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author | spz <spz@pkgsrc.org> | 2010-03-18 09:06:01 +0000 |
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committer | spz <spz@pkgsrc.org> | 2010-03-18 09:06:01 +0000 |
commit | 8b7212aeca4f4b1b98a8b0ac1bbdf579ba355e18 (patch) | |
tree | 6f6f5493687970d9eca95f0f1dae0436446b3802 /doc/pkgsrc.txt | |
parent | 557d72162a2a8ec6e5e6a19e7602fbb03c6563e1 (diff) | |
download | pkgsrc-8b7212aeca4f4b1b98a8b0ac1bbdf579ba355e18.tar.gz |
the handling of vulnerable binary packages has been moved from notification
by filesystem location to notification by pkg_add; document
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/pkgsrc.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/pkgsrc.txt | 25 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 16 deletions
diff --git a/doc/pkgsrc.txt b/doc/pkgsrc.txt index 15ba9278c31..6e662aab88e 100644 --- a/doc/pkgsrc.txt +++ b/doc/pkgsrc.txt @@ -1492,8 +1492,11 @@ packages). In the directory from the last section, there is a subdirectory called All, which contains all the binary packages that are available for the platform, excluding those that may not be distributed via FTP or CDROM (depending on -which medium you are using), and the ones that have vulnerabilities and -therefore are considered insecure to install without thinking before. +which medium you are using). There may be an extra directory for packages +that have vulnerabilities and therefore are considered insecure to install +without checking the implications first. This method has been replaced by +setting CHECK_VULNERABILITIES=yes in pkg_install.conf so pkg_add will +complain about vulnerabilities, instead. To install packages directly from an FTP or HTTP server, run the following commands in a Bourne-compatible shell (be sure to su to root first): @@ -1516,14 +1519,6 @@ After these preparations, installing a package is very easy: Note that any prerequisite packages needed to run the package in question will be installed, too, assuming they are present where you install from. -As mentioned above, packages for which vulnerabilities get known are not stored -in the All subdirectory. They don't get deleted since that could be very -frustrating if many other packages depend on it. Instead, they are moved to the -vulnerable subdirectory. So you may need to add this directory to the PKG_PATH -variable. However, you should run pkg_admin audit regularly, especially after -installing new packages, and verify that the vulnerabilities are acceptable for -your configuration. - After you've installed packages, be sure to have /usr/pkg/bin and /usr/pkg/sbin in your PATH so you can actually start the just installed program. @@ -2237,10 +2232,9 @@ Some other options are scattered in the pkgsrc infrastructure: * ALLOW_VULNERABLE_PACKAGES should be set to yes. The purpose of the bulk builds is creating binary packages, no matter if they are vulnerable or - not. When uploading the packages to a public server, the vulnerable - packages will be put into a directory of their own. Leaving this variable - unset would prevent the bulk build system from even trying to build them, - so possible building errors would not show up. + not. Leaving this variable unset would prevent the bulk build system + from even trying to build them, so possible building errors would not + show up. * CHECK_FILES (pkgsrc/mk/check/check-files.mk) can be set to "yes" to check that the installed set of files matches the PLIST. @@ -2520,8 +2514,7 @@ chroot-# exit The upload process may take quite some time. Use ls(1) or du(1) on the FTP server to monitor progress of the upload. The upload script will take care of -not uploading restricted packages and putting vulnerable packages into the -vulnerable subdirectory. +not uploading restricted packages. After the upload has ended, first thing is to revoke ssh access: |