laminar

Fast and lightweight Continuous Integration

Stars
274
Forks
48
Open issues
11
Closed issues
153
Last release
11 months ago
Last commit
6 months ago
Watchers
274
Total releases
13
Total commits
357
Open PRs
0
Closed PRs
30
Repo URL
Platform
License
gpl-3.0
Category
Usecase
Offers premium version?
NO
Proprietary?
NO
About

Laminar CI

Laminar (https://laminar.ohwg.net) is a lightweight and modular Continuous Integration service for Linux. It is self-hosted and developer-friendly, eschewing a configuration UI in favour of simple version-controllable configuration files and scripts.

Laminar encourages the use of existing GNU/Linux tools such as bash and cron instead of reinventing them.

Although the status and progress front-end is very user-friendly, administering a Laminar instance requires writing shell scripts and manually editing configuration files. That being said, there is nothing esoteric here and the guide should be straightforward for anyone with even very basic Linux server administration experience.

See the website and the documentation for more information.

Building from source

First install development packages for capnproto (version 0.7.0 or newer), rapidjson, sqlite and boost (for the header-only multi_index_container library) from your distribution's repository or other source.

On Debian Bullseye, this can be done with:

sudo apt install \
         capnproto cmake g++ libboost-dev libcapnp-dev libsqlite3-dev rapidjson-dev zlib1g-dev

Then compile and install laminar with:

git clone https://github.com/ohwgiles/laminar.git
cd laminar
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr
make -j "$(nproc)"

Warning: the following will overwrite an existing /etc/laminar.conf

sudo make install

make install includes a systemd unit file. If you intend to use it, consider creating a new user laminar or modifying the user specified in the unit file.

Packaging for distributions

The pkg directory contains shell scripts which use docker to build native packages (deb,rpm) for common Linux distributions. Note that these are very simple packages which may not completely conform to the distribution's packaging guidelines, however they may serve as a starting point for creating an official package, or may be useful if the official package lags.

Contributing

Issues and pull requests via GitHub are most welcome. All pull requests must adhere to the Developer Certificate of Origin.

Alternative Projects
No projects found

Subscribe to Open Source Businees Newsletter

Twice a month we will interview people behind open source businesses. We will talk about how they are building a business on top of open source projects.

We'll never share your email with anyone else.