.\" .\" Copyright (c) 1997 David E. O'Brien .\" .\" All rights reserved. .\" .\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without .\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions .\" are met: .\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright .\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. .\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright .\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the .\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. .\" .\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE DEVELOPERS ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR .\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES .\" OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. .\" IN NO EVENT SHALL THE DEVELOPERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, .\" INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT .\" NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, .\" DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY .\" THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT .\" (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF .\" THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. .\" .\" $OpenBSD: ports.7,v 1.14 2000/10/13 04:09:21 aaron Exp $ .\" $FreeBSD: ports.7,v 1.7 1998/06/23 04:38:50 hoek Exp $ .\" .Dd January 25, 1998 .Dt PORTS 7 .Os .Sh NAME .Nm ports .Nd contributed applications .Sh DESCRIPTION The .Nm OpenBSD Ports Collection (shamelessly stolen from the FreeBSD Ports Collection) offers a simple way for users and administrators to install applications. Each .Em port contains any patches necessary to make the original application source code compile and run on BSD. Compiling an application is as simple as typing .Ic make in the port directory! The .Pa Makefile automatically fetches the application source code, either from a local disk or via ftp, unpacks it on the local system, applies the patches, and compiles it. If all goes well, simply type .Ic sudo make install to install the application. .Pp For more information about using ports, see .Nm The OpenBSD Ports Mechanism (http://www.openbsd.org/ports.html). For information about creating new ports, see .\" .Xr porting 7 .\" and .Nm Building an OpenBSD Port (http://www.openbsd.org/porting.html). Other excellent resources are the ports and porting sections of the FreeBSD Handbook (http://www.freebsd.org/handbook/ports.html and http://www.freebsd.org/handbook/porting.html) as well as the NetBSD Package System documentation (http://www.netbsd.org/Documentation/netbsd/Packages.txt). .Pp .Sh PORTS MASTER MAKEFILE The ports master Makefile, normally located in .Pa /usr/ports/Makefile (but see .Ev PORTSDIR below) offers a few useful targets. .Bl -tag -width configure .It Ar index rebuild the ports complete index, .Pa /usr/ports/INDEX .It Ar mirror-maker see .Xr mirroring-ports 7 , .It Ar print-index display the contents of the index in a user-friendly way, .It Ar search invoked with a key, e.g., .Ic make search key=foo , retrieve information relevant to a given port (obsolescent). .El .Sh SELECTING A SET OF PORTS If .Pa /usr/ports/INDEX is up to date, it is possible to select subsets by setting the following variables on the command line: .Bl -tag -width category .It Va key package name matching the given key, .It Va category port belonging to category, .It Va maintainer port maintained by a given person. .El For instance, to invoke clean on all ports in the x11 category, one can say: .Bd -literal -offset indent make category=x11 clean .Ed The index search is done by a perl script, so all regular expressions from .Xr perlre 1 apply. .Sh TARGETS Individual ports are controlled through a few documented targets. Some of these targets work recursively through subdirectories, so that someone can, for examples, install all of the net ports. .Pp In case of failure in a subdirectory, the shell fragment held in .Ev REPORT_PROBLEM is executed. Default behavior is to call exit, but this can be overriden on the command line, e.g., to avoid stopping after each problem. .Bd -literal -offset indent make REPORT_PROBLEM=true .Ed The targets that do this are .Ar build , checksum , clean , configure , extract , fetch , fetch-list , .Ar install , distclean , deinstall, reinstall, mirror-distfiles, obj , .Ar list-distfiles , package , cdrom-packages and .Ar ftp-packages . .Pp Target names starting with _ are private to the ports infrastructure, should not be invoked directly, and are liable to change without notice. .Pp In the following list, each target will run the preceeding targets in order automatically. That is, .Ar build will be run .Pq if necessary by .Ar install , and so on all the way to .Ar fetch . Typical use only runs .Ar install explicitly (if root), or .Ar build (as user), then .Ar install (as root). .Bl -tag -width configure .It Ar fetch Fetch all of the files needed to build this port from the site(s) listed in .Ev MASTER_SITES and .Ev PATCH_SITES . See .Ev FETCH_CMD and .Ev MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE . .It Ar checksum Verify that the fetched distfile matches the one the port was tested against. Defining .Ev NO_CHECKSUM to .Dv Yes will skip this step. Sometimes, distfiles change without warning. The main OpenBSD mirror should still hold a copy of old distfiles, indexed by checksum. Using .Bd -literal -offset indent make checksum REFETCH=true .Ed will try to get a set of distfiles that match the recorded checksum. .It Ar depends Install .Pq or compile if only compilation is necessary any dependencies of the current port. When called by the .Ar extract, install or .Ar fetch targets, this is run in scattered pieces as .Ar fetch-depends , lib-depends , build-depends , run-depends and .Ar misc-depends . Defining .Ev NO_DEPENDS to .Dv Yes will skip this step. .It Ar extract Expand the distfile into a work directory. .It Ar patch Apply any patches that are necessary for the port. .It Ar configure Configure the port. Some ports will ask questions during this stage. See .Ev INTERACTIVE and .Ev BATCH . .It Ar build Build the port. This is the same as calling the .Ar all target. .It Ar install Install the port and register it with the package system. .El .Pp The following targets are not run during the normal install process. .Bl -tag -width fetch-list .It Ar fetch-list Build a script that lists the files needing to be fetched in order to build the port. .It Ar depends-list package-depends Print an ordered list of all the compile and run dependencies. .It Ar clean Remove the expanded source code. This does not recurse to dependencies unless .Ev CLEANDEPENDS is defined to .Dv Yes . .It Ar distclean Remove the port's distfile(s) and perform the .Ar clean operation. This does not recurse to dependencies. .It Ar reinstall Use this to restore a port after using .Xr pkg_delete 1 . .It Ar package Make a binary package for the port. The port will be installed if it hasn't already been. The package is a .tgz file that can be used to install the port on other machines with .Xr pkg_add 1 . If the directory specified by .Ev PACKAGES does not exist the package will be put into the current directory. See .Ev PKGREPOSITORY and .Ev PKGFILE . .El .Sh NETWORK CONFIGURATION The variables pertaining to network access have been marshalled into .Pa ${PORTSDIR}/template/network.conf.template . To customize that setup, copy that file into .Pa ${PORTSDIR}/db/network.conf and edit it. .Pp .Bl -tag -width MASTER_SITES .It Ev MASTER_SITE_OPENBSD If set to .Dv Yes , include the master OpenBSD site when fetching files. .It Ev MASTER_SITE_FREEBSD If set to .Dv Yes , include the master FreeBSD site when fetching files. .It Ev MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE Go to this site first for all files. .El .Sh PORT VARIABLES These can be changed in the environment, or in .Pa /etc/mk.conf for persistence. They can also be set on make's command line, e.g., .Ic make VAR_FOO=foo .Pp Boolean variables should be set to .Dv Yes instead of simply being defined, for uniformity and future compatibility. .Pp Variable names starting with _ are private to the ports infrastructure, should not be changed by the user, and are liable to change without notice. .Pp .Bl -tag -width MASTER_SITES .It Ev PORTSDIR Location of the ports tree. This is .Pa /usr/ports on .\" .Fx FreeBSD and .\" .Ox , OpenBSD and .Pa /usr/pkgsrc on .Nx . .It Ev DISTDIR Where to find/put distfiles, normally .Pa distfiles/ in .Ev PORTSDIR . .It Ev PACKAGES Used only for the .Ar package target; the base directory for the packages tree, normally .Pa packages/${ARCH} in .Ev PORTSDIR . If this directory exists, the package tree will be (partially) constructed. This directory does not have to exist; if it doesn't, packages will be placed into the current directory, or define one of .Bl -tag -width PKGREPOSITORY .It Ev PKGREPOSITORY Directory to put the package in. .It Ev PKGFILE The full path to the package. .El .It Ev PREFIX Where to install things in general .Po usually .Pa /usr/local .Pc .It Ev MASTER_SITES Primary sites for distribution files if not found locally. .It Ev PATCH_SITES Primary location(s) for distribution patch files if not found locally. .It Ev CLEANDEPENDS If set to .Dv Yes , let .Sq clean recurse to dependencies. .It Ev NOCLEANDEPENDS If defined, don't let .Sq clean recurse to dependencies (deprecated, use .Ev CLEANDEPENDS instead). .It Ev FETCH_CMD Command to use to fetch files. Normally .Xr ftp 1 . .It Ev FORCE_PKG_REGISTER If set, overwrite any existing package registration on the system. .It Ev MOTIFLIB Location of libXm.{a,so}. .It Ev PATCH_DEBUG If defined, display verbose output when applying each patch. .It Ev INTERACTIVE If defined, only operate on a port if it requires interaction. .It Ev BATCH If defined, only operate on a port if it can be installed 100% automatically. .El .Sh USING A READ-ONLY PORTS TREE Select read-write partition(s) that can accommodate working directories, the distfiles repository, and the built packages. Set .Ev WRKOBJDIR , .Ev PACKAGES and .Ev DISTDIR in .Pa /etc/mk.conf accordingly. do a .Li "cd /usr/ports && make obj" to create working directories stubs. .Pa /usr/ports may now be remounted read-only. .Sh FILES .Bl -tag -width /usr/ports/xxxxxxxx -compact .It Pa /usr/ports The default ports directory (FreeBSD and OpenBSD). .It Pa /usr/pkgsrc The default ports directory (NetBSD). .It Pa /usr/ports/Makefile Ports master Makefile. .It Pa /usr/ports/INDEX Ports index. .It Pa /usr/ports/infrastructure/mk/bsd.port.mk The ports main engine (OpenBSD). .It Pa /usr/ports/infrastructure/templates/network.conf.template Network configuration defaults (OpenBSD). .It Pa /usr/ports/infrastructure/db/network.conf Local network configuration (OpenBSD). .Sh SEE ALSO .Xr make 1 , .Xr pkg_add 1 , .Xr pkg_create 1 , .Xr pkg_delete 1 , .Xr pkg_info 1 , .Xr packages 7 .Pp The FreeBSD handbook. .Sh AUTHORS This man page was originated by David O'Brien. The FreeBSD ports collection is maintained by Satoshi Asami and the awesome ports team. The OpenBSD ports collection has been maintained by Marco S Hyman in the past. It is currently managed by Christopher Turan, with much help from Brad Smith and a host of others found at ports@openbsd.org. .Sh HISTORY .Nm The Ports Collection appeared in FreeBSD 1.0. .Sh BUGS Ports documentation is split over four places --- .Pa /usr/share/mk/bsd.port.mk , the .Dq Ports Collection section of the FreeBSD handbook, the .Dq Porting Existing Software section of the FreeBSD handbook, and .Xr ports 7 . OpenBSD adds a few web pages to further confuse the issue.