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PKG_ADD(1)		  BSD General Commands Manual		    PKG_ADD(1)

NAME
     pkg_add --	a utility for installing software package distributions

SYNOPSIS
     pkg_add [-viInfFrRMSK] [-t	template] [-p prefix] [-P prefix]
	     [-C chrootdir] pkg-name [pkg-name ...]

DESCRIPTION
     The pkg_add command is used to extract packages that have been previously
     created with the pkg_create(1) command.

WARNING
     Since the pkg_add command may execute scripts or programs contained
     within a package file, your system	may be susceptible to "trojan horses"
     or	other subtle attacks from miscreants who create	dangerous package
     files.

     You are advised to	verify the competence and identity of those who	pro-
     vide installable package files.  For extra	protection, use	the -M flag to
     extract the package file, and inspect its contents	and scripts to ensure
     it	poses no danger	to your	system's integrity.  Pay particular attention
     to	any +INSTALL, +POST-INSTALL, +DEINSTALL, +POST-DEINSTALL, +REQUIRE or
     +MTREE_DIRS files,	and inspect the	+CONTENTS file for @cwd, @mode (check
     for setuid), @dirrm, @exec, and @unexec directives, and/or	use the
     pkg_info(1) command to examine the	package	file.

OPTIONS
     The following command line	arguments are supported:

     pkg-name [pkg-name	...]
	     The named packages	are installed.	A package name of - will cause
	     pkg_add to	read from stdin.  If the packages are not found	in the
	     current working directory,	pkg_add	will search them in each di-
	     rectory named by PKG_PATH.

     -v, --verbose
	     Turn on verbose output.

     -K, --keep
	     Keep any downloaded package in PKGDIR if it is defined or in cur-
	     rent directory by default.

     -i, --no-deps
	     Install the package without fetching and installing dependencies.

     -I, --no-script
	     If	any installation scripts (pre-install or post-install) exist
	     for a given package, do not execute them.

     -n, --dry-run
	     Do	not actually install a package,	just report the	steps that
	     would be taken if it was.

     -R, --no-record
	     Do	not record the installation of a package.  This	means that you
	     cannot deinstall it later,	so only	use this option	if you know
	     what you are doing!

     -r, --remote
	     Use the remote fetching feature.  This will determine the appro-
	     priate objformat and release and then fetch and install the pack-
	     age.

     -f, --force
	     Force installation	to proceed even	if prerequisite	packages are
	     not installed or the requirements script fails.  Although pkg_add
	     will still	try to find and	auto-install missing prerequisite
	     packages, a failure to find one will not be fatal.

     -F	     Already installed packages	are not	an error.

     -p, --prefix prefix
	     Set prefix	as the directory in which to extract files from	a
	     package.  If a package has	set its	default	directory, it will be
	     overridden	by this	flag.  Note that only the first	@cwd directive
	     will be replaced, since pkg_add has no way	of knowing which di-
	     rectory settings are relative and which are absolute.  It is rare
	     in	any case to see	more than one directory	transition made, but
	     when such does happen and you wish	to have	control	over *all* di-
	     rectory transitions, then you may then wish to look into the use
	     of	MASTER and SLAVE modes (see the	-M and -S options).  If	the -p
	     flag appears after	any -P flag on the command line, it overrides
	     its effect, causing pkg_add not to	use the	given prefix recur-
	     sively.

     -P	prefix
	     Does the same as the -p option, except that the given prefix is
	     also used recursively for the dependency packages,	if any.	 If
	     the -P flag appears after any -p flag on the command line,	it
	     overrides its effect, causing pkg_add to use the given prefix re-
	     cursively.

     -t, --template template
	     Use template as the input to mktemp(3) when creating a "staging
	     area".  By	default, this is the string /var/tmp/instmp.XXXXXX,
	     but it may	be necessary to	override it in the situation where
	     space in your /var/tmp directory is limited.  Be sure to leave
	     some number of `X'	characters for mktemp(3) to fill in with a
	     unique ID.

	     You can get a performance boost by	setting	the staging area
	     template to reside	on the same disk partition as target directo-
	     ries for package file installation; often this is /usr.

     -M, --master
	     Run in MASTER mode.  This is a very specialized mode for running
	     pkg_add and is meant to be	run in conjunction with	SLAVE mode.
	     When run in this mode, pkg_add does no work beyond	extracting the
	     package into a temporary staging area (see	the -t option),	read-
	     ing in the	packing	list, and then dumping it (prefaced by the
	     current staging area) to stdout where it may be filtered by a
	     program such as sed(1).  When used	in conjunction with SLAVE
	     mode, it allows you to make radical changes to the	package	struc-
	     ture before acting	on its contents.

     -S, --slave
	     Run in SLAVE mode.	 This is a very	specialized mode for running
	     pkg_add and is meant to be	run in conjunction with	MASTER mode.
	     When run in this mode, pkg_add expects the	release	contents to be
	     already extracted and waiting in the staging area,	the location
	     of	which is read as a string from stdin.  The complete packing
	     list is also read from stdin, and the contents then acted on as
	     normal.

     -C, --chroot chrootdir
	     Before doing any operations, chroot(2) to the chrootdir directory
	     so	that all package files,	and the	package	database, are in-
	     stalled to	chrootdir.  Note that chrootdir	needs to be a fairly
	     complete file system, including everything	normally needed	by
	     pkg_add to	run.  This flag	was added to help support operations
	     done by sysinstall(8) and is not expected to be useful for	much
	     else.  Be careful that chrootdir is properly configured and can-
	     not be modified by	normal users, versions of commands like
	     fetch(1) may be run inside	chrootdir as a side effect.

     One or more pkg-name arguments may	be specified, each being either	a file
     containing	the package (these usually end with a ".tbz" suffix) or	a URL
     pointing at a file	available on an	ftp site.  Thus	you may	extract	files
     directly from their anonymous ftp locations (e.g. pkg_add
     ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/packages/shells/bash-1.14.7.tbz).
     Note: If you wish to use passive mode ftp in such transfers, set the
     variable FTP_PASSIVE_MODE to some value in	your environment.  Otherwise,
     the more standard ACTIVE mode may be used.	 If pkg_add consistently fails
     to	fetch a	package	from a site known to work, it may be because you have
     a firewall	that demands the usage of passive mode ftp.

TECHNICAL DETAILS
     The pkg_add utility extracts each package's "packing list"	into a special
     staging directory (see ENVIRONMENT), parses it, and then runs through the
     following sequence	to fully extract the contents of the package:

     1.	  A check is made to determine if the package is already recorded as
	  installed.  If it is,	installation is	terminated.

     2.	  A check is made to determine if the package conflicts	(from
	  @conflicts directives, see pkg_create(1)) with an already installed
	  package.  If it is, installation is terminated.

     3.	  Scan all the package dependencies (from @pkgdep directives, see
	  pkg_create(1)) are read from the packing list.  If any of these re-
	  quired packages is not currently installed, an attempt is made to
	  find and install it; if the missing package cannot be	found or in-
	  stalled, the installation is terminated.

     4.	  Search for any @option directives which control how the package is
	  added	to the system.	At the time of this writing, the only cur-
	  rently implemented option is @option extract-in-place	which will
	  cause	the package to be extracted directly into its prefix directory
	  without moving through a staging area.

     5.	  If @option extract-in-place is enabled, the package is now extracted
	  directly into	its final location, otherwise it is extracted into the
	  staging area.

     6.	  If a requirements script +REQUIRE exists for the package (see	the -r
	  flag of pkg_create(1)), then execute it with the following argu-
	  ments:

		pkg-name INSTALL

	  where	pkg-name is the	name of	the package in question	and the
	  "INSTALL" keyword denotes this as an installation requirements check
	  (useful if you want to have one script serving multiple functions).

     7.	  If a pre-install script +INSTALL exists for the package, it is then
	  executed with	the following arguments:

		pkg-name PRE-INSTALL

	  where	pkg-name is the	name of	the package in question	and
	  "PRE-INSTALL"	is a keyword denoting this as the preinstallation
	  phase.

	  Note:	The "PRE-INSTALL" keyword will not appear if separate scripts
	  for pre-install and post-install are given during package creation
	  time (using the -i and -I flags to pkg_create(1)).

     8.	  If @option extract-in-place is not used, then	the packing list (this
	  is the +CONTENTS file) is now	used as	a guide	for moving (or copy-
	  ing, as necessary) files from	the staging area into their final lo-
	  cations.

     9.	  If an	mtree file +MTREE_DIRS exists for the package (see the -m flag
	  of pkg_create(1)), then mtree(8) is invoked as:

		mtree -U -f +MTREE_DIRS	-d -e -p prefix

	  where	prefix is either the prefix specified with the -p or -P	flag
	  or, if neither flag was specified, the name of the first directory
	  named	by a @cwd directive within this	package.

     10.  If a post-install script +POST-INSTALL exists	for the	package, it is
	  then executed	with the following arguments:

		pkg-name POST-INSTALL

	  where	pkg-name is the	name of	the package in question	and
	  "POST-INSTALL" is a keyword denoting this as the post-installation
	  phase.

	  Note:	The "POST-INSTALL" keyword will	not appear if separate scripts
	  for pre-install and post-install are given during package creation
	  time (using the -i and -I flags to pkg_create(1)).

	  Reasoning behind passing keywords such as "POST-INSTALL" and
	  "PRE-INSTALL"	is that	this allows you	to write a single install
	  script that does both	"before" and "after" actions.  But, separating
	  the functionality is more advantageous and easier from a maintenance
	  viewpoint.

     11.  After	installation is	complete, a copy of the	description (+DESC),
	  comment (+COMMENT), pre-install script (+INSTALL), post-install
	  script (+POST-INSTALL), deinstall script (+DEINSTALL), post-dein-
	  stall	script (+POST-DEINSTALL), requirements script (+REQUIRE), dis-
	  play (+DISPLAY), mtree (+MTREE_DIRS),	and packing list (+CONTENTS)
	  files	are copied into	/var/db/pkg/<pkg-name> for subsequent possible
	  use by pkg_delete(1).	 Any package dependencies are recorded in the
	  other	packages' /var/db/pkg/<other-pkg>/+REQUIRED_BY file (if	the
	  environment variable PKG_DBDIR is set, this overrides	the
	  /var/db/pkg/ path shown above).

     12.  Finally, the staging area is deleted and the program terminates.

     All the scripts are called	with the environment variable PKG_PREFIX set
     to	the installation prefix	(see the -p and	-P options above).  This al-
     lows a package author to write a script that reliably performs some ac-
     tion on the directory where the package is	installed, even	if the user
     might change it with the -p or -P flags to	pkg_add.

ENVIRONMENT
     The value of the PKG_PATH is used if a given package cannot be found.
     The environment variable should be	a series of entries separated by
     colons.  Each entry consists of a directory name.	The current directory
     may be indicated implicitly by an empty directory name, or	explicitly by
     a single period.

     The environment variable PKG_DBDIR	specifies an alternative location for
     the installed package database, default location is /var/db/pkg.

     The environment variables PKG_TMPDIR and TMPDIR, in that order, are taken
     to	name temporary directories where pkg_add will attempt to create	its
     staging area in.  If these	variables are not present or if	the directo-
     ries named	lack sufficient	space, then pkg_add will use the first of
     /var/tmp, /tmp or /usr/tmp	with sufficient	space.

     The environment variable PACKAGEROOT specifies an alternate location for
     pkg_add to	fetch from.  The fetch URL is built using this environment
     variable and the automatic	directory logic	that pkg_add uses when the -r
     option is invoked.	 An example setting would be "ftp://ftp3.FreeBSD.org".

     The environment variable PACKAGESITE specifies an alternate location for
     pkg_add to	fetch from.  This variable subverts the	automatic directory
     logic that	pkg_add	uses when the -r option	is invoked.  Thus it should be
     a complete	URL to the remote package file(s).

     The environment variable PKGDIR specifies an alternative location to save
     downloaded	packages to when -K option is used.

     The environment variable PACKAGESUFFIX specifies an alternative file ex-
     tension to	use when fetching remote packages. Default is .tbz

FILES
     /var/tmp	  Temporary directory for creating the staging area, if	envi-
		  ronmental variables PKG_TMPDIR or TMPDIR do not point	to a
		  suitable directory.
     /tmp	  Next choice if /var/tmp does not exist or has	insufficient
		  space.
     /usr/tmp	  Last choice if /var/tmp and /tmp are not suitable for	creat-
		  ing the staging area.
     /var/db/pkg  Default location of the installed package database.

SEE ALSO
     pkg_create(1), pkg_delete(1), pkg_info(1),	pkg_version(1),	mktemp(3),
     sysconf(3), mtree(8)

AUTHORS
     Jordan Hubbard

CONTRIBUTORS
     John Kohl <jtk@rational.com>

BUGS
     Hard links	between	files in a distribution	are only preserved if either
     (1) the staging area is on	the same file system as	the target directory
     of	all the	links to the file, or (2) all the links	to the file are	brack-
     eted by @cwd directives in	the contents file, and the link	names are ex-
     tracted with a single tar command (not split between invocations due to
     exec argument-space limitations--this depends on the value	returned by
     sysconf(_SC_ARG_MAX)).

     Sure to be	others.

BSD				January	4, 2009				   BSD

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | WARNING | OPTIONS | TECHNICAL DETAILS | ENVIRONMENT | FILES | SEE ALSO | AUTHORS | CONTRIBUTORS | BUGS

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