you
will also need to make sure that bordeaux.guix.gnu.org is in the list
of substitutes (binary packages servers for Guix).

This is needed because some older Guix packages (like the ones on
Trisquel 11 or PureOS) don't have bordeaux enabled while installation
through the guix-install.sh instead have it enabled if you enable
substitutes (binary packages), and without it Guix will start to build
haskell (which is a dependency of pandoc) and this takes a few days to
complete on a ThinkPad X200.

If your Guix installation is recent enough it should already have it
and the following command should print 'bordeaux.guix.gnu.org is
enabled':
$ guix repl force-bordeaux-substitute.scm check

If instead you need to add it, it will print 'bordeaux.guix.gnu.org is
disabled'.

If you are in the same directory than this README, you can add
bordeaux.guix.gnu.org with the following command:
$ sudo guix archive --authorize < ../resources/distros/guix/bordeaux.guix.gnu.org.pub

Or if you do not want to blindly trust the file above, you could
simply update Guix and get the file from Guix instead, but updating
Guix the first time can be quite long to do:
$ guix pull
$ sudo guix archive --authorize < ~/.config/guix/current/share/guix/bordeaux.guix.gnu.org.pub

You will then need to make it possible for the build system to check
if bordeaux is enabled as some people might want to bulid everything
themselves for security reasons, so we don't (and can't) use bordeaux
if it is not already authorized:
$ sudo chmod +r /etc/guix/acl

Once bordeaux is enabled you can use the following commands to build
the website:
$ ./autogen.sh
$ ./configure
$ make serve

The first time it will be longer in the case you have a Guix older
than 1.4.0 (as it will also download Guix 1.4.0 in the process).

+=====================+
| Testing the website |
+=====================+

Here's how to deploy the website in a local webserver:
$ ./autogen.sh
$ ./configure
$ make serve

If you don't use Guix, remember to do ./configure --disable-guix instead.

Then you can point a browser to http://localhost:8086/software/gnuboot/web/ or
to http://localhost:PORT/software/gnuboot/web/ if you changed the port through
./configure options.

The GNU Boot website build system takes care of some of the
dependencies for you (for instance the static website generator that
is not packaged in any distributions) so you have less work to do to
install or use them on your side.

If you want to test your own modifications to the dependencies of this
build code, you either need to use the configure options to use
external repositories that have your modifications, or you could also
modify the build.sh script to use different git repositories and/or
revisions.

+=================================================+
| Deployment on https://gnu.org/software/gnuboot/ |
+=================================================+

The deployment to https://gnu.org/software/gnuboot/ uses rsync. As
gnu.org machine is behind a firewall, so you need to workaround
that.

A way to do that is to get a shell account on fencepost.gnu.org, and
use SSH to forward the connection to gnu.org. This can be done with
something like that in your SSH configuration:

    Host fencepost.gnu.org
       User USERNAME

    Host gnu.org
       User wwwcvs
       ProxyJump fencepost.gnu.org

In the example above you will need to adjust the fencepost USERNAME,
and modify it to suit your SSH setup if needed (for instance if you
use keys in different locations, etc). Of course, you'll have to get
access to gnu.org ssh server too.

See https://www.gnu.org/software/README.accounts.html for more details
about Fencepost accounts, the SSH fingerprints, etc.

For gnu.org, it's easier if you use an ED25519 key for gnu.org as I
have the fingerprints below. See [1] for other options.

To check that everything is setup you can then SSH into gnu.org:
    $ ssh gnu.org
    The authenticity of host '[127.0.0.1]:2224 ([127.0.0.1]:2224)' can't be established.
    ED25519 key fingerprint is SHA256:pmCf0NrBzSSYfg6DdgmlMzPWZzGpXXcPEz6LP1+o5Jc.
    This host key is known by the following other names/addresses:
        ~/.ssh/known_hosts:306: [127.0.0.1]:4444
    Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no/[fingerprint])?

You can then confirm by pasting the fingerprint like that[2]:
    Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no/[fingerprint])? SHA256:pmCf0NrBzSSYfg6DdgmlMzPWZzGpXXcPEz6LP1+o5Jc
    Warning: Permanently added '[127.0.0.1]:2224' (ED25519) to the list of known hosts.

Note that it is normal for the connection to gnu.org to block at this
point. You can exit it with the Ctrl+D or Ctrl+C key combinations.

At this point everything is setup.

To deploy the website, use the following commands from the website
directory:
    $ ./autogen.sh
    $ ./configure
    $ make publish

Then you can point a browser to https://gnu.org/software/gnuboot/web/

References:
-----------
[1]If you want to use RSA the easiest way is probably to contact the
   FSF system administrator that will install your key on #fsfsys and
   also ask that person for the server fingerprint. In that case it
   would be a good idea to also contribute a patch to add the
   fingerprint here.
[2]The 'SHA256:pmCf0NrBzSSYfg6DdgmlMzPWZzGpXXcPEz6LP1+o5Jc'
   fingerprint was confirmed to me the 24 October 2023 on the #fsfsys
   IRC channel on liberachat by Ian Kelling, a system administrator
   that has access to the gnu.org machine: "18:07 < iank> i see that
   SHA256:pmCf0NrBzSSYfg6DdgmlMzPWZzGpXXcPEz6LP1+o5Jc exists on the
   server".

+=========+
| License |
+=========+
This project is free software:
- For the files that are in website/pages and the the site.cfg file in
  the same directory than this README see website/pages/license.md for
  the license.
- For all the other files in the same directory than this README, you
  can redistribute them and/or modify them under the terms of the GNU
  General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation,
  either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later
  version.