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nbd
nbd.spec
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File nbd.spec of Package nbd
# # spec file for package nbd # # Copyright (c) 2011 SUSE LINUX Products GmbH, Nuernberg, Germany. # # All modifications and additions to the file contributed by third parties # remain the property of their copyright owners, unless otherwise agreed # upon. The license for this file, and modifications and additions to the # file, is the same license as for the pristine package itself (unless the # license for the pristine package is not an Open Source License, in which # case the license is the MIT License). An "Open Source License" is a # license that conforms to the Open Source Definition (Version 1.9) # published by the Open Source Initiative. # Please submit bugfixes or comments via http://bugs.opensuse.org/ # # norootforbuild Name: nbd BuildRequires: doxygen glib2-devel PreReq: %insserv_prereq coreutils Version: 2.9.20 Release: 1.<RELEASE5> License: GPLv2+ Group: Productivity/Networking/Other AutoReqProv: on Source: %{name}-%{version}.tar.bz2 Source2: init.nbd-server Patch2: nbd-2.9.20-close.diff Patch3: nbd-2.9.20-bigendian.diff Summary: Network Block Device Server and Client Utilities Url: http://nbd.sourceforge.net/ Prefix: /usr BuildRoot: %{_tmppath}/%{name}-%{version}-build Suggests: nbd-doc %description This package contains nbd-server. It is the server backend for the nbd network block device driver that's in the Linux kernel. nbd can be used to have a filesystem stored on another machine. It does provide a block device, not a file system; so unless you put a clustering filesystem on top of it, you can't access it simultaneously from more than one client. Use NFS or a real cluster FS (such as ocfs2) if you want to do this. nbd-server can export a file (which may contain a filesystem image) or a partition. Swapping over nbd is possible as well, though it's said not to be safe against OOM and should not be used for that case. nbd-server also has a copy-on-write mode where changes are saved to a separate file and thrown away when the connection closes. The package also contains the nbd-client tools, which you need to configure the nbd devices on the client side. Authors: -------- Wouter Verhelst <wouter@debian.org> Anton Altaparmakov <aia21@cam.ac.uk> Pavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz> Paul Clements <Paul.Clements@steeleye.com> %package doc License: GPLv2+ Summary: Network Block Device Server and Client Utilities Group: Productivity/Networking/Other Requires: nbd = %{version} %description doc This package contains the HTML documentation for the network block device (nbd) utilities. nbd can be used to have a filesystem stored on another machine. It does provide a block device, not a file system; so unless you put a clustering filesystem on top of it, you can't access it simultaneously from more than one client. Use NFS or a real cluster FS (such as ocfs2) if you want to do this. nbd-server can export a file (which may contain a filesystem image) or a partition. Swapping over nbd is possible as well, though it's said not to be safe against OOM and should not be used for that case. nbd-server also has a copy-on-write mode where changes are saved to a separate file and thrown away when the connection closes. Authors: -------- Wouter Verhelst <wouter@debian.org> Anton Altaparmakov <aia21@cam.ac.uk> Pavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz> Paul Clements <Paul.Clements@steeleye.com> %prep %setup %patch2 -p1 %patch3 -p1 %build export CFLAGS="$RPM_OPT_FLAGS -fstack-protector" ./configure --with-gnu-ld --prefix=/usr --mandir=%{_mandir} \ --infodir=%{_infodir} --libdir=%{_libdir} --libexecdir=%{_libdir} \ --program-prefix="" --sysconfdir=/etc --build=%{_target_cpu}-suse-linux make doxygen %install make install DESTDIR=$RPM_BUILD_ROOT man_MANS='nbd-client.8 nbd-server.1' mkdir -p $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/etc/init.d install %SOURCE2 $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/etc/init.d/nbd-server mkdir -p $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/usr/bin ln -s ../../etc/init.d/nbd-server $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/usr/bin/rcnbd-server #echo "#Port file options" > $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/etc/nbd-server.conf mkdir -p $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/etc/nbd-server touch $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/etc/nbd-server/config touch $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/etc/nbd-server/allow grep -A16 -B1 '^\[generic\]' README > $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/etc/nbd-server/config.example %files %defattr(-,root,root) %attr(0755,root,root) /usr/sbin/nbd-client %attr(0755,root,root) /usr/bin/nbd-server %attr(0755,root,root) /etc/init.d/nbd-server %attr(0755,root,root) /usr/bin/rcnbd-server %{_mandir}/man1/nbd-server.1.gz %{_mandir}/man8/nbd-client.8.gz %doc README #%config(noreplace) /etc/nbd-server.conf %dir /etc/nbd-server %ghost %config(noreplace) /etc/nbd-server/config %ghost %config(noreplace) /etc/nbd-server/allow %config /etc/nbd-server/config.example %files doc %defattr(-,root,root) %doc doc/html %post %{fillup_and_insserv -f nbd-server} if test -e /etc/nbd-server.conf; then # Do we have to create a generic section? unset generic if test -e /etc/nbd-server/config; then generic=1; fi while read port file opts; do if test -z "$port"; then continue; fi if test "${port:0:1}" = "#"; then continue; fi if test -z "$generic"; then echo -e "[generic]\n\t# No generic options yet\n" > /etc/nbd-server/config generic=1 fi FN=${file%/*} nm="cvt.$port.${FN##*/}.${file##*/}" echo " ... convert $port $file $opts -> $nm" /usr/bin/nbd-server $port $file $opts -o "$nm" >> /etc/nbd-server/config done < /etc/nbd-server.conf mv /etc/nbd-server.conf /etc/nbd-server.conf.converted fi %postun %{insserv_cleanup} %preun %{stop_on_removal nbd-server} %changelog
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