8d01b74d15
under ${WRKDIR}. Mention that files under ${PKGDIR} are all defined using variables.
2626 lines
104 KiB
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2626 lines
104 KiB
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<!-- $Id: porting.sgml,v 1.119 1998-12-12 07:09:09 asami Exp $ -->
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<!-- The FreeBSD Documentation Project -->
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<sect><heading>Making a port yourself<label id="porting"></heading>
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<p><em>Contributed by &a.jkh;, &a.gpalmer;, &a.asami;, &a.obrien; and
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&a.hoek;.<newline>28 August 1996.</em>
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<p>So, now you are interested in making your own port? Great! <tt/:)/
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<p>What follows are some guidelines for creating a new port for
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FreeBSD. The bulk of the work is done by
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<tt>/usr/share/mk/bsd.port.mk</tt>, which all port Makefiles include.
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Please refer to that file for more details on the inner workings of
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|
the ports collection. Even if you don't hack Makefiles daily, it is
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well commented, and you will still gain much knowledge from it.
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<p>Note: Only a fraction of the overridable variables
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(<tt>${..}</tt>) are mentioned in this document. Most (if not
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all) are documented at the start of <tt>bsd.port.mk</tt>. This file
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uses a non-standard tab setting. <tt>Emacs</tt> and <tt>Vim</tt>
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should recognize the setting on loading the file. <tt>vi</tt> or
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<tt>ex</tt> can be set to using the correct value by typing `<tt>:set
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tabstop=4</tt>' once the file has been loaded.
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<sect1>
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<heading>Quick Porting</heading>
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<p>This section tells you how to do a quick port. In many
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cases, it is not enough, but we will see.
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<p>First, get the original tarball and put it into
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<tt>${DISTDIR}</tt>, which defaults to
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<tt>/usr/ports/distfiles</tt>.
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<p>Note: The following assumes that the software compiled
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out-of-the-box, i.e., there was absolutely no change required
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for the port to work on your FreeBSD box. If you needed to
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change something, you will have to refer to the next section
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too.
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<sect2>
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<heading>Writing the Makefile</heading>
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<p>The minimal <tt>Makefile</tt> would look something like this:
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<tscreen><verb>
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# New ports collection makefile for: oneko
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# Version required: 1.1b
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# Date created: 5 December 1994
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# Whom: asami
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#
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# $Id$
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#
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DISTNAME= oneko-1.1b
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CATEGORIES= games
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MASTER_SITES= ftp://ftp.cs.columbia.edu/archives/X11R5/contrib/
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MAINTAINER= asami@FreeBSD.ORG
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MAN1= oneko.1
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MANCOMPRESSED= yes
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USE_IMAKE= yes
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.include <bsd.port.mk>
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</verb></tscreen>
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<p>See if you can figure it out. Do not worry about the contents
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of the <tt>$Id$</tt> line, it will be filled in
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automatically by CVS when the port is imported to our main
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ports tree. You can find a more detailed example in the <ref
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id="porting:samplem" name="sample Makefile"> section.
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<sect2>
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<heading>Writing the description files</heading>
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<p>There are three description files that are
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required for any port, whether they actually package or not.
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They are <tt>COMMENT</tt>, <tt>DESCR</tt>, and
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<tt>PLIST</tt>, and reside in the <tt>pkg</tt> subdirectory.
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<sect3>
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<heading>COMMENT</heading>
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<p>This is the one-line description of the port. <em>Please
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do not include the package name (or version number of the
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software) in the comment.</em>
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Here is an example:
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<tscreen><verb>
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A cat chasing a mouse all over the screen.
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</verb></tscreen>
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<sect3>
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<heading>DESCR</heading>
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<p>This is a longer description of the port. One to a few
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paragraphs concisely explaining what the port does is
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sufficient. This is <em>not</em> a manual or an
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|
in-depth description on how to use or compile the port!
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|
<em>Please be careful if you are copying from the
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<tt>README</tt> or manpage</em>; too often they are not a
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concise description of the port or are in an awkward format
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(e.g. manpages have justified spacing). If the ported software
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has an official WWW homepage, you should list in here.
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<p>It is recommended that you sign the name at the end of
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this file, as in:
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<tscreen><verb>
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This is a port of oneko, in which a cat chases a poor mouse all over
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the screen.
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:
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(etc.)
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http://www.oneko.org/
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- Satoshi
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asami@cs.berkeley.edu
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</verb></tscreen>
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<sect3>
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<heading>PLIST</heading>
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<p>This file lists all the files installed by the port. It
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is also called the `packing list' because the package is
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generated by packing the files listed here. The pathnames
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|
are relative to the installation prefix (usually
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<tt>/usr/local</tt> or <tt>/usr/X11R6</tt>). If you are
|
|
using the <tt/MANx/ variables (as you should be), do not list
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any manpages here.
|
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|
|
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<p>Here is a small example:
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<tscreen><verb>
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bin/oneko
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lib/X11/app-defaults/Oneko
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lib/X11/oneko/cat1.xpm
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lib/X11/oneko/cat2.xpm
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lib/X11/oneko/mouse.xpm
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@dirrm lib/X11/oneko
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</verb></tscreen>
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<p>Refer to the <tt>pkg_create(1)</tt> man page for details
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on the packing list. Note that you should list all the
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files, but not the name directories, in the list.
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|
Also, if the port creates directories for itself during
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|
installation, make sure to add <tt/@dirrm/ lines as
|
|
necessary to remove them when the port is deleted.
|
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|
|
<p>It is recommended you keep all the filenames in this file
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|
sorted alphabetically. It will make verifying the changes
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|
when you upgrade the port much easier.
|
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|
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<sect2>
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<heading>Creating the checksum file</heading>
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|
|
<p>Just type `<tt>make makesum</tt>'. The ports make rules
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|
will automatically generate the file <tt>files/md5</tt>.
|
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<sect2>
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|
<heading>Testing the port<label id="porting:testing"></heading>
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|
|
<p>You should make sure that the port rules do exactly what
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|
you want it to do, including packaging up the port. These
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|
are the important points you need to verify:
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<itemize>
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|
<item><tt/PLIST/ does not contain anything not installed
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by your port
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<item><tt/PLIST/ contains everything that is installed
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by your port
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|
<item>your port can be installed multiple times using the
|
|
<tt/reinstall/ target
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|
<item>your port <ref id="porting:cleaning" name="cleans up">
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after itself upon deinstall
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</itemize>
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|
<p>The recommended ordering of tests is:
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<enum>
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<item><tt>make install</tt>
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<item><tt>make package</tt>
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<item><tt>make deinstall</tt>
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|
<item><tt>pkg_add `make package-name`</tt>
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|
<item><tt>make deinstall</tt>
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<item><tt>make reinstall</tt>
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<item><tt>make package</tt>
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|
</enum>
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|
Make sure there aren't any warnings issued in any of the
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|
<tt/package/ and <tt/deinstall/ stages. After step 3, check
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|
to see if all the new directories are correctly deleted.
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|
Also, try using the software after step 4, to ensure that it
|
|
works correctly when installed from a package.
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|
|
<sect2>
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|
<heading>Checking your port with portlint<label id="porting:portlint"></heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Please use <tt>portlint</tt> to see if your port conforms
|
|
to our guidelines. The <tt>
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|
<htmlurl url="http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/ports.cgi?portlint"
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|
name="portlint"></tt> program is part of the ports collection.
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|
In particular, you may want to check if the <ref
|
|
id="porting:samplem" name="Makefile"> is in the right shape
|
|
and the <ref id="porting:pkgname" name="package"> is named
|
|
appropriately.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
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|
<heading>Submitting the port<label id="porting:submitting"></heading>
|
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|
|
<p>First, make sure you have read the <ref id="porting:dads"
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|
name="Do's and Dont's"> section.
|
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|
|
<p>Now that you are happy with your port, the only thing
|
|
remaining is to put it in the main FreeBSD ports tree and
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|
make everybody else happy about it too. We do not need
|
|
your <tt>work/</tt> directory or the <tt>pkgname.tgz</tt>
|
|
package, so delete them now. Next, simply include the
|
|
output of `<tt>shar `find port_dir`</tt>' in a
|
|
bug report and send it with the <tt>send-pr(1)</tt>
|
|
program (see <ref id="contrib:general" name="Bug Reports and
|
|
General Commentary"> for more information about
|
|
<tt>send-pr</tt>). If the uncompressed port is larger than 20KB,
|
|
you should compress it into a tarfile and use
|
|
<tt>uuencode(1)</tt> before including it in the bug report
|
|
(uuencoded tarfiles are acceptable even if the report is
|
|
smaller than 20KB but are not preferred). Be sure to classify
|
|
the bug report as category `ports' and class `change-request'.
|
|
(Do not mark the report `confidential'!)
|
|
|
|
<p>One more time, <em>do not include the original source distfile,
|
|
the <tt>work/</tt> directory, or the package you built with
|
|
`<tt>make package</tt>'!</em>
|
|
|
|
<p>Note: in the past, we asked you to upload new port
|
|
submissions in our ftp site (<tt/ftp.freebsd.org/). This is
|
|
no longer recommended as read access is turned off on that
|
|
<tt/incoming/ directory of that site due to the large amount
|
|
of pirated software showing up there. <tt>:<</tt>
|
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|
|
<p>We will look at your port, get back to you if necessary, and put
|
|
it in the tree. Your name will also appear in the list of
|
|
`Additional FreeBSD contributors' on the FreeBSD Handbook
|
|
and other files. Isn't that great?!? <tt>:)</tt>
|
|
|
|
<sect1>
|
|
<heading>Slow Porting</heading>
|
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|
|
<p>Ok, so it was not that simple, and the port required some
|
|
modifications to get it to work. In this section, we will
|
|
explain, step by step, how to modify it to get it to work with
|
|
the ports paradigm.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>How things work</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>First, this is the sequence of events which occurs when the
|
|
user first types `<tt>make</tt>' in your port's directory,
|
|
and you may find that having <tt>bsd.port.mk</tt> in another
|
|
window while you read this really helps to understand it.
|
|
|
|
<p>But do not worry if you do not really understand what
|
|
<tt>bsd.port.mk</tt> is doing, not many people
|
|
do... <tt>:></tt>
|
|
|
|
<enum>
|
|
<item>The fetch target is run. The fetch target is
|
|
responsible for making sure that the tarball exists
|
|
locally in <tt>${DISTDIR}</tt>. If fetch cannot
|
|
find the required files in <tt>${DISTDIR}</tt> it
|
|
will look up the URL <tt>${MASTER_SITES}</tt>,
|
|
which is set in the Makefile, as well as our main ftp
|
|
site at <htmlurl
|
|
url="ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/"
|
|
name="ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/,">
|
|
where we put sanctioned distfiles as backup. It will then
|
|
attempt to
|
|
fetch the named distribution file with
|
|
<tt>${FETCH}</tt>, assuming that the requesting
|
|
site has direct access to the Internet. If that succeeds,
|
|
it will save the file in <tt>${DISTDIR}</tt> for
|
|
future use and proceed.
|
|
|
|
<item>The extract target is run. It looks for your port's
|
|
distribution file (typically a gzip'd tarball) in
|
|
<tt>${DISTDIR}</tt> and unpacks it into a temporary
|
|
subdirectory specified by <tt>${WRKDIR}</tt>
|
|
(defaults to <tt>work</tt>).
|
|
|
|
<item>The patch target is run. First, any patches defined
|
|
in <tt>${PATCHFILES}</tt> are applied. Second, if
|
|
any patches are found in <tt>${PATCHDIR}</tt>
|
|
(defaults to the <tt>patches</tt> subdirectory), they are
|
|
applied at this time in alphabetical order.
|
|
|
|
<item>The configure target is run. This can do any one of
|
|
many different things.
|
|
|
|
<enum>
|
|
|
|
<item>If it exists, <tt>scripts/configure</tt> is run.
|
|
|
|
<item>If <tt>${HAS_CONFIGURE}</tt> or
|
|
<tt>${GNU_CONFIGURE}</tt> is set,
|
|
<tt>${WRKSRC}/configure</tt> is run.
|
|
|
|
<item>If <tt>${USE_IMAKE}</tt> is set,
|
|
<tt>${XMKMF}</tt> (default: `<tt>xmkmf
|
|
-a</tt>') is run.
|
|
|
|
</enum>
|
|
|
|
<item>The build target is run. This is responsible for
|
|
descending into the ports' private working directory
|
|
(<tt>${WRKSRC}</tt>) and building it. If
|
|
<tt>${USE_GMAKE}</tt> is set, GNU <tt>make</tt>
|
|
will be used, otherwise the system <tt>make</tt> will be
|
|
used.
|
|
|
|
</enum>
|
|
|
|
<p>The above are the default actions. In addition, you can
|
|
define targets `<tt>pre-<something></tt>' or
|
|
`<tt>post-<something></tt>', or put scripts with those
|
|
names, in the <tt>scripts</tt> subdirectory, and they will
|
|
be run before or after the default actions are done.
|
|
|
|
<p>For example, if you have a <tt>post-extract</tt> target
|
|
defined in your Makefile, and a file <tt>pre-build</tt> in
|
|
the <tt>scripts</tt> subdirectory, the
|
|
<tt>post-extract</tt> target will be called after the
|
|
regular extraction actions, and the <tt>pre-build</tt>
|
|
script will be executed before the default build rules are
|
|
done. It is recommended that you use Makefile targets if
|
|
the actions are simple enough, because it will be easier for
|
|
someone to figure out what kind of non-default action the
|
|
port requires.
|
|
|
|
<p>The default actions are done by the <tt>bsd.port.mk</tt>
|
|
targets `<tt>do-<something></tt>'. For example, the
|
|
commands to extract a port are in the target
|
|
`<tt>do-extract</tt>'. If you are not happy with the
|
|
default target, you can fix it by redefining the
|
|
`<tt>do-<something></tt>' target in your Makefile.
|
|
|
|
<p>Note that the `main' targets (e.g., <tt>extract</tt>,
|
|
<tt>configure</tt>, etc.) do nothing more than make sure all
|
|
the stages up to that one is completed and call the real
|
|
targets or scripts, and they are not intended to be
|
|
changed. If you want to fix the extraction, fix
|
|
<tt>do-extract</tt>, but never ever touch <tt>extract</tt>!
|
|
|
|
<p>Now that you understand what goes on when the user types
|
|
`<tt>make</tt>', let us go through the recommended steps to
|
|
create the perfect port.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Getting the original sources</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Get the original sources (normally) as a compressed tarball
|
|
(<tt><foo>.tar.gz</tt> or <tt><foo>.tar.Z</tt>)
|
|
and copy it into <tt>${DISTDIR}</tt>. Always use
|
|
<em>mainstream</em> sources when and where you can.
|
|
|
|
<p>If you cannot find a ftp/http site that is well-connected
|
|
to the net, or can only find sites that have irritatingly
|
|
non-standard formats, you might want to put a copy on a
|
|
reliable ftp or http server that you control (e.g., your
|
|
home page). Make sure you set <tt>MASTER_SITES</tt> to
|
|
reflect your choice.
|
|
|
|
<p>If you cannot find somewhere convenient and reliable to put
|
|
the distfile (note that if you are a FreeBSD committer, you
|
|
can just put it in the <tt>public_html</tt> directory on
|
|
freefall), we can `house' it ourselves by putting it on
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/LOCAL_PORTS/
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
as the last resort. Please refer to this location as
|
|
<tt>${MASTER_SITE_LOCAL}</tt>. Send mail to the &a.ports
|
|
if you are not sure what to do.
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port's distfile changes all the time for no good
|
|
reason, consider putting the distfile in your home page and
|
|
listing it as the first <tt>MASTER_SITES</tt>. This will
|
|
prevent users from getting `checksum mismatch' errors, and
|
|
also reduce the workload of maintainers of our ftp site.
|
|
Also, if there is only one master site for the port, it is
|
|
recommended that you house a backup at your site and list it
|
|
as the second <tt>MASTER_SITES</tt>.
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port requires some additional `patches' that are
|
|
available on the Internet, fetch them too and put them in
|
|
<tt>${DISTDIR}</tt>. Do not worry if they come from
|
|
site other than where you got the main source tarball,
|
|
we have a way to handle these situations (see the
|
|
description of <ref id="porting:patchfiles"
|
|
name="${PATCHFILES}"> below).
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Modifying the port</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Unpack a copy of the tarball in a private directory and
|
|
make whatever changes are necessary to get the port to
|
|
compile properly under the current version of FreeBSD. Keep
|
|
<em>careful track</em> of everything you do, as you will be
|
|
automating the process shortly. Everything, including the
|
|
deletion, addition or modification of files should be doable
|
|
using an automated script or patch file when your port is
|
|
finished.
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port requires significant user
|
|
interaction/customization to compile or install, you should
|
|
take a look at one of Larry Wall's classic Configure scripts
|
|
and perhaps do something similar yourself. The goal of the
|
|
new ports collection is to make each port as `plug-and-play'
|
|
as possible for the end-user while using a minimum of disk
|
|
space.
|
|
|
|
<p>Note: Unless explicitly stated, patch files, scripts, and
|
|
other files you have created and contributed to the FreeBSD
|
|
ports collection are assumed to be covered by the standard
|
|
BSD copyright conditions.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Patching</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>In the preparation of the port, files that have been added
|
|
or changed can be picked up with a recursive diff for later
|
|
feeding to patch. Each set of patches you wish to apply
|
|
should be collected into a file named
|
|
`<tt>patch-<xx></tt>' where <tt><xx></tt>
|
|
denotes the sequence in which the patches will be applied --
|
|
these are done in <em>alphabetical order</em>, thus
|
|
`<tt>aa</tt>' first, `<tt>ab</tt>' second and so on. These
|
|
files should be stored in <tt>${PATCHDIR}</tt>, from
|
|
where they will be automatically applied. All patches
|
|
should be relative to <tt>${WRKSRC}</tt> (generally
|
|
the directory your port's tarball unpacks itself into, that
|
|
being where the build is done). To make fixes and upgrades
|
|
easier, you should avoid having more than one patch fix the
|
|
same file (e.g., patch-aa and patch-ab both changing
|
|
<tt>${WRKSRC}</tt>/foobar.c).
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Configuring</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Include any additional customization commands to your
|
|
<tt>configure</tt> script and save it in the
|
|
`<tt>scripts</tt>' subdirectory. As mentioned above, you
|
|
can also do this as Makefile targets and/or scripts with the
|
|
name <tt>pre-configure</tt> or <tt>post-configure</tt>.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Handling user input</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port requires user input to build, configure or
|
|
install, then set <tt>IS_INTERACTIVE</tt> in your Makefile.
|
|
This will allow `overnight builds' to skip your port if the
|
|
user sets the variable <tt>BATCH</tt> in his environment
|
|
(and if the user sets the variable <tt>INTERACTIVE</tt>,
|
|
then <em>only</em> those ports requiring interaction are
|
|
built).
|
|
|
|
<p>It is also recommended that if there are reasonable
|
|
default answers to the questions, you check the
|
|
<tt/PACKAGE_BUILDING/ variable and turn off the interactive
|
|
script when it is set. This will allow us to build the
|
|
packages for CD-ROMs and ftp.
|
|
|
|
<sect1>
|
|
<heading>Configuring the Makefile</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Configuring the Makefile is pretty simple, and again we
|
|
suggest that you look at existing examples before starting.
|
|
Also, there is a <ref id="porting:samplem" name="sample
|
|
Makefile"> in this handbook, so take a look and please follow
|
|
the ordering of variables and sections in that template to
|
|
make your port easier for others to read.
|
|
|
|
<p>Now, consider the following problems in sequence as you
|
|
design your new Makefile:
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>The original source</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Does it live in <tt>${DISTDIR}</tt> as a standard
|
|
gzip'd tarball? If so, you can go on to the next step. If
|
|
not, you should look at overriding any of the
|
|
<tt>${EXTRACT_CMD}</tt>,
|
|
<tt>${EXTRACT_BEFORE_ARGS}</tt>,
|
|
<tt>${EXTRACT_AFTER_ARGS}</tt>,
|
|
<tt>${EXTRACT_SUFX}</tt>, or
|
|
<tt>${DISTFILES}</tt> variables, depending on how
|
|
alien a format your port's distribution file is. (The most
|
|
common case is `<tt>EXTRACT_SUFX=.tar.Z</tt>', when the
|
|
tarball is condensed by regular compress, not gzip.)
|
|
|
|
<p>In the worst case, you can simply create your own
|
|
`<tt>do-extract</tt>' target to override the default, though
|
|
this should be rarely, if ever, necessary.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>DISTNAME</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>You should set <tt>${DISTNAME}</tt> to be the base
|
|
name of your port. The default rules expect the
|
|
distribution file list (<tt>${DISTFILES}</tt>) to be
|
|
named
|
|
<tt>${DISTNAME}${EXTRACT_SUFX}</tt>
|
|
which, if it is a normal tarball, is going to be
|
|
something like:
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
foozolix-1.0.tar.gz
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
for a setting of `<tt>DISTNAME=foozolix-1.0</tt>'.
|
|
|
|
The default rules also expect the tarball(s) to extract into
|
|
a subdirectory called <tt>work/${DISTNAME}</tt>, e.g.
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
work/foozolix-1.0/
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
All this behavior can be overridden, of course; it simply
|
|
represents the most common time-saving defaults. For a port
|
|
requiring multiple distribution files, simply set
|
|
<tt>${DISTFILES}</tt> explicitly. If only a subset
|
|
of <tt>${DISTFILES}</tt> are actual extractable
|
|
archives, then set them up in
|
|
<tt>${EXTRACT_ONLY}</tt>, which will override the
|
|
<tt>${DISTFILES}</tt> list when it comes to
|
|
extraction, and the rest will be just left in
|
|
<tt>${DISTDIR}</tt> for later use.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>PKGNAME</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If <tt>${DISTNAME}</tt> does not conform to our <ref
|
|
id="porting:pkgname" name="guidelines for a good package
|
|
name">, you should set the <tt>${PKGNAME}</tt>
|
|
variable to something better. See the abovementioned
|
|
guideline for more details.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>CATEGORIES</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>When a package is created, it is put under
|
|
<tt>/usr/ports/packages/All</tt> and links are made from one
|
|
or more subdirectories of <tt>/usr/ports/packages</tt>. The
|
|
names of these subdirectories are specified by the variable
|
|
<tt>${CATEGORIES}</tt>. It is intended to make life
|
|
easier for the user when he is wading through the pile of
|
|
packages on the ftp site or the CD-ROM. Please take a look
|
|
at the existing <ref id="porting:categories"
|
|
name="categories"> and pick the ones that are suitable for
|
|
your port.
|
|
|
|
<p>This list also determines where in the ports tree the port
|
|
is imported. If you put more than one category here, it is
|
|
assumed that the port files will be put in the subdirectory
|
|
with the name in the first category. See the <ref
|
|
id="porting:categories" name="categories"> section for more
|
|
discussion about how to pick the right categories.
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port truly belongs to something that is different
|
|
from all the existing ones, you can even create a new
|
|
category name. In that case, please send mail to the &a.ports;
|
|
to propose a new category.
|
|
|
|
<p>Note that there is no error checking for category names;
|
|
`<tt>make package</tt>' will happily create a new directory
|
|
if you mistype the category name, so be careful!
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>MASTER_SITES</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Record the directory part of the ftp/http-URL pointing at
|
|
the original tarball in <tt>${MASTER_SITES}</tt>.
|
|
Do not forget the trailing slash (<tt>/</tt>)!
|
|
The make macros will try to use this specification for
|
|
grabbing the distribution file with <tt>${FETCH}</tt>
|
|
if they cannot find it already on the system.
|
|
|
|
<p>It is recommended that you put multiple sites on this list,
|
|
preferably from different continents. This will safeguard
|
|
against wide-area network problems, and we are even planning
|
|
to add support for automatically determining the closest
|
|
master site and fetching from there!
|
|
|
|
<p>If the original tarball is part of one of the following
|
|
popular archives: X-contrib, GNU, Perl CPAN, TeX CTAN, or
|
|
Linux Sunsite, you refer to those sites in an easy compact
|
|
form using MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB, MASTER_SITE_GNU,
|
|
MASTER_SITE_PERL_CPAN, MASTER_SITE_TEX_CTAN, and
|
|
MASTER_SITE_SUNSITE. Simply set MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR to the path
|
|
with in the archive. Here is an example:
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB}
|
|
MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= applications
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
<p>The user can also set the MASTER_SITE_* variables in
|
|
<tt>/etc/make.conf</tt> to override our choices, and use their
|
|
favorite mirrors of these popular archives instead.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>PATCHFILES<label id="porting:patchfiles"></heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port requires some additional patches that are
|
|
available by ftp or http, set <tt>${PATCHFILES}</tt>
|
|
to the names of the files and <tt>${PATCH_SITES}</tt>
|
|
to the URL of the directory that contains them (the format
|
|
is the same as <tt>${MASTER_SITES}</tt>).
|
|
|
|
<p>If the patch is not relative to the top of the source tree
|
|
(i.e., <tt>${WKRSRC}</tt>) because it contains some
|
|
extra pathnames, set <tt>${PATCH_DIST_STRIP}</tt>
|
|
accordingly. For instance, if all the pathnames in the
|
|
patch has an extra `<tt>foozolix-1.0/</tt>' in front of the
|
|
filenames, then set `<tt>PATCH_DIST_STRIP=-p1</tt>'.
|
|
|
|
<p>Do not worry if the patches are compressed, they will be
|
|
decompressed automatically if the filenames end with
|
|
`<tt>.gz</tt>' or `<tt>.Z</tt>'.
|
|
|
|
<p>If the patch is distributed with some other files, such as
|
|
documentation, in a gzip'd tarball, you can't just use
|
|
<tt>${PATCHFILES}</tt>. If that is the case, add the
|
|
name and the location of the patch tarball to
|
|
<tt>${DISTFILES}</tt> and
|
|
<tt>${MASTER_SITES}</tt>. Then, from the
|
|
<tt>pre-patch</tt> target, apply the patch either by running
|
|
the patch command from there, or copying the patch file into
|
|
the <tt>${PATCHDIR}</tt> directory and calling it
|
|
<tt>patch-<xx></tt>. (Note the tarball will have been
|
|
extracted alongside the regular source by then, so there is
|
|
no need to explicitly extract it if it is a regular gzip'd
|
|
or compress'd tarball.) If you do the latter, take extra
|
|
care not to overwrite something that already exists in that
|
|
directory. Also do not forget to add a command to remove
|
|
the copied patch in the <tt>pre-clean</tt> target.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>MAINTAINER</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Set your mail-address here. Please. <tt>:)</tt>
|
|
|
|
<p>For detailed description of the responsibility of maintainers,
|
|
refer to <ref id="policies:maintainer"
|
|
name="MAINTAINER on Makefiles"> section.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Dependencies</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Many ports depend on other ports. There are five variables
|
|
that you can use to ensure that all the required bits will
|
|
be on the user's machine. There are also some pre-supported
|
|
dependency variables for common cases, plus a few more to
|
|
control the behavior of dependencies.
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading>LIB_DEPENDS</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>This variable specifies the shared libraries this port
|
|
depends on. It is a list of `<tt>lib:dir[:target]</tt>' tuples
|
|
where <tt>lib</tt> is the name of the shared library, and
|
|
<tt>dir</tt> is the directory in which to find it in case
|
|
it is not available, and <tt/target/ is the target to call
|
|
in that directory. For example,
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
LIB_DEPENDS= jpeg.9:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/jpeg:install
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
will check for a shared jpeg library with major version 9,
|
|
and descend into the <tt>graphics/jpeg</tt> subdirectory
|
|
of your ports tree to build and install it if it is not
|
|
found. The `<tt/:target/' part can be omitted if it is
|
|
equal to <tt>${DEPENDS_TARGET}</tt> (which defaults to
|
|
`<tt/install/').
|
|
|
|
Note that the <tt>lib</tt> part is an argument given
|
|
to `<tt>ldconfig -r | grep -wF</tt>'. There shall be no
|
|
regular expressions in this variable.
|
|
|
|
The dependency is checked twice, once from within the
|
|
<tt/extract/ target and then from within the <tt/install/
|
|
target. (This is to ensure that the library is available
|
|
even if the port is installed on a different machine from
|
|
where it was built.) Also, the name of the dependency is
|
|
put in to the package so that <tt>pkg_add</tt> will
|
|
automatically install it if it is not on the user's
|
|
system.
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading>RUN_DEPENDS</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>This variable specifies executables or files this port
|
|
depends on during run-time. It is a list of
|
|
`<tt>path:dir[:target]</tt>' tuples where <tt>path</tt> is the name
|
|
of the executable or file, and <tt>dir</tt> is the
|
|
directory in which to find it in case it is not
|
|
available, and `<tt/target/' is the target to call in that
|
|
directory. If <tt>path</tt> starts with a slash
|
|
(<tt>/</tt>), it is treated as a file or directory and its
|
|
existence is
|
|
tested with `<tt>test -e</tt>'; otherwise, it is assumed
|
|
to be an executable, and `<tt>which -s</tt>' is used to
|
|
determine if the program exists in the user's search path.
|
|
|
|
<p>For example,
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
RUN_DEPENDS= ${PREFIX}/etc/innd:${PORTSDIR}/news/inn \
|
|
wish8.0:${PORTSDIR}/x11-toolkits/tk80
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
will check if the file or directory `<tt>/usr/local/etc/innd</tt>'
|
|
exists, and build and install it from the
|
|
<tt>news/inn</tt> subdirectory of the ports tree if it is
|
|
not found. It will also see if an executable called
|
|
`<tt>wish8.0</tt>' is in your search path, and descend into
|
|
the <tt>x11-toolkits/tk80</tt> subdirectory of your ports tree to
|
|
build and install it if it is not found. (Note that in
|
|
this case, `<tt>innd</tt>' is actually an executable; if
|
|
an executable is in a place that is not expected to be in
|
|
a normal user's search path, you should use the full
|
|
pathname.)
|
|
|
|
The dependency is checked from within the <tt>install</tt>
|
|
target. Also, the name of the dependency is put in to the
|
|
package so that <tt>pkg_add</tt> will automatically
|
|
install it if it is not on the user's system. The
|
|
`<tt/:target/' part can be omitted if it is the same as
|
|
<tt>${DEPENDS_TARGET}</tt>.
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading>BUILD_DEPENDS</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>This variable specifies executables or files this port
|
|
requires to build. Like <tt>RUN_DEPENDS</tt>, it is a
|
|
list of `<tt>path:dir[:target]</tt>' tuples. For example,
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
BUILD_DEPENDS= unzip:${PORTSDIR}/archivers/unzip
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
will check for an executable called `<tt>unzip</tt>', and
|
|
descend into the <tt>archivers/unzip</tt> subdirectory of
|
|
your ports tree to build and install it if it is not found.
|
|
|
|
Note that `build' here means everything from extracting to
|
|
compilation. The dependency is checked from within the
|
|
<tt>extract</tt> target. The `<tt/:target/' part can be
|
|
omitted if it is the same as <tt>${DEPENDS_TARGET}</tt>.
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading>FETCH_DEPENDS</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>This variable specifies executables or files this port
|
|
requires to fetch. Like the previous two, it is a list of
|
|
`<tt>path:dir[:target]</tt>' pairs. For example,
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
FETCH_DEPENDS= ncftp2:${PORTSDIR}/net/ncftp2
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
will check for an executable called `<tt>ncftp2</tt>', and
|
|
descend into the <tt>net/ncftp2</tt> subdirectory of
|
|
your ports tree to build and install it if it is not found.
|
|
|
|
The dependency is checked from within the <tt>fetch</tt>
|
|
target. The `<tt/:target/' part can be omitted if it is the
|
|
same as <tt>${DEPENDS_TARGET}</tt>.
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading>DEPENDS</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If there is a dependency that does not fall into either of
|
|
the above four categories, or your port requires to have
|
|
the source of the other port extracted in addition to
|
|
having them installed, then use this variable. This is
|
|
a list of `<tt>dir[:target]</tt>', as there is nothing to check,
|
|
unlike the previous four. The `<tt/:target/' part can be
|
|
omitted if it is the same as <tt>${DEPENDS_TARGET}</tt>.
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading>Common dependency variables</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Define `<tt>USE_XLIB=yes</tt>' if your port requires the
|
|
X Window System to be installed (it is implied by
|
|
<tt>USE_IMAKE</tt>). Define `<tt>USE_GMAKE=yes</tt>' if
|
|
your port requires GNU <tt/make/ instead of BSD <tt/make/.
|
|
Define `<tt>USE_AUTOCONF=yes</tt>' if your port requires
|
|
GNU autoconf to be run. Define `<tt>USE_QT=yes</tt>' if
|
|
your port uses the latest qt toolkit. Use
|
|
`<tt>USE_PERL5=yes</tt>' if your port requires version 5
|
|
of the perl language. (The last is especially important
|
|
since some versions of FreeBSD has perl5 as part of the
|
|
base system while others don't.)
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading>Notes on dependencies</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>As mentioned above, the default target to call when a
|
|
dependency is required is <tt>${DEPENDS_TARGET}</tt>. It
|
|
defaults to `<tt/install/'. This is a user variable; it
|
|
is never defined in a port's Makefile. If your port needs
|
|
a special way to handle a dependency, use the
|
|
`<tt/:target/' part of the <tt>*_DEPENDS</tt> variables
|
|
instead of redefining <tt>${DEPENDS_TARGET}</tt>.
|
|
|
|
<p>When you type `<tt>make clean</tt>', its dependencies are
|
|
automatically cleaned too. If you do not wish this to
|
|
happen, define the variable <tt/NOCLEANDEPENDS/ in your
|
|
environment.
|
|
|
|
<p>To depend on another port unconditionally, it is
|
|
customary to use the string `<tt/nonexistent/' as the
|
|
first field of <tt/BUILD_DEPENDS/ or <tt/RUN_DEPENDS/.
|
|
Use this only when you need the to get to the source of
|
|
the other port. You can often save compilation time by
|
|
specifying the target too. For instance,
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
BUILD_DEPENDS= /nonexistent:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/jpeg:extract
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
will always descend to the JPEG port and extract it.
|
|
|
|
<p>Do not use `<tt/DEPENDS/' unless there is no other way
|
|
the behavior you want can be accomplished. It will cause
|
|
the other port to be always built (and installed, by
|
|
default), and the dependency will go into the package as
|
|
well. If this is really what you need, I recommend you to
|
|
write it as <tt/BUILD_DEPENDS/ and <tt/RUN_DEPENDS/
|
|
instead -- at least the intention will be clear.
|
|
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Building mechanisms</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If your package uses GNU <tt>make</tt>, set
|
|
`<tt>USE_GMAKE=yes</tt>'. If your package uses configure,
|
|
set `<tt>HAS_CONFIGURE=yes</tt>'. If your package uses
|
|
GNU <tt/configure/, set `<tt>GNU_CONFIGURE=yes</tt>' (this
|
|
implies <tt/HAS_CONFIGURE/). If you want to give some extra
|
|
arguments to <tt/configure/ (the default argument list
|
|
`<tt>--prefix=${PREFIX}</tt>' for GNU <tt/configure/ and
|
|
empty for non-GNU <tt/configure/), set those extra arguments in
|
|
<tt>${CONFIGURE_ARGS}</tt>. If your package uses GNU
|
|
<tt/autoconf/, set `<tt>USE_AUTOCONF=yes</tt>'. This
|
|
implies <tt/GNU_CONFIGURE/, and will cause <tt/autoconf/ to
|
|
be run before <tt/configure/.
|
|
|
|
<p>If your package is an X application that creates Makefiles
|
|
from Imakefiles using <tt>imake</tt>, then set
|
|
`<tt>USE_IMAKE=yes</tt>'. This will cause the configure
|
|
stage to automatically do an <tt>xmkmf -a</tt>. If the
|
|
`<tt>-a</tt>' flag is a problem for your port, set
|
|
`<tt>XMKMF=xmkmf</tt>'.
|
|
If the port uses imake but does not understand the
|
|
`<tt>install.man</tt>' target,
|
|
`<tt>NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES=yes</tt>' should be set. In
|
|
addition, the author of the original port should be
|
|
shot. <tt>:></tt>
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port's source Makefile has something else than
|
|
`<tt>all</tt>' as the main build target, set
|
|
<tt>${ALL_TARGET}</tt> accordingly. Same goes for
|
|
`<tt>install</tt>' and <tt>${INSTALL_TARGET}</tt>.
|
|
|
|
<sect1>
|
|
<heading>Special Considerations</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>There are some more things you have to take into account when
|
|
you create a port. This section explains the most common of those.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading><tt/ldconfig/</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port installs a shared library, add a
|
|
<tt>post-install</tt> target to your Makefile that runs
|
|
`<tt>${LDCONFIG} -m</tt>' on the directory where the new
|
|
library is installed (usually <tt>${PREFIX}/lib</tt>)
|
|
to register it into the shared library cache.
|
|
|
|
<p>Also, add a matching `<tt>@exec /sbin/ldconfig
|
|
-m</tt>'/`<tt>@unexec /sbin/ldconfig -R</tt>' pair to your
|
|
<tt>pkg/PLIST</tt> file so that a user who installed the
|
|
package can start using the shared library immediately and
|
|
deinstallation will not cause the system to still believe
|
|
the library is there. These lines should immediately follow
|
|
the line for the shared library itself, as in:
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
lib/libtcl80.so.1
|
|
@exec /sbin/ldconfig -m %D/lib
|
|
@unexec /sbin/ldconfig -R
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<p>Never, ever, <em>ever</em> add a line that says
|
|
`<tt>ldconfig</tt>' without any arguments to your Makefile
|
|
or pkg/PLIST. This will reset the shared library cache to
|
|
the contents of <tt>/usr/lib</tt> only, and will royally
|
|
screw up the user's machine ("Help, xinit does not run
|
|
anymore after I install this port!"). Anybody who does this
|
|
will be shot and cut into 65,536 pieces by a rusty knife and
|
|
have his liver chopped out by a bunch of crows and will
|
|
eternally rot to death in the deepest bowels of hell (not
|
|
necessarily in that order)....
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>ELF support</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Since FreeBSD is moving to ELF from 3.0-release onwards,
|
|
we need to convert many ports that build shared libraries
|
|
to support ELF. Complicating this task is that a 3.0
|
|
system can run as both ELF and a.out, and that there will
|
|
be one more release (2.2.8) from the 2.2 branch. Below
|
|
are the guidelines on how to convert a.out only ports to
|
|
support both a.out and ELF compilation.
|
|
|
|
<p>Some part of this list is only applicable during the
|
|
conversion, but will be left here for awhile for reference
|
|
in case you have come across some old port you wish to
|
|
upgrade.
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading>Moving a.out libraries out of the way</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>A.out libraries should be moved out of
|
|
<tt>/usr/local/lib</tt> and similar to an `<tt/aout/'
|
|
subdirectory. (If you don't move them out of the way,
|
|
ELF ports will happily overwrite a.out libraries.) The
|
|
`<tt/move-aout-libs/' target in the -current
|
|
<tt>src/Makefile</tt> (called from `<tt/aout-to-elf'/)
|
|
will do this for you. It will only move a.out libs so
|
|
it is safe to call it on a system with both ELF and
|
|
a.out libs in the standard directories.
|
|
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading>Format</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>The ports tree will build packages in the format the
|
|
machine is in. This means a.out for 2.2 and a.out or
|
|
ELF for 3.0 depending on what <tt>`objformat`</tt>
|
|
returns. Also, once users move a.out libraries
|
|
to a subdirectory, building a.out libraries will be
|
|
unsupported. (I.e., it may still work if you know what
|
|
you are doing, but you are on your own.)
|
|
|
|
<p>Note: if a port only works for a.out, set
|
|
<tt/BROKEN_ELF/ to a string describing the reason why.
|
|
Such ports will be skipped during a build on an ELF
|
|
system.
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading>PORTOBJFORMAT</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p><tt/bsd.port.mk/ will set <tt/PORTOBJFORMAT/ to
|
|
`<tt/aout/' or `<tt/elf/' and export it in the
|
|
environments <tt/CONFIGURE_ENV/, <tt/SCRIPTS_ENV/ and
|
|
<tt/MAKE_ENV/. (It's always going to be `<tt/aout/' in
|
|
-stable). It is also passed to <tt/PLIST_SUB/ as
|
|
`<tt>PORTOBJFORMAT=${PORTOBJFORMAT}</tt>'. (See comment
|
|
on <tt/ldconfig/ lines below.)
|
|
|
|
<p>The variable is set using this line:
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
PORTOBJFORMAT!= test -x /usr/bin/objformat && /usr/bin/objformat || echo aout
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
in <tt/bsd.port.mk/.
|
|
|
|
<p>Ports' make processes should use this variable to
|
|
decide what to do. However, if the port's
|
|
<tt/configure/ script already automatically detects an
|
|
ELF system, it is not necessary to refer to
|
|
<tt/PORTOBJFORMAT/.
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading>Building shared libraries</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>The following are differences in handling shared
|
|
libraries for a.out and ELF.
|
|
|
|
<descrip>
|
|
<tag>Shared library versions</tag>An ELF shared library
|
|
should be called "<tt/libfoo.so.M/" where <tt/M/ is
|
|
the single version number, and an a.out library should
|
|
be called "<tt/libfoo.so.M.N/" where <tt/M/ is the
|
|
major version and <tt/N/ is the the minor version
|
|
number. Do not mix those; <em/never/ install an ELF
|
|
shared library called "<tt/libfoo.so.N.M/" or an a.out
|
|
shared library (or symlink) called "<tt/libfoo.so.N/".
|
|
|
|
<tag>Linker command lines</tag>Assuming `<tt>cc
|
|
-shared</tt>' is used rather than `<tt/ld/' directly,
|
|
the only difference is that you need to add
|
|
`<tt>-Wl,-soname,libfoo.so.M</tt>' on the command line
|
|
for ELF.
|
|
</descrip>
|
|
|
|
<p>You need to install a symlink <tt>libfoo.so</tt> ->
|
|
<tt>libfoo.so.N</tt> to make ELF linkers happy. Since
|
|
it should be listed in <tt/PLIST/ too, and it won't hurt
|
|
in the a.out case (some ports even require the link for
|
|
dynamic loading), you should just make this link
|
|
regardless of the setting of <tt/PORTOBJFORMAT/.
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading><tt/LIB_DEPENDS/</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>All port Makefiles are edited to remove minor numbers
|
|
from <tt/LIB_DEPENDS/, and also to have the regexp
|
|
support removed. (E.g.,
|
|
`<tt>foo\\.1\\.\\(33|40\\)</tt>' -> `<tt>foo.2</tt>'.)
|
|
They will be matched using `<tt>grep -wF</tt>'.
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading><tt/PLIST/</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p><tt/PLIST/ should contain the short (ELF) shlib names
|
|
if the a.out minor number is zero, and the long (a.out)
|
|
names otherwise. <tt/bsd.port.mk/ will automatically
|
|
add `<tt/.0/' to the end of short shlib lines if
|
|
<tt/PORTOBJFORMAT/ equals <tt/aout/, and will delete the
|
|
minor number from long shlib names if <tt/PORTOBJFORMAT/
|
|
equals <tt/elf/.
|
|
|
|
<p>In cases where you really need to install shlibs with
|
|
two versions on an ELF system or those with one version
|
|
on an a.out system (for instance, ports that install
|
|
compatibility libraries for other operating systems),
|
|
define the variable <tt/NO_FILTER_SHLIBS/. This will
|
|
turn off the editing of <tt/PLIST/ mentioned in the
|
|
previous paragraph.
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading><tt/ldconfig/</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>The <tt/ldconfig/ line in Makefiles should read:
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
${SETENV} OBJFORMAT=${PORTOBJFORMAT} ${LDCONFIG} -m ....
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
and in <tt/PLIST/:
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
@exec /usr/bin/env OBJFORMAT=%%PORTOBJFORMAT%% /sbin/ldconfig -m ...
|
|
@unexec /usr/bin/env OBJFORMAT=%%PORTOBJFORMAT%% /sbin/ldconfig -R
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
This is to ensure that the correct <tt/ldconfig/ will be
|
|
called depending on the format of the package, not the
|
|
default format of the system.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading><tt/MASTERDIR/<label id="porting:masterdir"></heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port needs to build slightly different versions
|
|
of packages by having a variable (for instance, resolution
|
|
or paper size) take different values, create one
|
|
subdirectory per package to make it easier for users to
|
|
see what to do, but try to share as many files as possible
|
|
between ports. Typically you only need a very short
|
|
Makefile in all but one of the directories if you use
|
|
variables cleverly. In the sole Makefiles, you can use
|
|
<tt>${MASTERDIR}</tt> to specify the directory
|
|
where the rest of the files are. Also, use a variable as
|
|
part of <tt><ref id="porting:pkgname" name="PKGNAME"></tt>
|
|
so the packages will have different names.
|
|
|
|
<p>This will be best demostrated by an example. This is
|
|
part of <tt>japanese/xdvi300/Makefile</tt>:
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
:
|
|
PKGNAME= ja-xdvi${RESOLUTION}-17
|
|
:
|
|
# default
|
|
RESOLUTION?= 300
|
|
.if ${RESOLUTION} != 118 && ${RESOLUTION} != 240 && \
|
|
${RESOLUTION} != 300 && ${RESOLUTION} != 400
|
|
@${ECHO} "Error: invalid value for RESOLUTION: \"${RESOLUTION}\""
|
|
@${ECHO} "Possible values are: 118, 240, 300 (default) and 400."
|
|
@${FALSE}
|
|
.endif
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
<tt>japanese/xdvi300</tt> also has all the regular
|
|
patches, package files, etc. If you type `<tt/make/'
|
|
there, it will take the default value for the resolution
|
|
(300) and build the port normally.
|
|
|
|
<p>As for other resolutions, this is the <em/entire/
|
|
<tt>xdvi118/Makefile</tt> (minus the comments):
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
RESOLUTION= 118
|
|
MASTERDIR= ${.CURDIR}/../xdvi300
|
|
|
|
.include "${MASTERDIR}/Makefile"
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
(<tt>xdvi240/Makefile</tt> and <tt>xdvi400/Makefile</tt>
|
|
are similar). The <tt>${MASTERDIR}</tt> definition
|
|
tells <tt/bsd.port.mk/ that the regular set of
|
|
subdirectories like <tt>${PATCHDIR}</tt> and
|
|
<tt>${PKGDIR}</tt> are to be found under
|
|
<tt/xdvi300/. The <tt/RESOLUTION=118/ line will override
|
|
the <tt/RESOLUTION?=300/ line in <tt>xdvi300/Makefile</tt>
|
|
and the port will be built with resolution set to 118.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Shared library versions</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>First, please read our <ref id="policies:shlib"
|
|
name="policy on shared library versioning"> to understand
|
|
what to do with shared library versions in general. Do
|
|
not blindly assume software authors know what they are
|
|
doing; many of them do not. It is very important that
|
|
these details are carefully considered, as we have quite a
|
|
unique situation where we are trying to have dozens of
|
|
potentially incompatible software pairs co-exist.
|
|
Careless port imports have caused great trouble regarding
|
|
shared libraries in the past (ever wondered why the port
|
|
<tt/jpeg-6b/ has a shared library version of `9.0'?).
|
|
If in doubt, send a message to the &a.ports;. Most of the
|
|
time, your job ends by determining the right shared
|
|
library version and making appropriate patches to
|
|
implement it.
|
|
|
|
<p>However, if there is a port which is a different version
|
|
of the same software already in the tree, the situation is
|
|
much more complex. In short, the FreeBSD implementation
|
|
does not allow the user to specify to the linker which
|
|
version of shared library to link against (the linker will
|
|
always pick the highest numbered version). This means, if
|
|
there is a <tt/libfoo.so.3.2/ and <tt/libfoo.so.4.0/ in
|
|
the system, there is no way to tell the linker to link a
|
|
particular application to <tt/libfoo.so.3.2/. It is
|
|
essentially completely overshadowed in terms of
|
|
compilation-time linkage. In this case, the only solution
|
|
is to rename the `base' part of the shared library. For
|
|
instance, change <tt/libfoo.so.4.0/ to
|
|
<tt/libfoo4.so.1.0/ so both version 3.2 and 4.0 can be
|
|
linked from other ports.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Manpages<label id="porting:manpages"></heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>The <tt/MAN[1-9LN]/ variables will automatically add any
|
|
manpages to <tt>pkg/PLIST</tt> (this means you must <em/not/
|
|
list manpages in the <tt/PLIST/ -- see <ref
|
|
id="porting:plist" name="generating PLIST"> for more).
|
|
It also makes the install stage automatically compress or
|
|
uncompress manpages depending on the setting of
|
|
<tt/NOMANCOMPRESS/ in <tt>/etc/make.conf</tt>.
|
|
|
|
<p>To specify whether the manpages are compressed upon
|
|
installation, use the <tt/MANCOMPRESSED/ variable. This
|
|
variable can take three values, `<tt/yes/', `<tt/no/' and
|
|
`<tt/maybe/'. `<tt/yes/' means manpages are already
|
|
installed compressed, `<tt/no/' means they are not, and `<tt/maybe/'
|
|
means the software already respects the value of
|
|
<tt/NOMANCOMPRESS/ so <tt/bsd.port.mk/ does not have to do
|
|
anything special.
|
|
|
|
<p><tt/MANCOMPRESSED/ is automatically set to `<tt/yes/' if
|
|
<tt/USE_IMAKE/ is set and <tt/NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES/ is not
|
|
set, and to `<tt/no/' otherwise. You don't have to
|
|
explicitly define it unless the default is not suitable for
|
|
your port.
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port anchors its man tree somewhere other than
|
|
<tt>PREFIX</tt>, you can use the <tt>MANPREFIX</tt> to set
|
|
it. Also, if only manpages in certain sections go in a
|
|
non-standard place, such as some Perl modules ports, you can
|
|
set individual man paths using
|
|
<tt>MAN<em>sect</em>PREFIX</tt> (where
|
|
<tt><em>sect</em></tt> is one of 1-9, L or N).
|
|
|
|
<p>If your manpages go to language-specific subdirectories,
|
|
set the name of the languages to <tt/MANLANG/. The value of
|
|
this variable defaults to <tt>""</tt> (i.e., English only).
|
|
|
|
<p>Here is an example that puts it all together.
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
MAN1= foo.1
|
|
MAN3= bar.3
|
|
MAN4= baz.4
|
|
MANLANG= "" ja
|
|
MAN3PREFIX= ${PREFIX}/share/foobar
|
|
MANCOMPRESSED= yes
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
states that six files
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
${PREFIX}/man/man1/foo.1.gz
|
|
${PREFIX}/man/ja/man1/foo.1.gz
|
|
${PREFIX}/share/foobar/man/man3/bar.3.gz
|
|
${PREFIX}/share/foobar/man/ja/man3/bar.3.gz
|
|
${PREFIX}/man/man4/baz.4.gz
|
|
${PREFIX}/man/ja/man4/baz.4.gz
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
are installed by this port.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Ports that require Motif</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>There are many programs that require a Motif library
|
|
(available from several commercial vendors, while there is
|
|
a free clone reported to be able to run many applications in
|
|
<tt>x11-toolkits/lesstif</tt>) to compile. Since
|
|
it is a popular toolkit and their licenses usually permit
|
|
redistribution of statically linked binaries, we have made
|
|
special provisions for handling ports that require Motif in a
|
|
way that we can easily compile binaries linked either
|
|
dynamically (for people who are compiling from the port) or
|
|
statically (for people who distribute packages).
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading>REQUIRES_MOTIF</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port requires Motif, define this variable in the
|
|
Makefile. This will prevent people who don't own a copy of
|
|
Motif from even attempting to build it.
|
|
|
|
<sect3>
|
|
<heading>${MOTIFLIB}</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>This variable will be set by <tt>bsd.port.mk</tt> to be the
|
|
appropriate reference to the Motif library. Please patch
|
|
the source to use this wherever the Motif library is
|
|
referenced in the Makefile or Imakefile.
|
|
|
|
<p>There are two common cases:
|
|
<enum>
|
|
<item>If the port refers to the Motif library as
|
|
`<tt>-lXm</tt>' in its Makefile or Imakefile, simply
|
|
substitute `<tt>${MOTIFLIB}</tt>' for it.
|
|
|
|
<item>If the port uses `<tt>XmClientLibs</tt>' in its
|
|
Imakefile, change it to `<tt>${MOTIFLIB}
|
|
${XTOOLLIB} ${XLIB}</tt>'.
|
|
</enum>
|
|
|
|
<p>Note that <tt>${MOTIFLIB}</tt> (usually) expands to
|
|
`<tt>-L/usr/X11R6/lib -lXm</tt>' or
|
|
`<tt>/usr/X11R6/lib/libXm.a</tt>', so there is no need to
|
|
add `<tt>-L</tt>' or `<tt>-l</tt>' in front.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>X11 fonts</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port installs fonts for the X window system, put
|
|
them in <tt>${X11BASE}/lib/X11/fonts/local</tt>. This
|
|
directory is new to XFree86 release 3.3.3. If it does not
|
|
exist, please create it, and print out a message urging the
|
|
user to update their XFree86 to 3.3.3 or newer, or at least
|
|
add this directory to the font path in
|
|
<tt>/etc/XF86Config</tt>.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Info files</heading>
|
|
<p>The new version of texinfo (included in 2.2.2-RELEASE and
|
|
onwards) contains a utility called `<tt/install-info/' to add
|
|
and delete entries to the `<tt/dir/' file. If your port
|
|
installs any info documents, please follow these instructions
|
|
so your port/package will correctly update the user's
|
|
<tt>&dollar{PREFIX}/info/dir</tt> file. (Sorry for the length
|
|
of this section, but it is imperative to weave all the info
|
|
files together. If done correctly, it will produce a
|
|
<em>beautiful</em> listing, so please bear with me! <tt/:)/
|
|
|
|
<p>First, this is what you (as a porter) need to know:
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
% install-info --help
|
|
install-info [OPTION]... [INFO-FILE [DIR-FILE]]
|
|
Install INFO-FILE in the Info directory file DIR-FILE.
|
|
|
|
Options:
|
|
--delete Delete existing entries in INFO-FILE;
|
|
don't insert any new entries.
|
|
:
|
|
--entry=TEXT Insert TEXT as an Info directory entry.
|
|
:
|
|
--section=SEC Put this file's entries in section SEC of the directory.
|
|
:
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<p>Note that this program will not actually <em/install/
|
|
info files; it merely inserts or deletes entries in the
|
|
<tt/dir/ file.
|
|
|
|
<p>Here's a seven-step procedure to convert ports to use
|
|
<tt/install-info/. I will use <tt>editors/emacs</tt> as an
|
|
example.
|
|
|
|
<enum>
|
|
<item>Look at the texinfo sources and make a patch to insert
|
|
<tt/@dircategory/ and <tt/@direntry/ statements to files
|
|
that don't have them. This is part of my patch:
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
--- ./man/vip.texi.org Fri Jun 16 15:31:11 1995
|
|
+++ ./man/vip.texi Tue May 20 01:28:33 1997
|
|
@@ -2,6 +2,10 @@
|
|
|
|
@setfilename ../info/vip
|
|
@settitle VIP
|
|
+@dircategory The Emacs editor and associated tools
|
|
+@direntry
|
|
+* VIP: (vip). A VI-emulation for Emacs.
|
|
+@end direntry
|
|
|
|
@iftex
|
|
@finalout
|
|
:
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<p>The format should be self-explanatory. Many authors leave
|
|
a <tt/dir/ file in the source tree that contains all the
|
|
entries you need, so look around before you try to write
|
|
your own. Also, make sure you look into related ports and
|
|
make the section names and entry indentations consistent (we
|
|
recommend that all entry text start at the 4th tab stop).
|
|
|
|
<p>Note that you can put only one info entry per file because
|
|
of a bug in `<tt>install-info --delete</tt>' that deletes
|
|
only the first entry if you specify multiple entries in the
|
|
<tt/@direntry/ section.
|
|
|
|
<p>You can give the <tt/dir/ entries to <tt/install-info/ as
|
|
arguments (<tt/--section/ and <tt/--entry/) instead of
|
|
patching the texinfo sources. I do not think this is a good
|
|
idea for ports because you need to duplicate the same
|
|
information in <em>three</em> places (<tt/Makefile/ and
|
|
<tt/@exec//<tt/@unexec/ of <tt/PLIST/; see below). However,
|
|
if you have a Japanese (or other multibyte encoding) info
|
|
files, you will have to use the extra arguments to
|
|
<tt/install-info/ because <tt/makeinfo/ can't handle those
|
|
texinfo sources. (See <tt/Makefile/ and <tt/PLIST/ of
|
|
<tt>japanese/skk</tt> for examples on how to do this).
|
|
|
|
<item>Go back to the port directory and do a `<tt>make clean;
|
|
make</tt>' and verify that the info files are regenerated
|
|
from the texinfo sources. Since the texinfo sources are
|
|
newer than the info files, they should be rebuilt when you
|
|
type <tt/make/; but many <tt/Makefile/s don't include
|
|
correct dependencies for info files. In emacs' case, I had
|
|
to patch the main <tt/Makefile.in/ so it will descend into
|
|
the <tt/man/ subdirectory to rebuild the info pages.
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
--- ./Makefile.in.org Mon Aug 19 21:12:19 1996
|
|
+++ ./Makefile.in Tue Apr 15 00:15:28 1997
|
|
@@ -184,7 +184,7 @@
|
|
# Subdirectories to make recursively. `lisp' is not included
|
|
# because the compiled lisp files are part of the distribution
|
|
# and you cannot remake them without installing Emacs first.
|
|
-SUBDIR = lib-src src
|
|
+SUBDIR = lib-src src man
|
|
|
|
# The makefiles of the directories in $SUBDIR.
|
|
SUBDIR_MAKEFILES = lib-src/Makefile man/Makefile src/Makefile oldXMenu/Makefile lwlib/Makefile
|
|
--- ./man/Makefile.in.org Thu Jun 27 15:27:19 1996
|
|
+++ ./man/Makefile.in Tue Apr 15 00:29:52 1997
|
|
@@ -66,6 +66,7 @@
|
|
${srcdir}/gnu1.texi \
|
|
${srcdir}/glossary.texi
|
|
|
|
+all: info
|
|
info: $(INFO_TARGETS)
|
|
|
|
dvi: $(DVI_TARGETS)
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<p>The second hunk was necessary because the default target in
|
|
the <tt/man/ subdir is called <tt/info/, while the
|
|
main Makefile wants to call <tt/all/. I also deleted the
|
|
installation of the <tt/info/ info file because we already
|
|
have one with the same name in <tt>/usr/share/info</tt>
|
|
(that patch is not shown here).
|
|
|
|
<item>If there is a place in the <tt/Makefile/ that is
|
|
installing the <tt/dir/ file, delete it. Your port may not
|
|
be doing it. Also, remove any commands that are otherwise
|
|
mucking around with the <tt/dir/ file.
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
--- ./Makefile.in.org Mon Aug 19 21:12:19 1996
|
|
+++ ./Makefile.in Mon Apr 14 23:38:07 1997
|
|
@@ -368,14 +368,8 @@
|
|
if [ `(cd ${srcdir}/info && /bin/pwd)` != `(cd ${infodir} && /bin/pwd)` ]; \
|
|
then \
|
|
(cd ${infodir}; \
|
|
- if [ -f dir ]; then \
|
|
- if [ ! -f dir.old ]; then mv -f dir dir.old; \
|
|
- else mv -f dir dir.bak; fi; \
|
|
- fi; \
|
|
cd ${srcdir}/info ; \
|
|
- (cd $${thisdir}; ${INSTALL_DATA} ${srcdir}/info/dir ${infodir}/dir); \
|
|
- (cd $${thisdir}; chmod a+r ${infodir}/dir); \
|
|
for f in ccmode* cl* dired-x* ediff* emacs* forms* gnus* info* message* mh-e* sc* vip*; do \
|
|
(cd $${thisdir}; \
|
|
${INSTALL_DATA} ${srcdir}/info/$$f ${infodir}/$$f; \
|
|
chmod a+r ${infodir}/$$f); \
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<item>(This step is only necessary if you are modifying an
|
|
existing port.) Take a look at <tt>pkg/PLIST</tt> and
|
|
delete anything that is trying to patch up
|
|
<tt>info/dir</tt>. They may be in <tt>pkg/INSTALL</tt> or
|
|
some other file, so search extensively.
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
Index: pkg/PLIST
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/pkg/PLIST,v
|
|
retrieving revision 1.15
|
|
diff -u -r1.15 PLIST
|
|
--- PLIST 1997/03/04 08:04:00 1.15
|
|
+++ PLIST 1997/04/15 06:32:12
|
|
@@ -15,9 +15,6 @@
|
|
man/man1/emacs.1.gz
|
|
man/man1/etags.1.gz
|
|
man/man1/ctags.1.gz
|
|
-@unexec cp %D/info/dir %D/info/dir.bak
|
|
-info/dir
|
|
-@unexec cp %D/info/dir.bak %D/info/dir
|
|
info/cl
|
|
info/cl-1
|
|
info/cl-2
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<item>Add a <tt/post-install/ target to the Makefile to create
|
|
a <tt/dir/ file if it is not there. Also, call
|
|
<tt/install-info/ with the installed info files.
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
Index: Makefile
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/Makefile,v
|
|
retrieving revision 1.26
|
|
diff -u -r1.26 Makefile
|
|
--- Makefile 1996/11/19 13:14:40 1.26
|
|
+++ Makefile 1997/05/20 10:25:09 1.28
|
|
@@ -20,5 +20,11 @@
|
|
post-install:
|
|
.for file in emacs-19.34 emacsclient etags ctags b2m
|
|
strip ${PREFIX}/bin/${file}
|
|
.endfor
|
|
+ if [ ! -f ${PREFIX}/info/dir ]; then \
|
|
+ ${SED} -ne '1,/Menu:/p' /usr/share/info/dir > ${PREFIX}/info/dir; \
|
|
+ fi
|
|
+.for info in emacs vip viper forms gnus mh-e cl sc dired-x ediff ccmode
|
|
+ install-info ${PREFIX}/info/${info} ${PREFIX}/info/dir
|
|
+.endfor
|
|
|
|
.include <bsd.port.mk>
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<p>Do not use anything other than <tt>/usr/share/info/dir</tt>
|
|
and the above command to create a new info file. In fact,
|
|
I'd add the first three lines of the above patch to
|
|
<tt/bsd.port.mk/ if you (the porter) wouldn't have to do it
|
|
in <tt/PLIST/ by yourself anyway.
|
|
|
|
<item>Edit <tt/PLIST/ and add equivalent <tt/@exec/ statements
|
|
and also <tt/@unexec/ for <tt/pkg_delete/. You do not need
|
|
to delete <tt>info/dir</tt> with <tt/@unexec/.
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
Index: pkg/PLIST
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/pkg/PLIST,v
|
|
retrieving revision 1.15
|
|
diff -u -r1.15 PLIST
|
|
--- PLIST 1997/03/04 08:04:00 1.15
|
|
+++ PLIST 1997/05/20 10:25:12 1.17
|
|
@@ -16,7 +14,15 @@
|
|
man/man1/etags.1.gz
|
|
man/man1/ctags.1.gz
|
|
+@unexec install-info --delete %D/info/emacs %D/info/dir
|
|
:
|
|
+@unexec install-info --delete %D/info/ccmode %D/info/dir
|
|
info/cl
|
|
info/cl-1
|
|
@@ -87,6 +94,18 @@
|
|
info/viper-3
|
|
info/viper-4
|
|
+@exec [ -f %D/info/dir ] || sed -ne '1,/Menu:/p' /usr/share/info/dir > %D/info/dir
|
|
+@exec install-info %D/info/emacs %D/info/dir
|
|
:
|
|
+@exec install-info %D/info/ccmode %D/info/dir
|
|
libexec/emacs/19.34/i386--freebsd/cvtmail
|
|
libexec/emacs/19.34/i386--freebsd/digest-doc
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<p>Note that the `<tt>@unexec install-info --delete</tt>'
|
|
commands have to be listed before the info files themselves
|
|
so they can read the files. Also, the `<tt>@exec
|
|
install-info</tt>' commands have to be after the info files
|
|
and the <tt/@exec/ command that creates the the <tt/dir/
|
|
file.
|
|
|
|
<item><ref id="porting:testing" name="Test"> and admire your
|
|
work. <tt/:)/ Check the <tt/dir/ file before and after each
|
|
step.
|
|
</enum>
|
|
|
|
<sect1>
|
|
<heading>The <tt/pkg/ Subdirectory</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>There are some tricks we haven't mentioned yet about the
|
|
<tt/pkg/ subdirectory that come in handy sometimes.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading><tt/MESSAGE/</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p><label id="porting:message">If you need to display a
|
|
message to the installer, you may place the message in
|
|
<tt>pkg/MESSAGE</tt>. This capability is often useful to
|
|
display additional installation steps to be taken after a
|
|
<tt/pkg_add/, or to display licensing information. Note the
|
|
<tt>pkg/MESSAGE</tt> file does not need to be added to
|
|
<tt>pkg/PLIST</tt>. Also, it will not get automatically
|
|
printed if the user is using the port, not the package, so
|
|
you should probably display it from the <tt/post-install/
|
|
target by yourself.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading><tt/INSTALL/</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port needs execute commands when the binary package
|
|
is installed with <tt/pkg_add/ you can do with via the pkg/INSTALL
|
|
script. This script will automatically be added to the
|
|
package, and will be run twice by pkg_add. The first time
|
|
will as `<tt>INSTALL ${PKGNAME} PRE-INSTALL</tt>'
|
|
and the second time as `<tt>INSTALL ${PKGNAME} POST-INSTALL</tt>'.
|
|
`<tt>$2</tt>' can be tested to determine which mode
|
|
the script is being run in.
|
|
The `<tt>PKG_PREFIX</tt>' environmental variable will be set to
|
|
the package installation directory. See man <tt>pkg_add(1)</tt>
|
|
for additional information.
|
|
Note, that this script is not run automatically if you install
|
|
the port with `<tt>make install</tt>'. If you are depending
|
|
on it being run, you will have to explicitly call it on your
|
|
port's Makefile.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading><tt/REQ/</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port needs to determine if it should install or
|
|
not, you can create a <tt>pkg/REQ</tt> ``requirements''
|
|
script. It will be invoked automatically at
|
|
installation/deinstallation time to determine whether or not
|
|
installation/deinstallation should proceed.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Changing <tt/PLIST/ based on make variables<label
|
|
id="porting:plist"></heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Some ports, particularly the p5- ports, need to change
|
|
their <tt/PLIST/ depending on what options they are
|
|
configured with (or version of perl, in the case of p5-
|
|
ports). To make this easy, any instances in the <tt/PLIST/
|
|
of <tt/%%OSREL%%/, <tt/%%PERL_VER%%/, and
|
|
<tt/%%PERL_VERSION%%/ will be substituted for appropriately.
|
|
The value of <tt/%%OSREL%%/ is the numeric revision of the
|
|
operating system (e.g., `2.2.7'). <tt/%%PERL_VERSION%%/ is
|
|
the full version number of perl (e.g., `5.00502') and
|
|
<tt/%%PERL_VER%%/ is the perl version number minus the
|
|
patchlevel (e.g., `5.005').
|
|
|
|
<p>If you need to make other substitutions, you
|
|
can set the <tt>PLIST_SUB</tt> variable with a list of
|
|
<tt>VAR=VALUE</tt> pairs and instances of `<tt>%%VAR%%</tt>'
|
|
will be substituted with `<tt/VALUE/' in the <tt/PLIST/.
|
|
For instance, if you have a port that installs many files in
|
|
a version-specific subdirectory, you can put something
|
|
like
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
OCTAVE_VERSION= 2.0.13
|
|
PLIST_SUB= OCTAVE_VERSION=${OCTAVE_VERSION}
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
in the <tt/Makefile/ and use <tt>%%OCTAVE_VERSION%%</tt>
|
|
wherever the version shows up in <tt/PLIST/. That way, when
|
|
you upgrade the port, you will not have to change dozens (or
|
|
in some cases, hundreds) of lines in the <tt/PLIST/.
|
|
|
|
<p>This substitution (as well as addition of any <ref
|
|
id="porting:manpages" name="man pages">) will be done
|
|
between the <tt/do-install/ and <tt/post-install/ targets,
|
|
by reading from <tt>${PLIST}</tt> and writing to
|
|
<tt>${TMPPLIST}</tt> (default:
|
|
<tt>${WRKDIR}/.PLIST.mktmp</tt>). So if your port
|
|
builds <tt>${PLIST}</tt> on the fly, do so in or
|
|
before <tt/do-install/. Also, if your port needs to edit
|
|
the resulting file, do so in <tt/post-install/ to a file
|
|
named <tt/${TMPPLIST}/.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Changing the names of files in the <tt/pkg/ subdirectory<label
|
|
id="porting:pkgsubdir"></heading>
|
|
<p>All the filenames in the <tt/pkg/ subdirectory are defined
|
|
using variables so you can change them in your Makefile if
|
|
need be. This is expecially useful when you are sharing the
|
|
same <tt/pkg/ subdirectory among several ports or have to
|
|
write to one of the above files (see <ref
|
|
id="porting:wrkdir" name="writing to places other than
|
|
WRKDIR"> for why it is a bad idea to write directry into the
|
|
<tt/pkg/ subdirectory).
|
|
|
|
<p>Here is a list of variable names and their default values.
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
COMMENT ${PKGDIR}/COMMENT
|
|
DESCR ${PKGDIR}/DESCR
|
|
PLIST ${PKGDIR}/PLIST
|
|
PKGINSTALL ${PKGDIR}/INSTALL
|
|
PKGDEINSTALL ${PKGDIR}/DEINSTALL
|
|
PKGREQ ${PKGDIR}/REQ
|
|
PKGMESSAGE ${PKGDIR}/MESSAGE
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<p>Please change these variables rather than overriding
|
|
<tt>PKG_ARGS</tt>. If you change <tt>PKG_ARGS</tt>, those
|
|
files will not correctly be installed in
|
|
<tt>/var/db/pkg</tt> upon install from a port.
|
|
|
|
<sect1>
|
|
<heading>Licensing Problems</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Some software packages have restrictive licenses or can be in
|
|
violation to the law (PKP's patent on public key crypto,
|
|
ITAR (export of crypto software) to name just two of them).
|
|
What we can do with them vary a lot, depending on the exact
|
|
wordings of the respective licenses.
|
|
|
|
<p>Note that it is your responsibility as a porter to read the
|
|
licensing terms of the software and make sure that the FreeBSD
|
|
project will not be held accountable of violating them by
|
|
redistributing the source or compiled binaries either via ftp
|
|
or CD-ROM. If in doubt, please contact the &a.ports;.
|
|
|
|
<p>There are two variables you can set in the Makefile to handle
|
|
the situations that arise frequently:
|
|
|
|
<enum>
|
|
<item>If the port has a `do not sell for profit' type of
|
|
license, set the variable <tt>NO_CDROM</tt> to the string
|
|
describing the reason why. We will make
|
|
sure such ports won't go into the CD-ROM come release time.
|
|
The distfile and package will still be available via ftp.
|
|
|
|
<item>If the resulting package needs to be built uniquely for
|
|
each site, or the resulting binary package can't be distributed
|
|
due to licensing, set the variable <tt>NO_PACKAGE</tt> to
|
|
the string describing the reason why.
|
|
We will make sure such packages won't go on the ftp site, nor
|
|
into the CD-ROM come release time. The distfile will still be
|
|
included on both however.
|
|
|
|
<item>If the port has legal restrictions on who can use it
|
|
(e.g., crypto stuff) or has a `no commercial use' license,
|
|
set the variable <tt>RESTRICTED</tt> to be the string
|
|
describing the reason why. For such ports, the
|
|
distfiles/packages will not be available even from our ftp
|
|
sites.
|
|
</enum>
|
|
|
|
<p>Note: The GNU General Public License (GPL), both version 1
|
|
and 2, should not be a problem for ports.
|
|
|
|
<p>Note: If you are a committer, make sure you update the
|
|
<tt>ports/LEGAL</tt> file too.
|
|
|
|
<sect1>
|
|
<heading>Upgrading</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>When you notice that a port is out of date compared to the
|
|
latest version from the original authors, first make sure you
|
|
have the latest port. You can find them in the
|
|
<tt>ports-current</tt> directory of the ftp mirror sites.
|
|
|
|
<p>The next step is to send a mail to the maintainer, if one is
|
|
listed in the port's Makefile. That person may already be
|
|
working on an upgrade, or have a reason to not upgrade the
|
|
port right now (because of, for example, stability problems
|
|
of the new version).
|
|
|
|
<p>If the maintainer asks you to do the upgrade or there isn't
|
|
any such person to begin with, please make the upgrade and
|
|
send the recursive diff (either unified or context diff is
|
|
fine, but port committers appear to prefer unified diff more)
|
|
of the new and old ports directories
|
|
to us (e.g., if your modified port directory is called
|
|
`<tt>superedit</tt>' and the original as in our tree is
|
|
`<tt>superedit.bak</tt>', then send us the result of `<tt>diff
|
|
-ruN superedit.bak superedit</tt>'). Please examine the output
|
|
to make sure all the changes make sense. The best way to send
|
|
us the diff is by including it to <tt>send-pr(1)</tt> (category
|
|
`ports'). Please
|
|
mention any added or deleted files in the message, as they
|
|
have to be explicitly specified to CVS when doing a commit.
|
|
If the diff is more than about 20KB, please compress and
|
|
uuencode it; otherwise, just include it in as is in the PR.
|
|
|
|
<sect1>
|
|
<heading>Do's and Dont's
|
|
<label id="porting:dads"></heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Here is a list of common do's and dont's that you encounter
|
|
during the porting process. You should check your own port
|
|
against this list, but you can also check ports in the PR
|
|
database that others have submitted. Submit any comments on
|
|
ports you check as described in <ref id="contrib:general"
|
|
name="Bug Reports and General Commentary">. Checking ports in
|
|
the PR database will both make it faster for us to commit them,
|
|
and prove that you know what you are doing.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Strip Binaries</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Do strip binaries. If the original source already strips
|
|
the binaries, fine; otherwise you should add a <tt>post-install</tt>
|
|
rule to do it yourself. Here is an example:
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
post-install:
|
|
strip ${PREFIX}/bin/xdl
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<p>Use the <tt>file</tt> command on the installed executable
|
|
to check whether the binary is stripped or not. If it
|
|
does not say `not stripped', it is stripped.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>INSTALL_* macros</heading>
|
|
<p>Do use the macros provided in <tt>bsd.port.mk</tt> to
|
|
ensure correct modes and ownership of files in your own
|
|
*-install targets. They are:
|
|
|
|
<itemize>
|
|
<item><tt>${INSTALL_PROGRAM}</tt> is a command to install
|
|
binary executables.
|
|
<item><tt>${INSTALL_SCRIPT}</tt> is a command to install
|
|
executable scripts.
|
|
<item><tt>${INSTALL_DATA}</tt> is a command to install
|
|
sharable data.
|
|
<item><tt>${INSTALL_MAN}</tt> is a command to install
|
|
manpages and other documentation (it doesn't compress anything).
|
|
</itemize>
|
|
|
|
<p>These are basically the <tt>install</tt> command with all
|
|
the appropriate flags. See below for an example on how to
|
|
use them.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading><tt/WRKDIR/<label id="porting:wrkdir"></heading>
|
|
<p>Do not write anything to files outside <tt/WKRDIR/.
|
|
<tt/WRKDIR/ is the only place that is guaranteed to be
|
|
writable during the port build (see <ref id="ports:cd"
|
|
name="compiling ports frem CDROM"> for an example of
|
|
building ports from a read-only tree). If you need to
|
|
modify some file in <tt>${PKGDIR}</tt>, do so by <ref
|
|
id="porting:pkgsubdir" name="redefining a variable">, not by
|
|
writing over it.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading><tt/WRKDIRPREFIX/</heading>
|
|
<p>Make sure your port honors <tt/WRKDIRPREFIX/. (Most ports
|
|
don't have to worry about this.) In particular, if you are
|
|
referring to a <tt>${WRKDIR}</tt> of another port,
|
|
note that the correct location is
|
|
<tt>${WRKDIRPREFIX}${PORTSDIR}/subdir/name/work</tt>,
|
|
not <tt>${PORTSDIR}/subdir/name/work</tt> or
|
|
<tt>${.CURDIR}/../../subdir/name/work</tt> or some
|
|
such.
|
|
|
|
<p>Also, if you are defining <tt/WRKDIR/ yourself, make sure
|
|
you prepend <tt>${WRKDIRPREFIX}${.CURDIR}</tt>
|
|
in the front.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Differentiating operating systems and OS versions<label
|
|
id="porting:versions"></heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>You may come across code that needs modifications or
|
|
conditional compilation based upon what version of UNIX it is
|
|
running under. If you need to make such changes to the code
|
|
for conditional compilation, make sure you make the changes as
|
|
general as possible so that we can back-port code to FreeBSD
|
|
1.x systems and cross-port to other BSD systems such as 4.4BSD
|
|
from CSRG, BSD/386, 386BSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD.
|
|
|
|
<p>The preferred way to tell 4.3BSD/Reno (1990) and newer versions of
|
|
the BSD code apart is by using the `<tt>BSD</tt>' macro
|
|
defined in <tt><sys/param.h></tt>. Hopefully that file
|
|
is already included; if not, add the code:
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
#if (defined(__unix__) || defined(unix)) && !defined(USG)
|
|
#include <sys/param.h>
|
|
#endif
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<p>to the proper place in the <tt>.c</tt> file. We believe that every
|
|
system that defines these to symbols has sys/param.h. If you find
|
|
a system that doesn't, we would like to know. Please send
|
|
mail to the &a.ports;.
|
|
|
|
<p>Another way is to use the GNU Autoconf style of doing this:
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H
|
|
#include <sys/param.h>
|
|
#endif
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
Don't forget to add <tt>-DHAVE_SYS_PARAM_H</tt> to the <tt>CFLAGS</tt>
|
|
in the Makefile for this method.
|
|
|
|
Once you have <tt><sys/param.h></tt> included, you may use:
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
#if (defined(BSD) && (BSD >= 199103))
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
to detect if the code is being compiled on a 4.3 Net2 code
|
|
base or newer (e.g. FreeBSD 1.x, 4.3/Reno, NetBSD 0.9, 386BSD,
|
|
BSD/386 1.1 and below).
|
|
|
|
Use:
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
#if (defined(BSD) && (BSD >= 199306))
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
to detect if the code is being compiled on a 4.4 code base or
|
|
newer (e.g. FreeBSD 2.x, 4.4, NetBSD 1.0, BSD/386 2.0 or
|
|
above).
|
|
|
|
The value of the BSD macro is 199506 for the 4.4BSD-Lite2 code
|
|
base. This is stated for informational purposes only. It should
|
|
not be used to distinguish between version of FreeBSD based only
|
|
on 4.4-Lite vs. versions that have merged in changes from 4.4-Lite2.
|
|
The __FreeBSD__ macro should be used instead.
|
|
|
|
<p>Use sparingly:
|
|
|
|
<itemize>
|
|
<item><tt>__FreeBSD__</tt> is defined in all versions of
|
|
FreeBSD. Use it if the change you are making ONLY affects
|
|
FreeBSD. Porting gotchas like the use of
|
|
<tt>sys_errlist[]</tt> vs <tt>strerror()</tt> are
|
|
Berkeleyisms, not FreeBSD changes.
|
|
|
|
<item>In FreeBSD 2.x, <tt>__FreeBSD__</tt> is defined to be
|
|
<tt>2</tt>. In earlier versions, it is <tt>1</tt>. Later
|
|
versions will bump it to match their major version number.
|
|
|
|
<item>If you need to tell the difference between a FreeBSD 1.x
|
|
system and a FreeBSD 2.x or 3.x system, usually the right answer is
|
|
to use the <tt>BSD</tt> macros described above. If there
|
|
actually is a FreeBSD specific change (such as special
|
|
shared library options when using `<tt>ld</tt>') then it is
|
|
OK to use <tt>__FreeBSD__</tt> and `<tt>#if __FreeBSD__ >
|
|
1</tt>' to detect a FreeBSD 2.x and later system.
|
|
|
|
If you need more granularity in detecting FreeBSD systems since
|
|
2.0-RELEASE you can use the following:
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
#if __FreeBSD__ >= 2
|
|
#include <osreldate.h>
|
|
# if __FreeBSD_version >= 199504
|
|
/* 2.0.5+ release specific code here */
|
|
# endif
|
|
#endif
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
<tt>__FreeBSD_version</tt> values:
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
2.0-RELEASE: 199411
|
|
2.1-current's: 199501, 199503
|
|
2.0.5-RELEASE: 199504
|
|
2.2-current before 2.1: 199508
|
|
2.1.0-RELEASE: 199511
|
|
2.2-current before 2.1.5: 199512
|
|
2.1.5-RELEASE: 199607
|
|
2.2-current before 2.1.6: 199608
|
|
2.1.6-RELEASE: 199612
|
|
2.1.7-RELEASE: 199612
|
|
2.2-RELEASE: 220000
|
|
2.2.1-RELEASE: 220000 (yes, no change)
|
|
2.2-STABLE after 2.2.1-RELEASE: 220000 (yes, still no change)
|
|
2.2-STABLE after texinfo-3.9: 221001
|
|
2.2-STABLE after top: 221002
|
|
2.2.2-RELEASE: 222000
|
|
2.2-STABLE after 2.2.2-RELEASE: 222001
|
|
2.2.5-RELEASE: 225000
|
|
2.2-STABLE after 2.2.5-RELEASE: 225001
|
|
2.2-STABLE after ldconfig -R merge: 225002
|
|
2.2.6-RELEASE: 226000
|
|
2.2.7-RELEASE: 227000
|
|
2.2-STABLE after 2.2.7-RELEASE: 227001
|
|
2.2-STABLE after semctl(2) change: 227002
|
|
2.2.8-RELEASE: 228000
|
|
2.2-STABLE after 2.2.8-RELEASE: 228001
|
|
3.0-current before mount(2) change: 300000
|
|
3.0-current after mount(2) change: 300001
|
|
3.0-current after semctl(2) change: 300002
|
|
3.0-current after ioctl arg changes: 300003
|
|
3.0-current after ELF conversion: 300004
|
|
3.0-RELEASE: 300005
|
|
3.0-current after 3.0-RELEASE: 300006
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
(Note that 2.2-STABLE sometimes identifies itself as
|
|
"2.2.[5678]-STABLE" after the 2.2.5-RELEASE.)
|
|
The pattern used to be year followed by the month, but we
|
|
decided to change it to a more straightforward major/minor
|
|
system starting from 2.2. This is because the parallel
|
|
development on several branches made it infeasible to
|
|
classify the releases simply by their real release dates.
|
|
(Note that if you are making a port now, you don't have to
|
|
worry about old -current's; they are listed here just for
|
|
your reference.)
|
|
|
|
</itemize>
|
|
|
|
<p>In the hundreds of ports that have been done, there have
|
|
only been one or two cases where <tt>__FreeBSD__</tt>
|
|
should have been used. Just because an earlier port
|
|
screwed up and used it in the wrong place does not mean
|
|
you should do so too.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Writing something after <tt/bsd.port.mk/</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Do not write anything after the `<tt>.include
|
|
<bsd.port.mk></tt>' line. It usually can be avoided
|
|
by including <tt/bsd.port.pre.mk/ somewhere in the middle of
|
|
your Makefile and <tt/bsd.port.post.mk/ at the end. (Note
|
|
that you need to include either the <tt/pre.mk//<tt/post.mk/
|
|
pair or <tt/bsd.port.mk/ only; don't mix those two.) The
|
|
former only defines a few variables, which can be used in
|
|
tests in Makefiles; the latter defines the rest. Here are
|
|
some important variables defined in <tt/bsd.port.pre.mk/.
|
|
(This is not the entire list; please read <tt/bsd.port.mk/
|
|
for the complete list.)
|
|
|
|
<descrip>
|
|
|
|
<tag>&dollar{ARCH}</tag> The archetecture, as returned by
|
|
`<tt>uname -m</tt>' (e.g., `i386').
|
|
|
|
<tag>&dollar{OPSYS}</tag> The operating system type, as returned by
|
|
`<tt>uname -s</tt>' (e.g., `FreeBSD').
|
|
|
|
<tag>&dollar{OSREL}</tag> The release version of the operating
|
|
system (e.g., `2.1.5', `2.2.7').
|
|
|
|
<tag>&dollar{OSVERSION}</tag> The numeric version of the
|
|
operating system, same as <ref id="porting:versions"
|
|
name="__FreeBSD_version"> above.
|
|
|
|
<tag>&dollar{PORTOBJFORMAT}</tag> The object format of the
|
|
system (`aout' or `elf').
|
|
|
|
<tag>&dollar{LOCALBASE}</tag> The base of the `local' tree
|
|
(e.g., `/usr/local/').
|
|
|
|
<tag>&dollar{X11BASE}</tag> The base of the `X11' tree
|
|
(e.g., `/usr/X11R6/').
|
|
|
|
<tag>&dollar{PREFIX}</tag> Where the port installs itself (see
|
|
<ref id="porting:prefix" name="more on PREFIX">).
|
|
|
|
</descrip>
|
|
|
|
<p>Note: if you have to define the variables <tt/USE_IMAKE/,
|
|
<tt/USE_X_PREFIX/ or <tt/MASTERDIR/, do so before including
|
|
<tt/bsd.port.pre.mk/; everything else can be either before
|
|
or after <tt/bsd.port.pre.mk/. Here are some examples of
|
|
things you can write after <tt/bsd.port.pre.mk/:
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
# no need to compile lang/perl5 if perl5 is already in system
|
|
.if ${OSVERSION} > 300003
|
|
BROKEN= perl is in system
|
|
.endif
|
|
|
|
# only one shlib version number for ELF
|
|
.if ${PORTOBJFORMAT} == "elf"
|
|
TCL_LIB_FILE= ${TCL_LIB}.${SHLIB_MAJOR}
|
|
.else
|
|
TCL_LIB_FILE= ${TCL_LIB}.${SHLIB_MAJOR}.${SHLIB_MINOR}
|
|
.endif
|
|
|
|
# software already makes link for ELF, but not for a.out
|
|
post-install:
|
|
.if ${PORTOBJFORMAT} == "aout"
|
|
${LN} -sf liblinpack.so.1.0 ${PREFIX}/lib/liblinpack.so
|
|
.endif
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Install additional documentation</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If your software has some documentation other than the
|
|
standard man and info pages that you think is useful for the
|
|
user, install it under <tt>${PREFIX}/share/doc</tt>.
|
|
This can be done, like the previous item, in the
|
|
<tt>post-install</tt> target.
|
|
|
|
<p>Create a new directory for your port. The directory name
|
|
should reflect what the port is. This usually means
|
|
<tt>${PKGNAME}</tt> minus the version part. However,
|
|
if you think the user might want different versions of the
|
|
port to be installed at the same time, you
|
|
can use the whole <tt>${PKGNAME}</tt>.
|
|
|
|
<p>Make the installation dependent to the variable
|
|
<tt>NOPORTDOCS</tt> so that users can disable it in
|
|
<tt>/etc/make.conf</tt>, like this:
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
post-install:
|
|
.if !defined(NOPORTDOCS)
|
|
${MKDIR} ${PREFIX}/share/doc/xv
|
|
${INSTALL_MAN} ${WRKSRC}/docs/xvdocs.ps ${PREFIX}/share/doc/xv
|
|
.endif
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<p>Do not forget to add them to <tt>pkg/PLIST</tt> too! (Do not
|
|
worry about <tt>NOPORTDOCS</tt> here; there is currently no
|
|
way for the packages to read variables from
|
|
<tt>/etc/make.conf</tt>.)
|
|
|
|
<p>Also, you can use the <tt>pkg/MESSAGE</tt> file to display
|
|
messages upon installation. See the <ref id="porting:message"
|
|
name="using pkg/MESSAGE"> section for details.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>DIST_SUBDIR</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Do not let your port clutter <tt>/usr/ports/distfiles</tt>. If
|
|
your port requires a lot of files to be
|
|
fetched, or contains a file that has a name that might conflict
|
|
with other ports (e.g., `Makefile'), set
|
|
<tt>${DIST_SUBDIR}</tt> to the name of the port
|
|
(<tt>${PKGNAME}</tt> without the version part should work
|
|
fine). This will change <tt>${DISTDIR}</tt> from the
|
|
default <tt>/usr/ports/distfiles</tt> to
|
|
<tt>/usr/ports/distfiles/${DIST_SUBDIR}</tt>, and in
|
|
effect puts everything that is required for your port into that
|
|
subdirectory.
|
|
|
|
<p>It will also look at the subdirectory with the same name on the
|
|
backup master site at <tt>ftp.freebsd.org</tt>. (Setting
|
|
<tt>${DISTDIR}</tt> explicitly in your Makefile will not
|
|
accomplish this, so please use <tt>${DIST_SUBDIR}</tt>.)
|
|
|
|
<p>Note this does not affect the <tt>${MASTER_SITES}</tt>
|
|
you define in your Makefile.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>RCS strings</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Do not put RCS strings in patches. CVS will mangle them
|
|
when we put the files into the ports tree, and when we check
|
|
them out again, they will come out different and the patch
|
|
will fail. RCS strings are surrounded by dollar
|
|
(`<tt>$</tt>') signs, and typically start with
|
|
`<tt>$Id</tt>' or `<tt>$RCS</tt>'.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Recursive diff</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Using the recurse (`<tt>-r</tt>') option to <tt>diff</tt>
|
|
to generate patches is fine, but please take a look at the
|
|
resulting patches to make sure you don't have any
|
|
unnecessary junk in there. In particular, diffs between two
|
|
backup files, Makefiles when the port uses Imake or GNU
|
|
<tt/configure/, etc., are unnecessary and should be deleted. If
|
|
you had to edit <tt/configure.in/ and run <tt/autoconf/ to
|
|
regenerate <tt/configure/, do not take the diffs of
|
|
<tt/configure/ (it often grows to a few thousand lines!);
|
|
define <tt/USE_AUTOCONF=yes/ and take the diffs of
|
|
<tt/configure.in/.
|
|
|
|
<p>Also, if you had to delete a file, then you can do it in the
|
|
<tt>post-extract</tt> target rather than as part of the
|
|
patch. Once you are happy with the resulting diff, please
|
|
split it up into one source file per patch file.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>PREFIX<label id="porting:prefix"></heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Do try to make your port install relative to
|
|
<tt>${PREFIX}</tt>. (The value of this variable will be
|
|
set to <tt>${LOCALBASE}</tt> (default
|
|
<tt>/usr/local</tt>), unless <tt>${USE_X_PREFIX}</tt>
|
|
or <tt>${USE_IMAKE}</tt> is set, in which case it will be
|
|
<tt>${X11BASE}</tt> (default <tt>/usr/X11R6</tt>).)
|
|
|
|
<p>Not hard-coding `<tt>/usr/local</tt>' or `<tt>/usr/X11R6</tt>'
|
|
anywhere in the source will make the port much more flexible and
|
|
able to cater to the needs of other sites. For X ports that use
|
|
imake, this is automatic; otherwise, this can often be done by
|
|
simply replacing the occurrences of `<tt>/usr/local</tt>' (or
|
|
`<tt>/usr/X11R6</tt>' for X ports that do not use imake) in the
|
|
various scripts/Makefiles in the port to read
|
|
`<tt>${PREFIX}</tt>', as this variable is automatically
|
|
passed down to every stage of the build and install processes.
|
|
|
|
<p>Do not set <tt>USE_X_PREFIX</tt> unless your port truly requires
|
|
it (i.e. it links against X libs or it needs to reference
|
|
files in <tt>${X11BASE}</tt>).
|
|
|
|
<p>The variable <tt>${PREFIX}</tt> can be reassigned in your
|
|
Makefile or in the user's environment. However, it is strongly
|
|
discouraged for individual ports to set this variable explicitly
|
|
in the Makefiles.
|
|
|
|
<p>Also, refer to programs/files from other ports with the
|
|
variables mentioned above, not explicit pathnames. For instance,
|
|
if your port requires a macro <tt>PAGER</tt> to be the full
|
|
pathname of <tt>less</tt>, use the compiler flag:
|
|
<verb>-DPAGER=\"${PREFIX}/bin/less\"</verb> or
|
|
<verb>-DPAGER=\"${LOCALBASE}/bin/less\"</verb> if this is an
|
|
X port, instead of <verb>-DPAGER=\"/usr/local/bin/less\".</verb>
|
|
This way it will have a better chance of working if the system
|
|
administrator has moved the whole `/usr/local' tree somewhere
|
|
else.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Subdirectories</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Try to let the port put things in the right subdirectories
|
|
of <tt>${PREFIX}</tt>. Some ports lump everything
|
|
and put it in the subdirectory with the port's name, which is
|
|
incorrect. Also, many ports put everything except binaries,
|
|
header files and manual pages in the a subdirectory of
|
|
`<tt>lib</tt>', which does not bode well with the BSD
|
|
paradigm. Many of the files should be moved to one of the
|
|
following: `<tt>etc</tt>' (setup/configuration files),
|
|
`<tt>libexec</tt>' (executables started internally),
|
|
`<tt>sbin</tt>' (executables for superusers/managers),
|
|
`<tt>info</tt>' (documentation for info browser) or
|
|
`<tt>share</tt>' (architecture independent files). See man
|
|
<tt>hier(7)</tt> for details, the rule governing
|
|
<tt>/usr</tt> pretty much applies to <tt>/usr/local</tt>
|
|
too. The exception are ports dealing with USENET `news'.
|
|
They may use <tt>${PREFIX}/news</tt> as a destination
|
|
for their files.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Cleaning up empty directories<label id="porting:cleaning"></heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Do make your ports clean up after themselves when they are
|
|
deinstalled. This is usually accomplished by adding
|
|
<tt/@dirrm/ lines for all directories that are specifically
|
|
created by the port. Note you need to delete subdirectories
|
|
before you can delete parent directories, as in:
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
:
|
|
lib/X11/oneko/pixmaps/cat.xpm
|
|
lib/X11/oneko/sounds/cat.au
|
|
:
|
|
@dirrm lib/X11/oneko/pixmaps
|
|
@dirrm lib/X11/oneko/sounds
|
|
@dirrm lib/X11/oneko
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<p>However, sometimes <tt/@dirrm/ will give you errors because
|
|
other ports also share the same subdirectory. You can call
|
|
<tt/rmdir/ from <tt/@unexec/ to remove only empty
|
|
directories without warning:
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
:
|
|
@unexec rmdir %D/share/doc/gimp 2>/dev/null || true
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
This will neither print any error messages nor cause
|
|
<tt/pkg_delete/ to exit abnormally even if
|
|
<tt>${PREFIX}/share/doc/gimp</tt> is not empty due to other
|
|
ports installing some files in there.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>UIDs</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port requires a certain user to be on the
|
|
installed system, let the <tt>pkg/INSTALL</tt> script call
|
|
<tt>pw</tt> to create it automatically. Look at
|
|
<tt>net/cvsup-mirror</tt> for an example.
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port must use the same user/group ID number when it is
|
|
installed as a binary package as when it was compiled, then you
|
|
must choose a free UID from 50 to 99 and register it
|
|
below. Look at <tt>japanese/Wnn</tt> for an example.
|
|
|
|
<p>Make sure you don't use a UID already used by the system or
|
|
other ports. This is the current list of UIDs between 50
|
|
and 99.
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
majordom:*:54:54:Majordomo Pseudo User:/usr/local/majordomo:/nonexistent
|
|
cyrus:*:60:60:the cyrus mail server:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
|
|
gnats:*:61:1:GNATS database owner:/usr/local/share/gnats/gnats-db:/bin/sh
|
|
uucp:*:66:66:UUCP pseudo-user:/var/spool/uucppublic:/usr/libexec/uucp/uucico
|
|
xten:*:67:67:X-10 daemon:/usr/local/xten:/nonexistent
|
|
pop:*:68:6:Post Office Owner (popper):/nonexistent:/nonexistent
|
|
wnn:*:69:7:Wnn:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
|
|
ifmail:*:70:66:Ifmail user:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
|
|
pgsql:*:70:70:PostgreSQL pseudo-user:/usr/local/pgsql:/bin/sh
|
|
ircd:*:72:72:IRCd hybrid:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
|
|
alias:*:81:81:QMail user:/var/qmail/alias:/nonexistent
|
|
qmaill:*:83:81:QMail user:/var/qmail:/nonexistent
|
|
qmaild:*:82:81:QMail user:/var/qmail:/nonexistent
|
|
qmailq:*:85:82:QMail user:/var/qmail:/nonexistent
|
|
qmails:*:87:82:QMail user:/var/qmail:/nonexistent
|
|
qmailp:*:84:81:QMail user:/var/qmail:/nonexistent
|
|
qmailr:*:86:82:QMail user:/var/qmail:/nonexistent
|
|
msql:*:87:87:mSQL-2 pseudo-user:/var/db/msqldb:/bin/sh
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<p>Please include a notice when you submit a port (or an upgrade)
|
|
that reserves a new UID or GID in this range. This allows us
|
|
to keep the list of reserved IDs up to date.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Do things rationally</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>The Makefile should do things simply and reasonably. If you
|
|
can make it a couple of lines shorter or more readable, then
|
|
do so. Examples include using a make `<tt>.if</tt>' construct
|
|
instead of a shell `<tt>if</tt>' construct, not redefining
|
|
<tt>do-extract</tt> if you can redefine <tt>${EXTRACT*}</tt>
|
|
instead, and using <tt>$GNU_CONFIGURE</tt> instead of
|
|
`<tt>CONFIGURE_ARGS += --prefix=${PREFIX}</tt>'.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Respect CFLAGS</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>The port should respect the <tt>${CFLAGS}</tt> variable.
|
|
If it doesn't, please add `<tt>NO_PACKAGE=ignores cflags</tt>'
|
|
to the Makefile.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Configuration files</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If your port requires some configuration files in
|
|
<tt>${PREFIX}/etc</tt>, do <em/not/ just install them
|
|
and list them in <tt>pkg/PLIST</tt>. That will cause
|
|
<tt/pkg_delete/ to delete files carefully edited by the user
|
|
and a new installation to wipe them out.
|
|
|
|
<p>Instead, install sample files with a suffix
|
|
(`<tt><filename>.sample</tt>' will work well) and
|
|
print out a <ref id="porting:message" name="message">
|
|
pointing out that the user has to copy and edit the file
|
|
before the software can be made to work.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Portlint</heading>
|
|
<p>Do check your port with <ref id="porting:portlint"
|
|
name="portlint"> before you submit or commit it.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Feedback</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Do send applicable changes/patches to the original
|
|
author/maintainer for inclusion in next release of the code.
|
|
This will only make your job that much easier for the next
|
|
release.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Miscellanea</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>The files <tt>pkg/DESCR</tt>, <tt>pkg/COMMENT</tt>, and
|
|
<tt>pkg/PLIST</tt> should each be double-checked. If you are
|
|
reviewing a port and feel they can be worded better, do so.
|
|
|
|
<p>Don't copy more copies of the GNU General Public License into
|
|
our system, please.
|
|
|
|
<p>Please be careful to note any legal issues! Don't let us
|
|
illegally distribute software!
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>If you are stuck....</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Do look at existing examples and the <tt>bsd.port.mk</tt>
|
|
file before asking us questions! <tt>;)</tt>
|
|
|
|
<p>Do ask us questions if you have any trouble! Do not just
|
|
beat your head against a wall! <tt>:)</tt>
|
|
|
|
<sect1>
|
|
<heading>A Sample Makefile<label id="porting:samplem"></heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>Here is a sample Makefile that you can use to create a new
|
|
port. Make sure you remove all the extra comments (ones
|
|
between brackets)!
|
|
|
|
<p>It is recommended that you follow this format (ordering of
|
|
variables, empty lines between sections, etc.). This format
|
|
is designed so that the most important information is easy to
|
|
locate. We recommend that you use <ref id="porting:portlint"
|
|
name="portlint"> to check the Makefile.
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
[the header...just to make it easier for us to identify the ports.]
|
|
# New ports collection makefile for: xdvi
|
|
[the version required header should updated when upgrading a port.]
|
|
# Version required: pl18 [things like "1.5alpha" are fine here too]
|
|
[this is the date when the first version of this Makefile was created.
|
|
Never change this when doing an update of the port.]
|
|
# Date created: 26 May 1995
|
|
[this is the person who did the original port to FreeBSD, in particular, the
|
|
person who wrote the first version of this Makefile. Remember, this should
|
|
not be changed when upgrading the port later.]
|
|
# Whom: Satoshi Asami <asami@FreeBSD.ORG>
|
|
#
|
|
# $Id$
|
|
[ ^^^^ This will be automatically replaced with RCS ID string by CVS
|
|
when it is committed to our repository.]
|
|
#
|
|
|
|
[section to describe the port itself and the master site - DISTNAME
|
|
is always first, followed by PKGNAME (if necessary), CATEGORIES,
|
|
and then MASTER_SITES, which can be followed by MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR.
|
|
After those, one of EXTRACT_SUFX or DISTFILES can be specified too.]
|
|
DISTNAME= xdvi
|
|
PKGNAME= xdvi-pl18
|
|
CATEGORIES= print
|
|
[do not forget the trailing slash ("/")!
|
|
if you aren't using MASTER_SITE_* macros]
|
|
MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB}
|
|
MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= applications
|
|
[set this if the source is not in the standard ".tar.gz" form]
|
|
EXTRACT_SUFX= .tar.Z
|
|
|
|
[section for distributed patches -- can be empty]
|
|
PATCH_SITES= ftp://ftp.sra.co.jp/pub/X11/japanese/
|
|
PATCHFILES= xdvi-18.patch1.gz xdvi-18.patch2.gz
|
|
|
|
[maintainer; *mandatory*! This is the person (preferably with commit
|
|
privileges) who a user can contact for questions and bug reports - this
|
|
person should be the porter or someone who can forward questions to the
|
|
original porter reasonably promptly. If you really do not want to have
|
|
your address here, set it to "ports@FreeBSD.ORG".]
|
|
MAINTAINER= asami@FreeBSD.ORG
|
|
|
|
[dependencies -- can be empty]
|
|
RUN_DEPENDS= gs:${PORTSDIR}/print/ghostscript
|
|
LIB_DEPENDS= Xpm.5:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/xpm
|
|
|
|
[this section is for other standard bsd.port.mk variables that do not
|
|
belong to any of the above]
|
|
[If it asks questions during configure, build, install...]
|
|
IS_INTERACTIVE= yes
|
|
[If it extracts to a directory other than ${DISTNAME}...]
|
|
WRKSRC= ${WRKDIR}/xdvi-new
|
|
[If the distributed patches were not made relative to ${WRKSRC}, you
|
|
may need to tweak this]
|
|
PATCH_DIST_STRIP= -p1
|
|
[If it requires a "configure" script generated by GNU autoconf to be run]
|
|
GNU_CONFIGURE= yes
|
|
[If it requires GNU make, not /usr/bin/make, to build...]
|
|
USE_GMAKE= yes
|
|
[If it is an X application and requires "xmkmf -a" to be run...]
|
|
USE_IMAKE= yes
|
|
[et cetera.]
|
|
|
|
[non-standard variables to be used in the rules below]
|
|
MY_FAVORITE_RESPONSE= "yeah, right"
|
|
|
|
[then the special rules, in the order they are called]
|
|
pre-fetch:
|
|
i go fetch something, yeah
|
|
|
|
post-patch:
|
|
i need to do something after patch, great
|
|
|
|
pre-install:
|
|
and then some more stuff before installing, wow
|
|
|
|
[and then the epilogue]
|
|
.include <bsd.port.mk>
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<sect1>
|
|
<heading>Package Names<label id="porting:pkgname"></heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>The following are the conventions you should follow in
|
|
naming your packages. This is to have our package directory
|
|
easy to scan, as there are already lots and lots of packages
|
|
and users are going to turn away if they hurt their eyes!
|
|
|
|
<p>The package name should look like
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
[<language>-]<name>[[-]<compiled.specifics>]-<version.string.numbers>;
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
If your <tt>${DISTNAME}</tt> doesn't look like that,
|
|
set <tt>${PKGNAME}</tt> to something in that format.
|
|
|
|
<enum>
|
|
<item>FreeBSD strives to support the native language of its
|
|
users. The `<tt><language></tt>' part should be a two letter
|
|
abbreviation of the natural language defined by ISO-639 if
|
|
the port is specific to a certain language. Examples are
|
|
`ja' for Japanese, `ru' for Russian, `vi' for Vietnamese,
|
|
`zh' for Chinese, `ko' for Korean and `de' for German.
|
|
|
|
<item>The `<tt><name></tt>' part should be all
|
|
lowercases, except for a really large package (with lots of
|
|
programs in it). Things like XFree86 (yes there really is a
|
|
port of it, check it out) and ImageMagick fall into this
|
|
category. Otherwise, convert the name (or at least the
|
|
first letter) to lowercase. If the capital letters are
|
|
important to the name (for example, with one-letter names
|
|
like R or V) you may use capital letters at your discretion.
|
|
There is a tradition of naming Perl 5 modules by prepending
|
|
`p5-' and converting the double-colon separator to a hyphen;
|
|
for example, the `Data::Dumper' module becomes
|
|
`p5-Data-Dumper'. If the software in question has numbers,
|
|
hyphens, or underscores in its name, you may include them as
|
|
well (like `kinput2').
|
|
|
|
<item>If the port can be built with different <ref
|
|
id="porting:masterdir" name="hardcoded defaults">
|
|
(usually part of the directory name in a family of ports), the
|
|
`<tt><compiled.specifics></tt>' part should state the
|
|
compiled-in defaults (the hyphen is optional). Examples are
|
|
papersize and font units.
|
|
|
|
<item>The version string should be a period-separated list of
|
|
integers and single lowercase alphabetics. The only exception
|
|
is the string `pl' (meaning `patchlevel'), which can be used
|
|
<em>only</em> when there are no major and minor version
|
|
numbers in the software.
|
|
</enum>
|
|
|
|
<p>Here are some (real) examples on how to convert a
|
|
<tt>${DISTNAME}</tt> into a suitable
|
|
<tt>${PKGNAME}</tt>:
|
|
|
|
<tscreen><verb>
|
|
DISTNAME PKGNAME Reason
|
|
mule-2.2.2 mule-2.2.2 no prob at all
|
|
XFree86-3.1.2 XFree86-3.1.2 ditto
|
|
EmiClock-1.0.2 emiclock-1.0.2 no uppercase names for single programs
|
|
gmod1.4 gmod-1.4 need hyphen after `<name>'
|
|
xmris.4.02 xmris-4.02 ditto
|
|
rdist-1.3alpha rdist-1.3a no strings like `alpha' allowed
|
|
es-0.9-beta1 es-0.9b1 ditto
|
|
v3.3beta021.src tiff-3.3 what the heck was that anyway? ;)
|
|
tvtwm tvtwm-pl11 version string always required
|
|
piewm piewm-1.0 ditto
|
|
xvgr-2.10pl1 xvgr-2.10.1 `pl' allowed only when no maj/minor numbers
|
|
gawk-2.15.6 ja-gawk-2.15.6 Japanese language version
|
|
psutils-1.13 psutils-letter-1.13 papersize hardcoded at package build time
|
|
pkfonts pkfonts300-1.0 package for 300dpi fonts
|
|
</verb></tscreen>
|
|
|
|
<p>If there is absolutely no trace of version information in the
|
|
original source and it is unlikely that the original author
|
|
will ever release another version, just set the version string
|
|
to `1.0' (like the piewm example above). Otherwise, ask the
|
|
original author or use the date string (`yy.mm.dd') as the
|
|
version.
|
|
|
|
<sect1>
|
|
<heading>Categories<label id="porting:categories"></heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>As you already know, ports are classified in several
|
|
categories. But for this to work, it is important that
|
|
porters and users understand what each category is and how we
|
|
decide what to put in each category.
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Current list of categories</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>First, this is the current list of port categories. Those
|
|
marked with an asterisk (<tt/*/) are <em/virtual/ categories
|
|
-- those that do not have a corresponding subdirectory in
|
|
the ports tree. Note that for non-virtual categories, you
|
|
will find a one-line description in the <tt>pkg/COMMENT</tt>
|
|
file in that subdirectory (e.g.,
|
|
<tt>archivers/pkg/COMMENT</tt>).
|
|
|
|
<descrip>
|
|
<tag><tt/archivers/</tag> Archiving tools.
|
|
<tag><tt/astro/</tag> Astronomical ports.
|
|
<tag><tt/audio/</tag> Sound support.
|
|
<tag><tt/benchmarks/</tag> Benchmarking utilities.
|
|
<tag><tt/biology/</tag> Biology-related software.
|
|
<tag><tt/cad/</tag> Computer aided design tools.
|
|
<tag><tt/chinese/</tag> Chinese language support.
|
|
<tag><tt/comms/</tag> Communication software. Mostly software
|
|
to talk to your serial port.
|
|
<tag><tt/converters/</tag> Character code converters.
|
|
<tag><tt/databases/</tag> Databases.
|
|
<tag><tt/deskutils/</tag> Things that used to be on the
|
|
desktop before computers were invented.
|
|
<tag><tt/devel/</tag> Development utilities. Do not put
|
|
libraries here just because they are libraries -- unless
|
|
they truly don't belong to anywhere else, they shouldn't be
|
|
in this category.
|
|
<tag><tt/editors/</tag> General editors. Specialized editors
|
|
go in the section for those tools (e.g., a
|
|
mathematical-formula editor will go in <tt/math/).
|
|
<tag><tt/elisp/</tag> Emacs-lisp ports.
|
|
<tag><tt/emulators/</tag> Emulators for other operating
|
|
systems. Terminal emulators do <em/not/ belong here --
|
|
X-based ones should go to <tt/x11/ and text-based ones to
|
|
either <tt/comms/ or <tt/misc/, depending on the exact
|
|
functionality.
|
|
<tag><tt/games/</tag> Games.
|
|
<tag><tt/german/</tag> German language support.
|
|
<tag><tt/graphics/</tag> Graphics utilities.
|
|
<tag><tt/japanese/</tag> Japanese language support.
|
|
<tag><tt/kde*/</tag> Ports that form the K Desktop Environment
|
|
(kde).
|
|
<tag><tt/korean/</tag> Korean language support.
|
|
<tag><tt/lang/</tag> Programming languages.
|
|
<tag><tt/mail/</tag> Mail software.
|
|
<tag><tt/math/</tag> Numerical computation software and other
|
|
utilities for mathematics.
|
|
<tag><tt/mbone/</tag> MBone applications.
|
|
<tag><tt/misc/</tag> Miscellaneous utilities -- basically
|
|
things that doesn't belong to anywhere else. This is the
|
|
only category that should not appear with any other
|
|
non-virtual category. If you have <tt/misc/ with something
|
|
else in your <tt/CATEGORIES/ line, that means you can safely
|
|
delete <tt/misc/ and just put the port in that other
|
|
subdirectory! <tt/:)/
|
|
<tag><tt/net/</tag> Miscellaneous networking software.
|
|
<tag><tt/news/</tag> USENET news software.
|
|
<tag><tt/offix*/</tag> Ports from the OffiX suite.
|
|
<tag><tt/perl5*/</tag> Ports that require perl version 5 to
|
|
run.
|
|
<tag><tt/pilot*/</tag> Software to use with the 3Com PalmPilot.
|
|
<tag><tt/plan9/</tag> Various programs from Plan9.
|
|
<tag><tt/print/</tag> Printing software. Desktop publishing
|
|
tools (previewers, etc.) belong here too.
|
|
<tag><tt/python*/</tag> Software written in python.
|
|
<tag><tt/russian/</tag> Russian language support.
|
|
<tag><tt/security/</tag> Security utilities.
|
|
<tag><tt/shells/</tag> Command line shells.
|
|
<tag><tt/sysutils/</tag> System utilities.
|
|
<tag><tt/tcl75*/</tag> Ports that use tcl version 7.5 to run.
|
|
<tag><tt/tcl76*/</tag> Ports that use tcl version 7.6 to run.
|
|
<tag><tt/tcl80*/</tag> Ports that use tcl version 8.0 to run.
|
|
<tag><tt/tcl81*/</tag> Ports that use tcl version 8.1 to run.
|
|
<tag><tt/textproc/</tag> Text processing utilities. It does
|
|
not include desktop publishing tools, which go to
|
|
<tt/print/.
|
|
<tag><tt/tk41*/</tag> Ports that use tk version 4.1 to run.
|
|
<tag><tt/tk42*/</tag> Ports that use tk version 4.2 to run.
|
|
<tag><tt/tk80*/</tag> Ports that use tk version 8.0 to run.
|
|
<tag><tt/tk81*/</tag> Ports that use tk version 8.1 to run.
|
|
<tag><tt/vietnamese/</tag> Vietnamese language support.
|
|
<tag><tt/www/</tag> Software related to the World Wide Web.
|
|
HTML language support belong here too.
|
|
<tag><tt/x11/</tag> The X window system and friends. This
|
|
category is only for software that directly support the
|
|
window system. Do not put regular X applications here. If
|
|
your port is an X application, define <tt/USE_XLIB/ (implied
|
|
by <tt/USE_IMAKE/) and put it in appropriate categories.
|
|
Also, many of them go into other <tt/x11-*/ categories (see
|
|
below).
|
|
<tag><tt/x11-clocks/</tag> X11 clocks.
|
|
<tag><tt/x11-fm/</tag> X11 file managers.
|
|
<tag><tt/x11-fonts/</tag> X11 fonts and font utilities.
|
|
<tag><tt/x11-toolkits/</tag> X11 toolkits.
|
|
<tag><tt/x11-wm/</tag> X11 window managers.
|
|
</descrip>
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<heading>Choosing the right category</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>As many of the categories overlap, you often have to choose
|
|
which of the categories should be the `primary' category of
|
|
your port. There are several rules that govern this issue.
|
|
Here is the list of priorities, in decreasing order of
|
|
precedence.
|
|
|
|
<enum>
|
|
<item>Language specific categories always come first. For
|
|
example, if your port installs Japanese X11 fonts, then your
|
|
<tt/CATEGORIES/ line should read `<tt>japanese
|
|
x11-fonts</tt>'.
|
|
|
|
<item>Specific categories win over less-specific ones. For
|
|
instance, an HTML editor should be listed as `<tt>www
|
|
editors</tt>', not the other way around. Also, you don't
|
|
need to list <tt/net/ when the port belongs to either of
|
|
<tt/mail/, <tt/mbone/, <tt/news/, <tt/security/ or <tt/www/.
|
|
|
|
<item><tt/x11/ is used as a secondary category only when the
|
|
primary category is a natural language. In particular, you
|
|
should <em/not/ put <tt/x11/ in the category line for X
|
|
applications.
|
|
|
|
<item>If your port truly doesn't belong to anywhere else, put
|
|
it in <tt/misc/.
|
|
</enum>
|
|
|
|
<p>If you are not sure about the category, please put a
|
|
comment to that effect in your <tt/send-pr/ submission so we
|
|
can discuss it before importing it. (If you are a
|
|
committer, send a note to &a.ports; so we can discuss it
|
|
first -- too often new ports are imported to a wrong
|
|
category only to be moved right away.)
|
|
|
|
<sect1>
|
|
<heading>Changes to this document and the ports system</heading>
|
|
|
|
<p>If you maintain a lot of ports, you should consider following
|
|
the &a.ports;. Important changes to
|
|
the way ports work will be announced there. You can always
|
|
find more detailed information on the latest changes by
|
|
looking at <htmlurl
|
|
url="http://www.FreeBSD.ORG/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/share/mk/bsd.port.mk"
|
|
name="the bsd.port.mk CVS log">.
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<sect1>
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<heading>That is It, Folks!</heading>
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<p>Boy, this sure was a long tutorial, wasn't it? Thanks for
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following us to here, really.
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<p>Well, now that you know how to do a port, let us go at it and
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convert everything in the world into ports! That is the
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easiest way to start contributing to the FreeBSD Project!
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<tt>:)</tt>
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