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Command: pkg_create | Section: 1 | Source: OpenBSD | File: pkg_create.1
PKG_CREATE(1) FreeBSD General Commands Manual PKG_CREATE(1)
NAME
pkg_create - create binary software package for distribution
SYNOPSIS
pkg_create [-mnQqSvx] [-A arches] [-B pkg-destdir] [-D name[=value]]
[-L localbase] [-M displayfile] [-P pkgpath:pkgspec:default]
[-U undisplayfile] [-u userlist] [-V n] [-W libspec] -d desc
-D COMMENT=value -D FULLPKGPATH=value -D PORTSDIR=value
-f packinglist -p prefix pkg-name
pkg_create -f packinglist
DESCRIPTION
The pkg_create command is normally used to create a binary package named
pkg-name, for subsequent use with pkg_add(1), pkg_delete(1) and
pkg_info(1). pkg-name will traditionally have a ".tgz" extension, to
denote the underlying binary format. pkg-name must follow
packages-specs(7).
Use of the ports(7) infrastructure instead of manual pkg_create
invocation is strongly recommended.
pkg_create can also be used to recreate a binary package from an existing
installation.
During package creation, pkg_create replaces too long file names with
smaller equivalents (see package(5)), records extra information in the
packing-list, such as the existence of symlinks and hard links, computes
and stores file checksums, and verifies that all special objects are
properly annotated in the packing-list.
It will also check all required shared libraries for reachability, by
looking into all installed dependencies. It may also ask the ports tree
for extra dependencies, provided some other dependency refers to the same
BASE_PKGPATH (see bsd.port.mk(5)). The rationale is that those libraries
must already be present for the package to build correctly, and thus be
reachable through the subset of dependencies that are not pure
RUN_DEPENDS.
The options are as follows:
-A arches
Register a list of architectures for which this package should
install. arches is a comma-separated list of architectures. Use
`*' to mean any architecture (e.g., arch-independent packages).
-B pkg-destdir
Set pkg-destdir as the prefix to prepend to any file to select
for the package.
-D name[=value]
Define name to value (or just define it) for substitution and
fragment inclusion purposes. Some specific names have extra
meaning, see bsd.port.mk(5) and package(5) for details:
CDROM Set to the port's Makefile PERMIT_PACKAGE_CDROM.
COMMENT Set package "one line description" (mandatory).
HISTORY_DIR Record checksums of files in permanent location
${HISTORY_DIR}/${FULLPKGPATH:S,/,./g}.lru.
FTP Set to the port's Makefile PERMIT_PACKAGE_FTP.
FULLPKGPATH Location in the ports tree, mandatory for updates to
work (see pkg_add(1)).
HOMEPAGE If defined, appended to the description.
MAINTAINER If defined, appended to the description.
NO_TS_IN_PLIST
If set, disable the @ts annotations in the generated
package, rely on the normal tar(1) timestamps
instead. (Mostly used to create firmware "packages"
since fw_update(8) only handles a very small subset
of the package(5) format.)
USE_GROFF Set to 1 to have groff format manpages behind the
scenes during package creation.
REVISION_CHECK, EPOCH_CHECK, FLAVOR_LIST_CHECK
Set automatically by bsd.port.mk(5) to values that
help pkg_create catch a few errors in package
naming.
-d [-]desc
Fetch long description for package from file desc or, if preceded
by `-', the argument itself.
-f packinglist
Fetch "packing-list" for package from the file packinglist.
Several packing-lists can be mentioned, in which case they will
be concatenated together.
-L localbase
Record localbase as the localbase used in the package (By
default, /usr/local). Packages built with another localbase can
only be installed by using the same localbase in pkg_add(1), to
prevent errors.
-M displayfile
Display the file (using more(1)) after installing the package.
Useful for things like legal notices on almost-free software,
etc.
-m Causes pkg_create to always display the progress meter in cases
it would not do so by default.
-n Don't actually create a package.
-P pkgpath:pkgspec:default
Declare a dependency on a package matching pkgspec (see
packages-specs(7)). An appropriate package must be installed
before this package may be installed, and that package must be
deinstalled before this package is deinstalled. The dependency
also contains a pkgpath (see pkgpath(7)) and a default package
name, in case there is no listing of available packages.
As a special case, `=' may be used as a pkgspec, to match the
default version exactly.
-p prefix
Set prefix as the initial directory "base" to start from in
selecting files for the package, and to record as the base for
installing the package.
-Q Print out the files in the actual packing-list of the package
being generated, with explicit typing (e.g. @file, @lib, ...).
-q Print out the actual packing-list of the package being generated
(query mode). Most often used in combination with -n.
-S Print the update signature of the package. See pkg_info(1).
-U undisplayfile
Display the file (using more(1)) when deinstalling the package.
Useful for reminders about stuff to clean up.
-u userlist
Check all @newuser and @newgroup statements against a userlist
file (usually ${PORTSDIR}/infrastructure/db/user.list) and error
out for entries not registered in that file. Also error out if
the file is incoherent.
-V n Adds n to the `global system version' of the package (see
package(5)). The default value of 0 is not recorded, thus
packages without @version have an implicit version of 0.
-v Turn on verbose output.
-W libspec
Package needs a shared library to work. libspec is
`name.major.minor' or `path/name.major.minor'. The package won't
be installed unless a library with the same name, the exact same
major number and at least the same minor number can be located.
A library without path is searched through dependent packages
under the same localbase, then in the system libraries under
/usr/lib and /usr/X11R6/lib. A library with a path is only
searched through dependent packages, that path being relative to
localbase.
-x Disable progress meter.
pkg_create can also be invoked with only the packing-list from an
installed package. It will recreate the corresponding binary package in
the current directory from the installation, or error out if any problem
is found. For example, the following will recreate a kdelibs-3.4.3.tgz
package:
pkg_create -f /var/db/pkg/kdelibs-3.4.3/+CONTENTS
PACKING-LIST DETAILS
The "packing-list" format (see -f) is fairly straightforward: basically a
list of filenames and directory names to include in the package.
Substitution of variables and inclusion of fragments is documented in the
next section.
Directory names are denoted by a trailing slash.
There are some annotations that can be inserted for better control. All
these commands start with an `@'. The following annotations can be
inserted manually (but commonly update-plist(1) is used for creating most
packing-list contents):
@ask-update pkgspec message
Mechanism to prevent unwanted updates. If the new package is
installed as part of an update matching pkgspec, the message will
be displayed to the user. In non-interactive mode, the update
will abort. Otherwise, the user will have a chance to proceed.
Automated updates can be done by using -D update_stem, with stem
the stem of the pkgspec. Classical use case for postgresql:
@ask-update postgresql-server-<8 Make sure your existing database is backed up
Use very sparingly. Most cases that seem to require manual
updates just require a bit more thought.
@bin filename
Describe the file as an OpenBSD binary executable (not a script).
@comment string
Place a comment in the packing-list. Useful in trying to
document some particularly hairy sequence that may trip someone
up later. Can also be used to comment out elements that update-
plist (see bsd.port.mk(5)) will insist in inserting in a packing-
list.
The special comment @comment no checksum can be used to tag the
next file as special: even though its characteristics will be
recorded in the package, it can be altered after installation,
and pkg_delete(1) will still delete it.
The special comment @comment no debug can be used to tag the next
file as special: even though it might be a binary, it has no
debug info (see build-debug-info(1)).
@conflict pkgspec
Declare a conflict with packages matching pkgspec (see
packages-specs(7)). The pkgname package can not be installed if
a package matching pkgspec has been installed because they
install the same files and thus conflict.
@cwd pathname
Set the package current directory. All subsequent filenames will
be assumed relative to pathname.
@dir directoryname
Create directory directoryname at pkg_add(1) time, taking @mode,
@group, and @owner into account, and remove it during
pkg_delete(1). Directories to remove can be shared between
packages. If name does not begin with an @, same as
name/
@define-tag tag mode params
Define a tag of name tag. Tags define actions to be performed at
specific time during pkg_add(1) and pkg_delete(1). A given tag
may be defined several times with additional properties.
Currently, the following modes are defined:
at-end
if the tag occurs in any dependency, the given command
params is executed at the end, similar to @exec commands.
The %D escape sequence stands for localbase.
Actual tags may themselves contain parameters, so the params
list recognizes two additional escape sequences:
%l list of tag parameters, in a random order, with
duplicates removed.
%u execute the command once for each distinct tag
parameter.
As a special case, deleting the package that contains the
@define-tag will work differently: If that @tag is present
in the same package as the @define-tag, then it will be run
when encountered, presumably before the command itself has
been deleted. If that @tag is not present, the command
won't be run at all, since the package has been deleted from
the file system, and usually cleaning up only requires
removing index files.
supersedes
If the given tag is found in dependencies, it supersedes the
other tag given in the same line. For instance:
@define-tag mktexlsr at-end mktexlsr
@define-tag mktexlsr-local at-end mktexlsr texmf-local
@define-tag mktexlsr supersedes mktexlsr-local
Here, the tag mktexlsr rebuilds every texmf directory index,
whereas mktexlsr-local only rebuilds the local texmf
directory index, so if both tags are seen, only the global
command will be run.
@exec command
Execute command during pkg_add(1). Note that @exec commands are
executed relative to their location in the packing-list, so they
can rely on any data that have already been extracted, but not on
anything that is listed after them. Some special elements, such
as new users and new groups, are always created first, so that
@exec can rely on them.
pkg_add(1) and pkg_delete(1) set the PATH to a predictable value:
/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/X11R6/bin:${LOCALBASE}/bin:${LOCALBASE}/sbin
during execution.
If command contains any of the following sequences somewhere in
it, they will be expanded inline. For the following examples,
assume that @cwd is set to /usr/local and the last extracted file
was bin/emacs.
%B Expands to the "basename" of the fully qualified
filename, that is the current directory prefix, plus the
last filespec, minus the trailing filename. In the
example case, that would be /usr/local/bin.
%D Expands to the current directory prefix, as set with
@cwd; in the example case /usr/local.
%F Expands to the last filename extracted (as specified); in
the example case, bin/emacs.
%f Expands to the "filename" part of the fully qualified
name, or the converse of %B; in the example case, emacs.
@exec-always command
Synonym of @exec.
@exec-add command
Similar to @exec, except it only gets executed during new
installations, and not during updates.
@exec-update command
Similar to @exec, except it only gets executed during updates,
and not during new installations.
@extra filename
Declare extra file filename to be deleted at deinstall time, if
user sets the -c option. Those files are extra configuration
files that are normally not deleted. filename can be an absolute
path. If filename ends with a slash, it is a directory.
@extraunexec command
Extra command to execute when removing extra files.
@file filename
Default annotation, to use if filename begins with @. filename
is always a relative path, relative to the current @cwd.
@fontdir directoryname
Specialized version of @dir, to handle font directories: create
font.alias from font.alias-* fragments, execute mkfontdir(1),
mkfontscale(1) and fc-cache(1) when needed. Delete extra files
at pkg_delete(1) time.
@group group
Set default group ownership for all subsequently extracted files
to group. Use without an arg to set back to default (extraction)
group ownership.
@info filename
Specialized version of @file, to handle GNU info files.
Automatically grab filename-* chapter files, run install-info(1)
as needed.
@lib filename
Specialized version of @file, to handle shared libraries.
Satisfy LIB_DEPENDS and WANTLIB, run ldconfig(8) as needed. See
`VARIABLE SUBSTITUTION AND FRAGMENT INCLUSION' for some details.
@man filename
Specialized version of @file, to handle manual pages.
@mandir directoryname
Specialized version of @dir, to handle manual directories:
instruct user to add/remove the directory to man.conf(5), remove
apropos(1) database when needed.
@mode mode
Set default permission for all subsequently extracted files to
mode. Format is the same as that used by the chmod(1) command.
Use without an arg to set back to default (extraction)
permissions.
@newgroup name:gid
During pkg_add(1), create a new group, using groupadd(8).
Happens before file and user creations. gid can be prefixed with
a `!' to ensure group has the correct GID. During pkg_delete(1),
groups will be deleted if extra clean-up has been requested, and
if other installed packages don't list the same group.
@newuser name:uid:group:loginclass:comment:home:shell
During pkg_add(1), create a new user. Happens before any file
creation. All fields correspond to useradd(8) parameters. Some
fields are optional and can be left empty. If the user already
exists, no action is taken. Individual fields can be prefixed by
a `!' to make sure an existing user matches. For instance, the
directive @newuser foo:!42 will make sure user foo has UID 42.
During pkg_delete(1), users will be deleted if extra clean-up has
been requested, and if other installed packages don't list the
same user.
@option name
Effects vary depending on name. These are the user settable
options
always-update
By default, pkg_add(1) uses some simplified information
to decide whether an installed package needs updating.
With this option, the package will be updated whenever
anything changes.
This is meant to be used by packages containing
information relating to the whole ports tree, like
sqlports, quirks, pkglocatedb.
is-branch
Annotate the few rare ports where several branches are
present in the ports tree (such as autoconf), to help
pkg_info(1) produce stem%branch annotations when needed.
no-default-conflict
By default, a package conflicts with other versions of
the same package. With this option, the older package
version will still be noticed, but the installation will
proceed anyway.
@owner user
Set default ownership for all subsequently extracted files to
user. Use without an arg to set back to default (extraction)
ownership.
@pkgpath pkgpath
Declare a secondary pkgpath for the package. This is used for
updates: pkg_add -u normally checks that the pkgpath embedded in
the package corresponds to the old package, to solve ambiguities
when packages with similar names are involved. When ports get
renamed, or flavors change, extra @pkgpath annotations can help
pkg_add get a sense of continuity. Note that these pkgpath can
take extra optional components, to allow the matching of several
flavors at once, and are order independent. For instance,
@pkgpath some/dir,f1,f2
and
@pkgpath some/dir,f2,f2,f1
are equivalent.
@pkgpath some/dir,f1[,f2,f3][,f4]
will match all pkgpaths to some/dir with flavor f1, and
optionally f4, and optionally both f2 and f3, e.g.,
some/dir,f1,f4, some/dir,f1,f2,f3, some/dir,f1,f2,f3,f4,
some/dir,f1 would match, but some/dir,f1,f5, some/dir,f2,f3,
some/dir,f1,f2,f4 would not.
Each binary package contains a set of pkgpaths: the primary
pkgpath that was used to build the package, recorded as @comment
pkgpath=some/path, and secondary pkgpaths as recorded through
@pkgpath.
In order for two packages to match, their primary pkgpaths must
match, or a secondary pkgpath must match the other package's
primary pkgpath.
@rcscript filename
Script for the /etc/rc.d framework. Contrary to @file, absolute
paths are okay, e.g.,
@rcscript ${RCDIR}/ballsd
In this case, performs an implicit @cwd to ${RCDIR}.
@sample filename
Last preceding @file item is a sample configuration file, to be
copied to filename at pkg_add(1) time and to be removed at
pkg_delete(1) time. During installation, existing configuration
files are untouched. During deinstallation, configuration files
are only removed if unchanged. filename can be an absolute path.
If filename ends with a slash, it refers to a configuration
directory instead.
@shell filename
Specialized version of @file, to handle shells. See shells(5).
@so filename
Describe the file as an OpenBSD shared object.
@static-lib filename
Describe the file as a OpenBSD static library.
@unexec command
Execute command during pkg_delete(1). PATH and expansion of
special % sequences are the same as for @exec. Note that @unexec
commands are executed relative to their location in the packing-
list, so they cannot rely on any data that has already been
deleted, thus they should occur before the files they need to
function. Some special elements, such as new users and new
groups, are always deleted last, so that @unexec can rely on
them.
@tag name [parameter]
Reference a tag of given name. The corresponding @define-tag
definition must be accessible through the dependency tree.
parameter is amenable to the same substitutions as @exec.
@unexec-always command
Synonym of @unexec.
@unexec-delete command
Similar to @unexec, except it only gets executed during true
deletions and not while removing an old package during updates.
@unexec-update command
Similar to @unexec, except it only gets executed while removing
an old package during updates, and not during true deletions.
The @bin, @lib, @so and @static-lib annotations are used by the debug
packages infrastructure to figure out which files may contain debug
information.
Some of these annotations define information that are local to each port
but global to the package ecosystem in general, and thus make it into the
package locate database by default (for instance: @define-tag, @newuser
and @newgroup). See pkg_mklocatedb(1) for details.
See package(5) for other internal annotations that are automatically
added by the package tools.
VARIABLE SUBSTITUTION AND FRAGMENT INCLUSION
In packing-lists, installation, deinstallation and requirement scripts,
description and message files, constructs like ${VAR} will be replaced
with the variable value, according to -D name=value options.
In particular, shared library versions should never be mentioned
explicitly in a packing-list. Shared library `foo' will take its version
number from LIBfoo_VERSION. The ports framework normally takes care of
all details, see SHARED_LIBS in bsd.port.mk(5).
Constructs like %%VAR%% and !%%VAR%% trigger fragment inclusion. If such
a line is encountered in a packing-list, the corresponding variable must
be defined to 0 or 1. If the variable's value is 1, %%VAR%% will be
replaced by the corresponding positive fragment, and !%%VAR%% will be
ignored. If the variable's value is 0, %%VAR%% will be ignored, and
!%%VAR%% will be replaced by the corresponding positive fragment.
A fragment is an auxiliary packing-list file, whose name is derived from
the current packing-list, and the variable name VAR triggering the
inclusion: pkg/PLIST yields a positive fragment pkg/PFRAG.VAR and a
negative fragment pkg/PFRAG.no-VAR, pkg/PLIST-FOO yields a positive
fragment pkg/PFRAG.VAR-foo and a negative fragment pkg/PFRAG.no-VAR-foo.
Fragments can be included inside fragments, so that %%VAR2%% inside
pkg/PFRAG.VAR triggers the inclusion of pkg/PFRAG.VAR2-VAR and !%%VAR2%%
triggers the inclusion of pkg/PFRAG.no-VAR2-VAR.
If a positive or a negative fragment file does not exist, the
corresponding inclusion will be ignored. However, if both the positive
and negative fragment files do not exist, pkg_create will error out, to
make it easier to spot fragment names errors.
SEE ALSO
pkg_add(1), pkg_delete(1), pkg_info(1), pkg_sign(1), tar(1),
bsd.port.mk(5), package(5), packages-specs(7), pkgpath(7), ports(7)
HISTORY
The pkg_create command first appeared in FreeBSD.
AUTHORS
Jordan Hubbard
initial design
Marc Espie
complete rewrite.
FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8 July 5, 2023 FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8