forked from kiss-community/kiss
docs: initial rewrite
This commit is contained in:
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@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
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#!/bin/sh -e
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# list all packages by size
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cd "$KISS_ROOT/var/db/kiss/installed"
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[ "$1" ] || set -- *
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for pkg do
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sum=$(kiss size "$pkg" 2>&1 >/dev/null)
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num=${sum%%[A-Z][A-Z] *}
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case ${sum%% *} in
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*MB) num=$((num * 1024)) ;;
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*GB) num=$((num * 1024 * 1024)) ;;
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esac
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printf '%10s %s\n' "$num" "$pkg"
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done
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@ -2,41 +2,20 @@ KISS PACKAGE MANAGER
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________________________________________________________________________________
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The KISS package manager is a self-contained POSIX shell script which is written
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in a highly portable way. It should run in anywhere with a POSIX shell and
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POSIX compliant coreutils.
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in a highly portable way. It should run anywhere with a POSIX shell and POSIX
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compliant core utilities.
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Source: $/kisslinux/kiss
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[0.0] Index
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Index
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________________________________________________________________________________
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- Usage [1.0]
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- Dependencies [2.0]
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- Interesting Features [3.0]
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- Runtime dependency detector built around 'ldd' [3.1]
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- Fully dynamic (and automatic) alternatives system [3.2]
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- 3-way handshake for files in /etc/ [3.3]
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- Configuration [4.0]
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- Repositories [5.0]
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- What is a repository? [5.1]
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- Enabling a remote repository [5.2]
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- Preventing a package from receiving updates [5.3]
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- Package fallbacks [5.4]
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- Bypassing KISS_PATH [5.5]
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- Package Manager Hooks [6.0]
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- Usage [6.1]
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- Removing unneeded files from packages [6.2]
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- Drop into a subshell on build fail [6.3]
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- Package Manager Extensions [7.0]
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- Tips and Tricks [8.0]
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- Swap grep implementations for a major speed up [8.1]
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- Configuration [3.0]
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- Package Manager Hooks [4.0]
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- Package Manager Extensions [5.0]
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[1.0] Usage
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@ -64,13 +43,6 @@ ________________________________________________________________________________
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[2.0] Dependencies
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________________________________________________________________________________
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POSIX utilities are used where appropriate _and_ where they exist to solve a
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particular problem. Utilities of which there is only a single and cross-platform
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implementation are considered "portable" (git, curl, etc)
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If a dependency can be made optional, it will be made so. Dependencies are also
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kept to a minimum (though we must also remain realistic).
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+----------------------+--------------------------------------------+----------+
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| Dependency | Reason for use | Required |
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+----------------------+--------------------------------------------+----------|
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@ -107,16 +79,14 @@ kept to a minimum (though we must also remain realistic).
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sources will simply become unusable.
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[2] There is no standard utility for the generation of sha256 checksums. While
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sha256sum is listed above, the package manager also supports sha256, shasum
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and openssl as fallbacks.
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sha256sum is listed above, the package manager also supports sha256, shasum,
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digest and openssl as fallbacks.
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[3] The tar command has no standard! This came as a shock. The POSIX equivalent
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is "pax" though this isn't in wide use (at least on Linux).
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[3] The tar command has no standard! The POSIX equivalent is "pax" though this
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has its own issues (-s is unclear about links).
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Our usage of tar is merely, cf, xf and tf. A patch is applied to sbase's
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tar so that it supports "dashless" arguments (as all others do). Our usage
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of tar cannot become any more basic than it is now. Portability should no
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longer be a concern.
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Our usage of tar is merely, cf, xf and tf. Our usage of tar cannot become
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any more basic than it is now. Portability should not be a concern.
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Tested tar implementations include: busybox, toybox, sbase, GNU and
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libarchive (though all tar implementations should work in theory).
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@ -127,10 +97,6 @@ kept to a minimum (though we must also remain realistic).
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The other compression methods are optional as no package sources (in the
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official repositories) make use of them.
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If a compression method has 1-3 uses (hasn't yet happened), the compression
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method will simply become a 'make' dependency of the package until usage
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increases to a "normality".
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[5] A privilege escalation utility is only needed when using the package
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manager as a normal user for system-wide package installation.
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@ -146,132 +112,11 @@ kept to a minimum (though we must also remain realistic).
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contain any arguments whatsoever.
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This makes our usage of 'strip' non-POSIX. That being said, our usage is
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compatible with these 'strip' implementations.
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strip binutils, elfutils, elftoolchain, llvm, etc.
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readelf Just needs -d flag.
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compatible with most 'strip' implementations (binutils, elfutils,
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elftoolchain, llvm, etc).
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[3.0] Interesting Features
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________________________________________________________________________________
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[3.1] Runtime dependency detector built around 'ldd'/'readelf'
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____________________________________________________________________________
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Dynamic dependencies brought in by build systems (which are missing from the
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package's dependency list) are fixed on-the-fly by checking which libraries
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link to the package's files.
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This prevents an incomplete dependency list from causing system breakage as
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the package manager is able to complete the list.
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A lot of packages make use of this "implicit" to "explicit" dependency list
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"conversion" to provide optional dependencies.
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Example output:
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| -> libXmu Checking for missing dependencies |
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| --- /home/dylan/conf/cache/kiss/build-4477/d |
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| depends |
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| @@ -1,3 +1,8 @@ |
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| +libX11 |
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| +libXau |
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| libXext |
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| libXt |
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| +libxcb |
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| xorg-util-macros make |
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| |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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[3.2] Fully dynamic (and automatic) alternatives system
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____________________________________________________________________________
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Any file conflicts between two packages automatically become choices in the
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alternatives system.
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This allows one to swap providers of files without needing to explicitly
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tell the package manager that two packages conflict, provide the same
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utilities, etc.
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In other words, no changes need to be made to packages. In fact, nothing
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needs to be done at all. It's entirely automatic.
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| List available alternatives ('a' is an alias to 'alternatives'). |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| $ kiss a |
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| gnugrep /usr/bin/grep |
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| ncurses /usr/bin/clear |
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| |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| Swap to GNU grep. |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| $ kiss a gnugrep /usr/bin/grep |
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| -> Swapping '/usr/bin/grep' from busybox to gnugrep |
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| |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| Swap back to busybox grep. |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| $ kiss a busybox /usr/bin/grep |
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| -> Swapping '/usr/bin/grep' from gnugrep to busybox |
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| |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| Swap to all alternatives for a given package (sbase for example). |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| $ kiss a | grep ^sbase | kiss a - |
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| -> Swapping '/usr/bin/cat' from busybox to sbase |
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| -> Swapping '/usr/bin/cut' from busybox to sbase |
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| -> Swapping '/usr/bin/yes' from busybox to sbase |
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| ...Many more lines of output... |
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| |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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The above command works as the output of the alternatives listing is
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directly usable as input to 'kiss a'.
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[3.3] 3-way handshake for files in /etc/
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____________________________________________________________________________
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Files in /etc/ are handled differently to those elsewhere on the system. A
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reinstallation or update to a package will not always overwrite these files.
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Instead, a 3-way handshake happens during installation to determine how the
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new /etc/ file should be handled.
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If the user has made modifications to the file and those modifications
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differ to the to-be-installed package's file, the file is installed with the
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suffix '.new'
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If the user hasn't touched the file, it will be automatically overwritten by
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the package manager as it will contain updated/new contents..
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If the user has touched the file but the file has not changed between
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package versions, it will simply be skipped over.
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| Example (with sha256 checksums truncated to fit). |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| -> opendoas Doing 3-way handshake for etc/doas.conf |
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| Previous: 1656eee66c235cb717f9f8f35aa9c3587bb768d7fe etc/doas.conf |
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| System: 4a51871b3190fa74726ea2b12ffafb96f40c172b68 etc/doas.conf |
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| New: 1656eee66c235cb717f9f8f35aa9c3587bb768d7fe etc/doas.conf |
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| -> Skipping etc/doas.conf |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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[4.0] Configuration
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[3.0] Configuration
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________________________________________________________________________________
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The package manager has no configuration files and no changes need to be made to
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@ -279,11 +124,9 @@ the system prior to its use. While there is no configuration file, this does not
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mean that there is no possibility for configuration.
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The package manager can be configured via the use of environment variables. I
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believe this to be the best configuration method (where realistic). Environment
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variables can be set system-wide, per-user, conditionally, for a single
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invocation, etc, etc.
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They require little to no extra code in the package manager to support them.
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believe this to be the best configuration method for the problem at hand.
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Environment variables can be set system-wide, per-user, conditionally, for a
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single invocation and so on.
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+-----------------+------------------------------------------------------------+
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| Variable | Description |
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@ -325,415 +168,95 @@ They require little to no extra code in the package manager to support them.
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| | Set to '0' to disable. |
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| | |
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| KISS_SU | Force usage of a different sudo tool. |
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| | Valid: su, sudo, doas, ssu |
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| | NOTE: Tool must support sudo-like arguments. |
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| | |
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| KISS_TMPDIR | Temporary directory for builds. Can be set to a tmpfs so |
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| | builds happen in memory. |
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| | |
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+-----------------+------------------------------------------------------------+
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There are also a myriad of "3rd-party" environment variables which control GCC,
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Make, CMake, etc. These aren't used by the package manager. They're used by the
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tools called by the package's build script.
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+-----------------+------------------------------------------------------------+
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| Variable | Description |
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+-----------------+------------------------------------------------------------+
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| XDG_CACHE_HOME | Cache directory location. |
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| | |
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| CC | C compiler. |
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| CXX | C++ compiler. |
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| AR | Archive tool. |
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| NM | Symbol tool. |
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| RANLIB | Index tool. |
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| | |
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| CFLAGS | C compiler flags. |
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| CXXFLAGS | C++ compiler flags. |
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| LDFLAGS | Linker flags. |
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| MAKEFLAGS | Make flags. |
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| SAMUFLAGS | Samurai flags. |
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| RUSTFLAGS | Rust compiler flags. |
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| | |
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| CMAKE_GENERATOR | 'Unix Makefiles' or 'Ninja'. |
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+-----------------+------------------------------------------------------------+
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[5.0] Repositories
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________________________________________________________________________________
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Repository management in KISS is very simple. Repositories are configurable via
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an environment variable. This environment variable can be set system-wide,
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per-user, conditionally (via a script or program), for a single invocation, etc.
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The environment variable is called '$KISS_PATH' and is functionally identical to
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the '$PATH' variable. A colon separated list of paths in other words.
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+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| Example KISS_PATH |
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+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| $ KISS_PATH=/var/db/kiss/repo/core:/var/db/kiss/repo/extra |
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| |
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+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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In the above example, two repositories are enabled (Core and Extra). The package
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manager will search this list for packages in the order it is written.
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Repositories can live anywhere on the system. In your '$HOME' directory,
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somewhere system-wide in '/', etc. The only requirement is that a full path be
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used.
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[5.1] What is a repository?
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____________________________________________________________________________
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A KISS repository is simply a directory of directories. The quickest way to
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get started is as follows.
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| 1. Create the repository |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| $ mkdir -p repo |
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| $ cd repo |
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| |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| 2. Let's 'fork' a few packages into our new repository. |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| $ kiss fork curl |
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| $ kiss fork xz |
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| $ kiss fork zlib |
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| |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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This is now a fully usable repository and it can be added to your KISS_PATH.
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[5.2] Enabling a remote repository
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____________________________________________________________________________
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Let's assume that our KISS_PATH matches the above example (Core and Extra).
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| 1. Clone the repository |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| # This can live anywhere on the system. |
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| $ git clone https://example.com/repo |
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| |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| 2. Enable the repository |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| $ export KISS_PATH=$KISS_PATH:/path/to/repo |
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| |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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[5.3] Preventing a package from receiving updates
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____________________________________________________________________________
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Preventing a package from receiving updates can be accomplished in a myriad
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of different ways. The easiest method is to leverage a user repository.
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| 1. Create a new repository |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| $ mkdir -p no_updates |
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| $ cd no_updates |
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| |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| 2. Copy the package to the new repository |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| $ cp -r /var/db/kiss/installed/PKG_NAME /path/to/no_updates |
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| |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| 3. Add the new repository to the /START/ of your KISS_PATH |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| $ export KISS_PATH=/path/to/no_updates:$KISS_PATH |
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| |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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The package manager will search KISS_PATH in order. It will see that the
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no_updates repository provides PKG_NAME and the version matches that which
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is installed. No updates will again happen for the package.
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[5.4] Package fallbacks
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____________________________________________________________________________
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If you would like to package something in your own repository but would
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like the package manager to prefer other repositories before yours, simply
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add your repository to the end of KISS_PATH.
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The moment that your package is available elsewhere, the package manager
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will prefer the new location to yours. The list is searched (in order) and
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the first match is picked.
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[5.5] Bypassing KISS_PATH
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____________________________________________________________________________
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There is a special case where one can bypass the regular KISS_PATH for a
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single invocation of the package manager. This has been called "CRUX-like
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usage" by users.
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| $ cd /path/to/myrepo/firefox |
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| $ kiss b |
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| |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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As seen above, various package manager commands will work without arguments,
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so long as you are in a package's repository directory. This will prepend
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the current directory to '$KISS_PATH' _only_ for this invocation.
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[6.0] Package Manager Hooks
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[4.0] Package Manager Hooks
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________________________________________________________________________________
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KISS' package manager is extensible via hooks which fire at various different
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places inside the utility. Hooks allow the user to modify behavior, add new
|
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features or conditionally do things on a per-package basis.
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This setting is controlled by the '$KISS_HOOK' environment variable which takes
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a colon separated list of absolute file paths to executables.
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Example:
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+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| export KISS_HOOK=$HOME/.local/bin/kiss-hook:/path/to/other/hook |
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| |
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+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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[6.1] Usage
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____________________________________________________________________________
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|
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This setting is controlled by the '$KISS_HOOK' environment variable which
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takes a colon separated list of absolute file paths to executables.
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| |
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| export KISS_HOOK=$HOME/.local/bin/kiss-hook:/path/to/other/hook |
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| |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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[6.2] List of hooks
|
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____________________________________________________________________________
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|
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Each hook is executed in the order it appears in KISS_HOOK and is given its
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own environment/arguments accordingly. The hooks are documented as follows.
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+--------------+-----------------------------------------------------------+
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| hook | arguments |
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+--------------+-----------------------------------------------------------+
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| build-fail | hook_type pkg_name build_directory |
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| post-build | hook_type pkg_name DESTDIR |
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| post-install | hook_type pkg_name installed_database |
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| post-package | hook_type pkg_name tarball |
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| post-update | hook_type |
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| pre-build | hook_type pkg_name build_directory |
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| pre-extract | hook_type pkg_name DESTDIR |
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| pre-install | hook_type pkg_name extract_directory |
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| pre-remove | hook_type pkg_name installed_database |
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| pre-update | hook_type |
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| | |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
+---------------+--------+----------+--------------------+-----------------+
|
||||
| hook | arg1 | arg2 | arg3 | arg4 |
|
||||
+---------------+--------+----------+--------------------+-----------------+
|
||||
| post-build | Type | Package | DESTDIR | |
|
||||
| post-install | Type | Package | Installed database | |
|
||||
| post-package | Type | Package | Tarball | |
|
||||
| post-update | Type | [7] | | |
|
||||
| pre-build | Type | Package | Build directory | |
|
||||
| pre-extract | Type | Package | DESTDIR | |
|
||||
| pre-install | Type | Package | Extracted package | |
|
||||
| pre-remove | Type | Package | Installed database | |
|
||||
| pre-update | Type | [7] | | |
|
||||
| queue-status | Type | Package | Number in queue | Total in queue |
|
||||
| | | | | |
|
||||
+---------------+--------+----------+--------------------+-----------------+
|
||||
|
||||
build-fail
|
||||
________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
arg1: build-fail
|
||||
arg2: package name
|
||||
arg3: build directory
|
||||
|
||||
post-build
|
||||
________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
arg1: post-build
|
||||
arg2: package name
|
||||
arg3: DESTDIR
|
||||
|
||||
post-install
|
||||
________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
arg1: post-install
|
||||
arg2: package name
|
||||
arg3: installed database (/var/db/kiss/installed/pkg_name)
|
||||
|
||||
post-package
|
||||
________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
arg1: post-package
|
||||
arg2: package name
|
||||
arg3: path to tarball
|
||||
|
||||
post-update
|
||||
________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
arg1: post-update
|
||||
env: PWD is set to the current repository.
|
||||
|
||||
pre-build
|
||||
________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
arg1: pre-build
|
||||
arg2: build directory
|
||||
|
||||
pre-extract
|
||||
________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
arg1: pre-extract
|
||||
arg2: DESTDIR
|
||||
|
||||
pre-install
|
||||
________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
arg1: pre-install
|
||||
arg2: extraction directory
|
||||
|
||||
pre-remove
|
||||
________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
arg1: pre-remove
|
||||
arg2: installed database (/var/db/kiss/installed/pkg_name)
|
||||
|
||||
pre-update
|
||||
________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
arg1: pre-update
|
||||
env: PWD is set to the current repository.
|
||||
[7] The -update hooks start in the current repository. In other words, you
|
||||
can operate on the repository directly or grab the value from '$PWD'.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
[6.2] Removing unneeded files from packages
|
||||
____________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
Packages can contain files which you will have no use for. A simple hook can
|
||||
be defined to remove them from packages.
|
||||
|
||||
NOTE: This is the default 'KISS_HOOK' script. If defining your own, be sure
|
||||
to include this if you would like to continue to remove these files.
|
||||
|
||||
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| case $1 in |
|
||||
| post-build) |
|
||||
| # Ensure that '$3' is set. |
|
||||
| : "${3:?DESTDIR is unset}" |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| rm -rf "$3/usr/share/gettext" \ |
|
||||
| "$3/usr/share/polkit-1" \ |
|
||||
| "$3/usr/share/locale" \ |
|
||||
| "$3/usr/share/info" \ |
|
||||
| "$3/usr/lib/charset.alias" |
|
||||
| ;; |
|
||||
| esac |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
[6.3] Drop into a subshell on build fail
|
||||
____________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
Handy for debugging.
|
||||
|
||||
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| case $1 in |
|
||||
| build-fail) |
|
||||
| log "$2" "Dropped into subshell" |
|
||||
| sh >/dev/tty |
|
||||
| ;; |
|
||||
| esac |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
[7.0] Package Manager Extensions
|
||||
[5.0] Package Manager Extensions
|
||||
________________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
Anything in the user's '$PATH' which matches the glob 'kiss-*' will be directly
|
||||
usable via the package manager. For example, 'kiss-size' is also usable as
|
||||
'kiss size' (and even 'kiss si') (the shortest available alias).
|
||||
|
||||
The detected 'kiss-*' utilities will appear in the package manager's help output
|
||||
with the second line in the script acting as a doc-string.
|
||||
The detected 'kiss-*' utilities will appear in the package manager's help-ext
|
||||
output with the second line in the script acting as a doc-string.
|
||||
|
||||
Example help output:
|
||||
|
||||
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| kiss extensions |
|
||||
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| -> Installed extensions (kiss-* in $PATH) |
|
||||
| -> chbuild Create/destroy temporary chroots |
|
||||
| -> chroot Enter a kiss chroot |
|
||||
| -> depends Display a package's dependencies |
|
||||
| -> export Installed package to tarball |
|
||||
| -> fork Fork a package into the current dir |
|
||||
| -> help Read KISS documentation |
|
||||
| -> link Link a repo file to another repo |
|
||||
| -> maintainer Find the maintainer of a package |
|
||||
| -> manifest Display all files owned by a package |
|
||||
| -> new Create a boilerplate package |
|
||||
| -> orphans List orphaned packages |
|
||||
| -> outdated Check repository packages for updates |
|
||||
| -> owns Check which package owns a file |
|
||||
| -> revdepends Packages which depend on package |
|
||||
| -> size Show the size on disk for a package |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
|
||||
These are in effect, optional utilities which interact with the package system
|
||||
in one way or another. My hope behind them is to act as an example as to how
|
||||
easy it is to interface with the plain-text and "static" package system.
|
||||
|
||||
Example utility:
|
||||
|
||||
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| kiss-depends (kiss depends, kiss de) |
|
||||
| kiss help-ext |
|
||||
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| #!/bin/sh -ef |
|
||||
| # Display a package's dependencies |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| # Ignore shellcheck as we want the warning's behavior. |
|
||||
| # shellcheck disable=2015 |
|
||||
| [ "$1" ] && kiss l "${1:-null}" >/dev/null || { |
|
||||
| printf 'usage: kiss-depends [pkg]\n' |
|
||||
| exit 1 |
|
||||
| } |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| cat "$KISS_ROOT/var/db/kiss/installed/$1/depends" 2>/dev/null |
|
||||
| -> Installed extensions (kiss-* in $PATH) |
|
||||
| -> chroot Enter a kiss chroot |
|
||||
| -> depends Display a package's dependencies |
|
||||
| -> export Installed package to tarball |
|
||||
| -> fork Fork a package into the current directory |
|
||||
| -> help Read KISS documentation |
|
||||
| -> link Link a repo file to another repo |
|
||||
| -> maintainer Find the maintainer of a package |
|
||||
| -> manifest Display all files owned by a package |
|
||||
| -> new Create a boilerplate package |
|
||||
| -> orphans List orphaned packages |
|
||||
| -> outdated Check repository packages for updates |
|
||||
| -> owns Check which package owns a file |
|
||||
| -> preferred Lists the owners of all files with conflicts |
|
||||
| -> revdepends Packages which depend on package |
|
||||
| -> repo-orphans List packages which aren't present in any repository |
|
||||
| -> size Show the size on disk for a package |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
[8.0] Tips and Tricks
|
||||
________________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
A lot of the package manager's features are hard to discover or otherwise
|
||||
non-obvious to its users. This section will document these features, how to use
|
||||
them and the benefits they bring.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
[8.1] Swap grep implementations for a major speed up.
|
||||
____________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
|
||||
The default grep implementation in KISS is busybox grep. This version of
|
||||
grep works very well and supports a large number of features. The one issue
|
||||
is that it is painfully slow when compared to other popular implementations.
|
||||
|
||||
A fairly major speedup can be attained by swapping to a different grep via
|
||||
the alternatives system. The fastest grep implementation around is GNU grep
|
||||
which is available in the official repositories as 'gnugrep'.
|
||||
|
||||
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| 1. Install GNU grep |
|
||||
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| $ kiss b gnugrep |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| 2. Swap to GNU grep |
|
||||
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| $ kiss a gnugrep /usr/bin/grep |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user