Hi, Thanks Ryan.
My answer is very similar to Ben’s: * I’d be happy to provide you exclusive access to the resources (encrypted VMs, your own users, network and machine are UPS-protected, firewalled, etc.) * I completely agree with you about the safety concerns: those should not be relaxed. * I volunteered because I thought they were needed: I love MacPorts, and I want it to thrive. Bye, Enrico From: Ben Greenfield <b...@cogs.com> Date: Friday, 21 May 2021 at 13:26 To: Ryan Schmidt <ryandes...@macports.org> Cc: Andrew Janke <fl...@apjanke.net>, Enrico Maria Crisostomo <enrico.m.crisost...@gmail.com>, MacPorts Developers <macports-dev@lists.macports.org> Subject: Re: Buildbot hardware (was: Re: Framing the MacPorts discussion) Hey All, Thanks for the direction Ryan. > On May 21, 2021, at 12:46 AM, Ryan Schmidt <ryandes...@macports.org> wrote: > > On May 19, 2021, at 12:38, Andrew Janke wrote: > >> I have a small stack of Mac Minis I got to use as a buildbot farm for >> Octave.app; I might be able to have them pull double duty for MacPorts >> depending on your change volume. > > > On May 20, 2021, at 08:10, Enrico Maria Crisostomo wrote: > >> I've got an iMac Pro in my LAN with 16 vCores and 64GB or RAM which is quite >> often idle. >> I'm not privy with how our build system work, but if we could get to a point >> where agents can be added, stopped, throttled, trusted members of our >> community could volunteer the computational power they have at their >> disposal without fully dedicating a machine. >> In my specific case: I'm happy to offer VMs on that machine to volunteer >> computational resources. > > > On May 20, 2021, at 08:20, Ben Greenfield wrote: > >> I can definitely donate the facilities if not the talent. >> >> I have a symmetrical fiber connection and a static ip. I also have battery >> backup. >> I’m in the final weeks of making the building legal and I haven’t configured >> the final network set-up for the building. I was going to set-up a vlan on >> my hp procurve switch. >> I’m still shopping for a router to run OPNsense I think. >> >> I have been a mac sysadmin long time. > > > There seem to be a lot of people suddenly volunteering hardware for our build > system. First, thank you; I didn't know we had people interested in that. > > Our build system has never been designed to accommodate external hardware. It > has always been designed as a centralized system controlled by one > administrator. When it was first set up in 2011-12 it was under the control > of our Apple administrator at macOS forge. I became the macOS forge > administrator temporarily in late 2015, and MacPorts left macOS forge in late > 2016 as that service shut down, and I recreated the buildbot system on my own > hardware and have run it since then. > > We now have one external Apple Silicon build machine hosted at another data > center, but it's still under my exclusive control so that I can keep > everything working together. > I would be happy to provide the same service. I don’t need a log-in and I can probably provide out of band power reset. The system could be on it’s own vlan. > There are currently many situations where the build system gets into a state > that requires manual intervention. Because I control all the machines, I'm > able to make those fixes and get things back up and running quickly. > > We currently have all the builders we need: one for each OS version / arch > combination. The system was never designed to have more than that. If for > example we added a second macOS 11 / x86_64 builder, there could be confusion > and problems if the two machines have different OS / Xcode / command line > tools / java versions installed. > > There are security issues to consider. The binaries produced by our buildbot > workers are signed on the master with our private key. This is our "seal of > approval" that says we believe these binaries to be good and safe. Users > trust that. If we start allowing other people to run build machines, then we > have the problem that we do not know for certain whether those other build > machines are free of malware or other problems. We would be signing binaries > for distribution to users without being certain of their safety or > correctness. I'm not very comfortable with that. Yes, that safety should be maintained. > > Why is this discussion happening? Why do people think we need more hardware? > If we need more or faster CPUs or more memory, I can make those changes to > the hardware I already manage. I volunteered because it sounded like resources might be needed:). Let me know if the free-hosting is needed. Ben >