Hi
I have an rpm package for installation. Before I install I should display the License Agreement and when the user accepts it then I should install the package. I know we don't have user interaction in rpm, what I am looking at is how to create an wrapper so that I can present this license agreement and then ask the user to agree it and if he says "Yes" or "y" I can continue to install.
I have seen programs like "jdk-6u18-linux-i586-rpm.bin" and other which are able to do this. We will just change the file to exectable and then run it.
Can someone help me on how to do that or any pointers?
Thanks Madhukar
Le mercredi 05 mai 2010 à 16:04 -0700, MGandra@diskeeper.com a écrit :
Hi
I have an rpm package for installation. Before I install I should display the License Agreement and when the user accepts it then I should install the package. I know we don’t have user interaction in rpm, what I am looking at is how to create an wrapper so that I can present this license agreement and then ask the user to agree it and if he says “Yes” or “y” I can continue to install.
I have seen programs like “jdk-6u18-linux-i586-rpm.bin” and other which are able to do this. We will just change the file to exectable and then run it.
Can someone help me on how to do that or any pointers?
Thanks Madhukar
Hi,
you could have a look at: http://www.linuxjournal.com/node/1005818
On 5/5/2010 18:04, MGandra@diskeeper.com wrote:
I have an rpm package for installation. Before I install I should display the License Agreement and when the user accepts it then I should install the package. I know we don’t have user interaction in rpm, what I am looking at is how to create an wrapper so that I can present this license agreement and then ask the user to agree it and if he says “Yes” or “y” I can continue to install.
I have seen programs like“jdk-6u18-linux-i586-rpm.bin” and other which are able to do this. We will just change the file to exectable and then run it.
We've found this problematic in the past at my workplace. In particular, it makes the product very difficult to automatically install or update since customers never get their hands on the actual binary RPMs. This forces sysadmins to log into every machine individually every time they want to install or update the program just so the installer can display some license agreement they've already read and agreed to. This is especially important to corporate customers who don't care to spend their time doing this for a network of hundreds of machines. If you insist on using a wrapper, please make it possible to extract the binary RPM so customers can add it to their private package management systems and avoid this mess.
As a simple alternative, I suggest sending customers to a web page with the license agreement that they can accept before actually downloading product RPMs. This makes it easier both for packagers like yourself as well as for customers who want to roll out products to a number of computers. Sun, Oracle, and VMware all do this sort of thing with many of their products since there's no point in making somebody accept the same license agreement hundreds of times.
-----Original Message----- From: packaging-bounces@lists.fedoraproject.org [mailto:packaging-bounces@lists.fedoraproject.org] On Behalf Of Garrett Holmstrom Sent: Wednesday, May 05, 2010 6:14 PM To: Discussion of RPM packaging standards and practices for Fedora Subject: Re: [Fedora-packaging] create a wrapper installer
On 5/5/2010 18:04, MGandra@diskeeper.com wrote:
I have an rpm package for installation. Before I install I should display the License Agreement and when the user accepts it then I should install the package. I know we don’t have user interaction in rpm, what I am looking at is how to create an wrapper so that I can present this license agreement and then ask the user to agree it and if he says “Yes” or “y” I can continue to install.
I have seen programs like“jdk-6u18-linux-i586-rpm.bin” and other which
are able to do this. We will just change the file to exectable and then run it.
We've found this problematic in the past at my workplace. In particular, it makes the product very difficult to automatically install or update since customers never get their hands on the actual binary RPMs. This forces sysadmins to log into every machine individually every time they want to install or update the program just so the installer can display some license agreement they've already read and agreed to. This is especially important to corporate customers who don't care to spend their time doing this for a network of hundreds of machines. If you insist on using a wrapper, please make it possible to extract the binary RPM so customers can add it to their private package management systems and avoid this mess.
As a simple alternative, I suggest sending customers to a web page with the license agreement that they can accept before actually downloading product RPMs. This makes it easier both for packagers like yourself as well as for customers who want to roll out products to a number of computers. Sun, Oracle, and VMware all do this sort of thing with many of their products since there's no point in making somebody accept the same license agreement hundreds of times.
I understand the concerns but we want to do that. Can you tell how to do that?
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