Click packages

Click is the code name used to describe a packaging format for Ubuntu mobile applications. This format specifies how individual apps are delivered to mobile devices, how they are packed into distributable format, and how they are installed on a mobile device by a system provided package manager. At a minimum they assume that a system framework exists providing all the necessary infrastructure and dependencies needed in order to install and run such apps.

The click packaging format is completely independent from facilities to do full-system installations or upgrades.

Compatibility

Currently, this package should remain compatible with Python 2.7, 3.2, 3.3, and 3.4; Ubuntu 12.04 LTS, Ubuntu 13.10, and Ubuntu 14.04 LTS.

Build

If you run from a fresh bzr checkout, please ensure you have the required build dependencies first by running:

$ dpkg-checkbuilddeps

and installing anything that is missing here.

Then run:

$ ./autogen.sh
$ ./configure --prefix=/usr \
    --sysconfdir=/etc \
    --with-systemdsystemunitdir=/lib/systemd/system \
    --with-systemduserunitdir=/usr/lib/systemd/user
$ make

to build the project.

Dependencies

For Ubuntu 14.04, make sure you have the python2.7 and python3.4 packages installed. Unless you upgraded from a previous version of Ubuntu and haven’t removed it yet, you won’t have Python 3.3 and Python 3.2 available. Build them from source if necessary, install them say into /usr/local, and make sure they are on your $PATH.

You’ll need tox (Ubuntu package python-tox) installed in order to run the full test suite. You should be able to just say:

$ tox

to run the full suite. Use tox’s -e option to run the tests against a subset of Python versions. You shouldn’t have to install anything manually into the virtual environments that tox creates, but you might have to if you don’t have all the dependencies installed in your system Pythons.

You’ll need the mock and python-debian libraries. For Ubuntu 13.10, apt-get install the following packages:

* python-mock
* python-debian
* python3-debian

Testing

After all of the above is installed, you can run tox to run the test suite against all supported Python versions. The ./run-tests scripts just does an additional check to make sure you’ve got the preload shared library built.

To run a specific testcase, use the standard python unittest syntax like:

$ python3 -m unittest click.tests.test_install

or:

$ python2 -m unittest click.tests.test_build.TestClickBuilder.test_build

Test coverage

If you have python-coverage installed, you can get a Python test coverage report by typing:

$ python-coverage combine $ python-coverage report

This works also for python3-coverage.

To get Vala/C coverage information, install the gcovr and lcov packages and run:

$ ./configure –enable-gcov $ make coverage-html

which will generate a “coveragereport/index.html” file for you.

The combined coverage information can be obtained via:

$ make coverage.xml

Integration Tests

There is also a set of integration tests that have additional test dependencies that are listed in debian/test/control.

Beware that some require to be run as root and they are designed to be run in a safe environment (like a schroot or a autopkgtest container) and may alter the system state (e.g adding test users). By default the tests will run against the installed click binary, but you can also use:

$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$(pwd)/lib/click/.libs
PYTHONPATH=$(pwd) GI_TYPELIB_PATH=$(pwd)/lib/click CLICK_BINARY=$(pwd)/bin/click TEST_INTEGRATION=1 python3 -m unittest discover click.tests.integration

to run against the build tree.

Documentation

To build the HTML version of the documentation, you’ll need Sphinx (Ubuntu package python-sphinx). Then do:

$ (cd doc && make html)

Contents:

Indices and tables