swcopy(8)
Contents
swcopy -- Copy POSIX and RPM packages.
swcopy [-p] [-s source_file] [-f file] [-t targetfile] \
[-x option=value] [-X options_file] [-W option] \
[software_selections] [@target [target1...]]
swcopy copies a POSIX distribution from a source archive or directory
to a target archive directory. Neither swcopy nor any component of
swbis is required on the target host, however, the target host must
look like a Unix system at the shell and command-line utility level.
Remote network connections are made by ssh. Ssh is the default but rsh
can be selected by a command line option.
Before and during data transfer to the target, the distribution is
audited. Package auditing includes parsing the INDEX and INFO meta-
data files. The package pathnames are checked for consistency with a
valid layout. swcopy can be made to operate on arbitrary data or
archives not in POSIX format by using the --no-audit option. By
default and with no external influences (i.e. swdefaults file) swcopy
will read a archive on stdin and write an audited archive on stdout.
The uncompressed audited output file will be identical to the
uncompressed input file unless an error occurs. Compressed archives
that are audited will be re-compressed in the same format, however, the
resulting file may not be identical to the input file (i.e. date,
filename, and other stored data in the compressed format will be
different).
swcopy operates on serial archives (e.g. compressed tar archives) or on
file system directories. It will attempt to preserve the form (archive
or directory) and compression state of the source object. An exception
is "." as a target (See Implementation Extensions below).
-f FILE
Reads software_selections from FILE. (Not implemented).
-p
Preview the operation. Information is written to stdout. The
target is not written and no remote connections are established.
-s SOURCE
Specify the source file SOURCE, "-" is standard input. The
syntax is the same as for a target. SOURCE may be a directory
or archive file.
-t targetfile
Specify a file containing a list of targets (one per line).
-x option=value
Specify the extended option overriding the defaults file value.
-X FILE
Specify the extended options filename, FILE, overriding the
default filenames. This option may be given more then once. If
the resulting specified value is an empty string then reading of
any options file is disabled.
-v
Given one time it is identical to -x verbose=2. This option can
be given multiple times with increasing effect. (Implementation
extension option).
-v is level 2, -vv is level 3,... etc.
level 0: silent on stdout and stderr.
level 1: fatal and warning messages to stderr.
-v level 2: level 1 plus a progress bar.
-vv level 3: level 2 plus script stderr.
-vvv level 4: level 3 plus events.
-vvvv level 5: level 4 plus events.
-vvvvv level 6: level 5 plus set shell -vx option.
-vvvvvv level 7 and higher: level 6 plus debugging messages.
The progress meter is suppressed if swcopy is using stdout for
data.
-b SIZE
Set block size, same as --block-size=N (Implementation extension
option).
--version, -V
Show version (Implementation extension)
--help
Show help (Implementation extension)
-W option[,option,...]
Specify the implementation extension option.
Syntax: -W option[=option_argument[,option...]
Options may be separated by a comma. The implementation
extension options may also be given individually using the
'--long-option[=option_arg]' syntax.
-W no-audit
Defaults File Option: swbis_no_audit
Do not audit the transferred file. This allows copying of
arbitrary data.
-W audit
Do audit the transferred file. Useful for overriding
swbisdefaults file.
-W block-size=SIZE
SIZE is number of octets.
-W login
Establishes a interactive shell on the (remote) target host.
Intended for debugging/verifying ssh operation.
-W gzip
Compress output using gzip.
-W bzip
Compress output using bzip2.
-W extract
Install the source using the archive reading utility at the
target.
-W create
Force copy as a tar archive
-W no-extract
For installation to a file, not as a tar archive to be
extracted.
-W pty
Do use pseudo-tty. The system Ptys are only used for the
--login feature. A warning is emitted to stderr which says that
the usage may be insecure.
-W no-pty
Do not use pseudo-tty. The system Ptys are only used by default
for the --login feature, otherwise they are not used and this
option would have no effect. If ptys are used a warning is
emitted to stderr which says that the usage may be insecure.
-W uncompress
Write output archive that is uncompressed.
-W remote-shell=SHELL
Defaults File Option: swbis_remote_shell_client
Supported shells are "ssh" and "rsh", ssh is the default.
-W quiet-progress
Defaults File Option: swbis_quiet_progress_bar
Disable progress bar, which is active for verbose levels 2 and
higher (i.e. -v).
-W show-progress
Enables progress bar.(i.e. -v).
-W show-options-files
Show the complete list of options files and if they are found.
-W show-options
Show the options after reading the files and parsing the command
line options.
-W pax-command={tar|pax|star|gtar}
Set the portable archive command for all operations. The
default is "pax".
-W pax-read-command={tar|pax|star|gtar}
Set the read command for local and remote hosts.
-W remote-pax-read-command={tar|pax|star|gtar}
Defaults File Option: swbis_remote_pax_read_command
Set the read command for remote hosts. This is the command that
runs on the target (e.g. pax -r, tar xpf -). The default is
"pax".
-W local-pax-read-command={tar|pax|star|gtar}
Defaults File Option: swbis_local_pax_read_command
Set the read command for local hosts. This is the command that
runs on the target (e.g. pax -r, tar xpf -). The default is
"pax".
-W pax-write-command={tar|pax|star|gtar|swbistar}
Set the write command for local and remote hosts. This is the
command that runs on the target (e.g. pax -w, tar cf -).
-W remote-pax-write-command={tar|pax|star|gtar|swbistar}
Defaults File Option: swbis_remote_pax_write_command
Set the write command for remote hosts.
-W local-pax-write-command={tar|pax|star|gtar|swbistar}
Defaults File Option: swbis_local_pax_write_command
Set the portable archive write command for local host
operations. This is the command that runs on the source (e.g.
pax -w, tar cf -). The default is "pax".
-W remote-pax-write-command={tar|pax|star|gtar|swbistar}
Defaults File Option: swbis_remote_pax_write_command
Set the portable archive write command for remote host
operations. This is the command that runs on the source (e.g.
pax -w, tar cf -). The default is "pax".
-W no-defaults
Do not read any defaults files.
-W no-remote-kill
Defaults File Option: swbis_no_remote_kill
Disables the use of a second remote connection to tear down the
first in the event of SIGINT or SIGTERM or SIGPIPE. Only has
effect if the number of ssh hops is greater than 1. A single
host remote connection (ssh hop = 1) never uses a second remote
connection.
-W no-getconf
Defaults File Option: swbis_no_getconf
Makes the remote command be '/bin/sh -s' instead of the default
'PATH=`getconf PATH` sh -s'.
-W shell-command=NAME
Defaults File Option: swbis_shell_command
NAME may be one of "detect" "bash", "sh" or "posix" and
specifies the command run by the remote shell. The default is
"detect".
-W use-getconf
Opposite of --no-getconf.
-W allow-rpm
Defaults File Option: swbis_allow_rpm
Allows detection and translation of RPMs. (--audit must also be
set.)
-W unrpm
Turns on options --allow-rpm and --audit.
-W source-script-name=NAME
Write the script that is written into the remote shell's stdin
to NAME. This is useful for debugging.
-W target-script-name=NAME
Write the script that is written into the remote shell's stdin
to NAME. This is useful for debugging.
software_selections
Refer to the software objects (products, filesets) on which to
be operated. (Not implemented). The implementation defined
behavior for no selections is to operate on the entire
distribution.
target
Refers to the software_collection where the software selections
are to be applied. Allows specification of host and pathname
where the software collection is located. A target that
contains only one part is assumed to be a hostname. To force
interpretation as a path, use a absolute path or prefix with
':'.
Source and Target Specification and Logic
Synopsis:
Posix:
host[:path]
host
host:
/path # Absolute path
Swbis Extension:
[user@]host[:path]
[user@]host_port[:path]
:path
Swbis Multi-hop Target Extension:
# ':' is the target delimiter
# '_' delimits a port number in the host field
[user@]host[@@[user@]host[@@...]][:file]
[user@]host_port[@@[user@]host[@@...]][:file]
# Using ':', a trailing colon is used to
# disambiguate between a host and file.
# For Example,
:file
host:
host
host:file
host:host:
host_port:host_port:
host:host:file
user@host:user@host:
user@host:user@host:host:
user@host:user@host:file
A more formal description:
target : HOST_CHARACTER_STRING ':' PATHNAME_CHARACTER_STRING
| HOST_CHARACTER_STRING ':'
| HOST_CHARACTER_STRING
| PATHNAME_CHARACTER_STRING
| ':' PATHNAME_CHARACTER_STRING # Impl extension
;
PATHNAME_CHARACTER_STRING must be an absolute path unless
a HOST_CHARACTER_STRING is given. Allowing
a relative path is a feature of the swbis
implementation.
NOTE: A '.' as a target is an implementation
extension and means extract in current
directory.
NOTE: A '-' indicating stdout/stdin is an
implementation extension.
NOTE: A ':' in the first character indicates a filename.
This is an implementation extension.
HOST_CHARACTER_STRING is an IP or hostname.
Examples:
Copy the distribution /var/tmp/foo.tar.gz at 192.168.1.10
swcopy -s /var/tmp/foo.tar.gz @192.168.1.10:/root
Implementation Extension Syntax (multi ssh-hop) :
Syntax:
%start wtarget # the Implementation Extension Target
# Note: a trailing ':' forces interpretation
# as a host, not a file.
wtarget : wtarget DELIM sshtarget
| sshtarget
| sshtarget DELIM
;
sshtarget : user '@' target # Note: only the last target
| target # may have a PATHNAME, and only a host
; * may have a user
target : HOST_CHARACTER_STRING
| PATHNAME_CHARACTER_STRING
;
user : PORTABLE_CHARACTER_STRING # The user name
DELIM : ':' # The multi-hop delimiter.
;
Rules
If a target directory on the host does not exist it will be created
using mkdir -p using the file creation mask of the originating swcopy
process. A trailing slash in the target spec signifies that the last
path component should be a directory. A source spec that is a
directory will be created on the target as a directory with the same
name in the target directory. If the source spec is stdin then the
existence of directories in the target spec and a trailing slash in the
target spec path determines whether the created file will be a regular
file or directory, that is, stdin will be copied as a file unless the
last target path component is a directory or ends in a slash '/'. If
the source spec is a regular file, the source basename will be used as
the basename in the target if the last target path component is a
directory or ends in a slash '/', otherwise, the target basename is the
last path component of the target spec. The implementation option
--extract biases these rules to install using the archive reading
command (e.g. pax -r).
Examples
Copy a regular file via tar archive creation and extraction.
This will preserve the permissions of the file to the extent tar
can preserve them.
swcopy --no-audit --create --extract -s :README @ HostA
Copy a directory to another host
swcopy --no-audit -s /usr @ HostA:/usr/local/tmp/HostA/
Copy several directories to another host as a compressed
archive file.
swcopy --no-audit --no-extract \
-s /usr -s /etc @ HostA:/tmp/usr-etc.tar.bz2
Install a tarball in the current directory: Note: Must use
stdin as source and "." as the target.
swcopy --no-audit -s - @. < foo.tar.gz
Copy thru a firewall:
swcopy -s /var/tmp/foo.tar.gz \
@root@host1:root@host2:/var/tmp
Copy Stdin to a remote host:
Unpack the archive on stdin in the directory
/a/b/c if 'c' is a directory, otherwise copy
the archive file to a file named 'c' in
directory /a/b creating it if possible and
overwriting if required.
swcopy -s - @host1:/a/b/c
Copy Stdin to a remote host:
Unpack the serial archive on stdin in the
directory /a/b/c if 'c' is a directory,
otherwise make the directory 'c' but fail if
directory 'c' cannot be created.
swcopy -s - @host1:/a/b/c/
# Note trailing slash.
Copy a regular file:
Copy file yy to directory /aa/bb/cc/ on the
remote host, creating it if required and possible.
If cc is a regular file then fail.
swcopy -s /xx/yy @host1:/aa/bb/cc/
Copy a regular file thru intermediate host 'fw':
Copy file yy to home directory of user1 on host1
thru a an intermediate host fw,
swcopy -s /xx/yy @ fw:user1@host1:.
Copy a directory from one host to another
Copy directory yy into directory cc if cc exists,
otherwise create cc and copy yy into it. If cc
is and copy as yy.
swcopy -s /xx/yy @host1:/aa/bb/cc
Software Specification Targets
A dash '-' is supported and means stdout or stdin. Operations with
stdout and stdin on a remote host is not supported.
A decimal '.' is supported and means the current directory. This is
supported for remote and non-remote targets. If the source is standard
input, the distribution will be unpacked (e.g. pax -r) in the directory
'.'. If the source is a regular file then a regular file in '.' will
be created with the same name.
Thus,
# swcopy -s `pwd`/myarchive.tgz @. # Do NOT do this even
# though in most cases
# swcopy is a coward.
will destroy the source file myarchive.tgz, whereas
# swcopy -s - @. <`pwd`/myarchive.tgz
will install it with the configured archive reading utility.
RPM Translation
RPM (RedHat Package Manager) format packages are copied by first
translating to an equivalent ISO/IEEE file layout in POSIX tar format
and then copying as a POSIX package. The RPM detection and translation
occurs if the ''--allow-rpm'' option is on (either by the command line
args or defaults file) and the ''--audit'' option is on. If the
''--allow-rpm'' option is not set an error occurs. If the ''--audit''
is not set, the RPM is copied as arbitrary data and translation does
not occur.
Since translation is done on the local (management) host, RPM is not
reqired on the remote (target) host.
The translation is (internally) equivalent to :
cat your-poor-poor-0.0.bin.rpm |
/usr/lib/swbis/lxpsf --psf-form2 -H ustar |
swpackage -Wsource=- -s@PSF
Extended options can be specified on the command line using the -x
option or from the defaults file, swdefaults. Shown below is an actual
portion of a defaults file which show default values.
Posix
These options are set in the /usr/lib/swbis/swdefaults or the
~/.swdefaults
autoselect_dependencies = false # Not Implemented
compress_files = false # Not Implemented
compression_type = none # Not Implemented
distribution_source_directory = -
distribution_target_directory = -
enforce_dependencies = false # Not Implemented
enforce_dsa = false # Not Implemented
logfile = /var/lib/sw/swcopy.log #Not Implemented
loglevel = 1 # Not Implemented
recopy = false # Not Implemented
select_local = false # Not Implemented
uncompress_files = false # Not Implemented
verbose = 1
Swbis Implementation
These options are set in the /usr/lib/swbis/swbisdefaults or the
~/.swbis/swbisdefaults file.
swcopy.swbis_no_getconf = true # true or false
swcopy.swbis_shell_command = detect # {detect|sh|bash|posix|ksh}
swcopy.swbis_no_remote_kill = false # true or false
swcopy.swbis_no_audit = false # true or false
swcopy.swbis_quiet_progress_bar = false # true or false
swcopy.swbis_local_pax_write_command=pax #{pax|tar|star|gtar}
swcopy.swbis_remote_pax_write_command=pax #{pax|tar|star|gtar}
swcopy.swbis_local_pax_read_command=pax #{pax|tar|gtar|star}
swcopy.swbis_remote_pax_read_command=pax #{pax|tar|gtar|star}
swcopy.swbis_allow_rpm = false # true or false
swcopy.swbis_remote_shell_client=ssh
0 if all targets succeeded, 1 if all targets failed, 2 if some targets
failed and some succeeded.
Multiple ssh-hops is an implementation extension.
The swbis distributed utilities require bash, public domain ksh, or
Sun's /usr/xpg4/bin/sh to be present on the target host. If the
swbis_shell_command extended option is set to 'detect' you don't have
to know which one is present, otherwise you may specify one explicitly.
A POSIX awk is required, and with the ability to specify several
thousand bytes of program text as a command argument. GNU awk works,
as does the ATT Awk book awk, and the awk on BSD systems. See the
INSTALL file for further details regarding a small issue with the
OpenSolaris (c.2006) awk.
Tar or pax is used for archive transfer. You may specify which one.
swcopy.swbis_local_pax_write_command=tar #{pax|tar|gtar}
swcopy.swbis_remote_pax_write_command=tar #{pax|tar|gtar}
/usr/lib/swbis/swdefaults
/usr/lib/swbis/swbisdefaults
$HOME/.swbis/swdefaults
$HOME/.swbis/swbisdefaults
ISO/IEC 15068-2:1999, Open Group CAE C701
info swbis
sw(5), swbis(7), swbisparse(1), swign(1), swverify(8)
swcopy(8): The archive copying utility of the swbis project.
Author: Jim Lowe Email: jhlowe at acm.org
Version: 1.13
Last Updated: 2006-07
Copying: GNU Free Documentation License
Swcopy is subject to breakage if a user's account on an intermediate
(or terminal) host in a target spec is not configured to use a Bourne
compatible shell. (This breakage may be eliminated by use of the --no-
getconf option as explained above.)
A multiple ssh hop source spec (more than 1 remote host involved in
the source transfer) upon a SIGINT may result in sshd and ssh processes
being left on on the intermediate host(s), this despite, swcopy's
action of sending a SIGTERM to the remote script's parent process.
Swcopy does not currently implement Software Selections nor the events
of the Selection and Analysis Phases nor dependency copying nor fileset
state transitions. The Execution (copying) phase is done on the entire
distribution by the utility selected in .../swbisdefaults which is
pax(1) by default. Pax is not found on all GNU/Linux systems. Also,
the pax version shipped with some (older) GNU/Linux systems mangles the
pathname of files whose pathname is exactly 100 octets long. Despite
this pax is the the builtin default. GNU tar is widely used and
trusted but creates non-standard archives for long pathnames. Perhaps
the best compromise is to use star (with -H ustar header option) for
archive creation and (GNU) tar for archive reading. If your
environment is 100% GNU/Linux using GNU tar is safe (GNU tar 1.13.25 is
recommended). Swcopy does not support using the cpio utility since its
archive writing interface is unlike pax and tar, although, future
support is possible for archive reading.
swcopy(8)