195 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
195 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
Installation Notes for Amd.
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NOTE: Please read all of this before starting.
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It is not very long and may save you time in the long term.
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1. ``Getting started...''
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If you don't know what an Automounter does for you then read the
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documentation in doc/amdref.texinfo. You can either use TeX to print
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it out or read it directly using the GNU info package.
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2. ``Find out what version of UN*X you are running...''
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To install Amd you need a port for your version of UN*X. In the
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config/ directory are several files called os-*.h. One of these
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should correspond to your version of UN*X. Run the program
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"config/os-type" to find out what system Amd thinks you have. Check
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the correspondong config/os-??? file to make sure that you and Amd are
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in agreement. If os-type returns "unknown" then either no-one has yet
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done a port, or your version of UN*X is so braindead that a port is
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not possible (e.g. System V without reliable signals). The current
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known operating systems (grouped by architecture) are:
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acis43 (AOS) ACIS 4.3BSD on an IBM RT
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aix3 AIX 3.2
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aux Apple A/UX
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bsd44 4.4 BSD on whatever
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concentrix Concentrix on an Alliant
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dgux Data General AViiON
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fpx4 Celerity FPX 4.1/2
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hlh42 4.2 BSD on HLH Orion 1/05
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hpux HP-UX 6.* and 7.* on a HP9000/300
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irix3 SGI Iris
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irix4 SGI Iris w/Irix 4.0.x
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next NeXT
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riscix 4.3 BSD on an Acorn Archimedes
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sos3, sos4 SunOS 3.* and 4.* on a Sun-3 and Sun-4
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u2_2 Ultrix 2.2 (or 2.*?) on a VAX (broken)
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u3_0 Ultrix 3.0 (or 3.*?) on a VAX (broken)
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u4_2 Ultrix 4.2
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umax43 4.3 BSD on an Encore Multimax
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xinu43 More/BSD (4.3 BSD) on a VAX or HP9000/300
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+ some others...
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If you do define a new operating system type foo, you may need to create a
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file called Makefile.foo which defines the special Makefile parameters.
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3. ``Hacking the Makefile...''
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Amd tries very hard to determine what type of machine you are using
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and how best to compile itself. If this does not work then you will
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have to find some heuristic which can differentiate your
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configuration. You may need to edit "config/arch" and
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"config/os-type". If you do make sure your changes can cope if
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/etc/motd is missing and please send it to the address below.
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To check whether things are working, run:
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sh config/arch
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sh config/os-type
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You may care to tailor some site specific preferences in "Makefile.com". The
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variables most likely to be changes are at the top. Any changes should be
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added to a file called config/Makefile.local (if they are applicable to all
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operating systems at your site) or Makefile.local.foo (where foo is the OS type
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as determined in part 2).
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Additionally, some configuration options may be altered in
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"config/Makefile.config". This means that you should not need to edit any
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distributed files apart from "config/Makefile.config". As a minimum, you
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should check:
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* You are using the correct C compiler. Amd, as shipped, does not use GCC.
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Note that using GCC version 1.34 or later (e.g. 1.36) gives structure
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passing problems with some parts of Sun's RPC library at least on Sun-4's.
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The current workaround is to use the system CC to compile the part of the
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automounter that gets hit by this problem. [[This is not the same problem
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that is fixed by -fpcc-struct-return.]] Amd contains no "register"
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declarations, so using old PCC based code generators is probably bad news.
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To use GNU CC, add the following to config/Makefile.local{.os-type}:
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CC = gcc ${GCCOPTS}
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* The installation directory (ETC) is set up correctly.
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* If you are running tests then it may be worth switching on the DEBUG flag
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which will cause a running commentary to be printed to the log file. To
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compile in the debug code, add the following to
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config/Makefile.local{.os-type}:
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DEBUG = -DDEBUG
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CCOPTS = -g
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The -g option will also allow you to use gdb. Using dbx is not advisable
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since it puts a breakpoint on exit() which causes all of Amd's child
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processes to dump core. gdb does not suffer from this problem.
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4. ``Build the executable...''
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Now you need to compile the automounter. To do this you type:
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make
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in the top-level directory. You can also go into each of the program
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directories and just run make there.
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If you are porting to a new machine you may want to do:
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make OS=foo
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where foo is the name of your version of UN*X as determined in part 1, until
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you have made the changes to config/os-type and/or config/arch. When the
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compilation is complete you will end up with a program called "A.arch_foo/amd".
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Try running:
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A.arch_foo/amd -v
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and check the output. It should look something like:
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Copyright (c) 1990 Jan-Simon Pendry
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Copyright (c) 1990 Imperial College of Science, Technology & Medicine
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Copyright (c) 1990 The Regents of the University of California.
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amd 5.2.1.5 of 90/09/16 13:22:46 5.3Alpha5 #0: Sun Sep 16 13:23:28 BST 1990
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Built by pendry@okeeffe.Berkeley.EDU for a tahoe running bsd44 (big-endian)
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Map support for: root, passwd, nis, file, error.
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fstypes: ufs, nfs, nfsx, host, link, program, auto, direct, toplvl, error.
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Make sure the O/S and architecture types were correctly derived during the
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build.
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5. ``Installation...''
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If you are not just testing Amd, then you can install it by typing:
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make install
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to install "A.arch_foo/amd" in "/usr/local/etc/amd" (or as otherwise
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modified in part 3).
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6. ``Update /etc/rpc''
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Amq uses Sun RPC to talk to Amd using program number 300019 which has
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been registered with Sun. Add the following lines to /etc/rpc or your
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YP or Hesiod master:
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# Automount control protocol
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amd 300019 amq
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Amd does not require this addition - it just keeps rpcinfo happy.
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7. ``Hanging your machine...''
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WARNING: THIS MAY HANG YOUR MACHINE IF YOU GET IT WRONG.
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Running Amd with a carelessly thought out mount map can cause your Amd to
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enter a deadlock inside the kernel. For example, attempting to automount a
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directory which is automounted. This will cause the automounter to issue a mount
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request causing the kernel to send an NFS request back to the same automounter,
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which is currently stuck in a system call and unable to respond - even
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kill -KILL won't get you out of this one.
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There is nothing you can do to fix it without rebooting your machine, so...
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Find a diskless workstation and play with that first before trying this on
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your main 200 user service machine (unless you hate your users). Something
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like a diskless Sun-4 is best for development testing - you can compile on a
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Sun-4 server and run the binary on the diskless node. They reboot very fast
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as well between tests.
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Now you can try running Amd. Please read the documentation in doc/Amd.tex
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for more details. The configuration file "maps/a_master" provides a sample for
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you to play with. Something like:
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./amd -c 40 -D test,nodaemon /tmp/amnt ../maps/a_master &
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is good for testing. Note that Amd will clean up correctly if you send it a
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SIGINT or SIGTERM. Other signals are either ignored or will blow it away,
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leaving your machine in a potentially dangerous state.
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Remember that Amd needs to run as root in order to do mounts/unmounts
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though it does check this condition somewhere near line one of main().
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It will also need write permission in the working directory if you
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have built it with DEBUG defined and your system's mount table is
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reflected in a file. In this case watch out for NFS stepping in and
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mapping root to nobody.
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8. ``Report what happened...''
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If anything interesting happened, eg it didn't work, please report it to me
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-- Jan-Simon Pendry <jsp@doc.ic.ac.uk> -- as detailed in the README file.
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$Id: INSTALL,v 5.2.2.2 1992/05/31 16:49:22 jsp Exp $
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