A directory will be automatically created for binaries to be written
into with this name when you build.
- alpha_dux40, alpha_dux50, alpha_dux51
+ alpha_dux40, alpha_dux50, alpha_dux51 (client does not work)
alpha_linux22, alpha_linux24, alpha_linux26
alpha_nbsd15, alpha_nbsd16
amd64_fbsd_53 (client does not work)
hp_ux11i, hp_ux110, hp_ux1123 (See notes below for information on
getting missing header)
hp_ux102 (Client port possible, but db servers and utilities work)
- i386_fbsd_42, i386_fbsd_43, i386_fbsd_44, i386_fbsd_45,
- i386_fbsd_46, i386_fbsd_47, i386_fbsd_50, i386_fbsd_51,
- i386_fbsd_52, i386_fbsd_53, i386_fbsd_60, i386_fbsd_61,
- i386_fbsd_62, i386_fbsd_70, i386_fbsd_80
- (client may work on 70)
+ i386_fbsd_50, i386_fbsd_51, i386_fbsd_52, i386_fbsd_53,
+ i386_fbsd_60, i386_fbsd_61, i386_fbsd_62, i386_fbsd_70,
+ i386_fbsd_80, i386_fbsd_81, i386_fbsd_90, amd64_fbsd_50,
+ amd64_fbsd_51, amd64_fbsd_52, amd64_fbsd_53, amd64_fbsd_60,
+ amd64_fbsd_61, amd64_fbsd_62, amd64_fbsd_70, amd64_fbsd_80,
+ amd64_fbsd_81, amd64_fbsd_90
+ (client may work on 70 and later)
i386_linux22, i386_linux24, i386_linux26
i386_nbsd15, i386_nbsd16, i386_nbsd20, i386_nbsd21, i386_nbsd30,
i386_nbsd40
ppc_darwin_70, ppc_darwin_80, ppc_darwin_90
ppc_linux22, ppc_linux24, ppc_linux26
ppc_nbsd16, ppc_nbsd20
- rs_aix42, rs_aix51, rs_aix52, rs_aix53
+ rs_aix42, rs_aix51, rs_aix52, rs_aix53, rs_aix61
s390_linux22, s390_linux24, s390_linux26
s390x_linux24, s390x_linux26
sgi_62, sgi_63, sgi_64, sgi_65 (file server not tested)
2. Using configure in the top level directory, configure for your
AFS system type, providing the necessary flags:
+
% ./configure --with-afs-sysname=sun4x_58 --enable-transarc-paths
If you do not have the "configure" script, or if you modify the
./configure command line.
All binaries, except for the 'fileserver' and 'volserver'
- executables, are stripped of their symbol table information by
- default. To enable a debugging build, specify the --enable-debug
- option on the ./configure command line. This builds with debugging
- compiler options and disables stripping of binaries.
+ executables and their 'da' variants, are stripped of their symbol
+ table information by default. To enable a debugging build, specify
+ the --enable-debug option on the ./configure command line. This
+ builds with debugging compiler options and disables stripping of
+ binaries.
You can also use different combinations of --enable-debug and
--enable (or --disable)-strip-binaries for finer control. One can,
to not be stripped. Note that these combinations are not
necessarily useful.
- The two binaries noted above, 'fileserver' and 'volserver' will
- never be stripped, regardless of any options given to configure.
+ The binaries noted above, 'fileserver' and 'volserver' and their
+ 'da' variants, will never be stripped, regardless of any options
+ given to configure.
There are two modes for directory path handling: "Transarc mode" and
"default mode":
by putting client configuaration files in /usr/vice/etc, and server
files in /usr/afs under the traditional directory layout.
- In default mode, files are located in standardized locations, usually
- under $(prefix).
+ under $(prefix), which defaults to /usr/local.
- Client programs, libraries, and related files always go in standard
directories under $(prefix). This rule covers things that would go
into $(bindir), $(includedir), $(libdir), $(mandir), and $(sbindir).
afsbosconfig $(afslocaldir)/BosConfig $(afsconfdir)/BosConfig
afsbosserver $(afsbindir)/bosserver $(sbindir)/bosserver
- The Demand Attach Fileserver (DAFS), is built by providing the
- --enable-demand-attach-fs argument to configure. Note that the
- bosserver must be built with DAFS in order to be able to create the
- dafs instance, which will be used in place of the fs instance. In
- addition, the fileserver, volserver, salvager, salvage, and
- salvageserver binaries must be built for DAFS.
+ In default mode, you can change all of the variables named above that
+ do not start with "afs" by passing the flags with the same name to
+ configure. For example, if you want to install the server binaries in
+ /usr/local/lib/openafs instead of /usr/local/libexec/openafs, pass the
+ --libexecdir=/usr/local/lib flag to configure.
For additional options, see section H below.
under the directory named for the sys_name you built for,
e.g. sun4x_57/dest or i386_linux22/dest
- 2. As appropriate you can clean up or, if you're using Linux, build for
+ 3. As appropriate you can clean up or, if you're using Linux, build for
another kernel version.
+
To clean up:
- % make clean
+
+ % make clean
C Problems
D Linux Notes
- For Linux systems you need also provide the path in which your
- kernel headers for your configured kernel can be found. This should
- be the path of the directory containing a child directory named
- "include". So if your version file was
- /usr/src/linux/include/linux/version.h you would invoke:
+ With current Linux versions, the /lib/modules/`uname -r`/source symlink
+ will be used to locate the kernel headers, but you will need to have
+ the headers and build system for your kernel installed in order to
+ build the kernel module. These are usually found in a separate package
+ from the kernel, often called something like linux-headers-<version>.
+
+ For older Linux systems, you may also need to provide the path in which
+ your kernel headers for your configured kernel can be found. This
+ should be the path of the directory containing a child directory named
+ "include". So if your version file were
+ /usr/src/linux/include/linux/version.h you would run:
+
% ./configure --with-afs-sysname=i386_linux24 \
--with-linux-kernel-headers=/usr/src/linux
- Currently you can build for only one Linux kernel at a time,
- and the version is extracted from the kernel headers in the root
- you specify.
+ Currently you can build for only one Linux kernel at a time, and the
+ version is extracted from the kernel headers in the root you specify.
- To build for another Linux kernel version:
- the system type defined in step A1.
- % ./configure --with-afs-sysname=i386_linux24 \
+ To build for another Linux kernel version, determine the sysname for
+ the system type as defined in step A1 for the other kernel version and
+ then run:
+
+ % ./configure --with-afs-sysname=<sysname> \
--with-linux-kernel-headers=/usr/src/linux-2.2.19-i686
% make
- Your dest tree will now include an additional kernel module for your
+ Your build tree will now include an additional kernel module for your
additional kernel headers. Be aware that if the kernel version string
which UTS_RELEASE is defined to in include/linux/version.h matches the
last kernel you built for, the previous kernel module will be
--with-bsd-kernel-headers= configure option if your kernel source is
not in /usr/src/sys.
- If you want to build src/aklog, add the following options to your
- configure. Note that you shouldn't need aklog because heimdal afslog
- does (almost) the same thing.
- --with-krb5 KRB5CFLAGS=-I/usr/include/kerberosV KRB5LIBS=-lcrypto
-
src/packaging/OpenBSD/buildpkg.sh will make a tar file for installing
the client. There is no server package, but I am told that "make
install" will put server binaries in /usr/afs.
The FreeBSD client may now work; It is tested on 7.0 and on current
as of the commit date.
-
You need kernel source installed to build OpenAFS. Use the
--with-bsd-kernel-headers= configure option if your kernel source is
not in /usr/src/sys.
You also need access to your kernel build directory for the opt_global.h
include file. Use the --with-bsd-kernel-build= configure option if your
kernel build is not GENERIC in the standard place. If
- /usr/src/sys/i386/compile/GENERIC does not point to
+ /usr/src/sys/${CPUARCH}/compile/GENERIC does not point to
/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC you may need to resolve that and retry the
build.
You can't run arla and OpenAFS at the same time.
-H Other configure options
+H AIX notes
+
+ Make sure that your default build environment is 32bit, ie.
+ the OBJECT_MODE environment variable is either unset or set to "32".
+
+ Verify this before doing configure and make. For example, assuming
+ ksh/bash:
+
+ % export OBJECT_MODE=32
+
+ To build aklog (in order to be able to get tokens from your Kerberos v5
+ ticket), you will need Kerberos libraries. On AIX 6.1, the IBM
+ Kerberos v5 libraries are in the packages krb5.client.rte and
+ krb5.toolkit.adt on the Expansion Pack.
+
+I Other configure options
AFS has a ton of other optional features that must be enabled using
configure options. Here is a summary:
+ --enable-bigendian
+ --enable-littleendian
+ These configure options are normally not required and should not be
+ given. They're only needed if the OpenAFS build system cannot
+ determine the endianness of your system, in which case configure
+ will abort and say to use one of these options.
+
--enable-bitmap-later
Speeds the startup of the fileserver by deferring reading volume
bitmaps until necessary. Demand attach is a better solution to the
same problem.
- --enable-bos-new-config
- A bosserver built with this option will look for BosConfig.new when
- it restarts and, if present, replace BosConfig with that file
- before reading its configuration.
-
- --enable-bos-restricted-mode
- Enables support for restricted mode in the bosserver. This mode
- can be enabled or disabled via a command-line switch and a signal
- and can be enabled (but not disabled) remotely. When enabled,
- bosserver will not permit any operations that change the local file
- system (install, uninstall, prune), run commands on the server
- (exec, create, delete), or view files (getlog).
-
- --enable-demand-attach-fs
- Enable Demand Attach file servers. Demand Attach is an extensive
- re-engineering of the file server that avoids the long startup and
- shutdown delays of the traditional file server by enabling
- persistance of file server state to disk. It is still very new,
- but is expected to become the default in a future version of
- OpenAFS.
-
- --enable-disconnected
- Enable disconnected support in the cache manager (EXPERIMENTAL).
-
- --enable-fast-restart
- When restarting the fileserver, don't salvage volumes. Instead,
- assume all volumes are okay and only take them off-line if that
- assumption is incorrect. Using this option safely requires
- scanning the fileserver log for error messages when volumes are
- taken off-line and salvaging them manually. Not recommended; use
- demand attach instead.
-
- --enable-icmp-pmtu-discovery
- Enable path MTU discovery in the Rx libraries by decoding ICMP
- unreachable packets.
+ --enable-checking
+ Enable compiler warnings when building with GCC and turn compiler
+ warnings into errors so that new warnings will cause compilation
+ failures. If you are developing patches to contribute to OpenAFS,
+ please build OpenAFS with this flag enabled. Warning-free code is
+ a requirement for all new submissions to OpenAFS.
+
+ --enable-debug
+ --enable-debug-kernel
+ --enable-debug-lwp
+ --enable-debug-pam
+ Compile the userspace code (for --enable-debug) or the code named
+ by the option with debugging information. If --enable-debug is
+ given, also do not strip binaries when installing them.
+
+ --enable-linux-syscall-probing
+ OpenAFS now uses keyrings to manage PAGs by default on Linux, which
+ does not require hooking into the system call table. On older
+ versions of Linux without keyring support, OpenAFS uses groups to
+ manage PAGs and probes for the system call table to hook into it to
+ preserve that group information. Normally, which method to use is
+ detected automatically, and if keyring support is present, support
+ for system call table probing is not compiled in. Use this
+ configure option to force inclusion of the system call table
+ probing code even if the kernel appears to support keyrings.
--enable-namei-fileserver
- Forces the namei fileserver on platforms (like Solaris) where the
- inode fileserver is the default.
+ Forces the namei fileserver on platforms (like Solaris 8 and 9)
+ where the inode fileserver is the default.
--enable-pthreaded-ubik
Enable the threaded version of Ubik and install the threaded
versions of Ubik servers. See README.PTHREADED_UBIK for more
information. (EXPERIMENTAL)
+ --enable-redhat-buildsys
+ Enable compilation of the kernel module for the Red Hat build
+ system kernel. Use this configure flag when building kernel
+ modules for Red Hat Linux systems.
+
+ --enable-reduced-depends
+ Try to minimize the shared library dependencies encoded in the
+ binaries. This omits from the link line all the libraries included
+ solely because the Kerberos libraries depend on them and instead
+ links the programs only against libraries whose APIs are called
+ directly. This will only work with shared Kerberos libraries and
+ will only work on platforms where shared libraries properly encode
+ their own dependencies (such as Linux). It is intended primarily
+ for building packages for Linux distributions to avoid encoding
+ unnecessary shared library dependencies that make shared library
+ migrations more difficult. If none of the above made any sense to
+ you, don't bother with this flag.
+
--enable-supergroups
Enables support of nested groups in the ptserver. WARNING: Once
you make use of this option by nesting one group inside another,
the resulting PTS database cannot be correctly and safely used by a
- ptserver built without this option.
+ ptserver built without this option. If some of your ptservers were
+ built with this option and some without this option, you will
+ probably corrupt your PTS database.
--enable-tivoli-tsm
Build with the Tivoli TSM API libraries for butc support of the
Tivoli backup system.
- --enable-unix-sockets
- Enable use of UNIX domain sockets for fssync.
+ --enable-transarc-paths
+ As discussed in A2 above, build for the traditional paths used by
+ the Transarc and IBM AFS distributions instead of the more typical
+ open source /usr/local paths. Passing this option to configure and
+ then running make dest will generate, in the dest directory, the
+ set of files and directory layout matching a Transarc or IBM AFS
+ tape distribution.
- It's also possible to disable some standard features. None of these
- options are recommended but may be useful in unusual circumstances:
-
- --disable-afsdb
- Disable AFSDB DNS record support in the cache manager, normally
- used to find cell VLDB servers.
-
- --disable-full-vos-listvol-switch
- Removes support for the -format option to vos listvol and also
- suppresses some additional fields that were added to vos examine
- output but may confuse older software.
+ --enable-warnings
+ Enable compilation warnings when built with GCC. This is similar
+ to --enable-checking, but new warnings will only be displayed, not
+ cause a build failure.
- --disable-largefile-fileserver
- Disable large file (>2GB) support in the fileserver.
+ It's also possible to disable some standard features. None of these
+ options are normally needed, but they may be useful in unusual
+ circumstances:
+
+ --disable-kernel-module
+ Even if kernel headers are found, do not attempt to build the
+ kernel module. On Linux, if you provide this flag, you'll also
+ need to provide --with-afs-sysname, since OpenAFS cannot determine
+ the correct sysname automatically without the kernel headers.
+
+ --disable-optimize
+ --disable-optimize-kernel
+ --disable-optimize-lwp
+ --disable-optimize-pam
+ Disable optimization for the given portion of the OpenAFS code.
+ Usually used either for debugging to avoid code optimization making
+ it harder to use a debugger, or to work around bugs in the compiler
+ optimizers or in the OpenAFS code.
--disable-pam
Do not build the AFS PAM modules. Normally building them is
harmless, but the PAM modules that come with OpenAFS are deprecated
and should not be used unless you're still using the OpenAFS
kaserver (which is itself deprecated and should not be used).
+
+ --disable-strip-binaries
+ Disable stripping of binaries on installation. You probably want
+ to use --enable-debug instead of this flag to also inclusion of
+ debugging information.
+
+ --disable-unix-sockets
+ Disable use of UNIX domain sockets for fssync. A TCP connection to
+ localhost will be used instead.
+
+ You may need to pass one or more of the following options to specify
+ paths and locations of files needed by the OpenAFS build process or
+ additional information required by the build process:
+
+ --with-afs-sysname=SYSNAME
+ Specifies the AFS sysname of the target system is SYSNAME.
+ Normally this is determined automatically from the build
+ architecture plus additional information (such as, on Linux, from
+ the kernel headers). The SYSNAME should be one of the options
+ listed in A2.
+
+ --with-krb5[=DIR]
+ --with-krb5-include=DIR
+ --with-krb5-lib=DIR
+ Normally, OpenAFS will automatically build with Kerberos support if
+ Kerberos is found during the build. If your Kerberos libraries are
+ in an unusual location, however, you may need to pass one or more
+ of these flags. --with-krb5 forces building with Kerberos support
+ if given and will cause configure to fail if Kerberos is not found.
+ You may optionally specify the root path to your Kerberos
+ installation as an argument to --with-krb5.
+
+ If you have a krb5-config script, it's used to find the flags to
+ build with Kerberos. If you have no krb5-config script, you can
+ specify the location to the include files with --with-krb5-include
+ and the libraries with --with-krb5-lib. You may need to do this if
+ Autoconf can't figure out whether to use lib, lib32, or lib64 on
+ your platform.
+
+ --with-linux-kernel-build=PATH
+ --with-linux-kernel-headers=PATH
+ --with-bsd-kernel-build=PATH
+ --with-bsd-kernel-headers=PATH
+ Specifies the path to the kernel headers and build system. See the
+ information above for Linux and *BSD systems.
+
+ --with-linux-kernel-packaging
+ Tells the OpenAFS kernel module build system to use conventions
+ appropriate for building modules to include in Linux kernel module
+ packages. Primarily, this renames the kernel module to openafs.ko
+ rather than libafs-<VERSION>.ko, which is easier to handle in Linux
+ distribution init scripts.
+
+ --with-html-xsl=PATH
+ --with-xslt-processor=PROGRAM
+ Specifies the XSLT style sheet and XSLT processor to use to convert
+ the DocBook manuals into HTML.
+
+ There are also some environment variables that you can set to control
+ aspects of the build. They can be set either on the configure command
+ line (preferred) or in the environment.
+
+ CC
+ The C compiler to use. Be aware that this is overridden on some
+ architectures that require a specific compiler be used to build the
+ kernel module.
+
+ CFLAGS
+ Additional flags to pass to the C compiler.
+
+ CPP
+ The C preprocessor to use. Defaults to cpp if found, otherwise
+ $CC -E.
+
+ CPPFLAGS
+ Additional flags to pass to the C preprocessor or compiler. This
+ is where to put -I options to add paths to the include file search.
+
+ FUSE_CFLAGS
+ Compiler flags required for building applications that use FUSE.
+
+ FUSE_LIBS
+ Libraries required for linking applications that use FUSE.
+
+ KRB5_CONFIG
+ To specify a particular krb5-config script to use, either set the
+ KRB5_CONFIG environment variable or pass it to configure like:
+
+ ./configure KRB5_CONFIG=/path/to/krb5-config
+
+ To not use krb5-config and force library probing even if there is a
+ krb5-config script on your path, set KRB5_CONFIG to a nonexistent
+ path:
+
+ ./configure KRB5_CONFIG=/nonexistent
+
+ LDFLAGS
+ Additional flags to pass to the linker. This is where to put -L
+ options to add paths to the library search.
+
+ LIBS
+ Additional libraries to link all userspace programs with.
+
+ PKG_CONFIG
+ The path to the pkg-config utility. Currently, this is only used
+ to locate the flags for building the FUSE version of afsd.
+
+ YACC
+ The yacc implementation to use. Defaults to bison, byacc, or yacc,
+ whichever is found first.
+
+ YFLAGS
+ Additional flags to pass to yacc.