# Evocheck This program scans the machine it is run on and verifies if it adheres to the Evolix standard, non-compliance warnings are outputted on standard out. It is currently adapted for Debian and OpenBSD systems. Configure by modifying evocheck.cf and use the VagrantFile to test it. ## How to build the package for a new Debian release On the master branch, add the last stable version with a release tag. ``` git tag -s v -m 'New release' git push --tags ``` Checkout the branch debian, merge the master branch. ``` git checkout debian git merge master --no-ff dch -v -1 gbp buildpackage --git-debian-branch=debian --git-upstream-tree=master --git-export-dir=/tmp/build-area --git-ignore-new ``` If the build is OK, you can now build the final package. ``` dch -D stretch -r gbp buildpackage --git-debian-branch=debian --git-upstream-tree=master --git-export-dir=/tmp/build-area --git-tag --git-sign --git-keyid= ``` ## Testing Evocheck can be tested with Vagrant, if you don't have installed it yet : ~~~ apt install vagrant vagrant-libvirt ~~~ You can now start your Vagrant machine and connect to it : ~~~ vagrant up vagrant ssh sudo -i ~~~ Evocheck can be run with : ~~~ /usr/share/scripts/evocheck.sh ~~~ ### Deployment Launch **vagrant rsync-auto** in a terminal to automatically synchronise your local code with the Vagrant VM : ~~~ vagrant rsync-auto ~~~ ## License This is an [Evolix](https://evolix.com) project and is licensed under the GPLv3, see the [LICENSE](LICENSE) file for details.