Yesterday I wrote about my plans to make deploying new Ubuntu servers both easier and more repeatable by relying on apt metapackages.
I’ve been working on the implementation, and it’s going pretty well so far. This documents the basic steps:
First, I installed the equivs package
aptitude install equivs
At this point, I’m not including any config files or post installation tasks, so I only have to worry about the control file.
#equivs-control my-metapackage
This generates a control file template in the current directory that you edit. I want to make sure my system has ufw, munin-node, logrotate, rsync, mlocate and wget installed, and I cleaned out the options I didn’t need, so my control file looks like this:
### Commented entries have reasonable defaults.
### Uncomment to edit them.
Section: misc
Priority: optional
Standards-Version: 3.6.2
Package: my-metapackage
Version: 0.01
Maintainer: Your Humble Scribe <fake@fake.com>
Depends: ufw, munin-node, logrotate, rsync, mlocate, wget
Description: Depends on Useful Bits and Pieces
This is a dependency package that we use to make sure that basics,
like a firewall, rsync, munin-node, etc, are installed.
Next step is to turn that into a debian package:
#equivs-build my-metapackage
dh_testdir
dh_testroot
dh_clean -k
dh_testdir
dh_testroot
dh_install
dh_installdocs
dh_installchangelogs
dh_compress
dh_fixperms
dh_installdeb
dh_gencontrol
dh_md5sums
dh_builddeb
dpkg-deb: building package `my-metapackage' in `../my-metapackage_0.01_all.deb'.
The package has been created.
Attention, the package has been created in the current directory,
not in ".." as indicated by the message above!
Now to test it out:
sudo dpkg -i my-metapackage_0.01_all.deb
This will install my-metapackage, but that’s not enough. Dpkg can’t satisfy remote dependancies, so it will throw errors for each of the dependencies you created and leave your newly installed package in a broken state. You can then use aptitude to resolve these missing dependencies to complete the process:
sudo aptitude -fy --safe-resolver install
This tells aptitude to install to fix any missing dependencies.
That should be it. I’ll note though, that for some reason, aptitude was insisting on removing my packages, rather than fixing the broken dependencies. I’m not sure why, and I’m not sure why its working now