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buffer Use the stack in a smarter way. Take an argument (perhaps marshalling 2004-01-30 13:44:52 +00:00
buildcmd Teach buildlink3 how to reorder libraries on the command line. You 2004-01-30 10:56:11 +00:00
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libtool-fix-la Extend the capabilities of buildlink3's libtool wrapper a bit compared 2004-03-30 17:25:19 +00:00
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logic Let -D flags be passed through the transformation script, so that they 2004-04-15 09:31:48 +00:00
marshall Handle "-Xlinker" being equivalent to "-Wl," when passing arguments 2004-03-29 06:02:53 +00:00
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mipspro-cc-post-logic Add bits to make buildlink3 use the MIPSpro compiler if USE_MIPSPRO is 2004-01-07 20:45:59 +00:00
mipspro-ucode-cc-post-cache Initial support for the MIPSpro ucode compilers found on IRIX 5.3. The 2004-02-18 11:18:42 +00:00
mipspro-ucode-cc-post-logic Indent. 2004-03-13 03:41:13 +00:00
PKGVIEWS_UG Commit the buildlink3 developer's guide and the pkgviews user's guide until 2004-01-29 06:03:15 +00:00
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TODO +less obfuscated errors 2004-02-17 08:59:44 +00:00
wrapper.sh Move a test from the reorderlibs script out to the wrapper scripts for 2004-02-12 20:29:34 +00:00

$NetBSD: README,v 1.4 2003/09/09 09:13:20 jlam Exp $

 0 Package Views
 ===============

Package views is a pkgsrc technology that supports building and
installing multiple versions of the same software such that they
co-exist on a single system.  Individual packages are installed into
their own directory tree and their files are symlinked into "views".
Users can choose amongst different software collections provided by
different views by appropriately setting shell environment variables,
e.g., PATH, MANPATH, etc.

Package views is similar in spirit to the Encap Package Management
System, the GNU Stow Project, and the Carnegie Mellon University Depot
Configuration Management system:

	http://www.encap.org/
	http://www.gnu.org/software/stow/stow.html
	http://asg.web.cmu.edu/andrew2/depot/

However, these projects have a philosophy of "install anywhere, use in
one place", whereas package views departs from that model with a
philosophy that can roughly be summarized as "install in one place,
use anywhere".


 0.1 A short history of package views
 ====================================

Package views was proposed as a solution to the problem of not being
able to install multiple versions of the same software simultaneously
via pkgsrc.  Alistair Crooks presented a paper on package views at
EuroBSDCon in November 2002 that described the work he did on the
"pkgviews" branch of pkgsrc where he implemented his ideas.  The paper
is highly-recommended reading for a more complete understanding of
package views principles and is available at:

	http://www.NetBSD.org/Documentation/software/pkgviews.pdf

Unfortunately, Alistair ran out of time to devote to integrating his
work into the main pkgsrc branch.  The code he developed languished on
the "pkgviews" branch for over a year, and in the meantime much code
was added to pkgsrc that increased the complexity and the capabilities
of pkgsrc, including buildlink2, which conflicted with Alistair's
implementation of package views.  In September 2003, Johnny Lam
integrated the functionality on the pkgviews branch into modern
pkgsrc.  As part of the integration, a new buildlink3 framework was
created so that the the ability to isolate builds from differences in
the environment wouldn't be lost.


 0.2 Package views terminology
 =============================

The terminology for packages in the package views world is as
follows:  a "pkgviews" package is a package that has been converted to
build and install using package views.  An "overwrite" package is one
that hasn't.  A "depoted" package describes a pkgviews package
installed into /usr/pkg/packages in its "depot" directory.  A package
"instance" in a view describes a depoted package symlinked into a
view.


 0.3 What's been done
 ====================

The pkg_install tools have been enhanced to handle both binary depoted
packages and binary "overwrite" packages.  The pkgsrc internals have
been modified to allow building and installing depoted packages and to
automatically add a depoted package in the the default view.
"Overwrite" packages shouldn't be affected by the changes, and can be
freely mixed with pkgviews packages.

Packages that have been converted to use "pkgviews" should add the
following line to their Makefiles:

	PKG_INSTALLATION_TYPES=	overwrite pkgviews

PKG_INSTALLATION_TYPES can also just be one value or the other to
explicitly note that the package only supports that one type of
installation style.  Users may add the following line to /etc/mk.conf:

	PKG_INSTALLATION_PREFS=	pkgviews overwrite

to note that they prefer building using pkgviews if the package
supports it, otherwise to build using the "overwrite" installation
style.  However, users should not change PKG_INSTALLATION_PREFS from
the default value unless they're sure that they want to start
migrating their package system over to using pkgviews.  The default,
"overwrite pkgviews", will cause all packages to build using the
"overwrite" installation style.

Some highlight of pkgviews packages include:

	* fully dynamic PLISTs
	* multiple versions of the same package can co-exist


 0.4 buildlink3 pkgsrc build framework
 =====================================

A new buildlink3 framework that takes advantage of depoted packages
has been added to pkgsrc as part of the package views changes.
Buildlink3 uses wrapper scripts much like buildlink2.  However, when
building pkgviews packages, it doesn't symlink files into
${BUILDLINK_DIR} since it can safely refer to only a specific
package's files by passing the appropriate -I<dir> and -L<dir> flags
to the compiler, where <dir> points to a location in the package's
depot directory.  When building "overwrite" packages, buildlink3 will
act and feel very much like buildlink2 but with more advanced wrapper
scripts, and there are provisions for allowing an "overwrite" package
to build against the viewed instance of a depoted package.  The
implementation currently allows "overwrite" to depend on either
"overwrite" or pkgviews packages, but pkgviews packages are restricted
to only being able to depend on other pkgviews packages.

Packages that have been converted to use buildlink3 should add the
following line to their Makefiles:

	USE_BUILDLINK3=	YES

A package must be converted to use the buildlink3 framework before it
can support the pkgviews installation style.


 0.5 Package conversion issues
 =============================

The conversion process for a package to use buildlink3 and pkgviews
essentially consists of changing USE_BUILDLINK2 to USE_BUILDLINK3,
including buildlink3.mk files instead of buildlink2.mk files, and
adding the PKG_INSTALLATION_TYPES line to the package Makefile.  It's
extremely easy and painless.

Since the idea is that the user can choose to install a package using
either installation style, the package Makefiles have to explicitly
support this.  This means that "hard" packages just got harder to
maintain, but easy packages stay about the same.  In this case, "hard"
packages are the ones that have module packages, e.g. PHP4, perl5,
Apache, Cyrus-SASL, etc.  A package of this type must support finding
shared modules or configuration files in directories shared with all
of its module packages, thus requiring some hard-coding of paths
across different packages.


 0.6 Future Work
 ===============

There may be some way around the problem of pkgviews packages not
being able to depend on "overwrite" packages.  That's the only thing
standing in the way between allowing an arbitrary package to be built
using either installation style and working seamlessly with any other
package.  The problem has to do with proper handling of metadata in
the +REQUIRED_BY and +CONTENTS files that are split in two separate
places.  One possible route to a solution is that for each overwrite
package, we can symlink /usr/pkg/packages/<pkg> -> /var/db/pkg/<pkg>.
This allows depoted packages to record themselves directly in the
+REQUIRED_BY files of "overwrite" packages.  If a user happens to run

	pkg_delete -K /usr/pkg/packages <overwrite_pkg>

then it still uses the correct +CONTENTS, +INSTALL, and +DEINSTALL
scripts, so the package will still remove itself properly from
/usr/pkg.  However, there are some remaining issues with properly
removing both the /var/db/pkg/<pkg> directory and the
/usr/pkg/packages/<pkg> symlink, so the deletion won't be completely
clean until this issue can be resolved.