Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-19 Thread Keith Roberts
On Sat, 18 Dec 2010, R P Herrold wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: R P Herrold herr...@centos.org
 Subject: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
 
 On Sat, 18 Dec 2010, Keith Roberts wrote:

 gpg --import-key yourkey.asc

 Thanks for your reply Tim. It still does not work though.

 [rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ gpg --import
 Fedora6-GPG-public-key.asc

 [rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ rpm -K qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
 qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm: (SHA1) DSA sha1 md5 (GPG) NOT OK
 (MISSING KEYS: GPG#1ac70ce6)

 Different issue in play here -- rpm (and also perhaps rpmbuild
 if a --rebuild is used) needs the key in the rpm database to
 consult

 Probably as root you want:

   # rpm --import Fedora6-GPG-public-key.asc

 and then that objection will be silenced

Thanks Russ.

That has cured the problem.

Do I need the .gpg subdirectory in my rpmbuilder homedir?

Also, is there an option to rpm and rpmbuild that would 
allow me to do all the verification checks, except for the 
package signer's pub key check?

Regards,

Keith

-- 
In theory, theory and practice are the same;
in practice they are not.

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-19 Thread Keith Roberts
On Sat, 18 Dec 2010, R P Herrold wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: R P Herrold herr...@centos.org
 Subject: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
 
 On Sat, 18 Dec 2010, Keith Roberts wrote:

 gpg --import-key yourkey.asc

 Thanks for your reply Tim. It still does not work though.

 [rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ gpg --import
 Fedora6-GPG-public-key.asc

 [rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ rpm -K qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
 qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm: (SHA1) DSA sha1 md5 (GPG) NOT OK
 (MISSING KEYS: GPG#1ac70ce6)

 Different issue in play here -- rpm (and also perhaps rpmbuild
 if a --rebuild is used) needs the key in the rpm database to
 consult

 Probably as root you want:

   # rpm --import Fedora6-GPG-public-key.asc

 and then that objection will be silenced

I have rebuilt qps now Russ.

Here's a snippet of the rebuild output. The full output has 
been copied and pasted into *.src.rpm-rebuild.txt

[rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ ls
Fedora6-GPG-public-key.asc  qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm-rebuild.txt
qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
[rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ rpmbuild --rebuild qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
Installing qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
warning: user mockbuild does not exist - using root
warning: group mockbuild does not exist - using root
warning: user mockbuild does not exist - using root
warning: group mockbuild does not exist - using root
Executing(%prep): /bin/sh -e /var/tmp/rpm-tmp.71205
+ umask 022
+ cd /home/rpmbuilder/rpm-packages/BUILD
+ LANG=C
+ export LANG
+ unset DISPLAY
+ cd /home/rpmbuilder/rpm-packages/BUILD
+ rm -rf qps-1.9.18.6
+ /usr/bin/bzip2 -dc /home/rpmbuilder/rpm-packages/SOURCES/qps-1.9.18.6.tar.bz2
Wrote: /home/rpmbuilder/rpm-packages/RPMS/i386/qps-1.9.18.6-1.i386.rpm
Wrote: /home/rpmbuilder/rpm-packages/RPMS/i386/qps-debuginfo-1.9.18.6-1.i386.rpm
Executing(%clean): /bin/sh -e /var/tmp/rpm-tmp.16535
+ umask 022
+ cd /home/rpmbuilder/rpm-packages/BUILD
+ cd qps-1.9.18.6
+ rm -rf /var/tmp/qps-1.9.18.6-1-root-rpmbuilder
+ exit 0
Executing(--clean): /bin/sh -e /var/tmp/rpm-tmp.16535
+ umask 022
+ cd /home/rpmbuilder/rpm-packages/BUILD
+ rm -rf qps-1.9.18.6
+ exit 0
[rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$

I shall test it works OK.

Kind Regards,

Keith

-- 
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in practice they are not.

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-19 Thread Keith Roberts
QPS works OK.

Here's a screenshot of what it looks like:

http://i55.tinypic.com/35l6t7b.jpg

And if you like it here's a temporary link to download it 
from my site:

http://www.karsites.net/centos/downloads/5.5/qps-1.9.18.6-1.i386.rpm

The binary is not signed by me, as I've not got that far 
yet.

Kind Regards,

Keith

-- 
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in practice they are not.

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[CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-19 Thread R P Herrold
On Sun, 19 Dec 2010, Keith Roberts wrote:

  # rpm --import Fedora6-GPG-public-key.asc

 and then that objection will be silenced

 Thanks Russ.

 That has cured the problem.

 Do I need the .gpg subdirectory in my rpmbuilder homedir?

no - that was created by GnuPG for maintaining a keystore, and 
as the issue was not with gnupg, the ./.gpg is unused

 Also, is there an option to rpm and rpmbuild that would
 allow me to do all the verification checks, except for the
 package signer's pub key check?

yes as for rpm, no as for rpmbuild

-- Russ herrold
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-19 Thread JohnS

On Sun, 2010-12-19 at 13:46 +, Keith Roberts wrote:

 http://www.karsites.net/centos/downloads/5.5/qps-1.9.18.6-1.i386.rpm

You should have a /5/
  /x86_64
 /i386
 /SRPMS
Structure to the directories, with a createrepo on them.

The SRPM form Fedora 9, qps-1.9.19-0.2.b.fc7.src.rpm will build also
with out a hitch.  You go higher than Fedora 9 you in for a rude
awakening,  Don't try building a 32 bit version under a multilib system.
Qt4-make is needed and major work needed to build the newer.

Rawhide laughed :-)

You made a key?rpm --import, rpm --sign then:
rpm -Kvv
rpm --checkig

John

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-19 Thread Keith Roberts
On Sun, 19 Dec 2010, R P Herrold wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: R P Herrold herr...@centos.org
 Subject: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
 
 On Sun, 19 Dec 2010, Keith Roberts wrote:

 # rpm --import Fedora6-GPG-public-key.asc

 and then that objection will be silenced

 Thanks Russ.

 That has cured the problem.

 Do I need the .gpg subdirectory in my rpmbuilder homedir?

 no - that was created by GnuPG for maintaining a keystore, and
 as the issue was not with gnupg, the ./.gpg is unused

 Also, is there an option to rpm and rpmbuild that would
 allow me to do all the verification checks, except for the
 package signer's pub key check?

 yes as for rpm, no as for rpmbuild

OK. Thanks for all your help Russ.

Keith







 -- Russ herrold
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-19 Thread Keith Roberts
On Sun, 19 Dec 2010, JohnS wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: JohnS jse...@gmail.com
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
 

 On Sun, 2010-12-19 at 13:46 +, Keith Roberts wrote:

 http://www.karsites.net/centos/downloads/5.5/qps-1.9.18.6-1.i386.rpm

 You should have a /5/
  /x86_64
 /i386
 /SRPMS
 Structure to the directories, with a createrepo on them.

 The SRPM form Fedora 9, qps-1.9.19-0.2.b.fc7.src.rpm will build also
 with out a hitch.  You go higher than Fedora 9 you in for a rude
 awakening,  Don't try building a 32 bit version under a multilib system.
 Qt4-make is needed and major work needed to build the newer.

 Rawhide laughed :-)

 You made a key?rpm --import, rpm --sign then:
 rpm -Kvv
 rpm --checkig

Thanks for the guidance John.

This is not meant to be a repository - just a temporary 
place to upload some rpms I build.

My main development machine is still down, so I'm just 
testing a few things out ATM on my laptop, which is where I 
built the Centos 5.5 qps binary rpm.

You only have to point rpm or yum (or use wget) to download 
and then install the qps rpm locally.

I'm with you on the later versions of Fedora packages not 
working on Centos 5.5

Running Centos 5.5 is very similar IMO to running Fedora 8.

Kind Regards,

Keith




 John

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-18 Thread Keith Roberts
Hi all.

I have downloaded the source rpm for qps fc6, but get the 
following error message:

[rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ ls
qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
[rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ rpm -K qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm: (SHA1) DSA sha1 md5 (GPG) NOT OK 
(MISSING KEYS: GPG#1ac70ce6)

[rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ rpm -Kv 
qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm:
 Header V3 DSA signature: NOKEY, key ID 1ac70ce6
 Header SHA1 digest: OK 
(d57f0bbeb1e8fe1cdbe0bc3cc70fdfeecc205831)
 MD5 digest: OK (47d180d6f6ca005dc78c5a65078c71c8)
 V3 DSA signature: NOKEY, key ID 1ac70ce6

I have found the missing FC6 key at:

http://keys.gnupg.net:11371/pks/lookup?search=0x1AC70CE6op=index

But how do I add it to my GPG public keyring please?

Regards,

Keith

-- 
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in practice they are not.

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-18 Thread Tim Dunphy
gpg --import-key yourkey.asc

done!

Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 18, 2010, at 1:31 PM, Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net wrote:

 Hi all.
 
 I have downloaded the source rpm for qps fc6, but get the 
 following error message:
 
 [rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ ls
 qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
 [rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ rpm -K qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
 qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm: (SHA1) DSA sha1 md5 (GPG) NOT OK 
 (MISSING KEYS: GPG#1ac70ce6)
 
 [rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ rpm -Kv 
 qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
 qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm:
 Header V3 DSA signature: NOKEY, key ID 1ac70ce6
 Header SHA1 digest: OK 
 (d57f0bbeb1e8fe1cdbe0bc3cc70fdfeecc205831)
 MD5 digest: OK (47d180d6f6ca005dc78c5a65078c71c8)
 V3 DSA signature: NOKEY, key ID 1ac70ce6
 
 I have found the missing FC6 key at:
 
 http://keys.gnupg.net:11371/pks/lookup?search=0x1AC70CE6op=index
 
 But how do I add it to my GPG public keyring please?
 
 Regards,
 
 Keith
 
 -- 
 In theory, theory and practice are the same;
 in practice they are not.
 
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-18 Thread Keith Roberts
On Sat, 18 Dec 2010, Tim Dunphy wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: Tim Dunphy bluethu...@gmail.com
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
 
 gpg --import-key yourkey.asc

 done!

 Sent from my iPhone

Thanks for your reply Tim. It still does not work though.

[rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ ls
Fedora6-GPG-public-key.asc  qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
[rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ gpg --import 
Fedora6-GPG-public-key.asc
gpg: key 1AC70CE6: Fedora Project 
fedora-ext...@fedoraproject.org not changed
gpg: Total number processed: 1
gpg:  unchanged: 1
[rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ gpg --list-keys
/home/rpmbuilder/.gnupg/pubring.gpg
---
pub   1024D/1AC70CE6 2004-12-14
uid  Fedora Project 
fedora-ext...@fedoraproject.org
uid  Fedora Project 
fedora-ext...@redhat.com
uid  Fedora Pre Extras Release 
pre-ext...@fedoraproject.org
sub   1024g/4E1A9D43 2004-12-14

[rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$
[rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ rpm -K qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm: (SHA1) DSA sha1 md5 (GPG) NOT OK 
(MISSING KEYS: GPG#1ac70ce6)

I copied the key from the website, and pasted it into the 
text file.

Any ideas what's happening please?

Kind Regards,

Keith


 On Dec 18, 2010, at 1:31 PM, Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net wrote:

 Hi all.

 I have downloaded the source rpm for qps fc6, but get the
 following error message:

 [rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ ls
 qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
 [rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ rpm -K qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
 qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm: (SHA1) DSA sha1 md5 (GPG) NOT OK
 (MISSING KEYS: GPG#1ac70ce6)

 [rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ rpm -Kv
 qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
 qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm:
 Header V3 DSA signature: NOKEY, key ID 1ac70ce6
 Header SHA1 digest: OK
 (d57f0bbeb1e8fe1cdbe0bc3cc70fdfeecc205831)
 MD5 digest: OK (47d180d6f6ca005dc78c5a65078c71c8)
 V3 DSA signature: NOKEY, key ID 1ac70ce6

 I have found the missing FC6 key at:

 http://keys.gnupg.net:11371/pks/lookup?search=0x1AC70CE6op=index

 But how do I add it to my GPG public keyring please?

 Regards,

 Keith

 --
 In theory, theory and practice are the same;
 in practice they are not.

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[CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-18 Thread R P Herrold
On Sat, 18 Dec 2010, Keith Roberts wrote:

 gpg --import-key yourkey.asc

 Thanks for your reply Tim. It still does not work though.

 [rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ gpg --import
 Fedora6-GPG-public-key.asc

 [rpmbuil...@karsites qps]$ rpm -K qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm
 qps-1.9.18.6-1.fc6.src.rpm: (SHA1) DSA sha1 md5 (GPG) NOT OK
 (MISSING KEYS: GPG#1ac70ce6)

Different issue in play here -- rpm (and also perhaps rpmbuild 
if a --rebuild is used) needs the key in the rpm database to 
consult

Probably as root you want:

# rpm --import Fedora6-GPG-public-key.asc

and then that objection will be silenced

-- Russ herrold
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-17 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 3:49 PM, Leonard den Ottolander
leon...@den.ottolander.nl wrote:
 Hello Nico,

 On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:20 -0500, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
 On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 11:00 AM, Leonard den Ottolander
  /usr/src/redhat and sub dirs are owned root.root. If you want to build
  as a normal user (and you should!) you should fix the ownership of those
  directories.

 NO. Never do this.

 Why would that be a problem?

 Regards,
 Leonard.

There are easily half a dozen reasons. The first one is that this is
where root runs their builds: if you leave it with write permission
for other users, they can replace components behind your back. Worse,
they can replace the .spec file, so when software is built, it runs as
the root user. Since various components do rely on RPM rebuilding,
such as HP's Proliant Service Pack, it inserts a great glaring
vulnerability to leverage when the rebuild occurs.

Second, if you open the permissions there, multiple users can step on
each other building similar packages at the same time, especially if
they happen to be different versions of the same software.

The third reason one is that /usr is typically of modest size, and
leaving it open for RPM development can lead to many gigabytes of
inappropriate debris scattering it. Many modern systems have a much
larger /usr than they used to, but having to allocate that much extra
space for compilation efforts may cause other interesting resource
allocation problems. And overflowing /usr can cause very serious
problems indeed.
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-17 Thread Leonard den Ottolander
Hello Nico,

On Fri, 2010-12-17 at 08:01 -0500, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
 There are easily half a dozen reasons. The first one is that this is
 where root runs their builds: if you leave it with write permission
 for other users,

 Second, if you open the permissions there, multiple users can step on
 each other building similar packages at the same time,

I only suggested chowning to a single trusted user, not opening that
directory to all users.

 The third reason one is that /usr is typically of modest size, and
 leaving it open for RPM development can lead to many gigabytes of
 inappropriate debris scattering it.

I didn't mention this, but of course I use a separate partition
for /usr/src in this setup. This way my home directory doesn't get
cluttered with the remains of multiple builds that don't need backing
up.

Regards,
Leonard.

-- 
mount -t life -o ro /dev/dna /genetic/research


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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-17 Thread m . roth
Leonard den Ottolander wrote:
 Hello Nico,
 On Fri, 2010-12-17 at 08:01 -0500, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
 There are easily half a dozen reasons. The first one is that this is
 where root runs their builds: if you leave it with write permission
 for other users,

 Second, if you open the permissions there, multiple users can step on
 each other building similar packages at the same time,

 I only suggested chowning to a single trusted user, not opening that
 directory to all users.
snip
Yes, but I don't know if you're doing this at work, or home. If the
former, what happens when someone else uses that to build, either a
co-worker, or you move on to a better job (or get hit by a car), who
doesn't know what's going on. It's better to leave the system in the way
it was intended, in terms of ownership and permissions, and so it's in a
known state.

 mark

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-17 Thread Keith Roberts
On Thu, 16 Dec 2010, Akemi Yagi wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: Akemi Yagi amy...@gmail.com
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
 
 On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 8:11 AM, Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net wrote:

 I had already installed the packages mentioned in the Centos
 wiki.

 I assume you are referring to this wiki:

 http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/SetupRpmBuildEnvironment

 If not, I strongly recommend reading it through. Up front it warns you
 to not do the build as root. It provides the details for setting up
 the build environment which will help you understand the whole
 process. Installing some rpms may be convenient but you may miss the
 chance of learning. :-)

I have followed the above tutorial, which was well written, 
and easy to understand.

Then I started on this one, linked to from the above Wiki 
page:

Building Source RPM as non-root under CentOS

http://www.owlriver.com/tips/non-root/

Got up to here:

Let's build something -- As a simple example, we have a 
local SRPM copy of the 'joe' text editor at a permanent 
location (backup is here). Let's get a copy and build it as 
non root [we have numbered the lines, so that we may refer 
to specifics after we are done]:

1 [herr...@dhcp-233 ~]$ cd
2 [herr...@dhcp-233 ~]$ mkdir build
3 [herr...@dhcp-233 ~]$ cd build
4 [herr...@dhcp-233 build]$ mkdir joe
5 [herr...@dhcp-233 build]$ cd joe
6 [herr...@dhcp-233 joe]$ joe README
7 [herr...@dhcp-233 joe]$ wget 
ftp://ftp.owlriver.com/pub/mirror/ORC/joe/joe-2.9.8-4.src.rpm
8 [herr...@dhcp-233 joe]$ rpmbuild --rebuild 
joe-2.9.8-4.src.rpm

In reviewing the commands above, we did this:

1. Move to the home directory
2. Make the ~/build/ subdirectory
3. Move into the ~/build/ subdirectory
4. Make the ~/build/joe/ subdirectory
5. Move into ~/build/joe/ subdirectory
6. Update our notes in the README
7. Retrieve the SRPM using wget
8. Build the binary RPM

When we inspect: ~/rpmbuild/RPMS/i386/ we find the binary 
file: joe-2.9.8-4.i386.rpm

...

and the build process works OK! I had to install 
ncurses-devel (did that as root) for joe to build OK.

Then I did my new sox program, which built fine first 
time. So I well pleased to have rebuilt 2 src.rpm files.

Now I know my build environment works OK, I can try 
building some other packages, by editing their spec files.

Thanks to everyone for all the help I received with this.

Looks like there might be another third party Centos repo 
on the horizon soon ;)

I guess I'll get my head down with another pass at 
MaximumRPM now.

Kind Regards,

Keith Roberts

-- 
In theory, theory and practice are the same;
in practice they are not.

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[CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Keith Roberts
I have been following the MaximumRPM guide from here:

http://www.rpm.org/max-rpm-snapshot/index.html

and it seems a bit dated, but still very good (if fact the 
best all round documentation I have found so far) on using 
RPM package manager, and how to build rpm packages.

The guide tells me to use the original paths, yet Centos 
wiki says otherwise.

[rpmbuil...@karsites sox]$ rpm -iv ./sox-12.18.1-1.src.rpm
error: cannot write to %sourcedir /usr/src/redhat/SOURCES

Is there a package I need to install and run to set 
things up corectly?

I have created a user called 'rpmbuilder' under my home dir, 
and created the rpmbuild dirs under that.

So what build dir shall I go for?

Kind Regards,

Keith Roberts

-- 
In theory, theory and practice are the same;
in practice they are not.

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Keith Roberts
Moved from a previous thread :)

On Thu, 16 Dec 2010, John Hodrien wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: John Hodrien j.h.hodr...@leeds.ac.uk
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] Stripping silent periods from MP3s

 On Thu, 16 Dec 2010, Keith Roberts wrote:

 Thanks for all the responses!

 I've read MaximumRPM from:

 http://www.rpm.org/max-rpm-snapshot/index.html

 Which helped me a great deal.

 I'll start a new thread regarding using RPM to build
 packages.

 You'll find MaximumRPM will have taught you a whole lot 
 you didn't need to know (not that this is a bad thing). 
 In this case, it really should have been a case of:

 yum install lame
 wget src.rpm
 rpmbuild --rebuild src.rpm
 rpm -Uvh --force shiny-new-binary.rpm

 No twiddling with the spec file was required, as it 
 already auto-detected the presence of lame.

 jh

Thanks for that John.

I read MaxRPM once before, so just going over the build part 
again. I want to be able to build my own Linux/Centos RPM's, 
and then post them on my website. May even make a 3rd party 
repo. I obviously know the ./configure, make, make install 
and autoconf and automake stuff, so doing RPM's and a repo 
should not be that difficult to work out.

Kind Regards,

Keith Roberts

-- 
In theory, theory and practice are the same;
in practice they are not.

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Keith Roberts
sox-12.18.1-1.src.rpm
[r...@karsites sox]#
[r...@karsites sox]# rpm -iv sox-12.18.1-1.src.rpm
sox-12.18.1-1
warning: user mockbuild does not exist - using root
warning: group mockbuild does not exist - using root

What's that all about - user mockbuild?

Is that a user created by one of the rpm builder scripts?

Kind Regards,

Keith Roberts

-- 
In theory, theory and practice are the same;
in practice they are not.

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Leonard den Ottolander
Hello Keith,

On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:25 +, Keith Roberts wrote:
 What's that all about - user mockbuild?
 
 Is that a user created by one of the rpm builder scripts?

No, it's the user that mock uses for its builds. Most if not all
upstream rpms are built using mock and so are the CentOS rpms.

Regards,
Leonard.

-- 
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Keith Roberts
On Thu, 16 Dec 2010, Leonard den Ottolander wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: Leonard den Ottolander leon...@den.ottolander.nl
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
 
 Hello Keith,

 On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:25 +, Keith Roberts wrote:
 What's that all about - user mockbuild?

 Is that a user created by one of the rpm builder scripts?

 No, it's the user that mock uses for its builds. Most if not all
 upstream rpms are built using mock and so are the CentOS rpms.

 Regards,
 Leonard.

Hi Leonard.

Thanks for that.

So I don't need to worry about that!

Regards,

Keith

-- 
In theory, theory and practice are the same;
in practice they are not.

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Leonard den Ottolander
Hello Keith,

On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:08 +, Keith Roberts wrote:
 [rpmbuil...@karsites sox]$ rpm -iv ./sox-12.18.1-1.src.rpm
 error: cannot write to %sourcedir /usr/src/redhat/SOURCES

/usr/src/redhat and sub dirs are owned root.root. If you want to build
as a normal user (and you should!) you should fix the ownership of those
directories.

 Is there a package I need to install and run to set 
 things up corectly?

redhat-rpm-config sets certain build macros. Although not strictly
required you should probably always install this packages. One thing I
stumbled on is that a new type of check summing is used nowadays for the
content of the rpms. If the correct macro isn't set you might run into
installation conflicts, f.e. for multilib doc files.

 I have created a user called 'rpmbuilder' under my home dir, 
 and created the rpmbuild dirs under that.

If you make a different user to do builds you should rather give it its
own home dir. But you can just as well build using your default account.

 So what build dir shall I go for?

Whatever you prefer. Just using /usr/src/redhat is probably the easiest.
If you want to use a different path scheme you can override the default
settings in ~/.rpmmacros to suit your needs.
%_sourcedir %{_topdir}/%{name}-%{version}
%_binary_filedigest_algorithm 8
Regards,
Leonard.

-- 
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Leonard den Ottolander
Hello Keith,

(Oops, send out the previous mail before it was finished.)

On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:08 +, Keith Roberts wrote:
 [rpmbuil...@karsites sox]$ rpm -iv ./sox-12.18.1-1.src.rpm
 error: cannot write to %sourcedir /usr/src/redhat/SOURCES

/usr/src/redhat and sub dirs are owned root.root. If you want to build
as a normal user (and you should!) you should fix the ownership of those
directories.

 Is there a package I need to install and run to set 
 things up corectly?

redhat-rpm-config sets certain build macros. Although not strictly
required you should probably always install this packages. One thing I
stumbled on is that a new type of check summing is used nowadays for the
content of the rpms. If the correct macro isn't set you might run into
installation conflicts, f.e. for multilib doc files.

 I have created a user called 'rpmbuilder' under my home dir, 
 and created the rpmbuild dirs under that.

If you make a different user to do builds you should rather give it its
own home dir. But you can just as well build using your default account.

 So what build dir shall I go for?

Whatever you prefer. Just using /usr/src/redhat is probably the easiest.
If you want to use a different path scheme you can override the default
settings in ~/.rpmmacros to suit your needs.

For example, I use
%_sourcedir %{_topdir}/%{name}-%{version}
%_specdir   %{_sourcedir}
so the source files end up in their own directory and not all in the
same SOURCES dir.

Regards,
Leonard.

-- 
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Lamar Owen
On Thursday, December 16, 2010 10:08:12 am Keith Roberts wrote:
 Is there a package I need to install and run to set 
 things up corectly?
[snip]
 So what build dir shall I go for?

See the Fedora packaging guidelines, and install 'fedora-packager' from EPEL to 
get the tools that help you set up a normal user build environment.  This works 
quite well for the most part, and should work better in 6.
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Keith Roberts
On Thu, 16 Dec 2010, Lamar Owen wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: Lamar Owen lo...@pari.edu
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
 
 On Thursday, December 16, 2010 10:08:12 am Keith Roberts wrote:
 Is there a package I need to install and run to set
 things up corectly?
 [snip]
 So what build dir shall I go for?

 See the Fedora packaging guidelines, and install 
 'fedora-packager' from EPEL to get the tools that help you 
 set up a normal user build environment.  This works quite 
 well for the most part, and should work better in 6.

I've done that now.

I had already installed the packages mentioned in the Centos 
wiki.

These won't cause conflicts at all with each other?

Keith

-- 
In theory, theory and practice are the same;
in practice they are not.

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Lamar Owen
On Thursday, December 16, 2010 11:11:17 am Keith Roberts wrote:
 I had already installed the packages mentioned in the Centos 
 wiki.
 
 These won't cause conflicts at all with each other?

Don't know for sure, but in the case of RPMs I've built on CentOS 4 and 5 in 
the past they coexisted ok.  But I need to double check the wiki to make sure 
I'm doing it the same way 'recommended'; I've been building my own RPMs for 
different purposes for a long time (right now 12 years total, and it's been 11 
years since the start of my five year stint maintaining the PostgreSQL RPM set, 
some work of which you're still using if you're still using CentOS 3 or 4 in 
production), so I'm going to see things from a different point of view than 
someone who hasn't ever done it.

Try it out and see.
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Akemi Yagi
On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 8:11 AM, Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net wrote:

 I had already installed the packages mentioned in the Centos
 wiki.

I assume you are referring to this wiki:

http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/SetupRpmBuildEnvironment

If not, I strongly recommend reading it through. Up front it warns you
to not do the build as root. It provides the details for setting up
the build environment which will help you understand the whole
process. Installing some rpms may be convenient but you may miss the
chance of learning. :-)

Akemi
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Keith Roberts
On Thu, 16 Dec 2010, Leonard den Ottolander wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: Leonard den Ottolander leon...@den.ottolander.nl
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
 
 Hello Keith,

 (Oops, send out the previous mail before it was finished.)

OK!

 On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:08 +, Keith Roberts wrote:
 [rpmbuil...@karsites sox]$ rpm -iv ./sox-12.18.1-1.src.rpm
 error: cannot write to %sourcedir /usr/src/redhat/SOURCES

 /usr/src/redhat and sub dirs are owned root.root. If you want to build
 as a normal user (and you should!) you should fix the ownership of those
 directories.

Right. I did su to root, and it work OK. But will chown 
those if I decide to use that branch of dirs.

 Is there a package I need to install and run to set
 things up corectly?

 redhat-rpm-config sets certain build macros. Although not strictly
 required you should probably always install this packages. One thing I
 stumbled on is that a new type of check summing is used nowadays for the
 content of the rpms. If the correct macro isn't set you might run into
 installation conflicts, f.e. for multilib doc files.

That's installed OK.

Installed Packages
Name   : redhat-rpm-config
Arch   : noarch
Version: 8.0.45
Release: 32.el5.centos
Size   : 128 k
Repo   : installed
Summary: CentOS specific rpm configuration files.
License: GPL
Description: CentOS specific rpm configuration files.


double-tabbing on rpm gives me:

[r...@karsites ~]# rpm
rpm rpmdev-diff rpmdev-sha384 
rpmlint
rpm2cpiorpmdev-extract  rpmdev-sha512 
rpmls
rpmargs rpmdev-md5  rpmdev-sum 
rpmpeek
rpmbuildrpmdev-newspec  rpmdev-vercmp 
rpmquery
rpmbuild-md5rpmdev-rmdevelrpms  rpmdev-wipetree 
rpmsign
rpmdb   rpmdev-setuptreerpmdiff 
rpmsodiff
rpmdev-bumpspec rpmdev-sha1 rpmelfsym 
rpmsoname
rpmdev-checksig rpmdev-sha224   rpmfile 
rpmverify
rpmdev-cksumrpmdev-sha256   rpminfo

 I have created a user called 'rpmbuilder' under my home dir,
 and created the rpmbuild dirs under that.

 If you make a different user to do builds you should rather give it its
 own home dir. But you can just as well build using your default account.

Sorry, I meant I have created a new user account under the 
/home/rpmbuilder directory.

 So what build dir shall I go for?

 Whatever you prefer. Just using /usr/src/redhat is probably the easiest.
 If you want to use a different path scheme you can override the default
 settings in ~/.rpmmacros to suit your needs.

 For example, I use
 %_sourcedir %{_topdir}/%{name}-%{version}
 %_specdir   %{_sourcedir}
 so the source files end up in their own directory and not all in the
 same SOURCES dir.

That's a handy tip to know!

Thanks again.

I'll see how things go now.

Kind Regards,

Keith

-- 
In theory, theory and practice are the same;
in practice they are not.

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Keith Roberts
On Thu, 16 Dec 2010, Akemi Yagi wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: Akemi Yagi amy...@gmail.com
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
 
 On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 8:11 AM, Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net wrote:

 I had already installed the packages mentioned in the Centos
 wiki.

 I assume you are referring to this wiki:

 http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/SetupRpmBuildEnvironment


Thanks Akemi.

I was refering to this Centos wiki article:

http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/I_need_the_Kernel_Source

The second part.

I'll read up on the link you sent me.

Thanks for that.

Is the link you sent me more relevant than the MaxRPM 
guidelines:

http://www.rpm.org/max-rpm-snapshot/p5206.html

Kind Regards,

Keith



 If not, I strongly recommend reading it through. Up front it warns you
 to not do the build as root. It provides the details for setting up
 the build environment which will help you understand the whole
 process. Installing some rpms may be convenient but you may miss the
 chance of learning. :-)

 Akemi
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Akemi Yagi
On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 8:33 AM, Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net wrote:
 On Thu, 16 Dec 2010, Akemi Yagi wrote:

 http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/SetupRpmBuildEnvironment

 I was refering to this Centos wiki article:

 http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/I_need_the_Kernel_Source

 The second part.

 I'll read up on the link you sent me.

That is a digest version of the SetupRpmBuildEnvironment page.

 Is the link you sent me more relevant than the MaxRPM
 guidelines:

 http://www.rpm.org/max-rpm-snapshot/p5206.html

The CentOS wiki has been written for ... CentOS users. :-O  The info
in there is supposed to be enough for building rpms under CentOS. If,
on the other hand, you find something that is missing in the article,
please report to the centos-docs mailing list. It's a wiki, so
contributions from users are always welcomed.

Akemi
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Robert Heller
At Thu, 16 Dec 2010 17:00:23 +0100 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org 
wrote:

 
 Hello Keith,
 
 On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:08 +, Keith Roberts wrote:
  [rpmbuil...@karsites sox]$ rpm -iv ./sox-12.18.1-1.src.rpm
  error: cannot write to %sourcedir /usr/src/redhat/SOURCES
 
 /usr/src/redhat and sub dirs are owned root.root. If you want to build
 as a normal user (and you should!) you should fix the ownership of those
 directories.

Even better would be to create the directories under your home dir and
then include a line like:

%_topdir /home/rpmbuilder/src

in ~/.rpmmacros

 
  Is there a package I need to install and run to set 
  things up corectly?
 
 redhat-rpm-config sets certain build macros. Although not strictly
 required you should probably always install this packages. One thing I
 stumbled on is that a new type of check summing is used nowadays for the
 content of the rpms. If the correct macro isn't set you might run into
 installation conflicts, f.e. for multilib doc files.
 
  I have created a user called 'rpmbuilder' under my home dir, 
  and created the rpmbuild dirs under that.
 
 If you make a different user to do builds you should rather give it its
 own home dir. But you can just as well build using your default account.
 
  So what build dir shall I go for?
 
 Whatever you prefer. Just using /usr/src/redhat is probably the easiest.
 If you want to use a different path scheme you can override the default
 settings in ~/.rpmmacros to suit your needs.
 %_sourcedir %{_topdir}/%{name}-%{version}
 %_binary_filedigest_algorithm 8
 Regards,
 Leonard.
 

-- 
Robert Heller -- 978-544-6933 / hel...@deepsoft.com
Deepwoods Software-- http://www.deepsoft.com/
()  ascii ribbon campaign -- against html e-mail
/\  www.asciiribbon.org   -- against proprietary attachments



  
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Keith Roberts

On Thu, 16 Dec 2010, Robert Heller wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: Robert Heller hel...@deepsoft.com
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
 
 At Thu, 16 Dec 2010 17:00:23 +0100 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org 
 wrote:


 Hello Keith,

 On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:08 +, Keith Roberts wrote:
 [rpmbuil...@karsites sox]$ rpm -iv ./sox-12.18.1-1.src.rpm
 error: cannot write to %sourcedir /usr/src/redhat/SOURCES

 /usr/src/redhat and sub dirs are owned root.root. If you want to build
 as a normal user (and you should!) you should fix the ownership of those
 directories.

 Even better would be to create the directories under your home dir and
 then include a line like:

 %_topdir /home/rpmbuilder/src

 in ~/.rpmmacros

OK.

Will try that as well.

Why is better to use a new user account under 
/home/rpmbuilder

than the default that rpm installs source rpms to?

Keith
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Keith Roberts
On Thu, 16 Dec 2010, Akemi Yagi wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: Akemi Yagi amy...@gmail.com
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
 
 On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 8:11 AM, Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net wrote:

 I had already installed the packages mentioned in the Centos
 wiki.

 I assume you are referring to this wiki:

 http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/SetupRpmBuildEnvironment

 If not, I strongly recommend reading it through. Up front it warns you
 to not do the build as root. It provides the details for setting up
 the build environment which will help you understand the whole
 process. Installing some rpms may be convenient but you may miss the
 chance of learning. :-)

Is there a tutorial on how to create your own third party 
repository for Centos please?

That's something I've been meaning to do for a long time.

Now I have cloud hosting, the download bandwidth and usage 
is no longer an issue.

Keith

-- 
In theory, theory and practice are the same;
in practice they are not.

This email was sent from my laptop with Centos 5.5
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Akemi Yagi
On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 9:40 AM, Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net wrote:

 Is there a tutorial on how to create your own third party
 repository for Centos please?

 That's something I've been meaning to do for a long time.

 Now I have cloud hosting, the download bandwidth and usage
 is no longer an issue.

Here :)

http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/CreateLocalMirror

and

http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/CreateLocalRepos

Akemi
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 11:00 AM, Leonard den Ottolander
leon...@den.ottolander.nl wrote:
 Hello Keith,

 On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:08 +, Keith Roberts wrote:
 [rpmbuil...@karsites sox]$ rpm -iv ./sox-12.18.1-1.src.rpm
 error: cannot write to %sourcedir /usr/src/redhat/SOURCES

 /usr/src/redhat and sub dirs are owned root.root. If you want to build
 as a normal user (and you should!) you should fix the ownership of those
 directories.

NO. Never do this.

Use a personal .rpmmacros file to reset your personal working
directories, so you can compile locally.

   %_topdir /home/username/rpm
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Bowie Bailey
On 12/16/2010 3:20 PM, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
 On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 11:00 AM, Leonard den Ottolander
 leon...@den.ottolander.nl wrote:
 Hello Keith,

 On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:08 +, Keith Roberts wrote:
 [rpmbuil...@karsites sox]$ rpm -iv ./sox-12.18.1-1.src.rpm
 error: cannot write to %sourcedir /usr/src/redhat/SOURCES
 /usr/src/redhat and sub dirs are owned root.root. If you want to build
 as a normal user (and you should!) you should fix the ownership of those
 directories.
 NO. Never do this.

 Use a personal .rpmmacros file to reset your personal working
 directories, so you can compile locally.

%_topdir /home/username/rpm

Here are the steps I use:

mkdir $HOME/rpm
mkdir $HOME/rpm/SOURCES
mkdir $HOME/rpm/SPECS
mkdir $HOME/rpm/BUILD
mkdir $HOME/rpm/SRPMS
mkdir $HOME/rpm/RPMS
mkdir $HOME/rpm/RPMS/i386
echo %_topdir$HOME/rpm  $HOME/.rpmmacros

You may also want an x86_64 directory depending on what you are building.

-- 
Bowie
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Leonard den Ottolander
Hello Nico,

On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:20 -0500, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
 On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 11:00 AM, Leonard den Ottolander
  /usr/src/redhat and sub dirs are owned root.root. If you want to build
  as a normal user (and you should!) you should fix the ownership of those
  directories.
 
 NO. Never do this.

Why would that be a problem?

Regards,
Leonard.

-- 
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Robert Heller
At Thu, 16 Dec 2010 15:34:33 -0500 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org 
wrote:

 
 On 12/16/2010 3:20 PM, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
  On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 11:00 AM, Leonard den Ottolander
  leon...@den.ottolander.nl wrote:
  Hello Keith,
 
  On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:08 +, Keith Roberts wrote:
  [rpmbuil...@karsites sox]$ rpm -iv ./sox-12.18.1-1.src.rpm
  error: cannot write to %sourcedir /usr/src/redhat/SOURCES
  /usr/src/redhat and sub dirs are owned root.root. If you want to build
  as a normal user (and you should!) you should fix the ownership of those
  directories.
  NO. Never do this.
 
  Use a personal .rpmmacros file to reset your personal working
  directories, so you can compile locally.
 
 %_topdir /home/username/rpm
 
 Here are the steps I use:
 
 mkdir $HOME/rpm
 mkdir $HOME/rpm/SOURCES
 mkdir $HOME/rpm/SPECS
 mkdir $HOME/rpm/BUILD
 mkdir $HOME/rpm/SRPMS
 mkdir $HOME/rpm/RPMS
 mkdir $HOME/rpm/RPMS/i386
 echo %_topdir$HOME/rpm  $HOME/.rpmmacros
 
 You may also want an x86_64 directory depending on what you are building.

Some packages will want a i486, i586, i686, and/or athlon directory. 
Oh, you will need a noarch directory also.

 

-- 
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Deepwoods Software-- http://www.deepsoft.com/
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/\  www.asciiribbon.org   -- against proprietary attachments


   
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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread m . roth
Leonard den Ottolander wrote:
 Hello Nico,

 On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:20 -0500, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
 On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 11:00 AM, Leonard den Ottolander
  /usr/src/redhat and sub dirs are owned root.root. If you want to build
  as a normal user (and you should!) you should fix the ownership of
  those directories.

 NO. Never do this.

 Why would that be a problem?

One possibility: suppose someone cracks in as the user that owns those
directories. They could then install whatever they want in there... and
the next time you built and installed something, it could carry their
payload.

  mark

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Keith Roberts
On Thu, 16 Dec 2010, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: m.r...@5-cent.us
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
 
 Leonard den Ottolander wrote:
 Hello Nico,

 On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:20 -0500, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
 On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 11:00 AM, Leonard den Ottolander
 /usr/src/redhat and sub dirs are owned root.root. If you want to build
 as a normal user (and you should!) you should fix the ownership of
 those directories.

 NO. Never do this.

 Why would that be a problem?

 One possibility: suppose someone cracks in as the user that owns those
 directories. They could then install whatever they want in there... and
 the next time you built and installed something, it could carry their
 payload.

That's a good point, bu if they get in as root, they can 
access any build branch they want to, under any user 
account.

Keith

-- 
In theory, theory and practice are the same;
in practice they are not.

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Keith Roberts

On Thu, 16 Dec 2010, Bowie Bailey wrote:


To: centos@centos.org
From: Bowie Bailey bowie_bai...@buc.com
Subject: Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

On 12/16/2010 3:20 PM, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:

On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 11:00 AM, Leonard den Ottolander
leon...@den.ottolander.nl wrote:

Hello Keith,

On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:08 +, Keith Roberts wrote:

[rpmbuil...@karsites sox]$ rpm -iv ./sox-12.18.1-1.src.rpm
error: cannot write to %sourcedir /usr/src/redhat/SOURCES

/usr/src/redhat and sub dirs are owned root.root. If you want to build
as a normal user (and you should!) you should fix the ownership of those
directories.

NO. Never do this.

Use a personal .rpmmacros file to reset your personal working
directories, so you can compile locally.

   %_topdir /home/username/rpm


Here are the steps I use:

   mkdir $HOME/rpm
   mkdir $HOME/rpm/SOURCES
   mkdir $HOME/rpm/SPECS
   mkdir $HOME/rpm/BUILD
   mkdir $HOME/rpm/SRPMS
   mkdir $HOME/rpm/RPMS
   mkdir $HOME/rpm/RPMS/i386
   echo %_topdir$HOME/rpm  $HOME/.rpmmacros

You may also want an x86_64 directory depending on what you are building.


I've done something similar now.

Here's what I have got so far:

[r...@karsites rpmbuilder]# ls -la
total 60
drwx-- 10 rpmbuilder rpmbuilder 4096 Dec 16 17:54 .
drwxr-xr-x  5 root   root   4096 Dec 16 14:09 ..
-rw---  1 rpmbuilder rpmbuilder  208 Dec 16 15:22 
.bash_history
-rw-r--r--  1 rpmbuilder rpmbuilder   33 Jan 22  2009 
.bash_logout
-rw-r--r--  1 rpmbuilder rpmbuilder  176 Jan 22  2009 
.bash_profile
-rw-r--r--  1 rpmbuilder rpmbuilder  124 Jan 22  2009 
.bashrc

drwxrwxr-x  2 rpmbuilder rpmbuilder 4096 Dec 16 14:11 BUILD
drwxr-xr-x  3 rpmbuilder rpmbuilder 4096 Aug 12  2002 .kde
drwxrwxr-x  2 rpmbuilder rpmbuilder 4096 Dec 16 15:21 .mc
drwxr-xr-x  4 rpmbuilder rpmbuilder 4096 Dec  9 23:44 
.mozilla
-rw-r--r--  1 rpmbuilder rpmbuilder   34 Dec 16 17:54 
.rpmmacros

drwxrwxr-x  9 rpmbuilder rpmbuilder 4096 Dec 16 17:51 RPMS
drwxrwxr-x  2 rpmbuilder rpmbuilder 4096 Dec 16 14:11 
SOURCES

drwxrwxr-x  2 rpmbuilder rpmbuilder 4096 Dec 16 14:11 SPECS
drwxrwxr-x  2 rpmbuilder rpmbuilder 4096 Dec 16 14:11 SRPMS
[r...@karsites rpmbuilder]#

and:

[r...@karsites home]# tree -Af -a rpmbuilder
rpmbuilder
├── rpmbuilder/.bash_history
├── rpmbuilder/.bash_logout
├── rpmbuilder/.bash_profile
├── rpmbuilder/.bashrc
├── rpmbuilder/.kde
│   └── rpmbuilder/.kde/Autostart
│   └── rpmbuilder/.kde/Autostart/.directory
├── rpmbuilder/.mc
│   ├── rpmbuilder/.mc/Tree
│   ├── rpmbuilder/.mc/history
│   └── rpmbuilder/.mc/ini
├── rpmbuilder/.mozilla
│   ├── rpmbuilder/.mozilla/extensions
│   └── rpmbuilder/.mozilla/plugins
├── rpmbuilder/.rpmmacros
├── rpmbuilder/BUILD
├── rpmbuilder/RPMS
│  ├── rpmbuilder/RPMS/athlon
│  ├── rpmbuilder/RPMS/geode
│   ├── rpmbuilder/RPMS/i386
│   ├── rpmbuilder/RPMS/i486
│   ├── rpmbuilder/RPMS/i586
│  ├── rpmbuilder/RPMS/i686
│   └── rpmbuilder/RPMS/noarch
├── rpmbuilder/SOURCES
├── rpmbuilder/SP
└── rpmbuilder/SRPMS

18 directories, 9 files

I also did a directory comparison using Kdif3, on 
/usr/src/redhat and /home/rpmbuilder. Then made the 
directories structures for rpmbuilder the same as redhat's - 
plus my extra files of course.


Thanks for all the input so far.

Keith

--
In theory, theory and practice are the same;
in practice they are not.

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Keith Roberts
On Thu, 16 Dec 2010, Akemi Yagi wrote:

 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 From: Akemi Yagi amy...@gmail.com
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
 
 On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 9:40 AM, Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net wrote:

 Is there a tutorial on how to create your own third party
 repository for Centos please?

 That's something I've been meaning to do for a long time.

 Now I have cloud hosting, the download bandwidth and usage
 is no longer an issue.

 Here :)

 http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/CreateLocalMirror

 and

 http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/CreateLocalRepos

 Akemi

Thanks for those links Akemi.

Something else to gen up on :)

Keith

-- 
In theory, theory and practice are the same;
in practice they are not.

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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Leonard den Ottolander
Hello Mark,

On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 16:21 -0500, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 One possibility: suppose someone cracks in as the user that owns those
 directories. They could then install whatever they want in there... and
 the next time you built and installed something, it could carry their
 payload.

How would that be more of an issue using /usr/src/redhat than any other
directory?

And seeing that most builds start with either installing a srpm or
building directly in which case that srpm is also being freshly
installed how is this enabling an attacker to deliver a payload?

Regards,
Leonard.

-- 
mount -t life -o ro /dev/dna /genetic/research


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Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD

2010-12-16 Thread Robert Heller
At Thu, 16 Dec 2010 21:26:19 + (GMT) CentOS mailing list 
centos@centos.org wrote:

 
 On Thu, 16 Dec 2010, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 
  To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
  From: m.r...@5-cent.us
  Subject: Re: [CentOS] Building packages using RPMBUILD
  
  Leonard den Ottolander wrote:
  Hello Nico,
 
  On Thu, 2010-12-16 at 15:20 -0500, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
  On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 11:00 AM, Leonard den Ottolander
  /usr/src/redhat and sub dirs are owned root.root. If you want to build
  as a normal user (and you should!) you should fix the ownership of
  those directories.
 
  NO. Never do this.
 
  Why would that be a problem?
 
  One possibility: suppose someone cracks in as the user that owns those
  directories. They could then install whatever they want in there... and
  the next time you built and installed something, it could carry their
  payload.
 
 That's a good point, bu if they get in as root, they can 
 access any build branch they want to, under any user 
 account.

If they get in as root, you are totally hosed and probably need to do a
wipe and re-install.  

 
 Keith
 

-- 
Robert Heller -- 978-544-6933 / hel...@deepsoft.com
Deepwoods Software-- http://www.deepsoft.com/
()  ascii ribbon campaign -- against html e-mail
/\  www.asciiribbon.org   -- against proprietary attachments


 
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