36 konrad.r 1.1 paths and platform information. In most cases the script
37 will automatically determine the correct paths and configuration.
38
39 Note:
40 The information is saved in config.status in case you want
41 to redo it in the future.
42
43 Next start the build process using nALFS. From nALFS README
44 file, nALFS is "used for parsing the ALFS profiles (simple
45 XML files) and, following those profiles, do various things
46 (like executing commands), one by one, to (usually) compile some packages."
47
48 nALFS webpage is http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/alfs/
49
50 To invoke the build process, provide the lsb-pegasus.xml file:
51
52 $nALFS -i -v -l rpm/lsb-pegasus.xml
53
54 After the compilation is done, to build the RPM binary file:
55
56 $rpmbuild -ba rpm/lsb-pegasus.spec
57 konrad.r 1.1
58 And you are done.
59
60
61 2). With environment variables
62
63 For more information on each of the environment variables, please
64 refer to the README file.
65
66 You need to set twelve environment variables: CC, CXX, LSBCC_SHAREDLIBS,
67 PEGASUS_PAM_AUTHENTICATION, PEGASUS_USE_PAM_STANDALONE_PROC,
68 PEGASUS_HAS_SSL, PEGASUS_LOCAL_DOMAIN_SOCKET, PEGASUS_USE_RELEASE_DIRS,
69 PEGASUS_LSB, PEGASUS_HOME, PEGASUS_ROOT, and PEGASUS_PLATFORM.
70
71 The first two define that a LSB compiler should be used:
72
73 export CC=lsbcc
74 export CXX=lsbc++
75
76 And LSBCC_SHAREDLIBS tells LSB that OpenPegasus shared
77 libraries are OK to compile with:
78 konrad.r 1.1
79 export LSBCC_SHAREDLIBS=pegcommon:pegconfig:pegrepository:pegcompiler:peggetoopt:pegcliutils
80
81 The next two make OpenPegasus compile with PAM authentication:
82
83 export PEGASUS_PAM_AUTHENTICATION=1
84 export PEGASUS_USE_PAM_STANDALONE_PROC=1
85
86 ,to support SSL:
87
88 export PEGASUS_HAS_SSL=1
89
90 , and connection to local domain sockets:
91
92 export PEGASUS_LOCAL_DOMAIN_SOCKET=1
93
94 And very importantly the LSB flag which determines that
95 OpenPegasus is compiled against an LSB compliant system:
96
97 export PEGASUS_LSB=1
98
99 konrad.r 1.1 Also, two env to determine location of compiled binaries and
100 the source, respectively:
101
102 export PEGASUS_HOME=`pwd`/BINARIES
103 export PEGASUS_ROOT=`pwd`
104
105 Lastly, what platform it is compiled on:
106
107 export PEGASUS_PLATFORM=LINUX_IX86_GNU
108
109 When all of those environment variables are set, you can
110 compile the code, as so:
111
112
113 $make
114
115 When the compilation is done, you have to pick the directory
116 where the binary will be temporarily put to build an RPM. In
117 the example, we picked the path /home/konrad/MAIN/pkgroot.
118
119 $make PREFIX=/home/konrad/MAIN/pkgroot/lsb-pegasus/opt/lsb-pegasus \
120 konrad.r 1.1 SYSCONF_PREFIX=/home/konrad/MAIN/pkgroot/lsb-pegasus/etc/ \
121 LOCAL_STATE_PREFIX=/home/konrad/MAIN/pkgroot/lsb-pegasus/var/opt/lsb-pegasus/ \
122 DEST_ETC_DIR=/home/konrad/MAIN/pkgroot/lsb-pegasus/etc/opt/lsb-pegasus install
123
124 To build the RPM, you have to change in the rpm/lsb-pegasus.spec
125 the BuildRoot path to be what you choose previously.
126
127 Change accordingly, in our case, the BuildRoot will be:
128 BuildRoot: /home/konrad/MAIN/pkgroot
129
130 Lastly the RPM build process:
131
132 $rpmbuild -b rpm/lsb-pegasus.spec
133
134 And the OpenPegasus LSB compliant package is built.
135
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