tree: 6fb89738e63631ba7490125695b37d47ba1606b7 [path history] [tgz]
  1. api/
  2. appengine/
  3. client/
  4. common/
  5. version/
  6. OWNERS
  7. README.md
cipd/README.md

CIPD (Chrome Infrastructure Package Deployment)

CIPD is package deployment infrastructure. It consists of a package registry and a CLI client to create, upload, download, and install packages.

A CIPD package has a package name (e.g. “infra/tools/foo”) and a list of content-addressed instances (e.g. “bec8e88201949be06b06174178c2f62b81e4008e”), where slashes in package names form a hierarchy of packages, and an instance is a ZIP file with the package file contents.

CIPD is different from apt-get, brew, nuget, pip, npm, etc. in that it is not tied to a specific OS or language.

Versions

A package instance can be referenced by a tuple (package name, version), for example when installing a package. A version is one of:

  • A hash of the instance file contents, e.g. "bec8e88201949be06b06174178c2f62b81e4008e"; this is also called the instance ID.
  • A a key-value tag, e.g. "git_revision:deadbeef", if it is unique among all instances of the package. Read more about tags below.
  • A ref, e.g. "latest", see below.

Tags

A package instance can be marked with tags, where a tag is a colon-separated key-value pair, e.g. "git_revision:deadbeef". If some tag points to only one instance, such tag can be used as version identifier.

Refs

A package can have git-like refs, where a ref of a package points to one of the instances of the package by id. For example, chrome-infra continuous builders always update the "latest" ref of a package to the instance that they upload.

Platforms

If a package is platform-specific, the package name should have a /<os>-<arch> suffix, for example “infra/tools/cipd/linux-amd64”. The os part can be linux, mac, or windows, and arch can be 386, amd64 or armv6l. See the ensure package docs for accepted os and arch values.

Some CIPD client subcommands accept a package name “directory” that ends with slash, e.g. “infra/tools/cipd/”, and apply a change to all packages in that directory non-recursively.

Access control

A package directory can have an ACL that applies to packages in that directory and inherited by subdirectories. ACLs can be read/controlled by the CIPD client.

API

The API definition with a lot of additional details is available here.