9803 pbchk could use a -c option
9825 pbchk -b option should be -p
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24 .TH INSTALL 1ONBLD "Jan 14, 2010"
25 .SH NAME
26 Install \- install a kernel from an ON workspace
27 .SH SYNOPSIS
28 .TP 8n
29 .B Install
30 .RB [ " \-w "
31 .IR workspace " ]"
32 .RB [ " \-s "
33 .IR "source dir" " ]"
34 .br
35 .RB [ " \-k "
36 .IR "kernel arch" " ]"
37 .RB "[ " \-n " | " \-t|T
38 .IR target " ]"
39 .br
40 .RB [ " \-u|m|a " ]
41 .RB [ " \-v|V|q " ]
42 .RB [ " \-c|p " ]
43 .br
44 .RB [ " \-l "
45 .IR "library file" " ]"
46 .RB [ " \-L " ]
47 .RB [ " \-3 " ]
48 .RB [ " \-6 " ]
49 .RB [ " \-K " ]
50 .br
51 .RB [ " \-o "
52 {
53 .BR obj " | "
54 .B debug
55 }
56 ]
57 .RB [ " \-d "
58 .IR "work dir" " ]"
59 .br
60 .RB [ " \-D "
61 .IR "library dir" " ]"
62 .RB [ " \-G "
63 .IB glomname " ]"
64 .RI [ " module ... " ]
65 .LP
66 or
67 .LP
68 .BR "Install \-R " "[ options ]"
69 .SH DESCRIPTION
70 .LP
71 .B Install
72 is a utility which simplifies the process of installing a 5.0 system.
73 .B Install
74 goes into a built ON workspace (or any kernel source tree),
75 looks at the Makefiles,
76 and figures out how to construct the /kernel and /usr/kernel directories.
77 It then creates a tarfile
78 .RB "(see " tar "(1))"
79 containing /kernel, /usr/kernel, and a few related /etc files. If a
80 .I target ([user@]machine:/dir)
81 is specified, the tarfile is either copied to
82 .IR machine:/dir " (-T) or untarred on " "machine" " in " "/dir" " (-t),"
83 using the remote user id
84 .IR user ,
85 if specified.
86 With no options,
87 .B Install
88 creates a sun4c system from files in the current workspace (as indicated
89 by $SRC) and places the tarfile in /tmp/Install.username/Install.sun4c.tar.
90
91 .SH OPTIONS
92 .TP 20n
93 .BI "-w" " ws"
94 Install the system built in the ON workspace
95 .I ws. ws
96 must be a built ON workspace \(em
97 .B Install
98 will not automatically invoke
99 .BR make (1) .
100 If \-w is not specified,
101 .B Install
102 uses the current
103 workspace (as indicated by $CODEMGR_WS). If there is no current workspace,
104 .B Install
105 checks to see if you are in an appropriate source directory, e.g. uts/sun4c;
106 if so,
107 .B Install
108 takes files from there. Otherwise,
109 .B Install
110 looks for files under $SRC/uts.
111 .TP
112 .BI "-s" " source directory"
113 where to look for files [default: $SRC/uts].
114 .TP
115 .BI "-k" " kernel arch"
116 the type of kernel to install. The default is sun4c; however, if you invoke
117 .B Install
118 from $SRC/uts/sun4z,
119 .B Install
120 assumes you want a sun4z kernel.
121 .TP
122 .B "-n"
123 No target; just create the tarfile in
124 /tmp/Install.username/Install.sun4c.tar [default].
125 .BR "-n" " implies " "-p" .
126 .TP
127 .BI "-t" " target"
128 Install the system on
129 .I target ([user@]machine:/dir).
130 This means that kernel/unix is copied to
131 .I machine:/dir/kernel/unix,
132 etc.
133 .IR /dir " is typically either " / " or " /mnt.
134 .BR "-t" " implies " "-c" .
135 The default remote user id is the same as the local one ($LOGNAME).
136 .TP
137 .BI "-T" " target"
138 Copy the tarfile to
139 .I target ([user@]machine:/dir).
140 This creates the file
141 .I /dir/Install.tar
142 on
143 .I machine.
144 To finish the install, log on to
145 .I machine
146 as root, and type
147 .RB `` "cd /; tar xvf /dir/Install.tar" "''."
148 .BR "-T" " implies " "-c" .
149 .TP
150 .B "-u"
151 Install unix only.
152 .TP
153 .B "-m"
154 Install modules only.
155 .TP
156 .B "-a"
157 Install unix and all modules [default].
158 .TP
159 .B "-v"
160 Verbose mode.
161 .TP
162 .B "-V"
163 REALLY verbose mode. Useful mainly for debugging.
164 .TP
165 .B "-q"
166 Quiet mode [default]. Only fatal messages are printed.
167 .TP
168 .B "-c"
169 Clean up. After a successful install, delete the files created in
170 /tmp/Install.username. This is the default behavior if a
171 .I target
172 is specified with
173 .BR "-t" " or " "-T" .
174 .TP
175 .B "-p"
176 Preserve temp files. This is the default behavior when no
177 .I target
178 is specified
179 .RB ( "-n" ).
180 .TP
181 .B "-R"
182 Recover from a failed
183 .BR Install .
184 This is not required, it's just faster than restarting.
185 A typical scenario is for
186 .B Install
187 to run smoothly right up to the very end, but then die with
188 "Permission denied" when it tries to rsh/rcp to the target machine.
189 At this point, you log on to the target machine, diddle the permissions,
190 log off, and type
191 .RB `` "Install -R" "''."
192 .B Install
193 will only have to retry the rsh/rcp,
194 rather than rebuild the tarfile from scratch.
195 .TP
196 .BI "-d" " temp directory"
197 specifies where
198 .B Install
199 should create its temp files [default: /tmp/Install.username]. This is
200 useful if you have limited space in /tmp (\fBInstall\fR can take as
201 much as 100MB).
202 The suffix "Install.username" is always appended.
203 .TP
204 .B "-L"
205 add a system to your library. This allows you to build a personal
206 collection of installable systems from various environments and for
207 various architectures. When you type
208 .RB `` "Install -w /ws/ws_name -k arch -L" "'', " Install
209 creates a tarfile called
210 .I ws_name.arch.tar
211 in your library directory (~/LibInstall by default).
212 .BR "-L" " implies " "-c" .
213 .TP
214 .BI "-l" " library file"
215 Installs the system contained in
216 .I library file.
217 You may omit the ``.tar'' suffix. For example,
218 .RB `` "Install -l my_ws.sun4c -t machine:/" ''
219 installs a system you previously built with
220 .B "-L"
221 (from sun4c files in my_ws) on
222 .IR machine:/ .
223 This is equivalent to typing
224 .RB `` "rsh machine '(cd /; tar xvf -)' <~/LibInstall/my_ws.sun4c.tar" '',
225 but it's easier to remember.
226 .TP
227 .BI "-D" " lib directory"
228 specifies the library directory [default: $HOME/LibInstall].
229 .TP
230 .BI "-G " glomname
231 gloms /kernel and /usr/kernel together into a single /kernel directory.
232 Useful for development work, e.g. use "Install -G good [...]" to create a
233 "/kernel.good".
234 .TP
235 .BR "-o " "{ \fBobj\fP | \fBdebug\fP }"
236 object directory. The default is "debug".
237 .TP
238 .B \-3
239 32-bit modules only
240 .TP
241 .B \-6
242 64-bit modules only
243 .TP
244 .B \-K
245 Do not include kmdb misc module or dmods
246 .TP
247 .B "-h"
248 Help. Prints a brief summary of
249 .BR Install "'s"
250 options.
251 .LP
252 If you are in a directory like $SRC/uts/sun4z when you invoke
253 .BR Install ,
254 it will infer that you want to install a sun4z system
255 from the current workspace.
256 .LP
257 If you supply a list of modules, it overrides any of the
258 .B "-uma"
259 options. You only need to specify the basename of the
260 module(s), e.g. ``\fBInstall ufs nfs le\fR''.
261 ``\fBInstall unix\fR'' is equivalent to ``\fBInstall -u\fR'', and
262 ``\fBInstall modules\fR'' is equivalent to ``\fBInstall -m\fR''.
263 .LP
264 You can customize
265 .B Install
266 by creating a .Installrc file in your home directory. .Installrc
267 should consist of a list of command-line-style options, e.g:
268 .LP
269 .nf
270 .B
271 -w /ws/foo
272 .fi
273 .br
274 .nf
275 .B
276 -t labmachine:/mnt -pv
277 .fi
278 .LP
279 .B Install
280 processes default options first, then .Installrc
281 options, then command-line options. In the case of
282 conflicting options (e.g. \fB-uma\fR), the last one wins.
283 .LP
284 In order to use the most convenient form of
285 .BR Install " (``" "Install -t machine:/" "''),"
286 you will need to do the following on the target machine:
287 .LP
288 .br
289 .nf
290 (1) add your machine name to the /etc/hosts.equiv file
291 .fi
292 .br
293 .nf
294 (2) add your username to the /etc/{passwd,shadow} files
295 .fi
296 .br
297 .nf
298 (3) chown -R yourself /kernel /usr/kernel
299 .fi
300 .br
301 .nf
302 (4) chmod -R u+w /kernel /usr/kernel
303 .fi
304 .SH "ENVIRONMENT"
305 .LP
306 You can set the following variables in your environment:
307 .LP
308 INSTALL_RC [default: $HOME/.Installrc]
309 .IP
310 file containing default options for \fBInstall\fR
311 .LP
312 INSTALL_STATE [default: $HOME/.Install.state]
313 .IP
314 where \fBInstall\fR keeps its state information
315 .LP
316 INSTALL_DIR [default: /tmp/Install.username]
317 .IP
318 where \fBInstall\fR does its work. This can be overridden on
319 the command line with \fB\-d\fR.
320 .LP
321 INSTALL_LIB [default: $HOME/LibInstall]
322 .IP
323 where \fBInstall\fR gets/puts library files. This can be overridden on
324 the command line with \fB\-D\fR.
325 .LP
326 INSTALL_CP [default: cp -p]
327 .IP
328 the command to copy files locally
329 .LP
330 INSTALL_RCP [default: rcp -p]
331 .IP
332 the command to copy files remotely
333 .SH "EXAMPLES"
334 .LP
335 .B
336 Install -w /ws/blort -t machine:/
337 .IP
338 .RI "installs the system built in workspace " /ws/blort " on " machine:/
339 .LP
340 .B
341 Install -w /ws/blort -T machine:/tmp
342 .br
343 .B
344 rsh machine -l root "cd /; tar xvf /tmp/Install.tar"
345 .IP
346 is an equivalent way to do the previous example
347 .LP
348 .B Install
349 .IP
350 makes a tarfile containing a sun4c kernel,
351 and places it in /tmp/Install.username/Install.sun4c.tar. However, if you
352 are in one of the arch directories (e.g. $SRC/uts/sun4m) when you invoke
353 .BR Install ,
354 you will get a tarfile for that architecture instead.
355 .LP
356 .B
357 Install -k sun4m -w /ws/on493 -t mpbox:/ ufs
358 .IP
359 installs a new sun4m ufs module from workspace /ws/on493 on mpbox:/
360 .SH "FILES"
361 $HOME/.Installrc, $HOME/.Install.state
362 .SH "SEE ALSO"
363 .BR tar "(1), " rsh "(1), " rcp "(1)"
364 .SH "BUGS"
365 .BR tar "(1) and " rsh "(1)"
366 do not have particularly useful exit codes. To compensate,
367 .B Install
368 feeds stderr through grep -v and throws away error messages which it
369 considers harmless. If there's anything left,
370 .B Install
371 assumes it is fatal. It's a hack, but it works.
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