341 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
341 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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Welcome to the OpenBSD ports collection.
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For more information on the OpenBSD ports tree please visit
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http://www.openbsd.org/ports.html
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For general information on the OpenBSD tree please visit
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http://www.openbsd.org
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======================================================================
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This file is mostly obsolete. You should refer to the corresponding
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man-pages: ports(7), packages(7), bsd.port.mk(5) instead.
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======================================================================
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Contacts
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========
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* individual ports list a
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MAINTAINER=
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line in their Makefile.
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* specific issues related to the ports framework (e.g., bugs in
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bsd.port.mk) should go to ports-admin@openbsd.org
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* ports without explicit maintainers, and other general issues should
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go to ports@openbsd.org
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Considering the size of the ports tree, and even though we strive to
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eradicate all bugs, things may go wrong on individual ports.
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In such a case, as a general rule, try to contact the MAINTAINER first.
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If nothing happens after a reasonable delay, start plaguing him,
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or go to the next step.
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Developers with a major investment in the ports tree include
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brad@cvs.openbsd.org, naddy@cvs.openbsd.org, espie@cvs.openbsd.org
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Those people can be contacted to put some pressure on a lazy maintainer.
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But we do read ports@openbsd.org, so...
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The ports tree
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==============
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The ports tree usually live under /usr/ports. It's a hierarchical
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list of recipes to build various pieces of software.
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We'll call that PORTSDIR in the following discussion.
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Stuff that doesn't constitute a port proper, but rather paraphernalia,
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is stored under /usr/ports/infrastructure, INFRA in the following
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discussion.
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The main Makefile, PORTSDIR/Makefile, can be used to obtain various
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information.
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* make search key=<keyword>
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will locate ports that match the given keyword in the Index and print
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information about them.
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* make index
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can be used to rebuild that INDEX, normally useful after you update your
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ports dir through cvs.
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* make readmes
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will populate the ports tree with a set of html indices.
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The script INFRA/build/out-of-date will find
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discrepancies between your installed packages and the INDEX. This might
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give you an hint as to what you would need to rebuild to update a machine.
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Some useful `make' trivia
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=========================
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* if you always use some make variables, e.g., DISTDIR, CLEANDEPENDS, or
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MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE you can put this in your local make configuration
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file instead: /etc/mk.conf.
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* starting with 2.6, make can deal with case issues, so CLEANDEPENDS=Yes
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or CLEANDEPENDS=YES or even CLEANDEPENDS=yEs should be equivalent.
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* the make process uses some subroutines out of /usr/share/mk. Starting
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with 2.6, the `port' subroutines live in INFRA/mk.
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The bsd.port.mk and bsd.port.subdir.mk in /usr/share/mk are only stubs
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that redirect to those files.
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Building a port
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===============
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It's usually as simple as
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cd category/portname && make && make install
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That specific `make' will normally
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* resolve dependencies and go out to install required ports recursively
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* fetch the software source (`distfiles' and `distribution patches')
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from the available media into your repository
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* extract the source
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* apply distribution patches and OpenBSD patches
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* build the program
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`make install' will
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* install the software on your system
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* log the installation so that later pkg_info or pkg_delete can deal with
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the software.
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Some ports can have some options, or demand that you make some choice
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before building, e.g.,
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cd /usr/ports/security/ssh
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make all install USA_RESIDENT=no
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Some ports may prompt you for more choice, or give you important
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information about ports building. Likewise, installing or uninstalling
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a port may give you useful information. READ IT.
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You can also use
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* `make uninstall' to remove the installed software (same as pkg_delete)
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* `make package' to convert the installed software into a binary `package'
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(a tar ball that you can share with other machines with the same
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configuration, contribute to the ftp project, or that you can backup
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separately). Packages normally end up in /usr/ports/packages, overridable
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with PACKAGE.
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* `make fetch-list' to build a small shell-script that should be able to
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retrieve the missing distfiles and distribution patches for the given port.
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* `make clean' to remove all scaffolding after the port is built and
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installed.
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* `make distclean' to also remove distfiles and distribution patches
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from the repository
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* `make clean CLEANDEPENDS=Yes' will also remove sub ports that have been
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recursively built.
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* `make distclean CLEANDEPENDS=Yes', guess what this does.
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Please note that, in normal use, the OpenBSD ports tree will grow quite
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a lot. Careful use of make clean and make distclean will help you. You
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can also redirect ports activity elsewhere by making use of WRKOBJDIR
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and DISTDIR. `find /usr/ports -type d -name work\* -print'
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can be useful to find out ports you forgot to clean out.
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There are a few kinks in the building of ports with options yet. Namely,
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all such ports should produce distinct package names if built with
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different options. Also, there is no check for consistency between
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make and make install. Taking the ssh example again,
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make USA_RESIDENT=No
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make install USA_RESIDENT=Yes
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won't be flagged as an error...
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Where do the distfiles come from
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================================
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Retrieving distfiles is a subpart of `make' that can be invoked separately
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as `make fetch'.
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Starting with 2.6, the fetch process is configurable by editing
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INFRA/db/network.conf.
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The ports tree does store files it retrieves in a repository area,
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normally /usr/ports/distfiles (defined as DISTDIR=${PORTSDIR}/distfiles;
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you can override this if you need; e.g., assuming you've got a cdrom
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full of distfiles mounted under /cdrom, you can make stuff with
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DISTDIR=/cdrom/distfiles, provided all the distfiles are available on
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the CD-Rom).
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If the file is found in the repository, the build process continues.
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In some rare cases, vendors change their archive contents without changing
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the archive name, so the file in the repository may end up having a wrong
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checksum. Or, if you aborted a network transfer, the file in the repository
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may be truncated, and end up having a wrong checksum again. In such a case,
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manual intervention is required (it was deemed that such problems may need
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human expertise and that blindly removing distfiles was not a good idea).
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It's usually as simple as deleting the offending file, or doing a
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make distclean.
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To avoid building from corrupted archives, the ports tree holds checksums
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for almost all files it retrieves from other media (a few ports ignore
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checksums from the files listed in IGNOREFILES).
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Those are strong cryptographic checksums: sha1, rmd160, and md5,
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in that order. See CIPHERS and PREFERRED_CIPHERS in
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INFRA/mk/bsd.port.mk for details.
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If the directory /cdrom/distfiles exist, available distfiles are copied
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off that directory to your repository. You can avoid the copy overhead
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by defining FETCH_SYMLINK_DISTFILES. You can give another location for
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the distfiles as CDROM_SITE.
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OpenBSD `ftp' command is normally used to fetch distfiles off the net,
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so all file addresses are given in URL format.
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Each port uses its own set of sites, and there should also be backups of
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the distribution files on ftp.openbsd.org. MASTER_SITE_BACKUP holds an
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overridable list of backup sites, normally
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ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/distfiles/${DIST_SUBDIR}/
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ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/licensed/${DIST_SUBDIR}/
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ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/${DIST_SUBDIR}/
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You can ask the fetch process to try to retrieve files from those sites first
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by setting MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE, e.g.,
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make MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE='${MASTER_SITE_BACKUP}'
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You can retrieve file from the OpenBSD site only with
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make MASTER_SITE_OPENBSD=Yes
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Continuing our CD-Rom example, you could also fetch files off a CD-Rom into
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your repository for safe-keeping by using the following incantation:
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make fetch MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE='file:/cdrom/${DIST_SUBDIR}/'
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This is equivalent to using CDROM_SITE.
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Some common sites have their own variables. It is strongly recommended
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that you edit the INFRA/db/network.conf file for
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your site.
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Please refer to that file for a complete list, and address lists
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(those are not exhaustive). Those include:
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MASTER_SITE_GNU FSF and other GPL programs
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MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB X11 contributed software
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MASTER_SITE_SUNSITE Sunsite site and mirror, major linux archive
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MASTER_SITE_GNOME Gnome
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MASTER_SITE_PERL_CPAN Comprehensive perl archive network
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MASTER_SITE_TEX_CTAN Comprehensive TeX archive network
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MASTER_SITE_KDE KDE
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MASTER_SITE_TCLTK Tcl/Tk
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MASTER_SITE_AFTERSTEP AfterStep
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MASTER_SITE_WINDOWMAKER WindowMaker
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There is a backup copy of that file in
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INFRA/templates/network.conf.template.
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In case you don't have a permanent network connection,
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`make fetch-list' should provide you with a shell script you can use to
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retrieve distfiles you're missing to build a given port.
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(TODO: improve and systematize fetch-all)
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Building several ports
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======================
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Each category directory holds a Makefile that propagates commands to
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its sub ports, e.g., if you cd /usr/ports/audio && make, this should
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build all ports under /usr/ports/audio.
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A more useful command is the
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INFRA/build/find-build-order script.
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You normally prepare a list of the ports you want to build, in the same
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format as INFRA/db/essentials, and pass it to find-build-order like
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this:
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cd /usr/ports/infrastructure
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cat db/essentials|build/find-build-order
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This yields a sorted list of the required ports.
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(Todo: provide for a script which builds everything we want)
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You can filter ports that require interaction out with
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make BATCH=yes
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Likewise, make FOR_CDROM=yes, make NO_RESTRICTED=yes
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will yield only the ports with the required level of liberty.
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Files Summary
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=============
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/usr/ports (PORTSDIR):
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the whole port collection
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/usr/ports/<category>/<portname>:
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where to find a given port
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/usr/ports/INDEX:
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all distfiles, rebuilt with make index
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/usr/ports/README.html
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/usr/ports/<category>/README.html
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/usr/ports/<category>/<portname>/README.html:
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www indices produced by make readmes
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/usr/ports/distfiles (DISTFILES):
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repository for distribution files and distribution patches
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/cdrom/distfiles (CDROM_SITE):
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standard location for distfiles off a CD
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/usr/ports/packages (PACKAGES):
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where binary packages are built (by category. Normally everything
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ends up under All, with symlinks for each category)
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/usr/ports/<category>/<portname>/work:
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where the ports mechanism does the building. This is normally a
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real directory, but you can set WRKOBJDIR to point to another
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base which is not /usr/ports, and work/ will be a link to
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${WRKOBJDIR}/category/portname/work. This can be useful to
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mount a master /usr/ports directory by NFS on several
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architectures. Normally, you first
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cd /usr/ports && make WRKOBJDIR=path obj
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on the master machine, which creates the symbolic links, so that
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you can mount your master /usr/ports read-only.
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/usr/ports/<category>/<portname>/pkg/SECURITY:
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information relative to a security audit of the port. Usually
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missing.
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/usr/ports/infrastructure:
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paraphernalia around the ports tree
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/usr/ports/db/network.conf:
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your local network configuration (ftp sites)
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/var/db/pkg:
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installed ports, see pkg_add(1).
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/usr/local (LOCALBASE):
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where normal ports install themselves.
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/usr/X11R6 (X11BASE):
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where ports with a large dependency on X11 install themselves.
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Other tweaks
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============
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FORCE_PACKAGE: force package building. Some ports can't be distributed
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as packages for legal reasons, but you may wish to build a package for
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your private consumption.
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HAVE_MOTIF: set in /etc/mk.conf if we own a copy of the real thing.
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MOTIF_STATIC: set in /etc/mk.conf to use a static version of the Motif
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library only.
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NO_MTREE: don't run mtree before installing a port. This is a dangerous
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option.
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NO_PKG_REGISTER: used for make install, don't register port under
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/var/db/pkg. This is a dangerous option.
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FORCE_PACKAGE_REGISTER: override an existing port (the <pkgname> is already
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installed message). You will end up with several flavors of the same
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package. This is a dangerous option, as this will probably erase the other
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port.
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NO_IGNORE: coerce fetch, build, install... into doing their job even though
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there might be a good reason not to. Good reasons include BROKEN,
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ONLY_FOR_ARCH, IS_INTERACTIVE in BATCH mode, NO_CDROM in FOR_CDROM... This
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is a dangerous option.
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Keeping up with the Jones, ports as a moving target
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===================================================
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The OpenBSD ports tree is growing from release to release. It needs
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people to write and test new ports.
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Like for src, you can choose to live on the bleeding edge by updating
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your ports dir thru cvs or ftp, and contribute bug-reports.
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If you prefer to stay with a stable release, we try to make sure
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the distfiles for a given release stay on the OpenBSD site between
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releases.
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No matter how fast we update the tree it seems that we are always
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behind. For this reason you will sometimes find a port that is
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marked as BROKEN. If you try to build the port you will see a
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message something like:
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===> xxx-1.0 is marked as broken: newer version available.
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This means we know there is a newer version of the application but
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have not yet had time to update the port. If you get this message
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all may not be lost. If the old sources are still available (and
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this is often the case) you can force a build using the old sources
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using the command:
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make NO_IGNORE=yes
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sudo make NO_IGNORE=yes install
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If you're feeling generous a better solution is to update the port
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to use the new sources and feed the changes back to the project.
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If you are interested in contributing (or creating a new port)
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please visit
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http://www.openbsd.org/porting.html
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$OpenBSD: README,v 1.10 2001/04/11 15:57:50 espie Exp $
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