FreeBSD Manual Pages
PKG-CREATE(8) FreeBSD System Manager's Manual PKG-CREATE(8) NAME pkg create -- a utility for creating software package distributions SYNOPSIS pkg create [-nqv] [-f format] [-l level] [-o outdir] [-p plist] [-r rootdir] [-t timestamp] -m metadatadir pkg create [-nqv] [-f format] [-l level] [-o outdir] [-r rootdir] [-t timestamp] -M manifest pkg create [-gnqvx] [-f format] [-l level] [-o outdir] [-r rootdir] [-t timestamp] pkg-name ... pkg create [-nqv] [-f format] [-l level] [-o outdir] [-r rootdir] [-t timestamp] -a pkg create [--no-clobber] [--quiet] [--verbose] [--format format] [--level level] [--out-dir outdir] [--plist plist] [--root-dir rootdir] --metadata metadatadir pkg create [--no-clobber] [--quiet] [--verbose] [--format format] [--level level] [--out-dir outdir] [--root-dir rootdir] --manifest manifest pkg create [--{glob,no-clobber,regex}] [--quiet] [--verbose] [--format format] [--level level] [--out-dir outdir] [--root-dir rootdir] pkg-name ... pkg create [--no-clobber] [--quiet] [--verbose] [--format format] [--level level] [--out-dir outdir] [--root-dir rootdir] --all DESCRIPTION pkg create is used to create packages from binaries or other files in- stalled on your computer. Package tarballs can be created from the files of a previously installed package using metadata from the local package database. Any number of packages may be created in one invocation of this style. Alternatively, a single package can be created from an arbitrary selec- tion of files on your system, but this requires a metadatadir and option- ally plist to be supplied. The package name will be derived from the +MANIFEST file which must be contained within the metadatadir, or passed as the argument to -M. Packages thus created can be distributed and subsequently installed on other machines using the pkg add command. OPTIONS The following options are supported by pkg create: -a, --all Create package tarballs from all packages installed on your system. This option is incompatible with the -g, -x or -m metadatadir options. -g, --glob Interpret pkg-name as a shell glob pattern and create package only for installed binaries whose name match this pattern. This option is incompatible with the -a, -x or -m metadatadir options. -x, --regex Like -g, but interpret pkg-name as a regular expression using the "modern" or "extended" syntax described in re_format(7). This option is incompatible with the -a, -g or -m metadatadir options. -f format, --format format Set format as the package output format. It can be one of tzst, txz, tbz, tgz or tar which are currently the only supported formats. If an invalid or no format is specified txz is assumed. -l level, --level level Set the compression level for created packages. It can be any valid numeric compression level you might specify to the underlying compression format. Additionally, level may be one of the special words "fast" or "best". If level is one of these special words, the fastest or slowest compression level, respectively, for the speci- fied compression format, is used. -m metadatadir, --metadata metadatadir Specify the directory containing the package manifest, +MANIFEST and optionally three other files; one contain- ing a message to be displayed on package installation, +DISPLAY. Another containing the description for the package, +DESC. If specified, only a single package will be created. +DISPLAY and +DESC are not required; the +MANIFEST file can contain all the required information needed to build a package. This option is incompatible with the -M, -a, -g or -x options. -M manifest, --manifest manifest Read all of the package metadata from the manifest file. This is exactly the same format as +MANIFEST mentioned above, but any file name can be used, and no other file will be used to read package metadata from. If speci- fied, only a single package will be created. This option is incompatible with the -m, -a, -g or -x options. -t timestamp, --timestamp Set the timestamp of the files within the archive. -n, --no-clobber Do not overwrite already existing packages. -o outdir, --out-dir outdir Set outdir as the output directory. If this option is not given, all created packages will be saved in the cur- rent directory. -p plist, --plist plist Specify some package metadata using the legacy plist for- mat from pkg_add(1), commonly found in pkg-plist files in the ports tree. Metadata from the plist file, if speci- fied, will take precedence over any equivalents from the metadatadir. Only has any effect when used with metadatadir. See PLIST FORMAT for details. -q, --quiet Force quiet output. This is the default, unless PKG_CREATE_VERBOSE is set to yes in pkg.conf. -v, --verbose Force verbose output, the opposite of --quiet. -r rootdir, --root-dir rootdir rootdir specifies the top-level directory to be treated as the root of the filesystem hierarchy containing the package files. File paths in generated packages will be relative to rootdir. This allows a package to be gener- ated from content offset from its intended final loca- tion, which allows a package building without disturbing similar content already on the system. If unspecified, the default is effectively /, the actual root directory. MANIFEST FILE DETAILS name pkg-name This entry sets the package's name to pkg-name. Among other things, this name is used - with the version and the origin of the concerned package - to identify a dependency. version pkg-version This entry sets the package's version to pkg-version. origin pkg-origin This entry sets the package's origin to pkg-origin. This is a string of the form category/port-dir which designates the port this package was built from. comment comment-string comment-string is a one-line description of this package. It is the equivalent of the COMMENT variable for a port, not a way to put com- ments in a +MANIFEST file. desc description description is a longer description of the package. It is the equivalent of the pkg-descr file for a port. It may be one to a few paragraphs. For example: desc = <<EOD This is a longer description of the package. It can span multiple lines. It can also span multiple paragraphs. EOD arch cpu-type The architecture of the machine the package was built on. cpu-type takes values like x86, amd64... www url The software's official website. maintainer mail-address The maintainer's mail address. prefix path-prefix The path where the files contained in this package are installed (usually /usr/local). flatsize size The size that the files contained in this package will occupy on your system once uncompressed. This value does not take into ac- count files stored in the package database. deps dep-name dep-origin dep-version Associative array of package dependencies, keyed on dep-name and with values version dep-version and origin dep-origin. For example: "deps" : { "pstree" : { "version" : "2.36", "origin" : "sysutils/pstree" }, "cdiff" : { "version" : "0.9.6.20140711,1", "origin" : "textproc/cdiff" }, }, conflict pkg-glob Flag this package as incompatible with the one designated by pkg-glob. Conflicting packages cannot be installed on the same sys- tem as they may contain references to the same files. option option-name option-value Set the option option-name to the value option-value. file sha256-hash path file entries list files included in the package. If the file is a regular one, such an entry contains its sha256 digest along with its path. If a packaged file is a link, you must use this entry's other form, as described below. file - path Same as above but for file links. The sha256 hash is replaced with a - (dash). dir path Mimics the file entry but for directories. PLIST FORMAT The following describes the plist format: The plist is a sequential list of lines which can have keywords prepended. A keyword starts with an `@'. Lines not starting with a key- word are considered as paths to a file. If started with a `/' then it is considered an absolute path. Otherwise the file is considered as rela- tive to PREFIX. Keyword lines are formed as follows: @keyword line Available keywords are the following: @cwd [directory] Set the internal directory pointer to point to directory. All subsequent filenames will be assumed relative to this directory. @preexec Command Execute command as part of the pre-install scripts. @preunexec command Execute command as part of the pre-deinstall scripts. @postexec command Execute command as part of the post-install scripts. @postunexec command Execute command as part of the post-deinstall scripts. @exec command (deprecated) Execute command as part of the unpacking process. If command contains any of the following sequences somewhere in it, they will be expanded inline. For the following examples, assume that @cwd is set to /usr/local and the last extracted file was bin/emacs. %F Expands to the last filename extracted (as specified), in the example case bin/emacs. %D Expand to the current directory prefix, as set with @cwd, in the example case /usr/local. %B Expand to the "basename" of the fully qualified filename, that is the current directory prefix, plus the last file- spec, minus the trailing filename. In the example case, that would be /usr/local/bin. %f Expand to the filename part of the fully qualified name, or the converse of %B, being in the example case, emacs. @unexec command (deprecated) Execute command as part of the deinstallation process. Expansion of special % sequences is the same as for @exec. This command is not executed during the package add, as @exec is, but rather when the package is deleted. This is useful for deleting links and other ancillary files that were created as a result of adding the package, but not directly known to the package's table of con- tents (and hence not automatically removable). @mode mode Set default permission for all subsequently extracted files to mode. Format is the same as that used by the chmod command. Use without an arg to set back to default (mode of the file while be- ing packed) permissions. @owner user Set default ownership for all subsequent files to user. Use without an arg to set back to default (root) ownership. @group group Set default group ownership for all subsequent files to group. Use without an arg to set back to default (wheel) group owner- ship. @comment string The line will be ignored when packing. @dir name Declare directory name to be deleted at deinstall time. By de- fault, most directories created by a package installation are deleted automatically when the package is deinstalled, so this directive is only needed for empty directories or directories outside of PREFIX. These directives should appear at the end of the package list. If the directory is not empty a warning will be printed, and the directory will not be removed. (Subdirecto- ries should be listed before parent directories.) ENVIRONMENT The following environment variables affect the execution of pkg create. See pkg.conf(5) for further description. PKG_DBDIR PLIST_KEYWORDS_DIR PORTSDIR SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH Set the timestamp for every single file in the archive to the one specified in the environment variable FILES See pkg.conf(5). EXAMPLES Create package files for installed packages: % pkg create -a -o /usr/ports/packages/All Create package file for pkg: % pkg create -o /usr/ports/packages/All pkg SEE ALSO pkg_printf(3), pkg_repos(3), pkg-lua-script(5), pkg-repository(5), pkg-script(5), pkg.conf(5), pkg(8), pkg-add(8), pkg-alias(8), pkg-annotate(8), pkg-audit(8), pkg-autoremove(8), pkg-backup(8), pkg-check(8), pkg-clean(8), pkg-config(8), pkg-delete(8), pkg-fetch(8), pkg-info(8), pkg-install(8), pkg-lock(8), pkg-query(8), pkg-register(8), pkg-repo(8), pkg-rquery(8), pkg-search(8), pkg-set(8), pkg-shell(8), pkg-shlib(8), pkg-ssh(8), pkg-stats(8), pkg-update(8), pkg-updating(8), pkg-upgrade(8), pkg-version(8), pkg-which(8) FreeBSD 13.0 April 13, 2020 FreeBSD 13.0
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | MANIFEST FILE DETAILS | PLIST FORMAT | ENVIRONMENT | FILES | EXAMPLES | SEE ALSO
Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=pkg-create&sektion=8&manpath=FreeBSD+12.2-RELEASE+and+Ports>