Mender is an open source over-the-air (OTA) software updater for embedded Linux devices. Mender comprises a client running at the embedded device, as well as a server that manages deployments across many devices.
This repository contains the artifacts library, which is used by the Mender client, command line interface, server and for build integration with the Yocto Project.
The artifacts library makes it easy to programmatically work with a Mender artifact, which
is a file that can be recognized by its .mender
suffix. Mender artifacts
can contain binaries, metadata, checksums, signatures and scripts that are
used during a deployment. The artifact format acts as a wrapper, and
uses the tar
format to bundle several files into one.
In its simplest form, an artifact contains just a rootfs image, along with its checksum, id and device type compatibility.
The artifacts library might also be useful for other updaters or purposes. We are always happy to see other uses of it!
To start using Mender, we recommend that you begin with the Getting started section in the Mender documentation.
You can use the reader and the writer in go in the standard way:
import (
"github.com/grid-x/mender-artifact/areader"
"github.com/grid-x/mender-artifact/awriter"
...
)
For sample usage, please see the Mender client source code.
You can find the latest mender-artifact
binaries in the Downloads page on
Mender Docs.
These binaries are built using the containerized method described below, hence using the
Dockerfile
(s) from this repository with the Go version specified there.
Additionally, mender-artifact
is distributed in source flavor for Yocto recipes in
meta-mender
and as Debian/Ubuntu binary packages in Mender APT
repositories. For these the Go
version to use is determined by the Yocto or Debian/Ubuntu distribution in use.
Note: The build process is only supported on Linux-based environments.
The preferred way to build mender-artifact
from source is containerized in docker
.
This process can be used to generate binaries suitable for running on Linux, Windows and MacOS
hosts.
You need the following prerequisites:
- docker Installation instructions
- the
make
tool. Most distributions offer amake
package. Install it using your native package management tool, such asapt
,yum
,pacman
, ...
In the source directory, build mender-artifact
by issueing
make build-natives-contained
This results in the self-contained binary mender-artifact
. You can leave it in place,
or move it to a location on your systems PATH
.
Note: containerized building on non-x86 platform is not supported yet
To build mender-artifact
from source you need the following prerequisites:
(packages given for Debian-based environments)
- the Go programming language. Installation instructions
- the packages
build-essential liblzma-dev libssl-dev pkg-config
In the source directory, mender-artifact
is built by simply issueing
make
This results in the self-contained binary mender-artifact
. You can leave it in place,
or move it to a location on your systems PATH
.
This is the easiest approach, and all that is needed it to run:
sudo make install-autocomplete-scripts
And the Bash
auto-complete script will be installed to
/etc/bash_completion.d
, and if Zsh
is installed on the system, the
corresponding auto-completion script is installed into
/usr/local/share/zsh/site-functions
.
You can override both the DESTDIR
(default: empty) and PREFIX
(default: /usr/local
) variables to alter the destination paths, i.e:
sudo make DESTDIR=/tmp PREFIX=/usr install-autocomplete-scripts
auto-completion of mender-artifact
sub-commands can be added to either ZSH or
Bash through:
The simplest way of enabling auto-completion in Bash is to copy the
./autocomplete/bash_autocomplete
file into /etc/bash_completion.d/
like so:
sudo cp path/to/mender-aritfact/autocomplete/bash_autocomplete /etc/bash_completion.d/mender-artifact
source /etc/bash_completion.d/mender-artifact
Alternatively the following can be added to .bashrc
:
PROG=mender-artifact
source path/to/mender-artifact/autocomplete/bash_autocomplete
Auto-completion for ZSH is supported through the zsh_autocompletion
script
found in the ./autocomplete
directory. In order to enable it consistently, add
these lines to your .zshrc
file:
source path/to/mender-artifact/autocomplete/zsh_autocomplete
We welcome and ask for your contribution. If you would like to contribute to Mender, please read our guide on how to best get started contributing code or documentation.
Mender is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. See LICENSE for the full license text.
We take security very seriously. If you come across any issue regarding security, please disclose the information by sending an email to security@mender.io. Please do not create a new public issue. We thank you in advance for your cooperation.
- Join the Mender Hub discussion forum
- Follow us on Twitter. Please feel free to tweet us questions.
- Fork us on Github
- Create an issue in the bugtracker
- Email us at contact@mender.io
- Connect to the #mender IRC channel on Libera