.. -*- mode: rst -*- .. _server-plugins-generators-pkgmgr: ====== Pkgmgr ====== The Pkgmgr plugin resolves the Abstract Configuration Entity "Package" to a package specification that the client can use to detect, verify and install the specified package. For a package specification to be included in the Literal configuration the name attribute from an abstract Package tag (from Bundler) must match the name attribute of a Package tag in Pkgmgr, along with the appropriate group associations of course. Each file in the Pkgmgr directory has a priority. This allows the same package to be served by multiple files. The priorities can be used to break ties in the case that multiple files serve data for the same package. Usage of Groups in Pkgmgr ========================= Groups are used by the Pkgmgr plugin, along with host metadata, for selecting the package entries to include in the clients literal configuration. They can be thought of as:: if client is a member of group1 then assign to literal config Nested groups are conjunctive (logical and).:: if client is a member of group1 and group2 then assign to literal config Group membership may be negated. Tag Attributes in Pkgmgr ======================== .. xml:schema:: pkglist.xsd :linktotype: :noautodep: PackageType Pkgmgr Directory ================ The Pkgmgr/ directory keeps the XML files that define what packages are available for a host or image and where to find those packages. All the files in the directory are processed. The names of the XML files have no special meaning to Bcfg2; they are simply named so it's easy for the administrator to know what the contents hold. All Packages could be kept in a single file if so desired. Bcfg2 simply uses the Groups in the files and priorities to determine how to assign Packages to a host's literal configuration. Listed detailed below is one possible structure for the Pkgmgr directory. The files are structured to contain particular portions of distribution repositories. The files in the directory are:: $ ls Pkgmgr/ centos-4-noarch-updates.xml centos-4-x86_64-updates.xml centos-4-x86_64.xml backup.example.com.xml fedora-core-4-noarch-updates.xml fedora-core-4-x86-updates.xml fedora-core-4-x86.xml rhel-as-4-noarch-updates.xml rhel-as-4-x86-updates.xml rhel-as-4-x86.xml rhel-es-4-noarch-updates.xml rhel-es-4-x86-updates.xml rhel-es-4-x86.xml rhel-ws-4-noarch-udpates.xml rhel-ws-4-x86_64-updates.xml rhel-ws-4-x86_64.xml rhel-ws-4-x86-updates.xml rhel-ws-4-x86.xml As can be seen the file names have been selected to indicate what the contents are and have been split by Vendor, product and repository area. A partial listing of the centos-4-x86_64.xml is below .. code-block:: xml $ cat centos-4-x86_64.xml ... .. code-block:: xml $ cat centos-4-x86_64-updates.xml ... Here it can be seen that the data is encapsulated in a !PackageList Tag which describes the URI of the files described, the type of package, and the priority of the files in this list. The priority is used to decide which specific file to use when there are multiple files that could be used for a particular host. The highest priority file is the one that is used. Using this system, it is possible to have a file that contains all the Packages from the original installation, centos-4-x86_64.xml in this case, and then create a new file that contains updates that are made available afterwards, centos-4-x86_64-updates.xml and centos-4-noarch-updates.xml in this case. The priority of the update PackageLists just needs to be higher so that they will be selected instead of the original installation Packages. The backup.example.com.xml contains a packalist for a specific host which is qualified by the Client tag. Its Packages have a higher priority than the update Packages. This is because this particular host requires special Packages that are older than the ones available in the updates. .. code-block:: xml ... Simplifying Multi-Architecture Environments with :ref:`Altsrc ` ================================================================================================= Frequently multi-architecture environments (typically x86_64) will run into problems needing to specify different architectures on different groups for clients. For example, desktop machines may install 32-bit compatibility packages in addition to 64-bit ones, while servers may install only 64-bit packages. Specifying this in the Pkgmgr was onerous, because different package targets (64bit, 32+64, etc) needed to be specified on a package by group basis. Two features have been implemented that should ease this situation considerably. * The :ref:`Altsrc ` feature adds the ability to add a "bind as" directive to entries. For example, the following entry, in a bundle: .. code-block:: xml would bind as if it were named bar, while the entry would still appear named "foo" in the client configuration specification. * Pkgmgr now builds virtual package targets for any package with Instance client elements. This means that if a client attempts to bind: .. code-block:: xml It will only include the instances listed in the package. By using these features together, a bundle can include: .. code-block:: xml This in conjunction with a Pkgmgr entry that looks like: .. code-block:: xml Will result in a bound entry that looks like: .. code-block:: xml Altogether, this should move policy decisions about package architectures to bundles/base. Automated Generation of Pkgmgr Configuration Files ================================================== The two utilities detailed below are provided in the tools directory of the source tarball. Also see the general :ref:`Pkgmgr ` and :ref:`server-plugins-structures-altsrc` pages. pkgmgr_gen.py ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ pkgmgr_gen will generate a Pkgmgr file from a list of directories containing RPMs or from a list of YUM repositories.:: [root@bcfg2 Pkgmgr]# pkgmgr_gen.py --help usage: pkgmgr_gen.py [options] options: -h, --help show this help message and exit -aARCHS, --archs=ARCHS Comma separated list of subarchitectures to include. The highest subarichitecture required in an architecture group should specified. Lower subarchitecture packages will be loaded if that is all that is available. e.g. The higher of i386, i486 and i586 packages will be loaded if -a i586 is specified. (Default: all). -dRPMDIRS, --rpmdirs=RPMDIRS Comma separated list of directories to scan for RPMS. Wilcards are permitted. -eENDDATE, --enddate=ENDDATE End date for RPM file selection. -fFORMAT, --format=FORMAT Format of the Output. Choices are yum or rpm. (Default: yum) -gGROUPS, --groups=GROUPS List of comma separated groups to nest Package entities in. -iINDENT, --indent=INDENT Number of leading spaces to indent nested entries in the output. (Default:4) -oOUTFILE, --outfile=OUTFILE Output file name. -P, --pkgmgrhdr Include PackageList header in output. -pPRIORITY, --priority=PRIORITY Value to set priority attribute in the PackageList Tag. (Default: 0) -rRELEASE, --release=RELEASE Which releases to include in the output. Choices are all or latest. (Default: latest). -sSTARTDATE, --startdate=STARTDATE Start date for RPM file selection. -uURI, --uri=URI URI for PackageList header required for RPM format ouput. -v, --verbose Enable verbose output. -yYUMREPOS, --yumrepos=YUMREPOS Comma separated list of YUM repository URLs to load. NOTE: Each URL must end in a '/' character. .. note:: The startdate and enddate options are not yet implemented. pkgmgr_update.py ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ pkgmgr_update will update the release (meaning the epoch, version and release) information in an existing Pkgrmgr file from a list of directories containing RPMs or from a list of YUM repositories. All Tags and other attributes in the existing file will remain unchanged.:: [root@bcfg2 Pkgmgr]# pkgmgr_update.py --help usage: pkgmgr_update.py [options] options: -h, --help show this help message and exit -cCONFIGFILE, --configfile=CONFIGFILE Existing Pkgmgr configuration file name. -dRPMDIRS, --rpmdirs=RPMDIRS Comma separated list of directories to scan for RPMS. Wilcards are permitted. -oOUTFILE, --outfile=OUTFILE Output file name or new Pkgrmgr file. -v, --verbose Enable verbose output. -yYUMREPOS, --yumrepos=YUMREPOS Comma separated list of YUM repository URLs to load. NOTE: Each URL must end in a '/' character. Pkgmgr Configuration Examples ============================= verify_flags ^^^^^^^^^^^^ This entry was used for the Centos test client used during RPM development. .. code-block:: xml Multiple Instances ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. code-block:: xml Kernel ^^^^^^ .. note:: Multiple instances with the same architecture must be in the installOnlyPkgs list. .. code-block:: xml Per Instance Ignore ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. note:: In this case a per instance ignore is actually a bad idea as the verify failure is because of multiarch issues where the last package installed wins. So this would be better as a Package level ignore. Ignore tag entries only work with the RPM driver. They do not appear to be supported in YUM as of 1.0pre5. .. code-block:: xml pkg_checks ^^^^^^^^^^ If pkg_checks = false the version information is not required. If pkg_checks = true the full information is needed as normal. For YUM a minimal entry is .. code-block:: xml In fact for YUM, with pkg_checks = false, any combination of the nevra attributes that will build a valid yum package name (see the Misc heading on the yum man page) is valid. .. code-block:: xml For RPM a minimal entry is .. code-block:: xml verify_fail_action ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The way I have Bcfg2 configured for my development systems. This way it reports bad, but doesn't do anything about it. .. code-block:: xml