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173 lines
7.3 KiB
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[#]: subject: "stow: Your Package Manager When You Can't Use Your Package Manager"
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[#]: via: "https://theartofmachinery.com/2021/08/08/stow_as_package_manager.html"
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[#]: author: "Simon Arneaud https://theartofmachinery.com"
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[#]: collector: "lujun9972"
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[#]: translator: " "
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[#]: reviewer: " "
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[#]: publisher: " "
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[#]: url: " "
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stow: Your Package Manager When You Can't Use Your Package Manager
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======
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[GNU `stow`][1] is an underrated tool. Generically, it helps maintain a unified tree of files that come from different sources. More concretely, I use a bunch of software (D compilers, various tools) that I install manually instead of through my system’s package manager (for various reasons). `stow` makes that maintainable by letting me cleanly add/remove packages and switch between versions. Here’s how it’s done.
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### The ~/local/ directory
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The idea is simple: you `stow` install all personal software inside a `local/` directory inside your home directory. The resulting directory structure looks the same as if you installed the software normally to the filesystem root, so you’ll end up with `~/local/bin` and `~/local/lib` directories, etc.
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Setting up the `local/` directory for use with `stow` is easy. The main thing you need is a `local/` directory in your home directory, with a `stow/` subdirectory to store package archives:
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```
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$ mkdir -p ~/local/stow
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```
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If you’re installing programs into your `local/` directory, you probably want to add `local/bin` to your `PATH` so you can easily use programs there like other programs. You can add this to the end of your `~/.profile` file (or whatever init file is used by your shell):
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```
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PATH="$HOME/local/bin:$PATH"
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```
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### Downloading and installing tarball packages
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I like [`tsv-utils`][2], a handy collection of tools for data analysis on the command line. It’s not in the normal package managers I use, but there are pre-compiled tarball archives available. Here’s how to use them with `stow`.
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First, switch to your `stow` archive directory:
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```
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$ cd ~/local/stow
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```
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Then download the tarball and extract it:
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```
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$ wget https://github.com/eBay/tsv-utils/releases/download/v2.2.0/tsv-utils-v2.2.0_linux-x86_64_ldc2.tar.gz
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$ tar xf tsv-utils-v2.2.0_linux-x86_64_ldc2.tar.gz
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```
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You’ll now have a directory containing all the package files:
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```
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$ tree tsv-utils-v2.2.0_linux-x86_64_ldc2
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tsv-utils-v2.2.0_linux-x86_64_ldc2
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├── LICENSE.txt
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├── ReleasePackageReadme.txt
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├── bash_completion
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│ └── tsv-utils
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├── bin
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│ ├── csv2tsv
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│ ├── keep-header
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│ ├── number-lines
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│ ├── tsv-append
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│ ├── tsv-filter
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│ ├── tsv-join
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│ ├── tsv-pretty
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│ ├── tsv-sample
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│ ├── tsv-select
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│ ├── tsv-split
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│ ├── tsv-summarize
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│ └── tsv-uniq
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└── extras
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└── scripts
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├── tsv-sort
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└── tsv-sort-fast
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4 directories, 17 files
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```
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You can delete the `.tar.gz` archive if you want.
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Now you can install the package into `local/` with `stow`:
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```
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$ stow tsv-utils-v2.2.0_linux-x86_64_ldc2
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```
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That creates a bunch of symbolic links inside the parent directory (`~/local/`) pointing to files and directories inside the package directory (`~/local/stow/tsv-utils-v2.2.0_linux-x86_64_ldc2`).
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If you’ve set your `PATH` (you might need to restart your shell), you’ll now be able to run `tsv-utils` commands normally:
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```
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$ tsv-summarize --help
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Synopsis: tsv-summarize [options] file [file...]
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tsv-summarize runs aggregation operations on fields in tab-separated value
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files. Operations can be run against the full input data or grouped by key
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fields. Fields can be specified either by field number or field name. Use
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'--help-verbose' for more detailed help.
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Options:
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[*snip*]
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```
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# Removing and upgrading packages
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Okay, `stow`’s algorithm for managing symbolic links is neat, but so far there’s no practical benefit over extracting the tarball directly into `local/`. `stow` shines when you’re maintaining your package collection. For example, if you decide to uninstall `tsv-utils` later, you just need to switch to the archive directory and run `stow` again with the `-D` flag:
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```
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$ cd ~/local/stow
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$ stow -D tsv-utils-v2.2.0_linux-x86_64_ldc2
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```
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That will cleanly remove `tsv-utils` from the `local/` directory without breaking any other installed packages. Try doing that after extracting the tarball directly to `local/`.
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The package directory inside the `stow/` directory will remain, but you can delete that too, if you want, of course.
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`stow` doesn’t manage versions, so upgrading packages means uninstalling the old package and installing the new package. `stow` detects when packages collide (e.g., they both include a file called `bin/tsv-summarize`), so you can only install one version at a time. However, you can keep as many archive directories as you like in `stow/`, allowing you to easily switch back and forth between versions if you need to.
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### Building packages from source
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Not all software comes precompiled. Sometimes you’re experimenting with your own custom version. If you want to use source packages with `stow`, you just need to figure out how to make the source package install to a directory in your `stow/` directory, instead of your filesystem root.
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Suppose I want to install my own version of the [GraphicsMagick][3] image processing tools. This will be a two-stage process. First I’ll need to download and extract the source somewhere (I keep a `src/` directory for third-party source code).
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```
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$ cd ~/src
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$ wget -O GraphicsMagick-1.3.36.tar.gz https://sourceforge.net/projects/graphicsmagick/files/graphicsmagick/1.3.36/GraphicsMagick-1.3.36.tar.gz/download
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$ tar xf GraphicsMagick-1.3.36.tar.gz
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$ cd GraphicsMagick-1.3.36
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```
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GraphicsMagick uses a GNU-style build system using `autotools`. `configure` scripts take a `--prefix` option that sets the installation root.
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```
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$ ./configure --prefix="$HOME/local/stow/GraphicsMagick-1.3.36"
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$ make install
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```
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The installation step automatically creates the `stow/GraphicsMagick-1.3.36/` directory. Now I just need to install the built package with `stow`.
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```
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$ cd ~/local/stow
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$ stow GraphicsMagick-1.3.36
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$ gm version
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GraphicsMagick 1.3.36 20201226 Q8 http://www.GraphicsMagick.org/
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Copyright (C) 2002-2020 GraphicsMagick Group.
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Additional copyrights and licenses apply to this software.
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See http://www.GraphicsMagick.org/www/Copyright.html for details.
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[*snip*]
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```
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### Other uses
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This is my personal favourite usage of `stow`, but it’s just a generic tool for merging multiple filesystem trees in a maintainable way. Some people use it to manage their `/etc/` configuration files, for example. If you try it out, I’m sure you can find other use cases.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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via: https://theartofmachinery.com/2021/08/08/stow_as_package_manager.html
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作者:[Simon Arneaud][a]
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选题:[lujun9972][b]
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译者:[译者ID](https://github.com/译者ID)
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校对:[校对者ID](https://github.com/校对者ID)
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本文由 [LCTT](https://github.com/LCTT/TranslateProject) 原创编译,[Linux中国](https://linux.cn/) 荣誉推出
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[a]: https://theartofmachinery.com
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[b]: https://github.com/lujun9972
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[1]: https://www.gnu.org/software/stow/
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[2]: https://github.com/eBay/tsv-utils
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[3]: http://www.graphicsmagick.org/
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