Some of the software you would expect to exist on a UNIX operating system
is either missing or outdated in MacOS. This ports system is meant to install
the software that Apple left out or behind. For example, MacOS 10.13.4
comes with LibreSSL 2.2.7, does not have mkdep(1)
, etc.
Then there is third-party software you simply want to have.
This is a package manager that performs automatically what you do manually
when you download, extract, patch, configure, build and install software.
It consists of a set of Makefiles describing where to download
the tarball from, what patches to apply, etc. A typical installation
happens with a simple make install
in the given port's directory.
The infrastructure is inspired by the OpenBSD ports system:
keep it a simple Makefile
, as expected on UNIX. Many of the
port Makefiles borrow from MacPorts and the OpenBSD ports.
git clone [email protected]:janstary/ports.git
cd ports && make init
The indvidual ports live in the subdirectories.
For example, to install mandoc
:
cd ~/ports/mandoc
make install
Inside, the installation is a sequence of the following targets:
fetch
downloads the source code, typically a gzipped tarball.checksum
makes sure it is the intended source fileextract
untars the source into a working directorypatch
applies any patches defined for the portconfigure
configures the build for your systembuild
(default target) performs the actual compilationfake
installs the software into a temporary locationpackage
creates a binary packageinstall
installs that package
uninstall
removes all files theinstall
target has createdclean
removes thework
andfake
directory of the portdistclean
also removes the source tarball
A port is described by a Makefile
in a subdirectory of the ports
directory.
As an easy example, this is mandoc/Makefile
:
NAME = mandoc
VERSION = 1.14.4
DESCRIPTION = UNIX manpage compiler
HOMEPAGE = https://mandoc.bsd.lv/
DOWNLOAD = $(HOMEPAGE)/snapshots/
CONFIGURE_ARGS =
include ../ports.mk
This is a simple port, with no dependencies, as mandoc does not
need any external libraries or binaries to configure, to build or to run.
The makefile declares the name and version, gives a simple description,
points to the homepage, and says where to get mandoc-14.4.4.tar.gz
.
The fetch
target will download mandoc-14.4.4.tar.gz
into ~/ports/distfiles
. The downloaded file will be checked
against what mandoc/distinfo
says:
SHA256(mandoc-1.14.4.tar.gz)= 24eb72103768987dcc63b53d27fdc085796330782f44b3b40c4660b1e1ee9b9c
This makes sure it is the actual mandoc-14.4.4.tar.gz
,
uncorrupted and not tampered with.
The extract
target will then untar mandoc-14.4.4.tar.gz
into ./work/mandoc-14.4.4
in the mandoc
directory.
If there are any extra-*
files found in the port's subdirectory,
they will be copied into the work directory. In this example,
the mandoc
port contains extra-configure.local
:
INSTALL_LIBMANDOC=0
BUILD_CGI=0
BUILD_CATMAN=0
MANPATH_DEFAULT="${PREFIX}/man:/usr/local/share/man:/usr/share/man"
This is a local configuration file which mandoc will use.
The configure
target will simply run the ./configure
script
without any arguments, as specified by the empty CONFIGURE_ARGS
,
overriding the defaults. The ./configure
script of mandoc takes
no arguments; it uses the above config file instead.
As there are no patches to apply, the patch
target does nothing here.
In general, all files named patch-*
are applied as patches to the source.
The build
target will then run make
in work/mandoc-14.4.4
,
building the actual binary. In general this also builds libraries,
typesets documentation, etc.
The fake
target will install the compiled mandoc into ./fake
.
This is a temporary directory that makes this installation isolated.
Files named in the content
file of the port, in this case
bin/apropos
bin/demandoc
bin/man
bin/mandoc
bin/soelim
bin/whatis
man/man1/apropos.1
man/man1/demandoc.1
man/man1/man.1
man/man1/mandoc.1
man/man1/soelim.1
man/man1/whatis.1
man/man5/man.conf.5
man/man5/mandoc.db.5
man/man7/eqn.7
man/man7/man.7
man/man7/mandoc_char.7
man/man7/mdoc.7
man/man7/roff.7
man/man7/tbl.7
man/man8/makewhatis.8
sbin/makewhatis
that are found in the temporary directory will be bundled
into a binary package created by the package
target.
This will create ~/ports/packages/mandoc-1.14.4-x86_64.tar.gz
(named after the port, the version, and the architecture).
Ultimately, the install
target will install the content of that package
into PREFIX
, which is /usr/local
by default,
and will register the installation in ~/ports/index/mandoc-14.4.4
.
If you later decide to uninstall mandoc
, running make uninstall
in the port subdirectory will remove the entire content of the package,
and will unregister the installation.