Difference between revisions of "OPS235 Lab 5 - Fedora17"
Brian.gray (talk | contribs) (→Investigation 4: How do you build software from source code?) |
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==Investigation 4: How do you build software from source code?== | ==Investigation 4: How do you build software from source code?== | ||
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+ | {{Admon/note|Use fedora2|Perform these steps in the '''fedora2''' virtual machine.}} | ||
{{Admon/note|Compiling requires the correct tools to be installed. | In order to build software from source code, you must have the appropriate software development tools (such as make and gcc) and libraries (such as GTK) installed. The required tools will vary depending on the computer languages used in the software being built.}} | {{Admon/note|Compiling requires the correct tools to be installed. | In order to build software from source code, you must have the appropriate software development tools (such as make and gcc) and libraries (such as GTK) installed. The required tools will vary depending on the computer languages used in the software being built.}} |
Revision as of 10:57, 13 February 2010
Contents
- 1 OPS235 Lab 5 - Loopback Filesystems, Archives, Compiling from Source
- 1.1 Objectives
- 1.2 References
- 1.3 Required Material
- 1.4 Prerequisites
- 1.5 Introduction
- 1.6 Investigation 1: How do you create and use a filesystem in a regular file?
- 1.7 Investigation 2: How do you create an archive file?
- 1.8 Investigation 3: How do you restore files from an archive?
- 1.9 Investigation 4: How do you build software from source code?
OPS235 Lab 5 - Loopback Filesystems, Archives, Compiling from Source
Objectives
- To create and use loopback filesystems in read-write mode
- To create and use archive files (tar and tar.gz)
- Compiling software from source code
- Customizing system startup
References
- man pages for mount, fstab, tar, gzip, make, chkconfig, dd, service
- Resources on the web:
Required Material
- SATA Hard Disk with Fedora 12 (the same one used for Lab 3 and 4)
- Lab log book
Prerequisites
- Completion of Labs 1-4
Introduction
There are two techniques used to place multiple files within one file: the first is to create a filesystem within a file, and the second is to use an archive program to create an archive file. Archive files are often used to contain source code for software; in this lab you will also be compiling software from a source code archive. Finally, you will modify your system startup to eliminate unnecessary services and configure your system to automatically mount a partition.
Investigation 1: How do you create and use a filesystem in a regular file?
- Login using your Learn ID
- Create an empty file that is exactly 3 MB in size:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/tmp/fstest bs=1k count=3072
- How does this command ensure that the file is 3 MB in size? What is in the file at first?
- Create an ext3 filesystem within the newly-created file
/tmp/fstest
. Note the warning message/question that appears - Mount the filesystem (remember to use the loopback option; refer to Lab 1 if required). Use a mountpoint of your choosing.
- Copy the files
/etc/services
and/etc/protocols
to the filesystem mounted in the previous step - Unmount the filesystem
- Test your filesystem to be sure that the files
/etc/services
and/etc/protocols
were in fact copied into the filesystem within the file named/tmp/fstest
. - How much space is left in that filesystem? (Hint:
df -h
).
Make sure that your lab notes answer the Investigation 1 question.
Investigation 2: How do you create an archive file?
- Change your working directory to
/usr/share/doc/sudo*
- Use the tar (tape archiver) command to create an archive file named
/tmp/archive1.tar
tar cvf /tmp/archive1.tar .
- What do the options c, v, and f mean?
- Record the archive file size.
- Compress the file using
gzip
:gzip /tmp/archive1.tar
- Record the archive file size after compression.
- Make sure you're still in
/usr/share/doc/sudo*
and then create a compressed archive:tar cvzf /tmp/archive2.tgz .
- What does the
z
option do? - Compare the sizes of
/tmp/archive1.tar.gz
and/tmp/archive2.tgz
. Why are they so close in size?
Answer the Investigation 2 question.
Investigation 3: How do you restore files from an archive?
- Create the directory
/tmp/extract1
and make it your current working directory (change into that directory). - Unzip the first archive you created:
gunzip /tmp/archive1.tar.gz
- Extract the files from the first archive:
tar xvf /tmp/archive1.tar
- Are all the files there?
- Compare
/tmp/extract1/README
and/usr/share/doc/sudo*/README
. Are they exactly the same? Why? - Create the directory
/tmp/extract2
and make it your current working directory. - Extract the files from the second archive:
tar xvzf /tmp/archive2.tgz
- Note that this time a separate
gunzip
command was not needed. Why? - Compare the
README
file in this directory with the original file. Are they exactly the same?
Answer the Investigation 3 question.
Investigation 4: How do you build software from source code?
- Go to the directory
/tmp
- Use the
wget
command to download the "tar ball" that contains the source code for the NLED text editor. - Extract the files. Change to the newly-extracted directory (
/tmp/nled-2.52
) - Check to see if there is a file named
configure
. If so, run it; if not, skip this step. (Most but not all source code archives contain this file) - Check to see if there is a file named
Makefile
ormakefile
. If so, type the command:make
- What does
make
do? - Some software distributed as source code can automatically install itself. Try this command:
make install
- Most but not all source code archives include the capability of installing themselves this way.
- If the command
make install
does not work (how can you tell?), copy thenled
program manually:cp nled /usr/local/bin
- Test
nled
to make sure it works.
Answer the Investigation 4 question.