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Revision: 1.7
Date: 99/02/08 09:44:44
One question that I see over and over again in comp.sys.hp.hpux is "How do I create a software depot?" The answer is "there are several ways" (hardly surprising; this is a UNIX system after all).
This is the first revision of this document. It contains the templates that I use for adding products to the software depots that I maintain. I you have any corrections or suggestions, I would appreciate them.
--
Brad Bass
bass@rsn.hp.com
Note: the "#" or "%" that precedes each line is the
shell prompt (I use tcsh). The "#" signifies the root user;
"%" is an ordinary user.
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creating a software depot
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swpackage
Swpackage can create an unregistered depot. It's primarily used
to package up software products for later installation by
swinstall. (We'll look at that process later.)
# swpackage -s /depot/psf_files/procmail.psf \
-d /home/bass/depot
"-s" specifies the source, "procmail.psf", a Product Specification
File, which tells swpackage how to package up the product. (We'll
talk about PSF files a little later.)
"-d" specifies the destination, "/home/bass/depot", a depot
subdirectory. The destination does not have to exist. Swpackage
will create it for you. The destination could also have been a
file or tape. (See the section Creating Depot Files or Tapes
for details.)
swcopy
If you have a bunch of products or filesets that you want to group
together into a new or existing depot (a collection of patches,
for example), use swcopy. The destination depot does not have to
exist; swcopy will create it for you if it doesn't. For example:
# swcopy -s /home/bass/depot procmail @ /tmp/depot
"-s" specifies the source depot, "/home/bass/depot". It could be a
depot file, directory, tape device or mounted CD-ROM.
"procmail" is the name of the product or fileset to copy.
"@" specifies the destination depot, "/tmp/depot". (Yes, I think
they should have used "-d" for destination.)
registering the depot directory (optional)
Note that the newly-created depot directory is unregistered. That
means we can't locate it with:
% swlist -l depot
Which would list all the available depots on this system.
However, we can still list the depot's contents with swlist, if we
tell him where the depot is:
% swlist -s /home/bass/depot
If you want to register the depot, use the swreg command:
# swreg -l depot /home/bass/depot
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copying into a software depot using swcopy
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There are basically two ways: Copy existing products or filesets with
swcopy, or package up new products with swpackage. Copying is simple
and was explained above in Method B. The basic form of the swcopy
command is:
# swcopy -s SOURCE_DEPOT SELECTION @ DESTINATION_DEPOT
The SOURCE_DEPOT could be a depot file, directory, tape device or
mounted CD-ROM. It has to be a fully-rooted path; this is, start
with a "/".
SELECTION is the name of the software selection (the product or
fileset) to copy. To copy them all, use "\*" as the selection.
The DESTINATION_DEPOT also has to be fully-rooted.
How do you know what the software selection's name is? For patches,
it's usually the name of the path. Use the swlist command to find
out, like so:
% swlist -s <depot>
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packaging software products using swpackage
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Swpackage is used to gather the pieces of a software product together
and stick them into a Software Depot. It's possible to tell him lots
of things about the product, like what other products have to be
installed first, or what products also have to be on the system.
For the purpose of this cookbook, I'll just do the basics: gathering
up the bits and putting them in the depot.
As we saw in Method A, the basic swpackage command is:
# swpackage -s PSF_FILE @ DEPOT
PSF_FILE is the Product Specification File, and DEPOT is the destination.
I recommend using the "-p" flag to preview the process, and fix any
errors in the PSF, before actually writing anything into the depot.
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the product specification file (psf)
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The Product Specification File (PSF) is where the real work
gets done. To make the job of writing PSF files easier, I created
some templates, and I fill in the blanks.
There are two main areas that I swinstall software to: /opt and
/usr/contrib . Each one of them has the product broken out differently.
If a product only has a few files -- maybe an executable or two, a few
man pages and maybe a library file -- I build it to reside in
/usr/contrib/bin , /usr/contrib/man/man1 and /usr/contrib/lib ,
respectively. For Gnu-configured software, this usually means setting
the --prefix to /usr/contrib .
On the other hand, if this is a major software package -- like Emacs
or TCL, I build it with the --prefix set to /opt/PACKAGE_NAME . This
keeps it all together in one place, and simplifies the PSF file. The
Post-Install script adds the bin directory to the contents of /etc/PATH ,
which you can source in your .cshrc .
Appendix 1 contains the PSF I use for packaging software products
that will be swinstalled into /usr/contrib .
Appendicies 2, 3 and 4 are the PSF and post-install and post-remove
scripts for packaging products to be installed in /opt .
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hp-ux 10.x/11.x compatibility
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Most software that is compiled under HPUX-10 will run just fine on
HPUX-11, without recompiling. So far, the only exceptions I have
encountered have been programs which use the "curses" library
manipulate the text cursor in an xterm, hpterm or dtterm. Text
editors such as Elvis and Vim are examples of this kind of program.
To make a product available to swinstall on either an HPUX-10 or -11
system, use the values below for these PSF directives:
architecture S700/S800_HPUX_10/11
os_release ?.10.*|?.11.*
To force swinstall to allow HPUX-10 software to be installed on HPUX-11,
Add the "-x allow_incompatible=true" argument to the command line.
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useful command-line options
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-p |
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Preview Mode. The task quits after the analysis phase. Nothing is written to disk. |
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-v |
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Verbose Mode |
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-vv |
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Very Verbose Mode |
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-x autoreboot=true |
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Allows software or patches which requires a reboot of the target system to be installed. |
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-x mount_all_filesystems=false |
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Allows software or patch installations even if a filesystem, like a cdrom drive, is not mounted. |
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-x allow_incompatible=true |
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Allows the installation of software or patches that are incompatible (wrong HPUX rev or machine architecture) with the target system. |
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-x enforce_dependencies=false |
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Allows the removal of software that has other products or filesets dependent on it. For example, some internally-developed tools require Perl5. If I want to remove it so that I can replace it with a later version, I can use this option. |
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creating depot files or tapes
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Swpackage is also used to re-package existing software selections from
an existing depot into a depot tape or file. For example, to re-package
the "procmail" product from the depot directory, "/home/bass/depot", into
a depot file, "/tmp/procmail.depot", use the following:
# swpackage -d /tmp/procmail.depot -x target_type=tape \
-s /home/bass/depot procmail
The addition of the "-x target_type=tape" forces swpackage to write
the depot sequentially to the tape (or file) instead of creating a
distribution directory.
To create a tape, substitute the file name given to the "-d" flag with
the tape device:
# swpackage -d /dev/rmt/0m -x target_type=tape \
-s /home/bass/depot procmail
The "-d" argument may also be a pipe to a UNIX command, like so:
# swpackage -d "| gzip -c > /tmp/procmail.depot.gz" \
-x target_type=tape ...
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Assume you have the HPUX 10.20 Install CD-ROM mounted on "/cdrom".
What is the product name of the C compiler? Of the Fortran compiler?
% swlist -l product -l subproduct -s /cdrom | grep -i compiler
# C-ANSI-C B.10.20.00 HP C/ANSI C Compiler
The answer is C-ANSI-C.
% swlist -l product -l subproduct -s /cdrom | grep -i fortran
# FORTRAN B.10.20.00 FORTRAN Programming
FORTRAN.Demos FORTRAN Guide, Reference and Floating Point Guide
FORTRAN.Development FORTRAN Programming
FORTRAN.Help FORTRAN On-line Help
FORTRAN.Manuals FORTRAN Man Pages
FORTRAN.ManualsByLang FORTRAN manuals in foreign languages
FORTRAN.Notes FORTRAN Release notes
FORTRAN.Vectorizor FORTRAN Vectorizor
The answer is FORTRAN.
I swinstalled the C compiler from some depot somewhere. How can I find
out which one?
% swlist -v -l product C-ANSI-C | grep install_source
install_source windsock:/depot/s700_hpux_10.20
What product contains pxdb?
% swlist -l file -s /cdrom | grep pxdb
C-Plus-Plus.HPCXX: /opt/CC/contrib/Tools/time_pxdb
DebugPrg.DEBUG-PRG: /opt/langtools/bin/pxdb
DebugPrg.DEBUG-PRG: /opt/langtools/lib/nls/msg/C/pxdb.cat
OS-Core.Q4: /usr/contrib/bin/q4pxdb
OS-Core.Q4: /usr/contrib/lib/nls/msg/C/q4pxdb.cat
The answer is DebugPrg.
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