flatpak buildflatpakDeveloperAlexanderLarssonalexl@redhat.comflatpak build1flatpak-buildBuild in a directoryflatpak buildOPTIONDIRECTORYCOMMAND ARGDescription
Runs a build command in a directory. DIRECTORY
must have been initialized with flatpak build-init.
The sdk that is specified in the metadata file
in the directory is mounted at /usr and the
files and var subdirectories
are mounted at /app and /var,
respectively. They are writable, and their contents are preserved between
build commands, to allow accumulating build artifacts there.
OptionsThe following options are understood:
Show help options and exit.
Print debug information during command processing.
Print OSTree debug information during command processing.
Use the non-devel runtime that is specified in the application metadata instead of the devel runtime.
Kill the build process and all children when the launching process dies.
Add a custom bind mount in the build namespace. Can be specified multiple times.
Start the build in this directory (default is in the current directory).
Share a subsystem with the host session. This overrides
the Context section from the application metadata.
SUBSYSTEM must be one of: network, ipc.
This option can be used multiple times.
Don't share a subsystem with the host session. This overrides
the Context section from the application metadata.
SUBSYSTEM must be one of: network, ipc.
This option can be used multiple times.
Expose a well-known socket to the application. This overrides to
the Context section from the application metadata.
SOCKET must be one of: x11, wayland, fallback-x11, pulseaudio, system-bus, session-bus,
ssh-auth, pcsc, cups.
This option can be used multiple times.
Don't expose a well-known socket to the application. This overrides to
the Context section from the application metadata.
SOCKET must be one of: x11, wayland, fallback-x11, pulseaudio, system-bus, session-bus,
ssh-auth, pcsc, cups.
This option can be used multiple times.
Expose a device to the application. This overrides to
the Context section from the application metadata.
DEVICE must be one of: dri, kvm, shm, all.
This option can be used multiple times.
Don't expose a device to the application. This overrides to
the Context section from the application metadata.
DEVICE must be one of: dri, kvm, shm, all.
This option can be used multiple times.
Allow access to a specific feature. This updates
the [Context] group in the metadata.
FEATURE must be one of:
devel, multiarch, bluetooth, canbus,
per-app-dev-shm.
This option can be used multiple times.
See flatpak-build-finish1
for the meaning of the various features.
Disallow access to a specific feature. This updates
the [Context] group in the metadata.
FEATURE must be one of:
devel, multiarch, bluetooth, canbus,
per-app-dev-shm.
This option can be used multiple times.
Allow the application access to a subset of the filesystem.
This overrides to the Context section from the application metadata.
FILESYSTEM can be one of: home, host, host-os, host-etc, xdg-desktop, xdg-documents, xdg-download,
xdg-music, xdg-pictures, xdg-public-share, xdg-templates, xdg-videos, xdg-run,
xdg-config, xdg-cache, xdg-data, an absolute path, or a homedir-relative
path like ~/dir or paths relative to the xdg dirs, like xdg-download/subdir.
The optional :ro suffix indicates that the location will be read-only.
The optional :create suffix indicates that the location will be read-write and created if it doesn't exist.
This option can be used multiple times.
See the "[Context] filesystems" list in
flatpak-metadata5
for details of the meanings of these filesystems.
Remove access to the specified subset of the filesystem from
the application. This overrides to the Context section from the
application metadata.
FILESYSTEM can be one of: home, host, host-os, host-etc, xdg-desktop, xdg-documents, xdg-download,
xdg-music, xdg-pictures, xdg-public-share, xdg-templates, xdg-videos,
an absolute path, or a homedir-relative path like ~/dir.
This option can be used multiple times.
Expose and configure access to the per-app storage directory in $HOME/.var/app. This is
not normally useful when building, but helps when testing built apps.
Add generic policy option. For example, "--add-policy=subsystem.key=v1 --add-policy=subsystem.key=v2" would map to this metadata:
[Policy subsystem]
key=v1;v2;
This option can be used multiple times.
Remove generic policy option. This option can be used multiple times.
Set an environment variable in the application.
This overrides to the Context section from the application metadata.
This option can be used multiple times.
Unset an environment variable in the application.
This overrides the unset-environment entry in the [Context]
group of the metadata, and the [Environment] group.
This option can be used multiple times.
Read environment variables from the file descriptor
FD, and set them as if
via . This can be used to avoid
environment variables and their values becoming visible
to other users.
Each environment variable is in the form
VAR=VALUE
followed by a zero byte. This is the same format used by
env -0 and
/proc/*/environ.
Allow the application to own the well-known name NAME on the session bus.
This overrides to the Context section from the application metadata.
This option can be used multiple times.
Allow the application to talk to the well-known name NAME on the session bus.
This overrides to the Context section from the application metadata.
This option can be used multiple times.
Allow the application to own the well-known name NAME on the system bus.
This overrides to the Context section from the application metadata.
This option can be used multiple times.
Allow the application to talk to the well-known name NAME on the system bus.
This overrides to the Context section from the application metadata.
This option can be used multiple times.
If the application doesn't have access to the real homedir, make the (homedir-relative) path
FILENAME a bind mount to the corresponding path in the per-application directory,
allowing that location to be used for persistent data.
This overrides to the Context section from the application metadata.
This option can be used multiple times.
Normally if there is a usr directory in the build dir, this is used
for the runtime files (this can be created by or arguments
to build-init). If you specify , this directory will be used instead.
Use this if you passed to build-init.
Mount the normally writable destination directories read-only. This can
be useful if you want to run something in the sandbox but guarantee that
it doesn't affect the build results. For example tests.
Use the specified filename as metadata in the exported app instead of
the default file (called metadata). This is useful
if you build multiple things from a single build tree (such as both a
platform and a sdk).
Log session bus traffic. This can be useful to see what access you need to allow in
your D-Bus policy.
Log system bus traffic. This can be useful to see what access you need to allow in
your D-Bus policy.
Examples$ flatpak build /build/my-app rpmbuild my-app.src.rpmSee alsoflatpak1,
flatpak-build-init1,
flatpak-build-finish1,
flatpak-build-export1