To incorporate the updates, you need write access to the distribution directory from a Linux machine, with a working version of rpm installed. There are three steps involved:
If you maintain a mirror of the updates
directory, you can at any time
produce a CD including the current updates by repeating these steps.
During the installation process, some programs are run directly off the CD.
Unfortunately, the FTP program does not always preserve the protection
modes of the files and directories that are copied. Therefore, it is
necessary to make sure that execute permission is given to programs, shell
scripts and shared libraries, before the directory is burned on the
CD. This is done by running the updatePerm
script on your local copy of
the distribution:
#!/bin/bash RHVERSION=6.0 LIST=/tmp/er3hd3w25 CDDIR=/jaz/redhat-${RHVERSION} # Find all directories, and make sure they have +x permission find $CDDIR -type d -exec chmod -c 755 {} \; # Find all files that are executables, shell or perl scripts find $CDDIR -type f | file -f - | grep -v RPM \ | egrep -i 'executable|perl|bourne|shell' | cut -f1 -d: > $LIST # Find shared libraries find $CDDIR -name \*.so >> $LIST # Make them executable while read file do if [ ! -x $file ] ; then chmod -c 755 $file fi done < $LIST /bin/rm $LIST exit 0
The following script called updateCD
copies all files from the update
directory to the RPMS directory. The script uses some nifty rpm tricks to
determine what packages in the updates directory are more recent. Older
packages are moved to the ${OLD}
directory.
#! /bin/bash # This script updates rpms in a RedHat distribution found in $RPMDIR. # The old rpms will be placed in $OLDDIR. # The new rpms should be located in $UPDDIR. # The new images are in $IMGDIR # The images to be updated are in $OMGDIR # The architechture is $ARCH. RHVERSION=6.0 ARCH=i386 CDDIR=/jaz/redhat-${RHVERSION} RPMDIR=${CDDIR}/${ARCH}/RedHat/RPMS UPDDIR=${CDDIR}/updates/${ARCH} IMGDIR=${CDDIR}/updates/images/${ARCH} OMGDIR=${CDDIR}/${ARCH}/images OLDDIR=${CDDIR}/old if [ ! -d $OLDDIR ] ; then echo making directory $OLDDIR mkdir $OLDDIR fi allow_null_glob_expansion=1 for rpm in ${UPDDIR}/*.rpm ; do NAME=`rpm --queryformat "%{NAME}" -qp $rpm` unset OLDNAME for oldrpm in ${RPMDIR}/${NAME}*.rpm ; do if [ `rpm --queryformat "%{NAME}" -qp $oldrpm` = "$NAME" ]; then OLDNAME=$oldrpm; break fi done if [ -z "$OLDNAME" ]; then echo $NAME is new cp -pv $rpm $RPMDIR else if [ `basename $rpm` != `basename $OLDNAME` ]; then mv $OLDNAME $OLDDIR cp -pv $rpm $RPMDIR fi fi done # Copy new boot image files to the right place... for newfile in ${IMGDIR}/* ; do file=${OMGDIR}/$(basename ${newfile}) if [ $newfile -nt $file ] ; then cp -pv $newfile $file fi done exit 0
Certain RPMs, specifically the kernel and kernel-smp packages, include the platform in the filename but not in the package name. For example, the "kernel" package comes in several flavors:
kernel-2.2.5-22.i386.rpm
kernel-2.2.5-22.i586.rpm
kernel-2.2.5-22.i686.rpm
but for all three rpm -qp returns just "kernel" for the package name.
As you can see, this "outsmarts" the updateCD script. The result is that only the last one gets properly copied. The first two get copied, but are then moved to the $OLD directory! Preferably, RedHat should name these differently. But for now, the easy solution is to move the packages by hand, after running updateCD. (Thanks to Kyle B. Ferrio <kyle@U.Arizona.EDU>)
Joshua Sarro <mthed@shore.net> has contributed a perl script called updateMirror.pl which can deal with the situation. You can fetch it here: http://imsb.au.dk/~mok/linux/doc/updateMirror.pl.
When installing from the CD, the installation program on the CD relies on
the file RedHat/base/hdlist
describing what RPM
packages are available on the CD. The hdlist
file can be generated
by the program misc/src/install/genhdlist
. This
program must be run with the absolute path to the root of the distribution as
the only argument. Here is the updateHdlist
script which calls that program:
#!/bin/bash RHVERSION=6.0 ARCH=i386 echo generating hdlist... CDDIR=/jaz/redhat-${RHVERSION} GENHDDIR=${CDDIR}/${ARCH}/misc/src/install chmod u+x ${GENHDDIR}/genhdlist chmod 644 ${CDDIR}/${ARCH}/RedHat/base/hdlist ${GENHDDIR}/genhdlist ${CDDIR}/${ARCH} || echo "*** GENHDLIST FAILED ***" exit 0
NOTE: After having incorporated the updates in the main RedHat/RPMS
directory, your copy of the distribution is no longer a mirror of the Red
Hat distribution site. Actually, it is more up-to-date! Therefore, if you
attempt to mirror the distribution, older versions of the RPM's that have
been updated will be downloaded once more, and the updates deleted.
As distributed with RedHat version 5.2 and earlier, genhdlist
CRASHES if there are files in the RedHat/RPMS
directory which are
not RPM files! This causes problems, because in the 5.2
distribution, there are a couple of non-RPM files named ls-lR
and
ls-lR.gz
in RedHat/RPMS
. Therefore, you must remove all
non-RPM files from the directory. Alternatively, you can apply the
following patch to misc/src/install/genhdlist.c
and
do a make. The patch will cause genhdlist
to ignore any non-RPM files.
*** genhdlist.c.orig Fri Nov 27 12:08:13 1998 --- genhdlist.c Fri Nov 27 12:08:20 1998 *************** *** 12,23 **** --- 12,26 ---- #define FILENAME_TAG 1000000 + /* Not used apparently... + int tags[] = { RPMTAG_NAME, RPMTAG_VERSION, RPMTAG_RELEASE, RPMTAG_SERIAL, RPMTAG_FILENAMES, RPMTAG_FILESIZES, RPMTAG_GROUP, RPMTAG_REQUIREFLAGS, RPMTAG_REQUIRENAME, RPMTAG_REQUIREVERSION, RPMTAG_DESCRIPTION, RPMTAG_SUMMARY, RPMTAG_PROVIDES, RPMTAG_SIZE, RPMTAG_OBSOLETES }; int numTags = sizeof(tags) / sizeof(int); + */ int main(int argc, char ** argv) { char buf[300]; *************** *** 26,34 **** --- 29,39 ---- struct dirent * ent; int fd, rc, isSource; Header h; + /* not used int count, type; int i; void * ptr; + */ if (argc != 2) { fprintf(stderr, "usage: genhdlist <dir>\n"); *************** *** 74,79 **** --- 79,85 ---- rc = rpmReadPackageHeader(fd, &h, &isSource, NULL, NULL); + if (!rc) { headerRemoveEntry(h, RPMTAG_POSTIN); headerRemoveEntry(h, RPMTAG_POSTUN); headerRemoveEntry(h, RPMTAG_PREIN); *************** *** 110,115 **** --- 116,122 ---- headerWrite(outfd, h, HEADER_MAGIC_YES); headerFree(h); close(fd); + } } errno = 0;
The comps file defines how the packages are bundled during the installation. In the Red Hat distribution, this is done according to the functionality they provide, for example:
Sometime during the installation process, the user is presented with a dialog called "Components to install". Some of the components have been preselected, and others not. The last item on the components list is called "Everything". According to the Red Hat documentation, selecting every package will require close to 1 Gb of free disk space.
On the dialog box, there also is an option that enables the user to
customize exactly what packages will be installed. Customizing the
installation by hand, or selecting "Everything" in the components list is
the only way to have your own packages installed unless you modify the
RedHat/base/comps
file.
The format of the comps
file currently starts with a
header describing the version of the comps format, followed by an empty
line.
0.1
<empty line>
After this, the components are listed, separated by empty lines:
<component 1>
<empty line>
<component 2>
<empty line>
.
.
<component n>
<empty line>
EOF
Each component has the following definition:
(0|1) (--hide)? <name>
<RPM 1>
<RPM 2>
...
<RPM n>
end
Before the name of each component, 0 or 1 is given. A value of 1 here means that the component is chosen by default, and 0 means it's not. The option "--hide" means that you will not see the entry, unless you choose "expert" installation. The first component is called "Base", and that is special, in the sense that it must be present and it does not show up in the dialog (you can't deselect the base installation, which makes sense...)
Next follows a list of rpm packages belonging to that component. Note that this is the package name stored in the rpm file, and not any part of the file name of the package (although it is often the same).
By adding your packages to the comps
file, you can
customize your own distribution, and make sure that your packages will be
installed by default. One thing to be careful about is interdependence
among your packages, but here, you are on your own :-) A word of warning:
be careful not to add or remove extra whitespace in the file. Examine the
existing comps
file (make a copy of the original) to
see how it's done (or check
i386/misc/src/install/pkgs.c
if you want to see how
the file is parsed).