I don't think anyone has figured out the right way to do default packages 
yet, especially not private packages. Juno does some I think, and JuliaBox 
does a pretty big set.

You could try using https://github.com/rened/DeclarativePackages.jl maybe?


On Sunday, March 8, 2015 at 6:23:40 PM UTC-7, Pavel wrote:

> I see now, thanks for clarifying. The next thought I had was to customize 
> this tarball with additional packages (which live in private repos, no ssh 
> keys on production server si git won't help) and include those in* 
> /etc/julia/juliarc.jl* . Then repack the custom version and upload to 
> GCloud. Does that sound like a reasonable workflow? What would be a good 
> place for custom Julia packages within the tarball's directory structure?
>
> On Sunday, March 8, 2015 at 6:03:01 PM UTC-7, Tony Kelman wrote:
>>
>> The tarball that those instructions will download and extract has all the 
>> library dependencies included in it. Should just work (tm), whether or not 
>> you're using Docker. I think you'll need to manually install git for the 
>> package manager to work, that part will be distribution-dependent. We'll 
>> eventually get rid of that requirement too, "just" needs somebody to 
>> rewrite almost the entire package manager.
>>
>>
>> On Sunday, March 8, 2015 at 5:53:54 PM UTC-7, Pavel wrote:
>>
>>> I do want a stable v0.3 binary, but what about all the 
>>> libraries/dependencies? My understanding is that there are quite a bit of 
>>> those judging by the list of packages in Ubuntu repository on my 
>>> development machine... Thought docker can create a bundle with everything 
>>> needed, including custom Julia packages, and the whole thing becomes ready 
>>> to use n GCloud (wishful thinking here?).
>>>
>>> On Sunday, March 8, 2015 at 5:17:56 PM UTC-7, Tony Kelman wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Do you want to build Julia from source, or just run a binary? If you 
>>>> just want to run a binary, do the following:
>>>>
>>>> mkdir -p ~/julia
>>>> curl -s -L https://status.julialang.org/stable/linux-x86_64 | \
>>>>   tar -C ~/julia -x -z --strip-components=1 -f -
>>>> export PATH="$PATH:$HOME/julia/bin" 
>>>>
>>>> This is what we run on Travis-CI when you set `language: julia`. It 
>>>> should work on pretty much any 64-bit Linux distribution. Replace "stable" 
>>>> with "download" if you want to use an 0.4-dev nightly, though unless 
>>>> you're 
>>>> developing Julia itself (in which case you probably want a from-source 
>>>> build) or absolutely need to use some 0.4-only feature, this is not 
>>>> recommended for regular use right now.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Sunday, March 8, 2015 at 3:09:57 PM UTC-7, Pavel wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> While there is already a package that helps running Julia on Amazon 
>>>>> EC2, Google Cloud does not seem to be widely used by the community. I did 
>>>>> notice however that a fairly impressive JuliaBox 
>>>>> <https://github.com/JuliaLang/JuliaBox> system has some docker 
>>>>> components in it along with the nginx server etc. I'm yet to get familiar 
>>>>> with docker but it my assumption is that the docker-component should not 
>>>>> be 
>>>>> restricted to AWS and could be used on GCloud as well.
>>>>>
>>>>> Has anyone tried using docker-component of JuliaBox with GCloud? Is 
>>>>> this component coded for a specific Linux flavor? I am interested in 
>>>>> having 
>>>>> just a Julia runtime environment on GCloud Compute without the part of 
>>>>> JuliaBox that allows to connect from a browser, edit code in it etc. Any 
>>>>> pointers would be helpful for (hopefully not too complex) setup of Julia 
>>>>> docker container on GCloud virtual machines.
>>>>>
>>>>>

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