backport to buster
[hcoop/debian/openafs.git] / INSTALL
1 Copyright 2000, International Business Machines Corporation and others.
2 All Rights Reserved.
3
4 This software has been released under the terms of the IBM Public
5 License. For details, see the LICENSE file in the top-level
6 directory or online at http://www.openafs.org/dl/license10.html
7
8 Short instructions for sites upgrading from a previous version of AFS:
9 % ./configure --enable-transarc-paths
10 % make
11 % make dest
12
13 will create a Transarc-style dest tree in ${SYS_NAME}/dest where
14 ${SYS_NAME} is the AFS sysname of the system you built for.
15 This assumes if you're building for Linux that your kernel source is
16 in /usr/src/linux.
17
18 Otherwise, please read on.
19
20 Building OpenAFS on UNIX and Linux
21 ----------------------------------
22
23 A Configuring
24
25 Uncompress the source into a directory of your choice. A directory
26 in afs space is also valid. In the directory that you uncompressed the
27 source in, you will only have an src/ directory.
28
29 1. Pick a system to build for, and note its default AFS sys_name.
30 A directory will be automatically created for binaries to be written
31 into with this name when you build.
32
33 alpha_dux40, alpha_dux50, alpha_dux51 (client does not work)
34 alpha_linux26
35 alpha_nbsd15, alpha_nbsd16
36 amd64_fbsd_80, amd64_fbsd_81, amd64_fbsd_82, amd64_fbsd_83,
37 amd64_fbsd_84, amd64_fbsd_90, amd64_fbsd_91, amd64_fbsd_92,
38 amd64_fbsd_93, amd64_fbsd_100, amd64_fbsd_101
39 amd64_linux26
40 amd64_nbsd20, amd64_nbsd30, amd64_nbsd40
41 arm_linux26, arm64_linux26
42 hp_ux11i, hp_ux110, hp_ux1123 (See notes below for information on
43 getting missing header)
44 hp_ux102 (Client port possible, but db servers and utilities work)
45 i386_fbsd_80, i386_fbsd_81, i386_fbsd_82, i386_fbsd_83,
46 i386_fbsd_84, i386_fbsd_90, i386_fbsd_91, i386_fbsd_92,
47 i386_fbsd_93, i386_fbsd_100, i386_fbsd_101
48 i386_linux26
49 i386_nbsd15, i386_nbsd16, i386_nbsd20, i386_nbsd21, i386_nbsd30,
50 i386_nbsd40
51 i386_obsd31, i386_obsd32, i386_obsd33, i386_obsd34, i386_obsd35,
52 i386_obsd36, i386_obsd37, i386_obsd38, i386_obsd39, i386_obsd40,
53 i386_obsd41
54 i386_umlinux26
55 ia64_hpux1122, ia64_hpux1123
56 ia64_linux26
57 ppc64_linux26
58 ppc_darwin_12, ppc_darwin_13, ppc_darwin_14, ppc_darwin_60,
59 ppc_darwin_70, ppc_darwin_80, ppc_darwin_90
60 ppc_linux26
61 ppc_nbsd16, ppc_nbsd20
62 rs_aix42, rs_aix51, rs_aix52, rs_aix53, rs_aix61
63 s390_linux26
64 s390x_linux26
65 sgi_62, sgi_63, sgi_64, sgi_65 (file server not tested)
66 sparc64_linux26
67 sun4x_58, sun4x_59, sun4x_510, sun4x_511
68 (logging UFS not supported for mixed-use partitions containing
69 client cache)
70 sunx86_58, sunx86_59, sunx86_510, sunx86_511
71 (logging UFS not supported for mixed-use partitions containing
72 client cache)
73 x86_darwin_80, x86_darwin90
74
75 2. Using configure in the top level directory, configure for your
76 AFS system type, providing the necessary flags:
77
78 % ./configure --with-afs-sysname=sun4x_58 --enable-transarc-paths
79
80 If you do not have the "configure" script, or if you modify the
81 source files, you can re-create it by running regen.sh. You will
82 need autoconf to do this.
83
84 For some systems you need also provide the path in which your kernel
85 headers for your configured kernel can be found. See the
86 system-specific Notes sections below for details. If you want to
87 build only the user-space programs and servers and not the kernel
88 module, specify the --disable-kernel-module option on the
89 ./configure command line.
90
91 All binaries, except for the 'fileserver' and 'volserver'
92 executables and their 'da' variants, are stripped of their symbol
93 table information by default. To enable a debugging build, specify
94 the --enable-debug option on the ./configure command line. This
95 builds with debugging compiler options and disables stripping of
96 binaries.
97
98 You can also use different combinations of --enable-debug and
99 --enable (or --disable)-strip-binaries for finer control. One can,
100 for example, compile binaries for debug and strip them anyway.
101 Alternatively, one can compile without debug and force the binaries
102 to not be stripped. Note that these combinations are not
103 necessarily useful.
104
105 The binaries noted above, 'fileserver' and 'volserver' and their
106 'da' variants, will never be stripped, regardless of any options
107 given to configure.
108
109 There are two modes for directory path handling: "Transarc mode" and
110 "default mode":
111
112 - In Transarc mode, we retain compatibility with Transarc/IBM AFS tools
113 by putting client configuration files in /usr/vice/etc, and server
114 files in /usr/afs under the traditional directory layout.
115 - In default mode, files are located in standardized locations, usually
116 under $(prefix), which defaults to /usr/local.
117 - Client programs, libraries, and related files always go in standard
118 directories under $(prefix). This rule covers things that would go
119 into $(bindir), $(includedir), $(libdir), $(mandir), and $(sbindir).
120 - Other files get located in the following places:
121
122 Directory Transarc Mode Default Mode
123 ============ ========================= ==============================
124 viceetcdir /usr/vice/etc $(sysconfdir)/openafs
125 afssrvdir /usr/afs/bin (servers) $(libexecdir)/openafs
126 afsconfdir /usr/afs/etc $(sysconfdir)/openafs/server
127 afslocaldir /usr/afs/local $(localstatedir)/openafs
128 afsdbdir /usr/afs/db $(localstatedir)/openafs/db
129 afslogdir /usr/afs/logs $(localstatedir)/openafs/logs
130 afsbosconfig $(afslocaldir)/BosConfig $(afsconfdir)/BosConfig
131 afsbosserver $(afsbindir)/bosserver $(sbindir)/bosserver
132
133 In default mode, you can change all of the variables named above that
134 do not start with "afs" by passing the flags with the same name to
135 configure. For example, if you want to install the server binaries in
136 /usr/local/lib/openafs instead of /usr/local/libexec/openafs, pass the
137 --libexecdir=/usr/local/lib flag to configure.
138
139 For additional options, see section I below.
140
141 B Building
142
143 1. Now, you can build OpenAFS.
144
145 % make
146
147 2. Install your build using either "make install" to install
148 into the current system (you will need to be root, and files
149 will be placed as appropriate for Transarc or standard paths),
150 "make install DESTDIR=/some/path" to install into an alternate
151 directory tree, or if you configured with --enable-transarc-paths
152 make dest to create a complete binary tree in the dest directory
153 under the directory named for the sys_name you built for,
154 e.g. sun4x_57/dest or i386_linux26/dest
155
156 3. As appropriate you can clean up or, if you're using Linux, build for
157 another kernel version.
158
159 To clean up:
160
161 % make clean
162
163 C Problems
164
165 If you have a problem building this source, you may want to visit
166 http://www.openafs.org/ to see if any problems have been reported
167 or to find out how to get more help.
168
169 Mailing lists have been set up to help; More details can be found
170 on the openafs.org site.
171
172 D Linux Notes
173
174 With current Linux versions, the /lib/modules/`uname -r`/source symlink
175 will be used to locate the kernel headers, but you will need to have
176 the headers and build system for your kernel installed in order to
177 build the kernel module. These are usually found in a separate package
178 from the kernel, often called something like linux-headers-<version>.
179
180 For older Linux systems, you may also need to provide the path in which
181 your kernel headers for your configured kernel can be found. This
182 should be the path of the directory containing a child directory named
183 "include". So if your version file were
184 /usr/src/linux/include/linux/version.h you would run:
185
186 % ./configure --with-afs-sysname=i386_linux26 \
187 --with-linux-kernel-headers=/usr/src/linux
188
189 Currently you can build for only one Linux kernel at a time, and the
190 version is extracted from the kernel headers in the root you specify.
191
192 To build for another Linux kernel version, determine the sysname for
193 the system type as defined in step A1 for the other kernel version and
194 then run:
195
196 % ./configure --with-afs-sysname=<sysname> \
197 --with-linux-kernel-headers=/usr/src/linux-3.19-i686
198 % make
199
200 Your build tree will now include an additional kernel module for your
201 additional kernel headers. Be aware that if the kernel version string
202 which UTS_RELEASE is defined to in include/linux/version.h matches the
203 last kernel you built for, the previous kernel module will be
204 overwritten.
205
206 The Linux 2.4 series (and older) are no longer supported. The OpenAFS 1.6
207 series of releases are the last ones supporting those old kernels and in
208 particular their LinuxThreads.
209
210 E HP-UX 11.0 Notes
211
212 HP-UX 11.0 requires a header called vfs_vm.h which HP has provided on
213 their web site. Go to http://www.hp.com/dspp, choose Software
214 downloads from the side menu, and select Software: HP operating systems
215 and then Operating systems: HP-UX from the select boxes. The last
216 select box will have an option for downloading vfs_vm.h.
217
218 F OpenBSD Notes
219
220 If you need to run regen.sh to make the configure script, you should
221 first install autoconf-2.59, then setenv AUTOCONF_VERSION 2.59.
222
223 You need kernel source installed to build OpenAFS. Use the
224 --with-bsd-kernel-headers= configure option if your kernel source is
225 not in /usr/src/sys.
226
227 src/packaging/OpenBSD/buildpkg.sh will make a tar file for installing
228 the client. There is no server package, but I am told that "make
229 install" will put server binaries in /usr/afs.
230
231 Your kernel may panic when you try to shutdown after running the
232 OpenAFS client. To prevent this, change the "dangling vnode" panic in
233 sys/kern/vfs_syscalls.c to a printf and build a new kernel.
234
235 You can't run arla and OpenAFS at the same time.
236
237 G FreeBSD Notes
238
239 The FreeBSD client supports FreeBSD 8.x and later, but does not receive
240 regular testing on versions older than FreeBSD 9.x at this time. Only
241 the amd64 and i386 architectures are supported, but it should not be
242 hard to port to other processors if they are already supported under
243 another operating system.
244
245 You need kernel source installed to build OpenAFS. Use the
246 --with-bsd-kernel-headers= configure option if your kernel source is
247 not in /usr/src/sys.
248
249 You also need access to your kernel build directory for the opt_global.h
250 include file. Use the --with-bsd-kernel-build= configure option if your
251 kernel build is not GENERIC in the standard place. If
252 /usr/src/sys/${CPUARCH}/compile/GENERIC does not point to
253 /usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC you may need to resolve that and retry the
254 build.
255
256 H AIX notes
257
258 Make sure that your default build environment is 32bit, ie.
259 the OBJECT_MODE environment variable is either unset or set to "32".
260
261 Verify this before doing configure and make. For example, assuming
262 ksh/bash:
263
264 % export OBJECT_MODE=32
265
266 To build aklog (in order to be able to get tokens from your Kerberos v5
267 ticket), you will need Kerberos libraries. On AIX 6.1, the IBM
268 Kerberos v5 libraries are in the packages krb5.client.rte and
269 krb5.toolkit.adt on the Expansion Pack.
270
271 I Other configure options
272
273 AFS has a ton of other optional features that must be enabled using
274 configure options. Here is a summary:
275
276 --enable-bigendian
277 --enable-littleendian
278 These configure options are normally not required and should not be
279 given. They're only needed if the OpenAFS build system cannot
280 determine the endianness of your system, in which case configure
281 will abort and say to use one of these options.
282
283 --enable-bitmap-later
284 Speeds the startup of the fileserver by deferring reading volume
285 bitmaps until necessary. Demand attach is a better solution to the
286 same problem.
287
288 --enable-checking
289 Enable compiler warnings when building with GCC and turn compiler
290 warnings into errors so that new warnings will cause compilation
291 failures. If you are developing patches to contribute to OpenAFS,
292 please build OpenAFS with this flag enabled. Warning-free code is
293 a requirement for all new submissions to OpenAFS.
294
295 --enable-debug
296 --enable-debug-kernel
297 --enable-debug-lwp
298 --enable-debug-pam
299 Compile the userspace code (for --enable-debug) or the code named
300 by the option with debugging information. If --enable-debug is
301 given, also do not strip binaries when installing them.
302
303 --enable-linux-d_splice_alias-extra-iput
304 Work around a kernel memory leak present in a few Linux kernels.
305 The only affected mainline kernels are 3.17 to 3.17.2, but this
306 switch will also be required should a distribution backport commit
307 908790fa3b779d37365e6b28e3aa0f6e833020c3 or commit
308 95ad5c291313b66a98a44dc92b57e0b37c1dd589 but not the fix in commit
309 51486b900ee92856b977eacfc5bfbe6565028070 from the linux-stable repo
310 (git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux-stable.git) or
311 the corresponding changes on other branches. This is impossible to
312 detect automatically. Without this switch, the openafs module will
313 build and work even with affected kernels. But it will leak kernel
314 memory, leading to performance degradation and eventually system
315 failure due to memory exhaustion.
316
317 --enable-linux-syscall-probing
318 OpenAFS now uses keyrings to manage PAGs by default on Linux, which
319 does not require hooking into the system call table. On older
320 versions of Linux without keyring support, OpenAFS uses groups to
321 manage PAGs and probes for the system call table to hook into it to
322 preserve that group information. Normally, which method to use is
323 detected automatically, and if keyring support is present, support
324 for system call table probing is not compiled in. Use this
325 configure option to force inclusion of the system call table
326 probing code even if the kernel appears to support keyrings.
327
328 --enable-namei-fileserver
329 Forces the namei fileserver on platforms (like Solaris 8 and 9)
330 where the inode fileserver is the default.
331
332 --enable-redhat-buildsys
333 Enable compilation of the kernel module for the Red Hat build
334 system kernel. Use this configure flag when building kernel
335 modules for Red Hat Linux systems.
336
337 --enable-reduced-depends
338 Try to minimize the shared library dependencies encoded in the
339 binaries. This omits from the link line all the libraries included
340 solely because the Kerberos libraries depend on them and instead
341 links the programs only against libraries whose APIs are called
342 directly. This will only work with shared Kerberos libraries and
343 will only work on platforms where shared libraries properly encode
344 their own dependencies (such as Linux). It is intended primarily
345 for building packages for Linux distributions to avoid encoding
346 unnecessary shared library dependencies that make shared library
347 migrations more difficult. If none of the above made any sense to
348 you, don't bother with this flag.
349
350 --enable-supergroups
351 Enables support of nested groups in the ptserver. WARNING: Once
352 you make use of this option by nesting one group inside another,
353 the resulting PTS database cannot be correctly and safely used by a
354 ptserver built without this option. If some of your ptservers were
355 built with this option and some without this option, you will
356 probably corrupt your PTS database.
357
358 --enable-tivoli-tsm
359 Build with the Tivoli TSM API libraries for butc support of the
360 Tivoli backup system.
361
362 --enable-transarc-paths
363 As discussed in A2 above, build for the traditional paths used by
364 the Transarc and IBM AFS distributions instead of the more typical
365 open source /usr/local paths. Passing this option to configure and
366 then running make dest will generate, in the dest directory, the
367 set of files and directory layout matching a Transarc or IBM AFS
368 tape distribution.
369
370 --enable-warnings
371 Enable compilation warnings when built with GCC. This is similar
372 to --enable-checking, but new warnings will only be displayed, not
373 cause a build failure.
374
375 It's also possible to disable some standard features. None of these
376 options are normally needed, but they may be useful in unusual
377 circumstances:
378
379 --disable-kernel-module
380 Even if kernel headers are found, do not attempt to build the
381 kernel module. On Linux, if you provide this flag, you'll also
382 need to provide --with-afs-sysname, since OpenAFS cannot determine
383 the correct sysname automatically without the kernel headers.
384
385 --disable-optimize
386 --disable-optimize-kernel
387 --disable-optimize-lwp
388 --disable-optimize-pam
389 Disable optimization for the given portion of the OpenAFS code.
390 Usually used either for debugging to avoid code optimization making
391 it harder to use a debugger, or to work around bugs in the compiler
392 optimizers or in the OpenAFS code.
393
394 --disable-pam
395 Do not build the AFS PAM modules. Normally building them is
396 harmless, but the PAM modules that come with OpenAFS are deprecated
397 and should not be used unless you're still using the OpenAFS
398 kaserver (which is itself deprecated and should not be used).
399
400 --disable-pthreaded-ubik
401 Disable the threaded version of Ubik and install the LWP
402 versions of Ubik servers.
403
404 --disable-strip-binaries
405 Disable stripping of binaries on installation. You probably want
406 to use --enable-debug instead of this flag to also inclusion of
407 debugging information.
408
409 --disable-unix-sockets
410 Disable use of UNIX domain sockets for fssync. A TCP connection to
411 localhost will be used instead.
412
413 You may need to pass one or more of the following options to specify
414 paths and locations of files needed by the OpenAFS build process or
415 additional information required by the build process:
416
417 --with-afs-sysname=SYSNAME
418 Specifies the AFS sysname of the target system is SYSNAME.
419 Normally this is determined automatically from the build
420 architecture plus additional information (such as, on Linux, from
421 the kernel headers). The SYSNAME should be one of the options
422 listed in A2.
423
424 --with-gssapi=DIR
425 --with-gssapi-include=DIR
426 --with-gssapi-lib=DIR
427 --with-krb5[=DIR]
428 --with-krb5-include=DIR
429 --with-krb5-lib=DIR
430 Normally, OpenAFS will automatically build with Kerberos support if
431 Kerberos is found during the build. If your Kerberos libraries are
432 in an unusual location, however, you may need to pass one or more
433 of these flags. --with-krb5 forces building with Kerberos support
434 if given and will cause configure to fail if Kerberos is not found.
435 You may optionally specify the root path to your Kerberos
436 installation as an argument to --with-krb5.
437
438 If you have a krb5-config script, it's used to find the flags to
439 build with Kerberos. If you have no krb5-config script, you can
440 specify the location to the include files with --with-krb5-include
441 and the libraries with --with-krb5-lib. You may need to do this if
442 Autoconf can't figure out whether to use lib, lib32, or lib64 on
443 your platform.
444
445 --with-gssapi is similar, except for the GSS-API libraries instead
446 of the Kerberos libraries. If you have to manually set the
447 location of the Kerberos libraries, you may need to do the same
448 thing for the GSS-API libraries.
449
450 --with-libintl=DIR
451 --with-libintl-include=DIR
452 --with-libintl-lib=DIR
453 Specifies the install location of the libintl library, used for
454 internationalization, or separately specifies the location of the
455 header files and libraries. By default, the default system library
456 paths will be searched. This library is not required on many
457 platforms.
458
459 --with-roken=PATH
460 --with-roken=internal
461 Specifies the install location of the libroken library. Specify
462 "internal" to use the embedded libroken library that comes with
463 OpenAFS (the default). This option is primarily useful for
464 building against a system libroken library if you have one.
465
466 --with-linux-kernel-build=PATH
467 --with-linux-kernel-headers=PATH
468 --with-bsd-kernel-build=PATH
469 --with-bsd-kernel-headers=PATH
470 Specifies the path to the kernel headers and build system. See the
471 information above for Linux and *BSD systems.
472
473 --with-linux-kernel-packaging
474 Tells the OpenAFS kernel module build system to use conventions
475 appropriate for building modules to include in Linux kernel module
476 packages. Primarily, this renames the kernel module to openafs.ko
477 rather than libafs-<VERSION>.ko, which is easier to handle in Linux
478 distribution init scripts.
479
480 --with-docbook2pdf=PROGRAM
481 Specifies the program used to convert the DocBook manuals to PDF.
482 Supported choices are fop, dblatex, and docbook2pdf. By default,
483 the user's path is searched for those programs in that order, and
484 the first one found is used.
485
486 --with-docbook-stylesheets=PATH
487 The location of the DocBook style sheets, used to convert the
488 DocBook manuals to other formats. By default, a set of likely
489 paths are searched.
490
491 --with-html-xsl=PATH
492 Specifies the XSLT style sheet to convert DocBook manuals into
493 HTML. The default is html/chunk.xsl. You may wish to use
494 html/docbook.xsml instead.
495
496 --with-xslt-processor=PROGRAM
497 Specifies the XSLT processor to use to convert the DocBook manuals
498 into HTML. Supported choices are libxslt, saxon, xalan-j, and
499 xsltproc. By default, the user's path is searched for those
500 programs in that order, and the first one found is used.
501
502 --with-ctf-tools[=DIR]
503 Location of ctfconvert and ctfmerge. Defaults to detect. These
504 tools create a reduced form of debug information that describes
505 types and function prototypes. This option is only relevant to
506 platforms that provide CTF tools and, at the moment, it is only
507 functional on Solaris (onbld package must be installed).
508
509 There are also some environment variables that you can set to control
510 aspects of the build. They can be set either on the configure command
511 line (preferred) or in the environment.
512
513 CC
514 The C compiler to use. Be aware that this is overridden on some
515 architectures that require a specific compiler be used to build the
516 kernel module. If gcc is used, version 3 or later is required.
517 If clang is used, version 3 or later is required. (Additional
518 restrictions apply when --enable-checking is used.)
519
520 CFLAGS
521 Additional flags to pass to the C compiler.
522
523 CPP
524 The C preprocessor to use. Defaults to cpp if found, otherwise
525 $CC -E.
526
527 CPPFLAGS
528 Additional flags to pass to the C preprocessor or compiler. This
529 is where to put -I options to add paths to the include file search.
530
531 FUSE_CFLAGS
532 Compiler flags required for building applications that use FUSE.
533
534 FUSE_LIBS
535 Libraries required for linking applications that use FUSE.
536
537 KRB5_CONFIG
538 To specify a particular krb5-config script to use, either set the
539 KRB5_CONFIG environment variable or pass it to configure like:
540
541 ./configure KRB5_CONFIG=/path/to/krb5-config
542
543 To not use krb5-config and force library probing even if there is a
544 krb5-config script on your path, set KRB5_CONFIG to a nonexistent
545 path:
546
547 ./configure KRB5_CONFIG=/nonexistent
548
549 LDFLAGS
550 Additional flags to pass to the linker. This is where to put -L
551 options to add paths to the library search.
552
553 LIBS
554 Additional libraries to link all userspace programs with.
555
556 PKG_CONFIG
557 The path to the pkg-config utility. Currently, this is only used
558 to locate the flags for building the FUSE version of afsd.
559
560 YACC
561 The yacc implementation to use. Defaults to bison, byacc, or yacc,
562 whichever is found first.
563
564 YFLAGS
565 Additional flags to pass to yacc.