ETCUPDATE(8) NetBSD System Manager's Manual ETCUPDATE(8)
NAME
etcupdate -- update the configuration and startup files in /etc
SYNOPSIS
etcupdate [-ahlv] [-p pager] [-s {srcdir | tgzdir | tgzfile}]
[-t temproot] [-w width]
DESCRIPTION
etcupdate is a tool that lets the administrator update the configuration
and startup files in /etc (and some other directories like /dev, /root
and /var) without having to manually check and modify every file. The
administrator should run this script after performing an operating system
update (e.g. after running make build in /usr/src or after extracting new
binary distribution files) to update to the latest configuration and
startup files.
etcupdate compares the new configuration files against the currently
installed files. The user is given the option of installing, merging or
deleting each modified or missing file. etcupdate also detects if the
user installs certain special files and performs corresponding tasks like
remaking device nodes or rebuilding a database from the aliases(5) file.
Finally, etcupdate runs postinstall(8) to check the results.
etcupdate needs a clean set of new configuration files to compare the
existing files against. These files, called the ``reference files'' in
this manual, may be derived from either a source or binary distribution
of NetBSD.
If the user is updating from sources (which is the default mode),
etcupdate will first create a copy of the reference files by running make
distribution in /usr/src/etc, installing the files to a so-called
temproot. (See usage of the -s srcdir and -t temproot options later in
this manual page.) Although this is the default mode, it is not recom-
mended (see the ``BUGS'' section).
Instead of using sources, it is recommended that the user should extract
one or more binary distribution sets in a special location and use those
as the reference files (see usage of the -s tgzdir option later in this
manual page), or specify one or more binary distribution sets directly
(see usage of the -s tgzfile option later in this manual page).
The following options are available:
-a etcupdate can automatically update files which have not
been modified locally. The -a flag instructs etcupdate to
store MD5 checksums in /var/etcupdate and use these check-
sums to determine if there have been any local modifica-
tions.
-h Prints a help text.
-l Automatically skip files with unchanged RCS IDs. This has
the effect of leaving alone files that have been altered
locally but which have not been changed in the reference
files. Since this works using RCS IDs, files without RCS
IDs will not be skipped even if only modified locally.
This flag may be used together with the -a flag described
above.
-p pager The pager to use when displaying files. By default this
is more(1) but it can be changed either with this option
or by defining the PAGER variable.
-s {srcdir | tgzdir | tgzfile}
The location of the reference files, or the NetBSD source
files used to create the reference files. This may be
specified in one of three ways:
-s srcdir The top level directory of the NetBSD
source tree. By default this is /usr/src
but it can be changed either with this
option or the SRCDIR variable. The refer-
ence files will be created by running
``make distribution'' in the srcdir/etc
directory. Note that srcdir should refer
to the top of the source directory tree;
earlier versions of etcupdate expected
srcdir to refer to the etc subdirectory
within the source tree.
-s tgzdir A directory in which reference files have
been extracted from one or more of the
``etc.tgz'' or ``xetc.tgz'' files from a
binary distribution of NetBSD. The refer-
ence files from the specified directory
will be copied to the temproot directory.
-s tgzfile The location of one or more set files (or
``tgz files'') from a binary distribution
of NetBSD. Each set file is a compressed
archive containing reference files. More
than one set file may be specified, either
by using a single -s option with a colon-
separated list of tgzfile names, or by
using multiple -s options; this is likely
to be useful to specify the locations of
both the etc.tgz and xetc.tgz set files.
Note that file names may not contain embed-
ded colon (`:') characters, because that
would conflict with the use of the colon
character to delimit multiple file names
with a single argument. The files from the
specified sets will be extracted to the
temproot directory.
-t temproot Specifies the location of the temproot directory. This
directory will be used for a temporary copy of the refer-
ence files created by running ``make distribution'' in the
source directory specified by -s srcdir, or a temporary
copy of the reference files extracted from the binary sets
specified by -s tgzfile, or a temporary copy of the refer-
ence files from the directory specified by -s tempdir. By
default this is /tmp/temproot but can be changed either
with this option or the TEMPROOT environment variable.
-v Makes etcupdate verbose about its actions.
-w width Sets screen width used during interactive merge. By
default this is the number of columns stty(1) reports but
it can be changed either with this option or by defining
the WIDTH variable. This is useful for xterm(1) users
with wider shell windows.
ENVIRONMENT
TEMPROOT Sets a default value for temproot. See -t above.
SRCDIR The location of the NetBSD sources files. See -s above.
PAGER The pager to use when displaying files. See -p above.
WIDTH The screen width used during interactive merge. See -w
above.
IGNOREFILES A list of files that etcupdate should ignore. Files
listed in this variable will never be considered for
updating by etcupdate.
FILES
The environment variables can also be defined in the following configura-
tion files. The user's personal configuration file settings override the
global settings.
/etc/etcupdate.conf
~/.etcupdaterc
EXAMPLES
You have just upgraded your NetBSD host from 3.0 to 4.0 and now it's time
to update the configuration files as well. To update the configuration
files from the sources (if you have the /usr/src/etc directory):
etcupdate
The default location of the source files is /usr/src but this may be
overridden with the -s srcdir command line argument:
etcupdate -s /some/where/src
To update the configuration files from binary distribution sets do some-
thing like this:
etcupdate -s /some/where/etc.tgz -s /some/where/xetc.tgz
or like this:
mkdir /tmp/temproot
cd /tmp/temproot
tar -xpzf /some/where/etc.tgz
tar -xpzf /some/where/xetc.tgz
etcupdate -s /tmp/temproot
You have modified only few files in the /etc directory so you would like
install most of the updates without being asked. To automatically update
the unmodified configuration files:
etcupdate -a
To get a better idea what's going on, use the -v flag:
etcupdate -v
SEE ALSO
cmp(1), more(1), rcs(1), sdiff(1), stty(1), aliases(5), postinstall(8)
HISTORY
The etcupdate command appeared in NetBSD 1.6.
In NetBSD 4.0, the -s tgzfile option was added, the -b tempdir option was
converted to -s tgzdir, and the -s srcdir option was changed to refer to
the top of the source directory tree rather than to the etc subdirectory.
AUTHORS
The script was written by Martti Kuparinen <martti@NetBSD.org> and
improved by several other NetBSD users.
The idea for this script (including code fragments, variable names etc.)
came from the FreeBSD mergemaster (by Douglas Barton). Unlike the
FreeBSD mergemaster, this does not use CVS version tags by default to
compare if the files need to be updated. Files are compared with cmp(1)
as this is more reliable and the only way if the version numbers are the
same even though the files are different.
BUGS
If a source directory is specified via the ``-s srcdir'' option (or if
the /usr/src directory is used by default), then etcupdate will run
``make distribution'' in the etc subdirectory of the source directory,
but it will not use the same options or environment variables that would
be used during a full build of the operating system. For this reason,
use of the ``-s srcdir'' option is not recommended, and use of the ``-s
tgzdir'' or ``-s tgzfile'' options is recommended.
NetBSD 4.0 March 25, 2007 NetBSD 4.0
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