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Commands Reference, Volume 4
Checks the accuracy of an installation.
pkgchk [ -l | -a -c -f -q -v ] [ -n -x ] [ -p
Path1[,Path2 . . . ] [ -i File] [ Pkginst . . . ]
pkgchk -d Device [
-l | -v ]
[ -p Path1[,Path2
. . . ] [ -i
File] [ Pkginst
. . . ]
pkgchk -m Pkgmap [
-e Envfile] [ -l | -a -c -f -q -v ] [ -n -x ] [ -i File] [ -p Path1[,Path2 .
. . ]]
pkgchk checks the accuracy of installed files or, by use of the
-l flag, displays information about package files. The
command checks the integrity of directory structures and the files.
Discrepancies are reported on stderr along with a detailed
explanation of the problem.
The first synopsis defined above is used to list or check the contents
and/or attributes of objects that are currently installed on the
system. Package names can be listed on the command line, or by default
the entire contents of a machine is checked.
The second synopsis is used to list or check the contents of a package
which has been spooled on the specified device, but not installed. Note
that attributes cannot be checked for spooled packages.
The third synopsis is used to list or check the contents and/or attributes
of objects which are described in the indicated Pkgmap.
-l
| Lists information on the selected files that make up a package. It
is not compatible with the a, c, f,
g, and v flags.
|
-a
| Audits the file attributes only, does not check file contents.
Default is to check both.
|
-c
| Audits the file contents only, does not check file attributes.
Default is to check both.
|
-f
| Corrects file attributes if possible. If used with the
-x flag, it removes hidden files. When pkgchk is
invoked with this flag it creates directories, named pipes, links, and special
devices if they do not already exist.
|
-q
| Enables quiet mode. Does not give messages about missing
files.
|
-v
| Enables verbose mode. Files are listed as processed.
|
-n
| Ignores volatile or editable files. This should be used for most
post-installation checking.
|
-x
| Searches exclusive directories only, looking for files that exist that
are not in the installation software database or the indicated
Pkgmap file. (An exclusive directory is a directory created
by and for a package; it should contain only files delivered with a
package. If any non-package files are found in an exclusive directory,
pkgchk reports an error.) If -x is used with the
-f flag, hidden files are removed; no other checking is
done.
Note: To remove hidden files only, use the -f and
-x flags together. To remove hidden files and check
attributes and contents of files, use the -f, -x,
-c, and -a flags together.
|
-p
| Only checks the accuracy of the pathname or pathnames listed.
"pathname" can be one or more pathnames separated by commas (or by white
space, if the list is quoted).
|
-i
| Reads a list of pathnames from File and compares this list
against the installation software database or the indicated Pkgmap
file. Pathnames that are not contained in "inputfile" are not
checked.
|
-d
| Specifies the device on which a spooled package resides.
Device can be a directory pathname, or "-" which specifies packages
in datastream format read from standard input.
|
-m
| Requests that the package be checked against the pkgmap file
Pkgmap.
|
-e
| Requests that the pkginfo file named as Envfile be used to
resolve parameters noted in the specified pkgmap file.
|
Pkginst
| Defines a short string used to designate an abbreviation for the package
name. (The term "package instance" is used loosely: it refers to
all instantiations of Pkginst, even those that do not include
instance identifiers.)
To indicate all instances of a package, specify
'Pkginst.*', enclosing the command line
in single quotes, as shown, to prevent the shell from interpreting the "*"
character. Use the token "all" to refer to all packages available on
the source medium.
|
This command returns the following exit values:
0
| Successful completion of script.
|
1
| Fatal error. Installation process is terminated at this
point.
|
/usr/sbin/pkgchk
| Contains the pkgchk command.
|
The pkgadd command, pkgask command, pkginfo command, pkgrm command, pkgtrans command.
The pkginfo file format, pkgmap file format.
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