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Operating Systems Linux Ubuntu Installing Commercial Linux Programs Post 302521632 by Corona688 on Thursday 12th of May 2011 01:01:22 AM
Old 05-12-2011
If .deb and .rpm packages etc are the only way your application's available, you're definitely going to annoy somebody somewhere down the line. I've frequently seen commercial programs distributed for UNIX in the form of tarballs that dump things into /opt/mypackagename/... Any technically competent administrator can make that work one way or another.

From that base you can build more refined packages for popular distributions that Do The Right Thing for the distribution in question in terms of building your package, getting the dependencies right, getting your application into PATH and so forth.

A .src.rpm might make the most sense to deploy your application as on redhat, since that actually builds it. I think debian has an equivalent but can't name it offhand.

Or you could simply have your package distribute objects and scripts and have a compiler dependency, and issue instructions for admins to run the final compilation script themselves. Make it a good script. Be extremely careful of where everything ends up.
 

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RPMBUILD(8)						      System Manager's Manual						       RPMBUILD(8)

NAME
rpmbuild - Build RPM Package(s) SYNOPSIS
BUILDING PACKAGES: rpmbuild {-ba|-bb|-bp|-bc|-bi|-bl|-bs} [rpmbuild-options] SPECFILE ... rpmbuild {-ta|-tb|-tp|-tc|-ti|-tl|-ts} [rpmbuild-options] TARBALL ... rpmbuild {--rebuild|--recompile} SOURCEPKG ... MISCELLANEOUS: rpmbuild --showrc rpmbuild-options [--buildroot DIRECTORY] [--clean] [--nobuild] [--rmsource] [--rmspec] [--short-circuit] [--target PLATFORM] DESCRIPTION
rpmbuild is used to build both binary and source software packages. A package consists of an archive of files and meta-data used to install and erase the archive files. The meta-data includes helper scripts, file attributes, and descriptive information about the package. Packages come in two varieties: binary packages, used to encapsulate software to be installed, and source packages, containing the source code and recipe necessary to produce binary packages. One of the following basic modes must be selected: Build Package, Build Package from Tarball, Recompile Package, Show Configuration. GENERAL OPTIONS These options can be used in all the different modes. -?, --help Print a longer usage message then normal. --version Print a single line containing the version number of rpm being used. --quiet Print as little as possible - normally only error messages will be displayed. -v Print verbose information - normally routine progress messages will be displayed. -vv Print lots of ugly debugging information. --rcfile FILELIST Each of the files in the colon separated FILELIST is read sequentially by rpm for configuration information. Only the first file in the list must exist, and tildes will be expanded to the value of $HOME. The default FILELIST is /usr/lib/rpm/rpmrc:/usr/lib/rpm/redhat/rpmrc:/etc/rpmrc:~/.rpmrc. --pipe CMD Pipes the output of rpm to the command CMD. --dbpath DIRECTORY Use the database in DIRECTORY rather than the default path /var/lib/rpm --root DIRECTORY Use the file system tree rooted at DIRECTORY for all operations. Note that this means the database within DIRECTORY will be used for dependency checks and any scriptlet(s) (e.g. %post if installing, or %prep if building, a package) will be run after a chroot(2) to DIRECTORY. BUILD OPTIONS The general form of an rpm build command is rpmbuild -bSTAGE|-tSTAGE [ rpmbuild-options ] FILE ... The argument used is -b if a spec file is being used to build the package and -t if rpmbuild should look inside of a (possibly compressed) tar file for the spec file to use. After the first argument, the next character (STAGE) specifies the stages of building and packaging to be done and is one of: -ba Build binary and source packages (after doing the %prep, %build, and %install stages). -bb Build a binary package (after doing the %prep, %build, and %install stages). -bp Executes the "%prep" stage from the spec file. Normally this involves unpacking the sources and applying any patches. -bc Do the "%build" stage from the spec file (after doing the %prep stage). This generally involves the equivalent of a "make". -bi Do the "%install" stage from the spec file (after doing the %prep and %build stages). This generally involves the equivalent of a "make install". -bl Do a "list check". The "%files" section from the spec file is macro expanded, and checks are made to verify that each file exists. -bs Build just the source package. The following options may also be used: --buildroot DIRECTORY When building a package, override the BuildRoot tag with directory DIRECTORY. --clean Remove the build tree after the packages are made. --nobuild Do not execute any build stages. Useful for testing out spec files. --nodeps Do not verify build dependencies. --rmsource Remove the sources after the build (may also be used standalone, e.g. "rpmbuild --rmsource foo.spec"). --rmspec Remove the spec file after the build (may also be used standalone, eg. "rpmbuild --rmspec foo.spec"). --short-circuit Skip straight to specified stage (i.e., skip all stages leading up to the specified stage). Only valid with -bc, -bi, and -bb. Useful for local testing only. Packages built this way will be marked with an unsatisfiable dependency to prevent their accidental use. --target PLATFORM When building the package, interpret PLATFORM as arch-vendor-os and set the macros %_target, %_target_cpu, and %_target_os accord- ingly. REBUILD AND RECOMPILE OPTIONS There are two other ways to invoke building with rpm: rpmbuild --rebuild|--recompile SOURCEPKG ... When invoked this way, rpmbuild installs the named source package, and does a prep, compile and install. In addition, --rebuild builds a new binary package. When the build has completed, the build directory is removed (as in --clean) and the the sources and spec file for the package are removed. SHOWRC The command rpmbuild --showrc shows the values rpmbuild will use for all of the options are currently set in rpmrc and macros configuration file(s). FILES
rpmrc Configuration /usr/lib/rpm/rpmrc /usr/lib/rpm/redhat/rpmrc /etc/rpmrc ~/.rpmrc Macro Configuration /usr/lib/rpm/macros /usr/lib/rpm/redhat/macros /etc/rpm/macros ~/.rpmmacros Temporary /var/tmp/rpm* SEE ALSO
gendiff(1), popt(3), rpm(8), rpm2cpio(8), rpmkeys(8) rpmspec(8), rpmsign(8), rpmbuild --help - as rpm supports customizing the options via popt aliases it's impossible to guarantee that what's described in the manual matches what's available. http://www.rpm.org/ <URL:http://www.rpm.org/> AUTHORS
Marc Ewing <marc@redhat.com> Jeff Johnson <jbj@redhat.com> Erik Troan <ewt@redhat.com> Red Hat, Inc. 09 June 2002 RPMBUILD(8)
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