# You may want to alter these before running ./makebuildserver # In the process of setting up the build server, many gigs of files # are downloaded (Android SDK components, gradle, etc). These are # cached so that they are not redownloaded each time. By default, # these are stored in ~/.cache/fdroidserver # # cachedir: buildserver/cache # To specify which Debian mirror the build server VM should use, by # default it uses http.debian.net, which auto-detects which is the # best mirror to use. # # debian_mirror: https://debian.osuosl.org/debian/ # The amount of RAM the build server will have (default: 2048) # memory: 3584 # The number of CPUs the build server will have # cpus: 1 # Debian package proxy server - if you have one # aptproxy: http://192.168.0.19:8000 # If this is running on an older machine or on a virtualized system, # it can run a lot slower. If the provisioning fails with a warning # about the timeout, extend the timeout here. (default: 600 seconds) # # boot_timeout: 1200 # By default, this whole process uses VirtualBox as the provider, but # QEMU+KVM is also supported via the libvirt plugin to vagrant. If # this is run within a KVM guest, then libvirt's QEMU+KVM will be used # automatically. It can also be manually enabled by uncommenting # below: # # vm_provider: libvirt # By default libvirt uses 'virtio' for both network and disk drivers. # Some systems (eg. nesting VMware ESXi) do not support virtio. As a # workaround for such rare cases, this setting allows to configure # KVM/libvirt to emulate hardware rather than using virtio. # # libvirt_disk_bus: sata # libvirt_nic_model_type: rtl8139 # Sometimes, it is not possible to use the 9p synced folder type with # libvirt, like if running a KVM buildserver instance inside of a # VMware ESXi guest. In that case, using NFS or another method is # required. # # synced_folder_type: nfs