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Preface

Introduction

User Commands

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pkgtrans

- translate package format

Synopsis

pkgtrans [-inosg] [-k keystore] [-a alias] [-P passwd] device1 device2 
     [pkginst]...

Description

The pkgtrans utility translates an installable package from one format to another. It translates:

Options

The options and arguments for this command are:

-a alias

Use public key certificate associated with friendlyName alias, and the corresponding private key. See KEYSTORE LOCATIONS and KEYSTORE AND CERTIFICATE FORMATS in pkgadd(1M) for more information.

-g

Sign resulting datastream.

-i

Copies only the pkginfo(4) and pkgmap(4) files.

-k keystore

Use keystore to retrieve private key used to generate signature. If it not specified, default locations are searched to find the specified private key specified by -a. If no alias is given, and multiple keys exist in the key store, pkgtrans will abort. See KEYSTORE LOCATIONS and KEYSTORE AND CERTIFICATE FORMATS in pkgadd(1M) for more information on search locations and formats.

When running as a user other than root, the default base directory for certificate searching is ~/.pkg/security, where ~ is the home directory of the user invoking pkgtrans.

-n

Creates a new instance of the package on the destination device if any instance of this package already exists, up to the number specified by the MAXINST variable in the pkginfo(4) file.

-o

Overwrites the same instance on the destination device. Package instance will be overwritten if it already exists.

-P passwd

Supply password used to decrypt the keystore. See PASS PHRASE ARGUMENTS in pkgadd(1M) for details on the syntax of the argument to this option.

-s

Indicates that the package should be written to device2 as a datastream rather than as a file system. The default behavior is to write a file system format on devices that support both formats.

Operands

device1

Indicates the source device. The package or packages on this device will be translated and placed on device2. See DEVICE SPECIFIERS, below.

device2

Indicates the destination device. Translated packages will be placed on this device. See DEVICE SPECIFIERS, below.

pkginst

Specifies which package instance or instances on device1 should be translated. The token all may be used to indicate all packages. pkginst.* can be used to indicate all instances of a package. If no packages are defined, a prompt shows all packages on the device and asks which to translate.

The asterisk character (*) is a special character to some shells and may need to be escaped. In the C-Shell, the * must be surrounded by single quotes (') or preceded by a backslash (\).

DEVICE SPECIFIERS

Packaging tools, including pkgtrans, pkgadd(1M), and pkgchk(1M), have options for specifying a package location by specifying the device on which it resides. Listed below are the device types that a package can be stored to and retrieved from. Note that source and destination devices cannot be the same.

device

Packages can be stored to a character or block device by specifying the device identifier as the device. Common examples of this device type are /dev/rmt/0 for a removable magnetic tape and /floppy/floppy0 for the first floppy disk on the system. pkgtrans can also produce regular file system files in a stream format, which is suitable for storage on a character device, web server, or as input to pkgadd(1M).

device alias

Devices that have been specified in /etc/device.tab are eligible for being the recipient or source of a package. Common examples of this type of device specification are spool (the default package device location) and disk1. These names correspond to devices specified in /etc/device.tab

directory

Packages can be stored onto a directory by specifying an absolute path to a file system directory. The package contents reside in a directory within the specified directory. The package directory name must be identical to its PKG specification in the pkginfo(4) file. An example device specification of this type is /export/packages.

Examples

Example 1 Translating All Packages on the Floppy Disk

The following example translates all packages on the floppy drive /dev/diskette and places the translations on /tmp:

example% pkgtrans /dev/diskette /tmp all

Example 2 Translating Packages on /tmp

The following example translates packages pkg1 and pkg2 on /tmp and places their translations (that is, a datastream) on the 9track1 output device:

example% pkgtrans /tmp 9track1 pkg1 pkg2

Example 3 Translating Packages on /tmp

The following example translates pkg1 and pkg2 on /tmp and places them on the diskette in a datastream format:

example% pkgtrans -s /tmp /dev/diskette pkg1 pkg2

Example 4 Creating a Signed Package

The following example creates a signed package from pkg1 and pkg2, and reads the password from the $PASS environment variable:

example% pkgtrans -sg -k /tmp/keystore.p12 -a foo \
    -p env:PASS /tmp /tmp/signedpkg pkg1 pkg2

Example 5 Translating a Package Datastream

The following example translates a package datastream into a file system format package:

example%  pkgtrans /tmp/pkg1.pkg ~/tmp pkg1

Environment Variables

The MAXINST variable is set in the pkginfo(4) file and declares the maximum number of package instances.

Exit Status

0

Successful completion.

>0

An error occurred.

Attributes

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

ATTRIBUTE TYPE
ATTRIBUTE VALUE
Availability
SUNWpkgcmdsu
Interface Stability
See below.

The command-line syntax is Evolving. The digitally-signed stream package is Evolving.

See Also

pkginfo(1), pkgmk(1), pkgparam(1), pkgproto(1), installf(1M), pkgadd(1M), pkgask(1M), pkgrm(1M), removef(1M), pkginfo(4), pkgmap(4), attributes(5), largefile(5)

Application Packaging Developer’s Guide

Notes

By default, pkgtrans does not translate any instance of a package if any instance of that package already exists on the destination device. Using the -n option creates a new instance if an instance of this package already exists. Using the -o option overwrites an instance of this package if it already exists. Neither of these options are useful if the destination device is a datastream.

Package commands are largefile(5)-aware. They handle files larger than 2 GB in the same way they handle smaller files. In their current implementations, pkgadd(1M), pkgtrans and other package commands can process a datastream of up to 4 GB.