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Usage
Starting the server
To start a server, either install it using Docker (see
Installation) or run it locally by executing vieter server
. See Configuration for more information about
configuring the binary.
Multiple repositories
Vieter works with multiple repositories. This means that a single Vieter server
can serve multiple repositories in Pacman. It also automatically divides files
with specific architectures among arch-repos. Arch-repos are the actual
repositories you add to your /etc/pacman.conf
file. See Configuring
Pacman below for more info.
Adding packages
Using Vieter is currently very simple. If you wish to add a package to Vieter,
build it using makepkg & POST that file to the /<repo>/publish
endpoint of
your server. This will add the package to the repository. Authentification
requires you to add the API key as the X-Api-Key
header.
All of this can be combined into a simple cURL call:
curl -XPOST -H "X-API-KEY: your-key" -T some-package.pkg.tar.zst https://example.com/somerepo/publish
somerepo
is automatically created if it doesn't exist yet.
Configuring Pacman
Configuring Pacman to use a Vieter instance is very simple. In your
/etc/pacman.conf
file, add the following lines:
[vieter]
Server = https://example.com/$repo/$arch
SigLevel = Optional
Here, you see two important placeholder variables. $repo
is replaced by the
name within the square brackets, which in this case would be vieter
. $arch
is replaced by the output of uname -m
. Because Vieter supports multiple
repositories & architectures per repository, using this notation makes sure you
always use the correct endpoint for fetching files.
I recommend placing this below all other repository entries, as the order decides which repository should be used if there's ever a naming conflict.