I am looking for an installer for my product. My requirement is that from one Node (Physical Machine) I should be able to install the software on multiple machines (Node). My product is a HA platform that needs to be installed on multiple Linux machines to form a cluster. Is there any installers that can do this free or paid. Currently we are developing on Linux, going forward we may need to support other Unix type OS.
Thanking you in advance
Package your product appropriately for the distribution (e.g. deb package) and use the standard management tools for the platform. Many simplicity-oriented people use
for node in $nodes; do ssh $node sudo apt-get install $package; done
and there is a host of cluster management software out there, one of which you are probably using.
I don't know if there is an "installer" the way you use in Windows machines. However you can create packages depending on your system. For Debian like systems you can create .deb packages, and for Red Hat style you can create .rpm packages.
The way the packages are created is to specify a correct installation path for files and pre-install & post-install scripts to execute when you install the files. Also you can set dependencies on your package, so that if you require some important library, the deb/rpm installer won't install your package until the required library is installed.
Hope that makes sense with my broken English:)
Related
1) What is the difference between installing apache from "yum install httpd" and "source" ?
2) Why both installation methods create different path for httpd.conf file?
3) Are we doing source installations for specific requirements?
Installation from Source:
tar xvfz httpd-2.2.17.tar.gz --> ./configure --enable-ssl --enable-so --> make --> make install
Installation using YUM:
yum instll httpd
Please help me.
Thanks in advance
-Shishir
1) What is the differnce between installing apache from "yum install
httpd" and "source" ?
Installing distributor-provided package (eg. by yum) means installing precompiled, almost-ready-to-use binary version of application, whereas installation by source means building application from source, which involves compiling program source code into binary code.
Most notable differences are:
Building from source provides more flexibility - often applications can be configured to be built with different features. For example, you can decide whether you want to build Apache with support for SSL and whether you want to include support for PHP scripting and so on. On the other hand, binary packages are sometimes split into several packages, for example Apache modules (such as mod_php) can be installed as separate modules.
Installing from source is usually much more time consuming while installing binary package involves mainly copying files and running installation scripts.
Most often, latest versions of applications are provided in source form only - there is time gap before application is packaged and made available in repositories. On the other hand, application installed from repository will be automatically updated by package manager, while applications installed from source will have to be updated manually.
Installing binary packages need only package manager, whareas installing from source required working toolchain, mostly make, compilers (eg. gcc) and development version of third-party libraries.
Package manager handles dependencies for you. For example, Apache needs libapr, Apache Portable Runtime. When you install Apache using package manager, it installs libapr automatically for you. When you build from source, you have to install libapr first.
2) Why both installation methods create different path for httpd.conf
file?
Because different distributions have different guidelines for filesystem layout. RedHat packages follow RedHat guidelines, Debian packages follow Debian guidelines.
Source packages follow some "generic" guidelines.
3) Are we doing source installations for specific requirements?
That may be one reason for doing so. See point 1.
in addition to providing the software via package managers, is there a way to provide the software with all its dependencies packaged into one for download. i.e one big binary.
The goal is for users without permissions or with dependency issues to simply download the big binary and run it out of the box.
Note: Software can already be installed via apt-get but I want to offer the option to download it whole
You could try creating
rpm package for Suse/RHEL linux can be installed "rpm -ivh".
package (.pkg) in solaris and can be installed "pkg -d".
I am trying to install gcc onto a linux RedHat Enterprise 5 virtual machine, and I have tried using a tar.gz package and also a rpm, and both methods give errors. The tar.gz says there is no c compiler found, and the rpm has dependencies that it can not find. Yum is available on this machine, however, there are no repositories found and I am still unsure of how to install the necessary repositories to get gcc installed. The end goal for installing gcc is to be able to install rsync, tcl, and the expect package for shell scripts. Any advice?
Your .tar.gz probably didn't work because it was the raw source code for GCC. The source for the compiler requires a compiler to build it — the classic chicken & egg problem. To get around this, you'd need to get a precompiled compiler for your system's architecture. GCC is not offered in a precompiled form by the FSF, as far as I know. If you're ever interested in actually trying to build a Linux system from the ground up like that, you might find Linux From Scratch interesting.
You'll probably not even need GCC to get rsync, tcl, etc. There are almost certainly pre-built packages available from yum repos for those tools. As #PeteyT said, RHEL uses a subscription to allow you to access packages using yum. You can learn more from the Red Hat Subscription Management Guide.
If you don't have a Red Hat subscription, you might be interested in CentOS, Scientific Linux and Fedora. As I understand it, CentOS and Scientific Linux are meant to be almost identical to RHEL. On the other hand, Fedora is a separate project owned by Red Hat (according to Wikipedia) which is an OS in its own right, and sometimes serves as a feeder to Red Hat products.
Once you have repos available, either via subscription or switching OSs, you should be able to simply run yum install rsync tcl expect to install rsync, tcl, and expect.
You might look at yum's docs for more about the various commands you can use with yum, and Red Hat's docs for more on package management in RHEL.
For easy deployment, I'd like to ship an installation of Postgres as part of the application. Is it possible to include an already compiled and runnable version of Postgres that can be launched as process? I was able to do such thing with a Windows and MacOS version, but haven't found anything about Linux on that matter yet. Perhaps someone has tried this before and can share some insights...
You haven't stated what linux OS you're using.
Assuming it's a Redhat variant why not package your application as an RPM package? You could then declare a dependency on the standard Postgres package which would be automatically installed yum. Same principle applies if you're using Debian based systems, just a different packaging format.
From the user's perspective the OS's native packaging format is always the easiest way to install your application. Just requires effort to package it properly.
You can find cross-platform binaries from these pages on PostgreSQL official website:
For easy GUI .run installers, use links provided at http://www.enterprisedb.com/products-services-training/pgdownload.
If your target machine has no X installed on it, or you want to automate installation process with shell scripts, then you can download RPM or Deb packages from http://community.openscg.com/se/postgresql/packages.jsp
I found these links on http://www.postgresql.org/download/linux/ubuntu/, under "Cross distribution packages" and "Graphical installer".
I quote from those pages:
Note: The cross distribution packages do not fully integrate with the platform-specific packaging systems.
You must have root priviliges to install these packages, however, none of your systems library files will be altered. The supporting libraries that these binaries require are included locally as part of the install. This is the "special sauce" that allows identical binaries to run on different linux distro's.
I have a project that runs on Debian and uses many packages provided from the Debian repositories.
Because of demand, I've looked into porting the project to CentOS, but found that many of the packages I require are completely missing - at least 10 dependencies would have to be compiled manually at install time on the users machine.
My question is, what is the best way to create an installer for the user's machine? Should I use automake tools (with the standard ./configure, make, make install), to compile the required libraries, or is this a non-standard approach. Note that my app doesn't actually need to be compiled since it is written in Python, so is it weird to do a "make", when you're not compiling your own app?
Should the configure script just warn the user that package X is missing, and let them handle the rest?
Should I roll my own dependency checker by runng pkg-config manually a few times for each library required, and exit if something is missing?
I'm quite new to this, so any tips to get me moving in the right direction are appreciated.
Edit: I am familiar with RPM and yum for red hat base distros, but CentOS is missing many multimedia packages that I require. An example of one of my package dependencies is "liquidsoap" which is a programmable audio engine: http://savonet.sourceforge.net/
This is available on Debian, but not Redhat/Centos
See this link on CentOS package management.
http://wiki.centos.org/PackageManagement/Yum
CentOS is redhat based and does not use .deb packages by default. However apt package management has been ported to tons of platforms, you may be able to use a port for centOS
If you use YUM whatever packages you need will be there for your application as redhat distros need all the same things that any other distro does.
EDIT: To get the details out of comments
Packages not available on the target platform either have to be built (possibly as a port) on the target platform and then shipped in the ported package (in this case YUM), or code needs to be modified and forked to use packages which already are available on the target platform. The choice depends on which is worse, or which is even possible given your constraints.