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mirror of https://codeberg.org/kiss-community/kiss synced 2024-12-25 00:20:05 -07:00
kiss/kiss
2019-08-13 00:00:51 +00:00

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#!/bin/sh -ef
#
# Disable warnings against word-splitting and globbing.
# They are used *safely* throughout this script as globbing
# is globally disabled and assumptions can be made about the input.
# shellcheck disable=2046,2086
#
# This is a simple package manager written in POSIX 'sh' for
# KISS Linux, utilizing the core UNIX utilities where needed.
#
# The script runs with 'set -e' enabled. It will exit on any
# non-zero return code. This ensures that no function continues
# if it fails at any point.
#
# Keep in mind that this involves extra code in the case where
# an error is optional and/or required.
#
# Where possible the package manager should check things first,
# die if necessary and continue if all is well.
#
# The code below conforms to shellcheck's rules. However, some
# lint errors *are* disabled as they relate to unexpected
# behavior (which we do expect).
#
# KISS is available under the MIT license.
#
# - Dylan Araps.
die() {
# Print a message and exit with '1' (error).
printf '\033[31m!>\033[m %s\n' "$@" >&2
exit 1
}
log() {
# Print a message with a colorful arrow to distinguish
# from other output.
printf '\033[32m=>\033[m %s\n' "$@"
}
pkg_lint() {
# Check that each mandatory file in the package entry exists.
log "[$1]: Checking repository files..."
# Figure out *where* the repository entry for the package
# is located.
repo_dir=$(pkg_search "$1")
cd "$repo_dir" || die "'$repo_dir' not accessible"
[ -f sources ] || die "[$1]: Sources file not found."
[ -x build ] || die "[$1]: Build file not found or not executable."
[ -s version ] || die "[$1]: Version file not found or empty."
# Ensure that the release field in the version file is set
# to something. The above test checks for the version field inclusively.
read -r _ rel < version
[ "$rel" ] || die "Release field not found in version file."
# Unset this variable so it isn't used again on a failed
# source. There's no 'local' keyword in POSIX sh.
rel=
}
pkg_search() {
# Figure out which repository a package belongs to by
# searching for directories matching the package name
# in $KISS_PATH/*.
[ "$KISS_PATH" ] || \
die "\$KISS_PATH needs to be set." \
"Example: KISS_PATH=/var/db/kiss/repo/core:/var/db/kiss/repo/extra" \
"Repositories will be searched in the configured order." \
"The variable should work just like \$PATH."
# Find the repository containing a package.
# Searches installed packages if the package is absent from the repositories.
set -- "$1" $(IFS=:; find $KISS_PATH "$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db" \
-maxdepth 1 -name "$1")
# A package may also not be found due to a repository not being
# readable by the current user. Either way, we need to die here.
[ -z "$2" ] && die "Package '$1' not in any repository."
printf '%s\n' "$2"
}
pkg_list() {
# List installed packages. As the format is files and
# directories, this just involves a simple for loop and
# file read.
# Change directories to the database. This allows us to
# avoid having to 'basename' each path. If this fails,
# set '$1' to mimic a failed glob which indicates that
# nothing is installed.
cd "$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db" 2>/dev/null ||
set -- "$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db/"\*
# Optional arguments can be passed to check for specific
# packages. If no arguments are passed, list all. As we
# loop over '$@', if there aren't any arguments we can
# just set the directory contents to the argument list.
[ "$1" ] || { set +f; set -f -- *; }
# If the 'glob' above failed, exit early as there are no
# packages installed.
[ "$1" = "$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db/"\* ] && return 1
# Loop over each version file and warn if one doesn't exist.
# Also warn if a package is missing its version file.
for pkg; do
[ -d "$pkg" ] || {
log "Package '$pkg' is not installed."
return 1
}
[ -f "$pkg/version" ] || {
log "Warning: Package '$pkg' has no version file."
continue
}
read -r version release < "$pkg/version" &&
printf '%s\n' "$pkg $version-$release"
done
}
pkg_sources() {
# Download any remote package sources. The existence of local
# files is also checked.
log "[$1]: Downloading sources..."
# Store each downloaded source in named after the package it
# belongs to. This avoid conflicts between two packages having a
# source of the same name.
mkdir -p "$src_dir/$1"
cd "$src_dir/$1"
# Find the package's repository files. This needs to keep
# happening as we can't store this data in any kind of data
# structure.
repo_dir=$(pkg_search "$1")
while read -r src _; do
case $src in
# Git repository.
git:*)
git clone "${src##git:}" "$mak_dir"
;;
# Remote source.
*://*)
[ -f "${src##*/}" ] && {
log "[$1]: Found cached source '${src##*/}'."
continue
}
wget "$src" || {
rm -f "${src##*/}"
die "[$1]: Failed to download $src."
}
;;
# Local files (Any source that is non-remote is assumed to be local).
*)
[ -f "$repo_dir/$src" ] ||
die "[$1]: No local file '$src'."
log "[$1]: Found local file '$src'."
;;
esac
done < "$repo_dir/sources"
}
pkg_extract() {
# Extract all source archives to the build directory and copy over
# any local repository files.
log "[$1]: Extracting sources..."
# Store each downloaded source in named after the package it
# belongs to. This avoid conflicts between two packages having a
# source of the same name.
mkdir -p "$mak_dir/$1" && cd "$mak_dir/$1"
# Find the package's repository files. This needs to keep
# happening as we can't store this data in any kind of data
# structure.
repo_dir=$(pkg_search "$1")
while read -r src dest; do
mkdir -p "./$dest"
case $src in
# Do nothing as git repository was downloaded to the build
# directory directly.
git:*) ;;
# Only 'tar' archives are currently supported for extraction.
# Any other file-types are simply copied to '$mak_dir' which
# allows you to extract them manually.
*://*.tar*|*://*.tgz)
tar xf "$src_dir/$1/${src##*/}" -C "./$dest" \
--strip-components 1 \
|| die "[$1]: Couldn't extract ${src##*/}."
;;
# Local files (Any source that is non-remote is assumed to be local).
*)
if [ -f "$repo_dir/$src" ]; then
cp -f "$repo_dir/$src" "./$dest"
elif [ -f "$src_dir/$1/${src##*/}" ]; then
cp -f "$src_dir/$1/${src##*/}" "./$dest"
else
die "[$1]: Local file $src not found."
fi
;;
esac
done < "$repo_dir/sources"
}
pkg_depends() {
# Resolve all dependencies and install them in the right order.
# Find the package's repository files. This needs to keep
# happening as we can't store this data in any kind of data
# structure.
repo_dir=$(pkg_search "$1")
# This does a depth-first search. The deepest dependencies are
# listed first and then the parents in reverse order.
case $missing_deps in
# Dependency is already in list, skip it.
*" $1 "*) ;;
*)
# Recurse through the dependencies of the child
# packages. Keep doing this.
[ -f "$repo_dir/depends" ] &&
while read -r dep _; do
[ "${dep##\#*}" ] || continue
pkg_depends "$dep" ||:
done < "$repo_dir/depends"
# After child dependencies are added to the list,
# add the package which depends on them.
missing_deps="$missing_deps $1 "
;;
esac
}
pkg_verify() {
# Verify all package checksums. This is achieved by generating
# a new set of checksums and then comparing those with the old
# set.
# Find the package's repository files. This needs to keep
# happening as we can't store this data in any kind of data
# structure.
repo_dir=$(pkg_search "$1")
# Generate a second set of checksums to compare against the
# repository's checksums for the package.
pkg_checksums "$1" > "$cac_dir/c-$1"
# Compare the checksums using 'cmp'.
cmp -s "$cac_dir/c-$1" "$repo_dir/checksums" || {
log "[$1]: Checksum mismatch."
# Instead of dying above, log it to the terminal. Also define a
# variable so we *can* die after all checksum files have been
# checked.
mismatch="$mismatch$1 "
}
}
pkg_strip() {
# Strip package binaries and libraries. This saves space on the
# system as well as on the tar-balls we ship for installation.
# Find the package's repository files. This needs to keep
# happening as we can't store this data in any kind of data
# structure.
repo_dir=$(pkg_search "$1")
# Package has stripping disabled, stop here.
[ -f "$repo_dir/nostrip" ] && return
log "[$1]: Stripping binaries and libraries..."
# Strip only files matching the below mime-types from the package
# directory. No alternative to 'file' here sadly.
find "$pkg_dir/$1" -type f | while read -r binary; do
case $(file -bi "$binary") in
application/x-sharedlib*|application/x-pie-executable*)
strip_opts=--strip-unneeded
;;
application/x-archive*) strip_opts=--strip-debug ;;
application/x-executable*) strip_opts=--strip-all ;;
*) continue ;;
esac
# Suppress errors here as some binaries and libraries may
# fail to strip. This is OK.
strip "$strip_opts" "$binary" 2>/dev/null ||:
done
}
pkg_manifest() (
# Generate the package's manifest file. This is a list of each file
# and directory inside the package. The file is used when uninstalling
# packages, checking for package conflicts and for general debugging.
log "[$1]: Generating manifest..."
# This funcion runs as a sub-shell to avoid having to 'cd' back to the
# prior directory before being able to continue.
cd "$pkg_dir/$1"
# Find all files and directories in the package. Directories are printed
# with a trailing forward slash '/'. The list is then reversed with
# directories appearing *after* their contents.
find . -mindepth 1 -type d -exec printf '%s/\n' {} + -or -print |
sort -r | sed -e ss.ss > "$pkg_dir/$1/$pkg_db/$1/manifest"
log "[$1]: Generated manifest."
)
pkg_tar() {
# Create a tar-ball from the built package's files.
# This tar-ball also contains the package's database entry.
log "[$1]: Creating tar-ball..."
# Find the package's repository files. This needs to keep
# happening as we can't store this data in any kind of data
# structure.
repo_dir=$(pkg_search "$1")
# Read the version information to name the package.
read -r version release < "$repo_dir/version"
# Create a tar-ball from the contents of the built package. `fakeroot`
# is used here to correct issues with file ownership.
fakeroot \
tar zpcf "$bin_dir/$1#$version-$release.tar.gz" -C "$pkg_dir/$1" . ||
die "[$1]: Failed to create tar-ball."
log "[$1]: Successfully created tar-ball."
}
pkg_build() {
# Build packages and turn them into packaged tar-balls. This function
# also checks checksums, downloads sources and ensure all dependencies
# are installed.
log "Resolving dependencies..."
for pkg; do pkg_depends "$pkg"; done
# Store the explicit packages so we can handle them differently
# below. Dependencies are automatically installed but packages
# passed to KISS aren't.
explicit_packages=" $* "
# Set the resolved dependency list as the function's arguments.
set -- $missing_deps
# The dependency solver always lists all dependencies regardless of
# whether or not they are installed. Ensure that all explicit packages
# are included and ensure that all installed packages are excluded.
for pkg; do
case $explicit_packages in
*" $pkg "*)
build_packages="$build_packages$pkg "
;;
*)
pkg_list "$pkg" >/dev/null ||
build_packages="$build_packages$pkg "
;;
esac
done
# Set the filtered dependency list as the function's arguments.
set -- $build_packages
log "Building: $*."
# Only ask for confirmation if more than one package needs to be built.
[ $# -gt 1 ] || [ "$build_prompt" ] && {
log "Continue?: Press Enter to continue or Ctrl+C to abort here."
# POSIX 'read' has none of the "nice" options like '-n', '-p'
# etc etc. This is the most basic usage of 'read'.
read -r REPLY || exit
}
log "Checking to see if any dependencies have already been built..."
log "Installing any pre-built dependencies..."
# Install any pre-built dependencies if they exist in the binary
# directory and are up to date.
for pkg; do
# Don't check for pre-built package if it was passed to KISS
# directly.
case $explicit_packages in
*" $pkg "*)
shift
set -- "$@" "$pkg"
continue
;;
esac
# Find the package's repository files. This needs to keep
# happening as we can't store this data in any kind of data
# structure.
repo_dir=$(pkg_search "$pkg")
# Figure out the version and release.
read -r version release < "$repo_dir/version"
# Remove the current package from the package list.
shift
# Install any pre-built binaries if they exist.
# This calls 'args' to inherit a root check and call
# to 'sudo' to elevate permissions.
[ -f "$bin_dir/$pkg#$version-$release.tar.gz" ] && {
log "[$pkg]: Found pre-built binary, installing..."
args i "$bin_dir/$pkg#$version-$release.tar.gz"
continue
}
# Add the removed package back to the list if it doesn't
# have a pre-built binary.
set -- "$@" "$pkg"
done
for pkg; do pkg_lint "$pkg"; done
for pkg; do
# Find the package's repository files. This needs to keep
# happening as we can't store this data in any kind of data
# structure.
repo_dir=$(pkg_search "$pkg")
# Ensure that checksums exist prior to building the package.
[ -f "$repo_dir/checksums" ] || {
log "[$pkg]: Checksums are missing."
# Instead of dying above, log it to the terminal. Also define a
# variable so we *can* die after all checksum files have been
# checked.
no_checkums="$no_checkums$pkg "
}
done
# Die here as packages without checksums were found above.
[ "$no_checkums" ] &&
die "Run 'kiss checksum ${no_checkums% }' to generate checksums."
for pkg; do pkg_sources "$pkg"; done
for pkg; do pkg_verify "$pkg"; done
# Die here as packages with differing checksums were found above.
[ "$mismatch" ] &&
die "Checksum mismatch with: ${mismatch% }"
# Finally build and create tarballs for all passed packages and
# dependencies.
for pkg; do
pkg_extract "$pkg"
# Find the package's repository files. This needs to keep
# happening as we can't store this data in any kind of data
# structure.
repo_dir=$(pkg_search "$pkg")
# Install built packages to a directory under the package name
# to avoid collisions with other packages.
mkdir -p "$pkg_dir/$pkg/$pkg_db"
# Move to the build directory and call the build script.
(cd "$mak_dir/$pkg"; fakeroot "$repo_dir/build" "$pkg_dir/$pkg") ||
die "[$pkg]: Build failed."
# Copy the repository files to the package directory.
# This acts as the database entry.
cp -Rf "$repo_dir" "$pkg_dir/$pkg/$pkg_db/"
log "[$pkg]: Successfully built package."
# Create the manifest file early and make it empty.
# This ensure that the manifest is added to the manifest...
: > "$pkg_dir/$pkg/$pkg_db/$pkg/manifest"
pkg_strip "$pkg"
pkg_manifest "$pkg"
pkg_tar "$pkg"
# Install only dependencies of passed packages.
case $explicit_packages in
*" $pkg "*) continue ;;
*) pkg_install "$pkg" ;;
esac
done
log "Successfully built package(s)."
log "Run 'kiss i${explicit_packages% }' to install the built package(s)."
}
pkg_checksums() {
# Generate checksums for packages.
# Find the package's repository files. This needs to keep
# happening as we can't store this data in any kind of data
# structure.
repo_dir=$(pkg_search "$1")
while read -r src _; do
case $src in
# Git repository.
# Skip checksums on git repositories.
git:*) ;;
*)
# File is local to the package and is stored in the
# repository.
[ -f "$repo_dir/$src" ] &&
src_path=$repo_dir/${src%/*}
# File is remote and was downloaded.
[ -f "$src_dir/$1/${src##*/}" ] &&
src_path=$src_dir/$1
# Die here if source for some reason, doesn't exist.
[ "$src_path" ] ||
die "[$1]: Couldn't find source '$src'."
# An easy way to get 'sha256sum' to print with the 'basename'
# of files is to 'cd' to the file's directory beforehand.
(cd "$src_path" && sha256sum "${src##*/}") ||
die "[$1]: Failed to generate checksums."
# Unset this variable so it isn't used again on a failed
# source. There's no 'local' keyword in POSIX sh.
src_path=
;;
esac
done < "$repo_dir/sources"
}
pkg_conflicts() {
# Check to see if a package conflicts with another.
# This function takes a path to a KISS tar-ball as an argument.
log "[$2]: Checking for package conflicts."
# Extract manifest from the tar-ball and only extract files entries.
tar xf "$1" -O "./$pkg_db/$2/manifest" |
while read -r line; do
[ "${line%%*/}" ] && printf '%s\n' "$line" >> "$cac_dir/manifest-$pid"
done ||:
# Enable globbing.
set +f
# Compare extracted manifest to all installed manifests.
# If there are matching lines (files) there is a package conflict.
for db in "$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db/"*; do
[ "$2" = "${db##*/}" ] && continue
grep -Fxf "$cac_dir/manifest-$pid" "$db/manifest" 2>/dev/null &&
die "Package '$2' conflicts with '${db##*/}'."
done
# Disable globbing.
set -f
# Remove this temporary file as we no longer need it.
rm -f "$cac_dir/manifest-$pid"
}
pkg_remove() {
# Remove a package and all of its files. The '/etc' directory
# is handled differently and configuration files are *not*
# overwritten.
# The package is not installed, don't do anything.
pkg_list "$1" >/dev/null || {
log "[$1]: Not installed."
return
}
# Enable globbing.
set +f
# Make sure that nothing depends on this package.
[ "$2" = check ] && for file in "$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db/"*; do
# Check each depends file for the package and if it's
# a run-time dependency, append to the $required_by string.
grep -qFx "$1" "$file/depends" 2>/dev/null &&
required_by="$required_by'${file##*/}', "
done
# Disable globbing.
set -f
[ "$required_by" ] &&
die "[$1]: Package is required by ${required_by%, }." \
"[$1]: Aborting here..."
# Block being able to abort the script with 'Ctrl+C' during removal.
# Removes all risk of the user aborting a package removal leaving
# an incomplete package installed.
trap '' INT
while read -r file; do
# The file is in '/etc' skip it. This prevents the package
# manager from removing user edited configuration files.
[ "${file##/etc/*}" ] || continue
if [ -d "$KISS_ROOT/$file" ]; then
rmdir "$KISS_ROOT/$file" 2>/dev/null || continue
else
rm -f -- "$KISS_ROOT/$file" ||
log "[$1]: Failed to remove '$file'."
fi
done < "$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db/$1/manifest"
# Reset 'trap' to its original value. Removal is done so
# we no longer need to block 'Ctrl+C'.
trap pkg_clean EXIT INT
log "[$1]: Removed successfully."
}
pkg_install() {
# Install a built package tar-ball.
for pkg; do
# Install can also take the full path to a tar-ball.
# We don't need to check the repository if this is the case.
if [ -f "$pkg" ] && [ -z "${pkg%%*.tar.gz}" ] ; then
tar_file=$pkg
else
# Find the package's repository files. This needs to keep
# happening as we can't store this data in any kind of data
# structure.
repo_dir=$(pkg_search "$pkg")
# Read the version information to name the package.
read -r version release < "$repo_dir/version"
# Construct the name of the package tarball.
tar_name=$pkg\#$version-$release.tar.gz
[ -f "$bin_dir/$tar_name" ] ||
die "Package '$pkg' has not been built." \
"Run 'kiss build $pkg'."
tar_file=$bin_dir/$tar_name
fi
# Figure out which package the tar-ball installs by checking for
# a database entry inside the tar-ball. If no database entry exists,
# exit here as the tar-ball is *most likely* not a KISS package.
pkg_name=$(tar tf "$tar_file" | grep -x "\./$pkg_db/.*/version") ||
die "'${tar_file##*/}' is not a valid KISS package."
pkg_name=${pkg_name%/*}
pkg_name=${pkg_name##*/}
pkg_conflicts "$tar_file" "$pkg_name"
mkdir -p "$tar_dir/$pkg_name"
# Extract the tar-ball to catch any errors before installation begins.
tar pxf "$tar_file" -C "$tar_dir/$pkg_name" ||
die "[$pkg_name]: Failed to extract tar-ball."
log "[$pkg_name]: Checking that all dependencies are installed..."
# Make sure that all run-time dependencies are installed prior to
# installing the package.
[ -f "$tar_dir/$pkg_name/$pkg_db/$pkg_name/depends" ] &&
while read -r dep dep_type; do
[ "${dep##\#*}" ] || continue
[ "$dep_type" ] || pkg_list "$dep" >/dev/null ||
required_install="$required_install'$dep', "
done < "$tar_dir/$pkg_name/$pkg_db/$pkg_name/depends"
[ "$required_install" ] &&
die "[$1]: Package requires ${required_install%, }." \
"[$1]: Aborting here..."
log "[$pkg_name]: Installing package..."
# Block being able to abort the script with 'Ctrl+C' during installation.
# Removes all risk of the user aborting a package installation leaving
# an incomplete package installed.
trap '' INT
# If the package is already installed (and this is an upgrade) make a
# backup of the manifest file.
[ -f "$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db/$pkg_name/manifest" ] &&
cp -f "$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db/$pkg_name/manifest" "$cac_dir/m-$pkg_name"
# This is repeated multiple times. Better to make it a function.
rsync_pkg() {
rsync -HKav --exclude etc -- "$tar_dir/$pkg_name/" "$KISS_ROOT/"
}
# Install the package by using 'rsync' and overwrite any existing files
# (excluding '/etc/').
rsync_pkg
# If '/etc/' exists in the package, install it but don't overwrite.
[ -d "$tar_dir/$pkg_name/etc" ] &&
rsync -HKav --ignore-existing "$tar_dir/$pkg_name/etc" "$KISS_ROOT/"
# Remove any leftover files if this is an upgrade.
[ -f "$cac_dir/m-$pkg_name" ] && {
awk 'NR==FNR{lines[$0];next}!($0 in lines)' \
"$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db/$pkg_name/manifest" "$cac_dir/m-$pkg_name" |
while read -r file; do
# Skip deleting some leftover files.
[ -f "$KISS_ROOT/$file" ] && [ ! -L "$KISS_ROOT/$file" ] &&
case $file in
*bin/rm|*bin/busybox|*bin/rsync|/etc/*) ;;
*) rm -f "$KISS_ROOT/$file" ;;
esac
done ||:
}
# Install the package again to fix any non-leftover files being
# removed above.
rsync_pkg ||:
rsync_pkg ||:
# Reset 'trap' to its original value. Installation is done so
# we no longer need to block 'Ctrl+C'.
trap pkg_clean EXIT INT
# Run the post install script and suppress errors. If it exists,
# it will run, else nothing will happen.
"$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db/$pkg_name/post-install" 2>/dev/null ||:
log "[$pkg_name]: Installed successfully."
done
}
pkg_updates() {
# Check all installed packages for updates. So long as the installed
# version and the version in the repositories differ, it's considered
# an update.
log "Updating repositories..."
# Create a list of all repositories.
IFS=:; set -- $KISS_PATH; IFS=$old_ifs
# Update each repository in '$KISS_PATH'. It is assumed that
# each repository is 'git' tracked.
for repo; do
log "[${repo##*/}]: Updating repository."
(cd "$repo"; git rev-parse --git-dir >/dev/null && git pull)
done
log "Checking for new package versions..."
# Enable globbing.
set +f
for pkg in "$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db/"*; do
# Find the package's repository files. This needs to keep
# happening as we can't store this data in any kind of data
# structure.
repo_dir=$(pkg_search "${pkg##*/}")
# Read version and release information from the installed packages
# and repository.
read -r db_ver db_rel < "$pkg/version"
read -r re_ver re_rel < "$repo_dir/version"
# Compare installed packages to repository packages.
[ "$db_ver-$db_rel" != "$re_ver-$re_rel" ] && {
printf '%s\n' "${pkg##*/} $db_ver-$db_rel ==> $re_ver-$re_rel"
outdated="$outdated${pkg##*/} "
}
done
# Disable globbing.
set -f
# End here if no packages have an update.
[ "$outdated" ] || {
log "Everything is up to date."
return
}
# Turn the string of outdated packages into a 'list'.
set -- $outdated
log "Packages to update: ${outdated% }."
# Tell 'pkg_build' to always prompt before build.
build_prompt=1
# Build all packages requiring an update.
pkg_build "$@"
}
pkg_clean() {
# Clean up on exit or error. This removes everything related
# to the build.
[ "$KISS_DEBUG" = 1 ] && return
# Remove temporary directories.
rm -rf -- "$mak_dir" "$pkg_dir" "$tar_dir"
# Remove temporary files.
(set +f; rm -f "$cac_dir/c-"* "$cac_dir/m-"* "$cac_dir/rm")
}
args() {
# Parse script arguments manually. POSIX 'sh' has no 'getopts'
# or equivalent built in. This is rather easy to do in our case
# since the first argument is always an "action" and the arguments
# that follow are all package names.
# Actions can be abbreviated to their first letter. This saves
# keystrokes once you memorize the commands and it also has the
# side-effect of "correcting" spelling mistakes (assuming the first
# letter is right).
case $1 in
# Build the list of packages.
b|bu|bui|buil|build)
shift
# If no arguments were passed, rebuild all packages.
[ "$1" ] || {
cd "$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db" || die "Failed to find package db."
# Use a glob after 'cd' to generate a list of all installed
# packages based on directory names.
set +f; set -f -- *
# Undo the above 'cd' to ensure we stay in the same location.
cd - >/dev/null
}
pkg_build "$@"
;;
# Generate checksums for packages.
c|ch|che|chec|check|checks|checksu|checksum|checksums)
shift
[ "$1" ] || die "'kiss checksum' requires an argument."
for pkg; do pkg_lint "$pkg"; done
for pkg; do pkg_sources "$pkg"; done
for pkg; do
pkg_checksums "$pkg" > "$(pkg_search "$pkg")/checksums"
log "[$pkg]: Generated checksums."
done
;;
# List dependencies for a package.
d|de|dep|depe|depen|depend|depends)
shift
[ "$1" ] || die "'kiss depends' requires an argument."
for pkg; do
repo_dir=$(pkg_search "$pkg")
[ -f "$repo_dir/depends" ] && {
log "[$pkg]: Has the following dependencies:"
cat "$repo_dir/depends"
}
done
;;
# Install packages.
i|in|ins|inst|insta|instal|install)
shift
[ "$1" ] || die "'kiss install' requires an argument."
# Rerun the script with 'sudo' if the user isn't root.
# Cheeky but 'sudo' can't be used on shell functions
# themselves.
[ "$(id -u)" != 0 ] && {
sudo KISS_PATH=$KISS_PATH kiss i "$@"
return
}
# Create a list of each package's dependencies.
for pkg; do
if [ "${pkg%%*.tar.gz}" ]; then
pkg_depends "$pkg"
else
missing_deps="$missing_deps $pkg "
fi
done
# Filter the list, only including explicit packages.
for pkg in $missing_deps; do
case " $* " in
*" $pkg "*) install_pkgs="$install_pkgs $pkg " ;;
esac
done
set -- $install_pkgs
pkg_install "$@"
;;
# Remove packages.
r|re|rem|remo|remov|remove)
shift
[ "$1" ] || die "'kiss remove' requires an argument."
# Rerun the script with 'sudo' if the user isn't root.
# Cheeky but 'sudo' can't be used on shell functions
# themselves.
[ "$(id -u)" != 0 ] && {
sudo KISS_PATH=$KISS_PATH kiss r "$@"
return
}
log "Removing packages..."
# Create a list of each package's dependencies.
for pkg; do pkg_depends "$pkg"; done
# Reverse the list of dependencies filtering out anything
# not explicitly set for removal.
for pkg in $missing_deps; do
case " $* " in
*" $pkg "*) remove_pkgs="$pkg $remove_pkgs" ;;
esac
done
for pkg in $remove_pkgs; do
pkg_list "$pkg" >/dev/null ||
die "[$pkg]: Not installed."
pkg_remove "$pkg" check
done
;;
# List installed packages.
l|li|lis|list)
shift
pkg_list "$@"
;;
# Print package manifest.
m|ma|man|mani|manif|manife|manifest)
shift
[ "$1" ] || die "'kiss manifest' requires an argument."
for pkg; do
if pkg_list "$pkg" >/dev/null; then
log "[$pkg]: Owns the following files:"
cat "$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db/$pkg/manifest"
else
log "[$pkg]: Not installed."
fi
done
;;
# Check which package owns a file.
o|ow|own|owns)
shift
[ "$1" ] || die "'kiss owns' requires an argument."
for file; do
# Strip 'KISS_ROOT' from the file path if passed and
# follow symlinks.
file_true=$(readlink -f "$KISS_ROOT/${file##$KISS_ROOT}")
[ -f "$file_true" ] || die "File '$file' doesn't exist."
set +f
pkg_owns=$(grep -lFx "${file_true##$KISS_ROOT}" \
"$KISS_ROOT/$pkg_db/"*/manifest)
set -f
pkg_owns=${pkg_owns%/*}
pkg_owns=${pkg_owns##*/}
log "[$pkg_owns] owns '$file'"
done
;;
# Upgrade packages.
u|up|upg|upgr|upgra|upgrad|upgrade)
pkg_updates
;;
# Search for packages.
s|se|sea|sear|searc|search)
shift
[ "$1" ] || die "'kiss search' requires an argument."
for pkg; do
# Create a list of all matching packages.
set -- $(IFS=:; find $KISS_PATH -mindepth 1 \
-maxdepth 1 -name "$pkg")
# Print all matches. If there aren't any, print an error.
printf '%s\n' "${@:-$(log "[$pkg] Not found.")}"
# Exit with an error if a search fails.
[ "$1" ] || exit 1
done
;;
# Print version and exit.
v|ve|ver|vers|versi|versio|version)
log "kiss 0.5.12"
;;
# Print usage and exit.
h|he|hel|help|-h|--help|'')
log "kiss [b|c|d|i|l|m|o|r|s|u] [pkg] [pkg] [pkg]" \
"build: Build a package." \
"checksum: Generate checksums." \
"depends: List package dependencies." \
"install: Install a package." \
"list: List installed packages." \
"manifest: List package files owned by package." \
"owns: Check which package owns a file." \
"remove: Remove a package." \
"search: Search for a package." \
"update: Check for updates."
;;
# Print message about invalid commands.
*)
die "'kiss $1' is not a valid command."
;;
esac
}
main() {
# Set the location to the repository and package database.
pkg_db=var/db/kiss/installed
# The PID of the current shell process is used to isolate directories
# to each specific KISS instance. This allows multiple package manager
# instances to be run at once. Store the value in another variable so
# that it doesn't change beneath us.
pid=$$
# Store the original value of IFS so we can revert back to it if the
# variable is ever changed.
old_ifs=$IFS
# Catch errors and ensure that build files and directories are cleaned
# up before we die. This occurs on 'Ctrl+C' as well as success and error.
trap pkg_clean EXIT INT
# Create the required temporary directories and set the variables
# which point to them.
mkdir -p "${cac_dir:=$KISS_ROOT/var/cache/kiss}" \
"${mak_dir:=$cac_dir/build-$pid}" \
"${pkg_dir:=$cac_dir/pkg-$pid}" \
"${tar_dir:=$cac_dir/extract-$pid}" \
"${src_dir:=$cac_dir/sources}" \
"${bin_dir:=$cac_dir/bin}" \
|| die "Couldn't create cache directories."
args "$@"
}
main "$@"