NAME¶
usepackage -
Usepackage Environment Manager
SYNOPSIS¶
See
use(1).
DESCRIPTION¶
Usepackage is an environment management program. It is based on the
principle of
packages - collections of executables that share a common
set of necessary environment variables, such as PATH, MANPATH or
LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
For each given
package,
use sources the appropriate environment
information into the current shell. The environment information is specified
in packages files, see
PACKAGES.
The
usepackage executable is the backend program used to generate
environment information suitable for sourcing into a running shell. The
use frontend should be invoked to actually effect changes to the
environment, see
use(1).
OPTIONS¶
- -v
- Output verbose information to the standard error
stream.
- -s
- Silence warnings for un-matched packages. This is useful in
a shell rc script when a package is known not to be available on
all architectures that the shell is used on, see PACKAGES.
- -c
- Force csh style environment output.
- -b
- Force bourne shell style environment output.
- -f file
- Specify an alternate initial configuration file, see
PACKAGES.
- -l
- List available packages and groups, see ANNOTATIONS
and GROUPS.
PACKAGES¶
Usepackage reads package environment information from the configuration
file as follows:
LOAD ORDER¶
When
Usepackage starts up, it loads an initial configuration file, the
name of this file may be given on the command line (see
OPTIONS),
otherwise it defaults to the builtin name "usepackage.conf" (see
FILES). This file is located by searching along a path which defaults
to:
/usr/etc:~:.
This path may be overridden with the PACKAGES_PATH environment variable (see
ENVIRONMENT). A packages file may contain inclusion directives which
cause the sourcing of other files at given points. An inclusion directive
looks like:
(include file-name)
The same location mechanism is used to find "file-name" as for the
initial configuration file. A package file name may also be given as an
absolute file name or may be shell-style user directory, tilde (~), relative.
SYNTAX¶
A package file consists of comments, delimited by a leading hash (#), or package
definitions of the form:
package [arch [os [version [host [shell]]]]]
[<= requires ...] : setting [, setting ...] ;
The
package,
arch,
os,
version,
host, and
shell parts may be simple shell-style patterns of the form:
- *
- matches anything.
- foo*
- matches "foo", "foobar" etc.
- {foo,bar}
- matches "foo" or "bar".
The
requires list specifies the names of other packages which must be
sourced into the environment before the settings for this package are
processed.
A
setting is either a variable definition (as described below) or a
section of text to be directly evaluated in the shell, delimited with
<[ and
]>, for example:
<[ /usr/local/bin/test-init ]>
When
Usepackage searches for the definition for a particular package, it
compares each line in the packages file against the name of the package given
(package) and system-dependant information for the execution host, as obtained
by
uname(2). This information is the hardware implementation
(platform), the operating system name (os), the operating system version
(version) and the hostname (host). Comparisons are case-insensitive. If a
match is obtained then the given variable definitions and script sections are
processed to modify the environment. A variable definition may have one of the
following forms:
var-name = "string"
var-name = path-list
var-name += path-list
var-name += "string"
The first sets the given variable to a literal string value, the second sets the
given variable to a path list, the third prepends the current value of a
variable with the given path list, and the fourth interprets the literal
string as a path list and prepends it to the current value of the variable.
Path lists are colon (:) separated lists of directories and may contain
shell-style tilde (~), user-relative, directories which will be expanded
automatically (except when the path list is given as a literal string). When
pre-pending paths to a variable, duplicate paths are removed from the original
value first.
In addition,
Usepackage can optionally test for the existence of paths
before setting or adding them to variables. This is done with the test form of
the above operators:
var-name ?= path-list
var-name ?+= path-list
var-name ?+= "string"
These operate as per the definitions above, but will ignore path components that
don't exist.
GROUPS¶
In addition to the package definitions in a packages file, there may also be
group definitions. These have the following syntax:
group := package [, package ...] ;
Usepackage searches for a given package name in the defined groups first,
if the given name matchs a group name then the packages defined as part of
that group are sourced into the environment together. A group definition may
not reference other groups and may not contain patterns.
ANNOTATIONS¶
In order to give useful package information to the user, annotations may be
placed in the packages file that give summaries of packages. These annotations
have the form:
>> name : "description" <<
Usepackage collects these annotations together and displays them when
called with the
-l flag, see
OPTIONS. These annotations have no
impact on the package mechanism and need not necessarily be beside or
correspond to the package definitions (although this is the sensible way to
arrange things).
EXAMPLE¶
The following fragment of a packages file illustrates the main features:
# GNU software is available everywhere:
>> GNU : "The GNU project software" <<
GNU : PATH += /usr/local/gnu/bin,
MANPATH += /usr/local/gnu/man ;
# CVS requires RCS which is found in the GNU package, but
# is only available on SPARC Solaris machines:
>> CVS : "Concurrent Versions System revision control" <<
CVS sun4* SunOS 5.* <= GNU :
CVSROOT = /usr/src/cvsroot,
CVSEDITOR = "vi",
PATH += /usr/local/cvs/bin,
MANPATH += /usr/local/cvs/man ;
# User bin directories (Solaris will run SunOS 4 binaries):
# (Only added to the path if the directories actually exist)
>> user : "User's own programs" <<
user sun4* SunOS : PATH ?+= ~/bin/sun4 ;
user sun4* SunOS 5.* : PATH ?+= ~/bin/solaris ;
user alpha OSF : PATH ?+= ~/bin/alpha ;
# Special function for zsh:
>> zsh-function : "Special zsh function" <<
zsh-function * * * * zsh :
<[ hello() { echo "Hello World!"; } ]> ;
# include standard packages:
(include packages.standard)
# security hole:
dot : PATH += . ;
# groups:
user-setup := standard, user ;
programmer-setup := standard, CVS, user, dot ;
Note the use of Operating System version numbers to distinguish between SunOS 4
and Solaris (SunOS 5), the use of "sun4*" to match the multiple
different platform versions of SPARC machines (sun4m, sun4c, etc.) and the
fact that package "user" on a SPARC Solaris machine will match both
of the first two lines of the "user" package section, resulting in
the "solaris" directory and the "sun4" directory being
added into the PATH.
Assuming the appropriate shell setup script has been sourced - see
use(1)
- then the following command will cause the CVS environment (including the GNU
environment) to be sourced:
$ use CVS
Note that on a DEC Alpha machine, this will generate a warning like:
$ use CVS
warning: no match for package `CVS' on this host.
In a shell script which is executed on a number of different platforms (such as
the shell startup script). These warnings may be silenced (see
OPTIONS).
FILES¶
- /usr/share/usepackage/usepackage.conf
- The default master packages file.
- /usr/share/usepackage/use.csh
- Shell setup for csh and derivatives.
- /usr/share/usepackage/use.bsh
- Shell setup for bourne shell and derivatives.
- /usr/share/usepackage/use.ksh
- Shell setup for ksh.
- /usr/bin/usepackage
- The underlying Usepackage executable.
ENVIRONMENT¶
Other than the reading and re-definition of environment variables for package
setup,
use also uses the following environment variables for user
configuration:
- PACKAGES_PATH
- Colon-separated path list giving the directories to search
for configuration files. Shell-style tilde (~) user-directory escapes are
expanded.
- HOME
- If present in the environment, this is used to provide the
expansion for the tilde (~) user-directory.
- SHELL
- If present in the environment, the last path component of
this is used for shell matching (see SYNTAX) and detecting the
style of environment output that should be used (see OPTIONS).
COPYRIGHT¶
Usepackage Environment Manager
Copyright (C) 1995-2005 Jonathan Hogg
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later
version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with
this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple
Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
SEE ALSO¶
use(1), csh(1),
sh(1),
ksh(1),
env(1),
environ(5), getenv(3C),
uname(1),
uname(2)