Annotation of www/ports.html, Revision 1.81
1.47 naddy 1: <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2 Final//EN">
1.11 deraadt 2: <html>
1.25 deraadt 3: <head>
4: <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
5: <meta name="resource-type" content="document">
1.47 naddy 6: <meta name="description" content="The OpenBSD Ports and Packages Collection">
1.25 deraadt 7: <meta name="keywords" content="openbsd,ports">
8: <meta name="distribution" content="global">
1.77 nick 9: <meta name="copyright" content="copyright 1997-2004 by OpenBSD.">
1.27 brad 10: <title>OpenBSD Ports and Packages</title>
1.47 naddy 11: <link rev="made" href="mailto:www@openbsd.org">
1.43 jufi 12: </head>
1.25 deraadt 13:
14: <body text="#000000" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" link="#23238E">
15:
1.68 jsyn 16: <a href="index.html"><img alt="[OpenBSD]" height="30" width="141" src="images/smalltitle.gif" border="0"></a>
1.30 espie 17:
1.47 naddy 18: <h2><font color="#e00000">The Ports & Packages collection</font></h2>
1.25 deraadt 19:
1.47 naddy 20: <hr>
21:
1.53 naddy 22: <h3><font color="#0000e0">Index</font></h3>
23: <ul>
24: <li><a href="#Motivation">Motivation</a></li>
25: <li><a href="#Get">Getting Packages</a></li>
26: <li><a href="#stable">Ports and Packages Update for an OpenBSD Release</a></li>
27: <li><a href="#Manage">Managing Installed Packages</a></li>
28: <li><a href="#Use">Using Ports</a></li>
29: <li><a href="#Life">Life Cycle of the Ports Tree</a></li>
30: <li><a href="#XFree86">Ports and XFree86</a></li>
1.55 heko 31: <li><a href="#Example">Example Use of the Ports Tree</a></li>
32: <li><a href="#Advanced">Advanced Usage of the Ports Tree</a></li>
1.53 naddy 33: <li><a href="#Create">Creating New Ports</a></li>
1.56 heko 34: <li><a href="#Lag">When a Port Is Lagging Behind the Mainstream Version</a></li>
1.53 naddy 35: <li><a href="#Help">Problems and Contacts</a></li>
36: </ul>
37:
38: <hr>
39:
40: <h3><font color="#0000e0"><a name="Motivation">Motivation</a></font></h3>
1.25 deraadt 41:
42: OpenBSD is a fairly complete system of its own, but still there is a lot
1.60 jcs 43: of software that one might want to see added. However, there is the problem
44: of where to draw the line as to what to include, as well as the occasional
1.25 deraadt 45: licensing and export restriction problems. As OpenBSD is supposed to be
46: a small stand-alone UNIX-like operating system, some things just can't be
47: shipped with the system.
48:
49: <p>
1.47 naddy 50: <strong><font color="#e00000">
1.31 espie 51: The ports & packages collection does NOT go through the thorough security audit that OpenBSD follows.
52: Although we strive to keep the quality of the packages collection high, we just do not have enough human
53: resources to ensure the same level of robustness and security.
54: </font></strong>
1.25 deraadt 55:
56: <p>
1.31 espie 57: The port collection, originally borrowed from
58: <a href="http://www.freebsd.org/">FreeBSD</a>, fills this gap.
59: The concept is to have, for each third-party software, a Makefile that
1.25 deraadt 60: controls
61: <ul>
62: <li>where to fetch it,
63: <li>how to do the fetch,
64: <li>what it depends upon (if anything),
65: <li>how to alter the sources (if needed),
66: <li>and how to configure, build and install it.
67: </ul>
68: This information is kept in a directory hierarchy under the
69: /usr/ports directory.
1.31 espie 70:
71: <p>
72: Packages are the binary equivalent of ports. A compiled port becomes
1.55 heko 73: a package that can be registered into the system using
1.63 rohee 74: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=pkg_add&sektion=1&format=html">pkg_add(1)</a>
1.31 espie 75:
76: <p>
1.47 naddy 77: <strong><font color="#e00000">
1.36 brad 78: Packages look like simple <code>.tgz</code> bundles, but they should
1.33 espie 79: always be added using
1.47 naddy 80: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=pkg_add&sektion=1&format=html">pkg_add(1)</a>,
1.33 espie 81: as there might be some extra information that only
1.47 naddy 82: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=pkg_add&sektion=1&format=html">pkg_add(1)</a>
1.33 espie 83: knows how to handle.</font></strong>
1.36 brad 84: Tip: you can distinguish between packages and <strong>.tgz</strong> bundles
1.33 espie 85: using
1.47 naddy 86: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=pkg_info&sektion=1&format=html">pkg_info(1)</a>.
1.31 espie 87:
1.53 naddy 88: <h3><font color="#0000e0"><a name="Get">Getting Packages</a></font></h3>
1.31 espie 89:
90: A large collection of pre-compiled packages is available for most common
91: architectures.
92: <ul>
1.34 jufi 93: <li>On the CD-Rom (that you can order <a href="orders.html">here</a>),
1.31 espie 94: <li>On the <a href=ftp.html>ftp mirror sites</a>.
1.40 beck 95: <li>Browsed and retrieved from the web package lists:
96: <ul>
1.80 pvalchev 97: <li><a href="http://www.openbsd.org/3.6_packages/">Packages for OpenBSD 3.6</a>
1.78 pvalchev 98: <li><a href="http://www.openbsd.org/3.5_packages/">Packages for OpenBSD 3.5</a>
1.40 beck 99: </ul>
1.31 espie 100: </ul>
101:
1.44 espie 102:
1.31 espie 103: Adding a package is as easy as
1.36 brad 104: <code>pkg_add pkgname.tgz</code>.
1.71 ian 105: If you are grabbing packages from a single source (a package repository),
1.39 espie 106: set PKG_PATH to that repository URL, in order to grab dependencies.
1.31 espie 107:
108: <p>
1.80 pvalchev 109: For instance, to install the Gimp package for the 3.6 release on an i386
1.31 espie 110: machine off the ftp site (including dependencies), do:
111:
112: <pre>
1.80 pvalchev 113: # setenv PKG_PATH ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/3.6/packages/i386/
1.78 pvalchev 114: # pkg_add ${PKG_PATH}gimp-1.2.5.tgz
1.31 espie 115: </pre>
116:
1.53 naddy 117: <h3><font color="#0000e0"><a name="stable">Ports and Packages Update for an OpenBSD Release</a></font></h3>
1.45 espie 118: <p>
119: The 2.7 release saw the introduction of a stable branch for the ports tree.
120: <p>
1.80 pvalchev 121: For instance, to grab the stable branch for the 3.6 release:
1.45 espie 122: <pre>
123: $ cd /usr/ports
1.80 pvalchev 124: $ cvs -q -d anoncvs@some.anon.server:/cvs up -r OPENBSD_3_6 -Pd
1.45 espie 125: </pre>
126: <p>
127: Starting with the 2.8 release, selected binary packages are also made
1.69 naddy 128: available.
1.46 espie 129: Please refer to the
1.45 espie 130: <a href="pkg-stable.html">stable packages page</a> to find out about
131: updated packages and important updates to the stable branch.
1.79 robert 132: If you want to receive security announcements, you can subscribe
133: to the ports-security mailing list.
1.45 espie 134: </p>
135: <p>
136: Package names are <strong>always</strong> changed in case of a package
137: update, to avoid any risk of confusion between a package from the release
138: and a bug-fixed package.
139: </p>
140:
1.53 naddy 141: <h3><font color="#0000e0"><a name="Manage">Managing Installed Packages</a></font></h3>
1.31 espie 142:
1.47 naddy 143: The <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=packages&sektion=7&format=html">packages(7)</a>
1.31 espie 144: manual page holds useful information about ways to manage
145: installed packages, solve conflicts (files that already exist) and handle
146: dependencies.
147: <p>
1.45 espie 148: As of OpenBSD 2.8, to update a package you must:
1.31 espie 149: <ul>
1.33 espie 150: <li>Remove the old package using
1.47 naddy 151: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=pkg_delete&sektion=1&format=html">pkg_delete(1)</a>
1.33 espie 152: <li>Add the new package using
1.47 naddy 153: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=pkg_add&sektion=1&format=html">pkg_add(1)</a>
1.31 espie 154: </ul>
155: This is slightly inconvenient, as packages may trigger dependencies, and
156: you may have to remove a large subset of packages for an update.
157:
1.53 naddy 158: <h3><font color="#0000e0"><a name="Use">Using Ports</a></font></h3>
1.31 espie 159:
160: If a given package does not exist for your architecture, you may still
161: be able to compile the port. Besides, some users will want to compile
162: everything from source for various reasons.
163:
1.25 deraadt 164: <p>
1.27 brad 165: You can ftp the release version from the pub/OpenBSD/[version] (where
166: [version] is the release number) directory on any of the
167: <a href=ftp.html>ftp mirror sites</a>.
168: The release versions are the ones we ship on our CDROM, and have gone
169: through more testing than any snapshot.
1.30 espie 170: Further information is available in the
1.47 naddy 171: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=ports&sektion=7&format=html">ports(7)</a> man page.
1.30 espie 172:
1.76 david 173: <h3><font color="#0000e0"><a name="Life">Life Cycle of the Ports Tree</a></font></h3>
1.27 brad 174:
175: <p>
1.31 espie 176: The ports tree, like the rest of OpenBSD, is constantly changing.
1.37 marc 177: <p>
178: The current ports tree <strong>may not</strong> be used with the previous
1.59 espie 179: release. This is due to changes, typically with the port make process,
180: that require code based upon the OpenBSD-current source tree.
1.30 espie 181: <p>The ports tree works as a single entity. Updating a single directory is
182: not guaranteed to work, as package dependencies may force you to update
183: and recompile vast portions of the ports tree.
1.31 espie 184: It is strongly suggested that people don't track ports-current unless
1.30 espie 185: they're prepared to deal with various problems.
1.33 espie 186: <a href=mail.html>Mailing lists</a> such as
1.47 naddy 187: <code>ports-changes@openbsd.org</code> or
1.33 espie 188: <code>tech@openbsd.org</code> will probably be invaluable.
1.27 brad 189:
1.59 espie 190: <p>You are advised to track ports-stable on a production machine:
191: we will try to keep the stable ports tree up-to-par with respect to
192: problems, and to provide timely binary updates as well.
193:
194: <p>Note that vanishing distfiles is not an issue, as
195: ftp.openbsd.org holds the complete repository. Even changing checksums is
196: not an issue: you can issue the command
197: <pre>
198: make checksum REFETCH=true
199: </pre>
200: to make sure you are grabbing the correct distfile for your ports tree.
201:
202: For definitions of <i>current</i> and <i>stable</i>, see the
1.81 ! nick 203: <a href="faq/faq5.html#Flavors">OpenBSD's flavors</a>.
1.59 espie 204:
205:
1.48 naddy 206: <p>A list of <a href="portsplus/index.html">daily changes</a> to ports
1.47 naddy 207: and ports-current is available.
208:
1.27 brad 209: <p>
1.29 espie 210: The ports-current tree can be retrieved via:
1.25 deraadt 211: <ul>
212: <li><a href=anoncvs.html>Anonymous CVS</a> (see link). The command is
213: essentially <strong>cvs get ports</strong>.
214: <li>Anonymous ftp from
215: <a href="ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/snapshots/ports.tar.gz">
216: ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/snapshots/ports.tar.gz</a>.
1.19 marc 217: This archive is updated nightly.
1.32 naddy 218: <li><a href="cvsup.html">CVSup</a>. See the example for using CVSup in
219: <a href="cvsup.html#checkout">checkout mode</a>.
1.25 deraadt 220: <li>Your web browser using the
221: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/ports/">CVS
1.20 marc 222: web interface</a>.
1.25 deraadt 223: </ul>
224:
1.53 naddy 225: <h3><font color="#0000e0"><a name="XFree86">Ports and XFree86</a></font></h3>
226: There is some special magic in the OpenBSD XFree86 configuration files
1.35 espie 227: that allows the ports tree to install imake-based applications under
228: /usr/local.
229:
1.53 naddy 230: <p>As of 2.9, OpenBSD ships with XFree86 4.0.3.
231: If you are using a previous distribution, together with XFree86 binaries
232: from the XFree86 project, you may need to apply the patch in
1.35 espie 233: <code>/usr/ports/infrastructure/patches/patch-xfree-4.0</code>
1.53 naddy 234: to a default binary XFree86 4.0.x distribution for it to work with the OpenBSD
1.35 espie 235: ports tree.
236:
1.55 heko 237: <h3><a name="Example"></a><font color="#0000e0">Example Use of the Ports Tree</font></h3>
1.54 lebel 238:
239: <p>
1.25 deraadt 240: Let's say you managed to get a ports tree and you want to compile and
1.33 espie 241: install the archiving utility <strong>unzip</strong>. You should be able to
1.23 espie 242: do something like this:
1.31 espie 243:
1.11 deraadt 244: <pre>
1.31 espie 245: % cd /usr/ports/archivers/unzip
246: % su
247: # make
248: # make install
249: # exit
1.11 deraadt 250: </pre>
1.25 deraadt 251:
1.31 espie 252: Easy, huh ? Especially considering all that happened in the background:
253: <ul>
254: <li>Fetch unzip sources from an ftp site,
255: <li>Check the source archive integrity,
256: <li>Extract the unzip source,
257: <li>Apply OpenBSD specific patches,
258: <li>Configure and build the program,
259: <li>Create a binary package under /usr/ports/packages,
260: <li>Install that package.
261: </ul>
1.25 deraadt 262:
263: <p>
1.61 brad 264: With OpenBSD 3.0, almost all ports automatically build
1.31 espie 265: packages when installing.
266:
267: <p>
268: As ports get built, the /usr/ports/distfiles directory gets filled with
269: program sources, and /usr/ports/packages gets filled with binary packages.
1.55 heko 270: Users with low connectivity may refer to
1.64 rohee 271: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=mirroring-ports&sektion=7&format=html">mirroring-ports(7)</a> for
1.45 espie 272: an efficient way to grab all distfiles at once. In OpenBSD-current, you
1.46 espie 273: can use the script /usr/ports/infrastructure/fetch/clean-old to track
274: old distfiles.
1.72 avsm 275: Note that the OpenBSD CD only includes the ports tree and selected packages.
1.31 espie 276: If you wish to have the distfiles, you will have to get them through an
277: independent way.
1.25 deraadt 278:
1.55 heko 279: <h3><font color="#0000e0"><a name="Advanced"></a>Advanced Usage of the Ports Tree</font></h3>
280:
281: <p>
282: Ports tree has many features for the advanced user that make it a valuable
283: tool beyond basic installation. Advanced users may wish to tamper with
284: the makefiles (you should read the
1.63 rohee 285: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=make&sektion=1&format=html">make(1)</a>
1.72 avsm 286: manual page first) or set various variables from the make command-line or in
1.55 heko 287: <tt>/etc/mk.conf</tt>. These variables are described in detail in the
1.63 rohee 288: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=bsd.port.mk&sektion=5&format=html">bsd.port.mk(5)</a>
1.55 heko 289: manual page, and the porting documents below.
290: </p>
291:
1.53 naddy 292: <h3><font color="#0000e0"><a name="Create">Creating New Ports</a></font></h3>
1.25 deraadt 293: <p>
294: If you are interested in helping to expand the OpenBSD ports tree
295: you should first read <a href="porting.html">porting.html</a>.
1.50 naddy 296: That page references the
1.66 jufi 297: <a href="http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/porters-handbook/index.html">
298: FreeBSD Porter's Handbook</a>
1.25 deraadt 299: as well as OpenBSD specific policies and hints.
1.56 heko 300:
301: <h3><font color="#0000e0"><a name="Lag">When a Port Is Lagging Behind the Mainstream Version</a></font></h3>
302:
303: <p>
304: The ports collection is a volunteer project. Sometimes the project simply
305: doesn't have the developer resources to keep everything up-to-date.
306: Developers pretty much pick up what they consider interesting and can
307: test in their environment. Your <a href="goals.html#funding">donations</a>
308: count for what platforms the ports can be tested on.
309: </p>
310:
311: <p>
312: Some individual ports may lag behind the mainstream versions because of this.
313: The ports collection may have a version back of a program from January while a new
314: version of the program has been released by its developers in May three months ago.
315: Often this is a conscious decision; the new version may have problems in it on
316: OpenBSD that the maintainer is trying to solve, or that have simply made the
317: application worse than the old version: OpenBSD may have different
318: <a href="goals.html">goals</a> than the mainstream developers in other projects,
319: which sometimes results in features and design or implementation choices
320: that are undesirable from OpenBSD developers' point of view. The update may also be
321: postponed because the new version is not considered a crucial update.
322: </p>
323:
324: <p>
325: If you really need a new version of a port, you should ask the <tt>MAINTAINER</tt>
326: of the port to update the port (see <a href="#Help">below</a> on how to find out who
327: the maintainer is); if you can send patches for this, all the better. To create proper
328: patches, you should refer to the <a href="porting.html">documentation on building
329: ports</a>.
330: </p>
1.25 deraadt 331:
1.53 naddy 332: <h3><font color="#0000e0"><a name="Help">Problems and Contacts</a></font></h3>
1.25 deraadt 333:
334: <p>
1.54 lebel 335: If you have trouble with an existing port, please send e-mail to the
336: port maintainer. To see who is the maintainer of the port, type, for
337: example:
338: <pre>
339: % cd /usr/ports/archivers/unzip
1.74 xsa 340: % make show=MAINTAINER
1.54 lebel 341: </pre>
342: Alternatively, if there is no maintainer, or you can't reach
343: him/her, send mail to the OpenBSD
1.27 brad 344: ports mailing list, <a href="mailto:ports@openbsd.org">ports@openbsd.org</a>.
1.54 lebel 345: Please don't use the misc@openbsd.org mailing list for questions about ports.
1.25 deraadt 346: Corrections are always welcome, but in any case do please provide:
347: <ul>
348: <li>The output of <code>uname -a</code>,
349: <li>Your OpenBSD version, including any patches you may have applied,
350: <li>A complete description of the problem.
1.45 espie 351: </ul>
352: For ports that don't build correctly, a complete build transcript is almost
1.54 lebel 353: always required. You can use the portslogger script, found in
354: /usr/ports/infrastructure/build, for this. A sample run of portslogger
355: might be:
356:
357: <pre>
358: % cd /usr/ports/archivers/unzip
359: % su
360: # mkdir -p ~/portslogs
1.63 rohee 361: # make clean install 2>&1 | /usr/ports/infrastructure/build/portslogger \
1.54 lebel 362: ~/portslogs
363: </pre>
364:
365: After this, you should have a logfile of the build in your ~/portslogs directory
366: that you can send to the port maintainer. Also, make sure you are not using
367: any special options in your build, for example in /etc/mk.conf.
368:
369: <p>
370: Alternatively, you can
1.45 espie 371: <ul>
1.47 naddy 372: <li>Use <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=script&sektion=1&format=html">script(1)</a> to create a complete build transcript. Don't remove the configure information.
373: <li>Attach the output of <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=pkg_info&sektion=1&format=html">pkg_info(1)</a> if it seems even remotely relevant.
374: <li><a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=gcc&sektion=1&format=html">gcc(1)</a> internal compiler errors do ask you to report the bug to
1.45 espie 375: the gcc mailing-list. It does save time if you follow their direction, and
376: provide at least the various files produced by <tt>gcc -save-temps</tt>.
1.25 deraadt 377: </ul>
378:
379: <hr>
380: <a href="index.html"><img height=24 width=24 src=back.gif border=0 alt=OpenBSD></a>
1.47 naddy 381: <a href="mailto:www@openbsd.org">www@openbsd.org</a>
1.81 ! nick 382: <br><small>$OpenBSD: ports.html,v 1.80 2004/10/29 18:30:03 pvalchev Exp $</small>
1.25 deraadt 383: </body>
1.11 deraadt 384: </html>