Software Distributor
Software Distributor is the Hewlett-Packard company's name for their HP-UX software package management system.
SD provides a set of tools for creating packages that will install software on a system running the HP-UX operating system. The packages can be grouped together into a software repository called a depot, and a server can be configured to host multiple depots for installation of software packages and even entire systems.
SD was first available with release 10.0 of HP-UX in 1995. Since then it has undergone several enhancements and bug fixes, and now provides a reliable software installation tool. It uses a client-server arrangement to distribute software using a background daemon called . A software distributor provides its customers with the ability to purchase software licenses from multiple sources. This agent is started at boot time, and communicates using either the TCP or UDP protocols through RPC. The SD packages are normally stored and transmitted in compressed form, using either the gzip or compress programs.
Commands
The tools for performing SD operations are normally accessed from the command line. SD includes the following commands:' — access to the software products or depots can be controlled at a fine-level by means of an Access Control List. This list can be managed by the command.- '
The commands log messages to an administrative area, which can be useful for diagnosing installation issues or just tracking what software is loaded or removed.
Packaging
Software packages are built by means of a specification file, a set of install scripts, and the actual software content. The install scripts are executed during software installation, verification, and removal, and can be used to prepare a system for the software and to perform activation or deactivation of the package. The specification file determines how the software package will be organized, list the locations of the various files to be loaded into the package, restrict the systems on which the package can be installed, and determine the security configuration of the package. It also provides various information about the package, such as a name, version, and description.Software packages are organized in a hierarchy of containers, with the highest level being a bundle or product and the lowest being the filesets and then files. The hierarchy is arranged as follows:
- Bundle
- *
- **
- ***
- ****Files
The filesets and products can be linked together by various requirement tags, which cause to select the appropriate dependencies automatically.
Each fileset can have multiple control scripts specific to the files it will load. These scripts are executed in the following order during an installation:' — run during a pre-install analysis phase to check if the fileset can be loaded on the system.
- '
- '