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

Using swconfig
Syntax
swconfig [-p] [-u] [-v] [-c catalog] [-C session_file]
[-f software_file] [-Q date] [-S session_file] [-t target_file] [-x option=value]
[-X option_file] [software_selections] [@ target_selections]
Options and Operands
-p Preview a configuration task by running it through the Analysis
Phase and then exiting.
-u Unconfigure the software instead of configuring it.
-v Turn on verbose output to stdout and display all activity to the
screen.
-c catalog Store copy of a response file or files created by a request script.
See Chapter 11: “Using Control Scripts ” (page 201).
-C session_file Run the command and save the current option and operand values
to a session_file for re-use in another session. See “Session Files”
(page 39).
-f software_file Read a list of software selections from a separate file instead of (or
in addition to) the command line. See “Software Files” (page 36).
-Q date Schedules a job for the given date when remote operations are
enabled. See “Scheduling Jobs from the Command Line” (page 115)
and Chapter 7: “Remote Operations Overview” (page 116)
-S session_file Run the command based on values saved from a previous installation
session, as defined in session_file. See “Session Files”
(page 39).
-t target_file Read a list of target selections from a separate file instead of (or in
addition to) the command line. See “Target Files” (page 37).
-x option=value Sets a command option to value and overrides default values
or a values in options files. See “Changing Command Options”
(page 55).
-X option_file Read session options and behaviors from option_file. See
“Changing Command Options” (page 55).
software_selections The software objects to be configured. See “Software Selections”
(page 35).
target_selections The target of the command. See “Target Selections” (page 37).
Changing Command Options
You can change the behavior of this command by specifying additional command-line options
when you invoke the command (using the -xoption) or by reading predefined values from a file.
The following table shows the options and default values that apply to swconfig.
Table 9 swconfig Command Options and Default Values
• logdetail=false• admin_directory=/var/adm/sw
• •agent_auto_exit=true logfile=/var/adm/sw/swconfig.log
•• loglevel=1agent_timeout_minutes=10000
• •allow_incompatible=false lookupcache_timeout_minutes=10
•• mount_all_filesystems=trueallow_multiple_versions=false
• •ask=false preview=false
Configuring Your Installation (swconfig) 55