src2pkg Options & Variables
As seen in the Internal
Execution section, the src2pkg functions are driven and controlled
by using variables. The src2pkg options are also controlled by setting
variables. This section takes a closer look at the different types of
variables to see how, when and where to use them. The discussion here
centers on the syntax as used in sr2pkg build scripts -see the --help
output or man-page for src2pkg or trackinstall for the corresponding
syntax.
Option types
- Administrative options like working directories or prompting
preferences
- Transient User Options
- Build Options
- Advanced Features Options
Notes
1. The administrative options are usually changed by editing the
/etc/src2pkg/src2pkg.conf file which contains comments on usage of
these options. These options are used to change the default src2pkg
behaviour, such as where to find sources, where to unpack and build
them and where to leave the final compressed package when finished.
Default prompting options can also be set here. src2pkg can be run
without a src2pkg.conf file since sane defaults are set in the DEFINES
and FUNCTIONS files. But changes you make to src2pkg.conf will override
these defaults.
2. Transient User Options -many of the administrative options above can
be overridden on a case-by-case basis from the command-line when
needed. This category also includes other options which are used on a
temporary basis without affecting the content of the final package.
Examples include the CLEANUP and USE_OBJ_DIR options.
3. Build Options -these are the main options which may affect package
content or compiling success.
EXTRA_CONFIGS -this is probably the most used of all
options. It is used to pass extra arguments to the configure script
found in source-code archives. Sometimes you'll need or want to pass
arguments like '--without-gnome' or '--disable-tests' to configure in
order for the sources to configure and compile correctly. Note that the
installation prefix for the package('--prefix=???') is set separately
for your convenience with the PRE_FIX variable which is set to /usr by
default.
CONFIG_COMMAND is the command run to configure
sources -usually just 'configure'.
Here's an example which uses the above 3 variables. Usually you won't
need to change all three of these at once, but they are kept separate
so it is possible when needed. Say you have sources which need to be
configured with this line:
./configure Linux --prefix=/opt/myprogram --with-gnu-ld
You'd pass all that to src2pkg like this (in a sr2pkg script):
CONFIG_COMMAND='configure Linux'
PRE_FIX=/opt/myprogram
EXTRA_CONFIGS='--with-gnu-ld'
4. Advanced Options -src2pkg contains several features which may be
used to produce what might be considered non-standard packages. Most of
these options revolve around creating smaller packages, but others may
be used to create or preserve logfiles or other information.
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