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You can manage and distribute both operating system
software and application software on a local system with Software
Distributor (SD-UX). SD-UX consists of a set of commands and is part
of the HP-UX operating system. Some basics of SD-UX are presented here. For information
about SD-UX, see Software Distributor Administration Guide. With SD-UX, you can do the following tasks:
Install update software on local system. See “Adding Software”. List software that is installed on a system or on
various media. See “Listing Software”. Remove software from a system. See “Removing Software”. Copy software from a distribution source or media
onto a system. Verify compatibility of software products with your
system. Create software packages that make later software
installations quicker and easier. Configure installed software.
For a list of SD-UX commands, see Table 5-1: “SD-UX Command Summary”. SD-UX Software Structure | |
SD-UX commands work on a hierarchy of software
objects. Here are the terms used to describe the SD-UX objects. - Bundles
Collections of filesets,
possibly from several different products, encapsulated by HP for a
specific purpose. All HP-UX 11.x operating system software is packaged
in bundles. Example of a bundle is: HPUXMinRuntime B.11.31 English HP-UX Minimum Runtime Environment
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- Products
Collections of subproducts
(optional) and filesets. The SD-UX commands focus on products but
still allow you to specify subproducts and filesets. Example of a product is: Networking HP-UX_LanLink_Product
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- Subproducts
Groups of logically related
filesets within a product if the product contains several filesets. Examples of subproducts are: Networking.Runtime
Networking.MinimumRuntime
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- Filesets
Files and control scripts
that make up a product. This is the smallest manageable (selectable)
SD-UX software object. Filesets are only part of a single product
but could be included in several different HP-UX bundles, and more
than one subproduct. The Runtime subproduct
contains all the filesets in the MinimumRuntime subproduct as well
as some additional filesets. Examples of filesets are: Networking.LAN-KRN
Networking.LAN-PRG
Networking.LAN-RUN
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The Networking.LAN-KRN and Networking.LAN-RUN filesets are part of bundle HPUXMinRuntime. The first three are included in both the subproducts, Networking.Runtime and Networking.MinimumRuntime The Networking.LAN-PRG fileset
is also part of the HPUXMinRuntime bundle and
is included in the Networking.Development subproduct.
SD-UX commands refer to this product structure
in the form: bundle[.] or product[.[subproduct.]fileset] Location of Software | |
Software, packaged in SD-format, is stored in
a depot. Any system can store one
or more depots. A depot is a repository which holds all the needed
pieces for installation of the software. You create a depot by copying
software directly to it (using the SD-UXswcopy command)
from either a tape or CD/DVD or by creating a software package within
it (using the swpackage command). Before you can
use the depot you must register it (using the swreg command). It can then be used as the source for installation tasks
with the swinstall command which is executed on
the target machine. There are two types of depots: - Directory Depot
Software in a directory
depot is stored under a normal directory on your file system (by default /var/spool/sw). When using the
SD-UX commands, refer to a directory depot via its top most directory.
In a CD/DVD depot, the directory would be the media’s mount
point. - Tape Depot
Software in a tape depot
is formatted as a tar archive. Tape depots such as cartridge tapes,
DAT and 9-track tape are referred to by the file system path to the
tape drive’s device file. A tape
depot can only be created by usingswpackage and
it cannot be verified or modified with SD-UX commands. You cannot
copy software (using swcopy) directly to a tape;
use swpackage for this operation. Software in a tape depot may be installed directly
on a local host, but must first be transferred to a directory depot
before it can be “pulled” by other hosts on the network.
A tape depot can be accessed by only one command at a time.
| | | | | NOTE: If you administer software for systems, you should
create separate depots for each. | | | | |
SD-UX Tasks | |
SD-UX commands can be executed from the command
line. However, SD-UX provides a graphical and terminal user interface
for the commonly used commands: swinstall, swcopy, swremove, and on 11.x, swlist -i. The most common SD-UX tasks are: The following table shows lists some of the other
SD-UX functions. Table 5-1 SD-UX Command Summary Command | Purpose |
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swinstall | Install software | swremove | Remove software | swpackage | Package software into a depot | swcopy | Copy software from one depot to another | swlist | List software in a depot or installed on a system | swreg | Make a depot visible to other systems | swverify | Verify the integrity of installed software and
depot software | swconfig | Configure and unconfigure installed software | swacl | Change access to SD-UX software objects | swagentd | Serve local or remote SD software management tasks,
including invoking a swagent command | swask | Run interactive request scripts | swmodify | Modify software products | sd | Start the Job Browser GUI |
For information about SD-UX, see Software
Distributor Administration Guide. Type /usr/sbin/swinstall. If you have
the DISPLAY variable set, swinstall will run using
a graphical user interface; otherwise a terminal interface is presented. Click
onSource Host Nameand choose the
system from which to install. Click
on Source Depot Path and choose a
registered depot from which to install. Select
the bundle/product/fileset to be installed. You may select: To select an item, move the cursor to the bundle
and press Return or Space. You can
select one or more items and mark them for installation. To see all subsets belonging to a bundle or product,
chooseOpen. You can do this when
only one item is selected. To see a description of the item (if there is
one), select the item and choose Show Description
Of Software. To update all parts of your operating system with
new software found on the update media, select Match
What Target Has. | | | | | NOTE: By default, swinstall does
not reinstall filesets if the same revision already exists on your
system. If you want to reinstall the same revision (for example if
some files are lost), you can change the installation options by choosingOptions/Change Option. | | | | |
Installing a product or a fileset may automatically
install dependent filesets necessary to run the selected item(s). Choose Action/Install (analysis) to start the installation process. The
installation process is divided into four phases: - Install Analysis
Checks dependencies, verifies
that all files can be installed correctly and defines the sequence
of installation so that, for example, only one kernel rebuild should
be necessary even if there are more filesets which require a new kernel. - Execution Phase
Performs preinstall tasks
if necessary and installs filesets. - Post_install
Performs post-installation
activities, such as rebuilding of kernel and system reboot. - Configuration Phase
Configures installed filesets
for your system. In some cases this must be done after the system
is rebooted. This is done with the script /sbin/rc2.d/S120swconfig which is a link to /sbin/init.d/swconfig.
Information about the installation is logged in /var/adm/sw/swinstall.log and /var/adm/sw/swagent.log. You open the swagent.log log file during the installation process
by pressing Logfile.... Check the
log file for errors.
Installing Protected SoftwareMost HP software products are shipped to you on
DVD optical media as “protected” products. That is, they
cannot be installed or copied unless a “codeword” and “customer ID” are provided by you. Software that is unlocked
by a codeword may only be used on computers for which you have a valid
license to use that software. It is your responsibility
to ensure that the codeword and software are used in this manner. The codeword for a particular software product
is found on the DVD certificate which you receive from HP. It shows
the codeword along with the customer ID for which the codeword is
valid. One codeword usually unlocks all the products on a DVD which
you have purchased. When an additional HP software product is purchased,
an additional codeword will be provided by HP. Just enter the new
codeword and customer ID and they will be merged with any previously
entered codewords. A codeword for a particular customer ID and DVD
only needs to be entered once per target system. The codeword and
customer ID are stored for future reference in /var/adm/sw/.codewords. SD-UX will prompt you for these codewords or numbers prior to the
installation of protected software. You can enter or change the numbers
via the SD-UX graphical user interface (using Add
New Codeword from the Actions menu) or by using the appropriate default (-x codeword=xxxx and -x customer_id=xxx) on the command line. Here is a sample DVD certificate. With swlist you can do the
following: Specify the “level” (bundles, products, subproducts, filesets or files) to show in your
list. Show the product structure
of software selections. Show software attributes,
such as size, revision, and vendor. Display the depots on
a specified system.
Some examples follow: Table 5-2 Example Tasks and Commands Example Task | Command |
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To list the software installed
at root (/) on your local system | swlist | To list the software in the depot
named /mydepot | swlist -d @ /mydepot | To list the depots on appserver | swlist -l depot @ appserver | To list all files that are part
of the LVM product | swlist
-l file LVM | To list files using the SD-UX graphical
user interface on 11.x | swlist -i |
You can use HP SMH to list software: See the swlist(1M) manpage for additional information. To remove software, use /usr/sbin/swremove. You select the software to remove and the system checks dependencies
between selected and remaining software. If a fileset is required
by another bundle, that fileset is not removed. See the swremove(1M) manpage. SD-UX Roles | |
Within your environment, an individual system
can play one or more SD-UX roles: development host, local host, or
network host (distribution depot). The SD-UX command determines the
specific role a host plays and therefore its role can change at any
time. Software is created on the development environment
and individual filesets are “packaged” for further distribution.
The SD-UX swpackage command prepares software products
and filesets so they can be easily distributed and managed by other
SD-UX commands. A local host is any system where software is to
be installed or managed. A network host contains one or more depots and
is connected to a network. It can act as a common software installation
source for other network clients. You copy software from a depot to
the network host. From the network host, you can copy software to
systems as needed.
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