Skip Navigation Links | |
Exit Print View | |
Application Packaging Developer's Guide Oracle Solaris 10 1/13 Information Library |
3. Enhancing the Functionality of a Package (Tasks)
4. Verifying and Transferring a Package
Verifying and Transferring a Package (Task Map)
The Installation Software Database
Interacting With the pkgadd Command
Installing Packages on Standalone Systems or Servers in a Homogeneous Environment
Verifying the Integrity of a Package
How to Verify the Integrity of a Package
Displaying Additional Information About Installed Packages
How to Obtain Information With the pkgparam Command
Customizing the Format of the pkginfo Display
Parameter Descriptions for the pkginfo Long Format
How to Obtain Information With the pkginfo Command
Transferring a Package to a Distribution Medium
How to Transfer a Package to a Distribution Medium
5. Case Studies of Package Creation
Software packages are installed using the pkgadd command. This command transfers the contents of a software package from the distribution medium or directory and installs it onto a system.
This section provides basic installation instructions for installing your package in order to verify that it installs correctly.
Information for all packages installed on a system is kept in the installation software database. There is an entry for every object in a package, with information such as the component name, where it resides, and its type. An entry contains a record of the package to which a component belongs; other packages that might reference the component; and information such as path name, where the component resides and the component type. Entries are added and removed automatically by the pkgadd and pkgrm commands. You can view the information in the database by using the pkgchk and the pkginfo commands.
Two types of information are associated with each package component. The attribute information describes the component itself. For example, the component's access permissions, owner ID, and group ID are attribute information. The content information describes the contents of the component, such as file size and time of last modification.
The installation software database keeps track of the package status. A package can be either fully installed (it has successfully completed the installation process), or partially installed (it did not successfully complete the installation process).
When a package is partially installed, portions of a package may have been installed before installation was terminated; thus, part of the package is installed, and recorded in the database, and part is not. When you reinstall the package, you are prompted to start at the point where installation stopped because the pkgadd command can access the database and detect which portions have already been installed. You can also remove the portions that have been installed, based on the information in the installation software database using the pkgrm command.
If the pkgadd command encounters a problem, it first checks the installation administration file for instructions. (See admin(4) for more information.) If no instructions exist, or if the relevant parameter in the administration file is set to ask, the pkgadd displays a message describing the problem and prompts for a reply. The prompt is usually Do you want to continue with this installation?. You should respond with yes, no, or quit.
If you have specified more than one package, no stops installation of the package being installed but pkgadd continues with installation of the other packages. quit indicates that pkgadd should stop installation of all packages.
This section describes how to install packages on a standalone or a server system in a homogeneous environment.
See Building a Package, if needed.
# pkgadd -d device-name [pkg-abbrev...]
|
Example 4-1 Installing Packages on Standalones and Servers
To install a software package named pkgA from a tape device named /dev/rmt/0, you would enter the following command:
# pkgadd -d /dev/rmt/0 pkgA
You can also install multiple packages at the same time, as long as you separate package names with a space, as follows:
# pkgadd -d /dev/rmt/0 pkgA pkgB pkgC
If you do not name the device on which the package resides, the command checks the default spool directory (/var/spool/pkg). If the package is not there, the installation fails.
See Also
If you are ready to go to the next task, see How to Verify the Integrity of a Package.