Software Distributor (SD-UX) Administration Guide HP-UX 11i v1, 11i v2, and 11i v3 (762797-001, March 2014)
Table Of Contents
- Software Distributor Administration Guide
- Contents
- HP secure development lifecycle
- About This Document
- 1 Introduction to Software Distributor
- SD-UX Overview
- SD-UX Concepts
- Using the GUI and TUI Commands
- The Terminal User Interface
- Starting the GUI/TUI Commands
- Window Components
- Opening and closing items in the object list
- Marking Items in the Object List
- Preselecting Host Files
- Software Selection Window
- Session and File Management—The File Menu
- Changing Software Views—The View Menu
- Changing Options and Refreshing the Object List—The Options Menu
- Performing Actions—The Actions Menu
- Getting Help—The Help Menu
- XToolkit Options and Changing Display Fonts
- Working from the Command Line
- 2 Installing Software
- Installation with swinstall
- Features and Limitations
- Installing with the GUI
- Installing from the Command Line
- Installation Tasks and Examples
- Updating to HP-UX 11i
- Installing Patches
- Recovering Updated Files
- Installing Software That Requires a System Reboot
- Using Software Codewords and Customer IDs
- Re-installing Software Distributor
- Installing Multiple Versions
- Installing to an Alternate Root
- Compatibility Filtering and Checking
- Software Selection Checking
- Configuring Your Installation (swconfig)
- Verifying Your Installation (swverify)
- Installation with swinstall
- 3 Managing Installed Software
- 4 Managing Software Depots
- Depot Management Commands and Concepts
- Copying Software Depots
- Registering and Unregistering Depots (swreg)
- Verifying Signed Software Signatures
- Additional Depot Management Tasks and Examples
- Combining Patch Depots
- Creating a Tape Depot for Distribution
- Setting Depot Attributes
- Creating a Network Depot
- Managing Multiple Versions of HP-UX
- Listing Registered Depots
- Listing the Contents of a Depot (swlist -d)
- Source Depot Auditing
- Verifying a Depot (swverify -d)
- Removing Software from Depots
- Removing a Depot
- 5 HP-UX Patching and Patch Management
- 6 Using Jobs and the Job Browser
- 7 Remote Operations Overview
- 8 Reliability and Performance
- 9 SD-UX Security
- 10 Creating Software Packages
- Overview of the Packaging Process
- Identifying the Products to Package
- Adding Control Scripts
- Creating a Product Specification File (PSF)
- Product Specification File Examples
- PSF Syntax
- PSF Object Syntax
- Selecting the PSF Layout Version
- PSF Value Types
- Product Specification File Semantics
- Re-Specifying Files
- Packaging the Software (swpackage)
- Packaging Tasks and Examples
- Registering Depots Created by swpackage
- Creating and Mastering a CD-ROM Depot
- Compressing Files to Increase Performance
- Packaging Security
- Repackaging or Modifying a Software Package
- Packaging In Place
- Following Symbolic Links in the Source
- Generating File Revisions
- Depots on Remote File Systems
- Verifying the Software Package
- Packaging Patch Software
- Writing to Multiple Tapes
- Making Tapes from an Existing Depot
- 11 Using Control Scripts
- Introduction to Control Scripts
- General Script Guidelines
- Packaging Control Scripts
- Using Environment Variables
- Execution of Control Scripts
- Execution of Other Commands by Control Scripts
- Control Script Input and Output
- File Management by Control Scripts
- Testing Control Scripts
- Requesting User Responses (swask)
- Request Script Tasks and Examples
- 12 Nonprivileged SD
- A Command Options
- B Troubleshooting
- Error Logging
- Common Problems
- Cannot Contact Target Host’s Daemon or Agent
- GUI Won’t Start or Missing Support Files
- Access To An Object Is Denied
- Slow Network Performance
- Connection Timeouts and Other WAN Problems
- Disk Space Analysis Is Incorrect
- Packager Fails
- Command Logfile Grows Too Large
- Daemon Logfile Is Too Long
- Cannot Read a Tape Depot
- Installation Fails
- swinstall or swremove Fails With a Lock Error
- Use of Square Brackets ([ and ]) Around an IPv6 Address Causes an Error
- Some SD commands do not work after network configuration changes
- C Replacing or Updating SD-UX
- D Software Distributor Files and File System Structure
- Glossary
- Index

Table 8 Product Compatibility (continued)
Target Root attributeProduct value (Pattern to
match)
Product attribute
uname -rB.11.11?.11.*os_release
uname -vC*os_version
If allow_incompatible=false (the default), swinstall restricts the installation of incompatible
software and automatically filters the products on the source. The Software Selection window shows
only those products compatible with the hardware and OS of all target systems.
If allow_incompatible=true, swinstall allows the installation of any software. The GUI
displays all products on the source for selection.
You can also use the -x os_name and -x os_release options to check compatibility. During
an OS update, for example, if a system has been installed as 11.0/32 bit and you wish to update
to the 64-bit version of HP-UX, you can make the system appear as a 64-bit system for the purpose
of compatibility checking against the merged depot by specifying the options-x
os_name=HP-UX:64 and -x os_release=B.11.00. (You can also specify these options at
a fileset level.)
NOTE: Compatibility filtering does not apply to alternate root file systems. You must select software
that you know to be compatible with the alternate root.
Software Selection Checking
The swinstall command behavior can be controlled using the enforce_selections option.
If set to false (default), swinstall proceeds even when only one software selection is available
in the source. If set to true, swinstall proceeds only if all software selections are available in
the source.
Configuring Your Installation (swconfig)
The swconfig command runs configuration scripts. Although swinstall and swremove
automatically run configuration or unconfiguration scripts, swconfig lets you work independently
of these commands. This lets you:
• Execute scripts to address problems if a configuration fails, is deferred, or must be changed.
• Explicitly configure, unconfigure or reconfigure any installed software that has associated
configuration scripts.
• Configure or unconfigure hosts that share software located on another host.
Features and Limitations
• swconfig can execute these kinds of scripts:
Configures installed filesets or products. (Executed by swconfig and
swinstall.)
Configure
Request Requests an interactive response from the user as part of the configuration
process.
Unconfigure Undoes configurations performed by configure scripts. For example,
removing configuration from the host’s /etc/profile or /sbin/rc files.
This moves the software from the configured state back to installed.
• The swconfig command runs only from the command line interface.
• The swconfig command configures the host on which the software will run.
• Filesets or products can include configure (unconfigure) scripts.
52 Installing Software