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- <sect1 id="ch-prepare-aboutdependencies">
- <title>About dependencies</title>
- <?dbhtml filename="aboutdependencies.html" dir="chapter02"?>
- <!-- Leave this file in the repo until we figure out finally what to do with
- dependencies -->
- <para>There are a few ways to compile a list of a package's installation
- dependencies. What we consider the best way is using the
- <command>strace</command> program available at <ulink
- url="http://www.wi.leidenuniv.nl/~wichert/strace/"/>.</para>
- <para><command>strace</command> is a program that provides a trace of all
- system calls made by another program. One of the most useful system calls
- to trace when figuring out dependencies is the <emphasis>execve(2)</emphasis>
- system call, which is used to execute programs (see its man page for
- all the details). Whenever you run a program, be it from a shell or via a
- configure script or Makefile file, the execve call is made. If you trace
- these calls, you will know what programs were executed behind the
- scenes.</para>
- <para>Here is a line of output from running a configure script:</para>
- <screen>19580 execve("/bin/rm", ["rm", "-f", "conf19538", "conf19538.exe", "conf19538.file"], [/* 26 vars */]) = 0</screen>
- <para>This line tells us that the <command>/bin/rm</command> program was
- run with a PID of 19580, which command line parameters it was given (rm -f
- conf195838 conf19538.exe conf19538.file) and its exit value (0).</para>
- <para>For dependency purposes all we care about is that
- <command>/bin/rm</command> was run during the configure script, so this is
- an installation dependency. Without <command>rm</command>, the script
- wouldn't be able to run properly.</para>
- <para>Unfortunately, this method is not foolproof. Configure scripts check
- for the presense of many programs, but not all of them are considered real
- dependencies. For instance, configure scripts may check for the presence of
- the <command>autoconf</command> program. It will be listed in the strace
- output, but it's not a real installation dependency. A package will in most
- if not all cases install just fine without that program. There are other
- such false positives.</para>
- <para>This means automatic dependency gathering is never accurate. You will
- always need to validate the list and figure out the false positives. In
- some (rare) cases autoconf might be a real dependency, so you
- can't simply ignore all autoconf entries. A manual validation really is a
- requirement for an accurate list.</para>
- <para>This book is not so verbose as to list exactly which program from which
- package is required for a successful installation (we used to, but it had
- become too much work to maintain it). The book will contain simply the
- names of packages you need to have installed. If you need the verbosity
- in the form of "package a needs file b and c from package d", have a look
- at <enter URL when it's available>.</para>
- </sect1>
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