Pegasus Enhancement Proposal (PEP)
PEP #: 235
Title: OpenPegasus Version 2.5 Release Readme file
Version: 1.4
Created: 6 Sept 2005
Authors: Warren
Grunbok
Status: draft
Version History:
Version | Date | Author | Change Description |
---|---|---|---|
1.0 | 5, Sept 2005 | Warren Grunbok |
Initial draft |
1.1 |
13,
Sept 2005 |
Warren
Grunbok/Roger Kumpf |
Updates
based on Architecture team review |
1.2 |
22, Sept 2005 |
Warren Grunbok |
Updates from posted comments to
1.1 |
1.3 |
22,Sept 2005 |
Warren
Grunbok |
changed _
to - |
1.4 |
26, Sept 2005 |
Warren Grunbok/Dave Sudlik |
Cleanup on example lists |
Abstract: Installation, build, operation information on the OpenPegasus Version 2.5.0 Release. Note that if this readme conflicts with the documentation in the release notes or interface definition documents for a particular release, those documents should be considered authorative. This is a simplified overview to act as an introduction to OpenPegasus.
OpenPegasus - A Manageability Services Broker for the DMTF CIM/WBEM Standards
Tagline: OpenPegasus is an object manager for DMTF CIM objects written in C++ and hosted by The Open Group
STATUS: Revised Sept 2005 for Pegasus release version
2.5.0
- Draft
Availability of PegasusInstall Pegasus
Pegasus Supported Platforms
Pegasus Dependencies
Commands
Documentation
How to Participate
Download or checkout PegasusTest the Pegasus installation
Verify that you have the required software
Set the environment variables
Build the Pegasus runtime, test files, test clients, and repository
Populate the Pegasus repository
Register providers in the Pegasus environment
Notes about Building Pegasus on Linux
Notes on building Pegasus with SSL
Building Pegasus on Windows 2000 or Windows XP With Microsoft Visual C++
The MU Utility
Testing with ICU enabled
OpenPegasus is being developed and maintained under the auspices of The Open Group. OpenPegasus is maintained under the license defined in the doc directory of this release. The specific file is: pegasus/doc/license.txt. This licensing is intended to support as wide a distribution as possible with minimal demands on the users.
More information on this project, access to the CVS, and documentation on Pegasus are available from the OpenGroup WEB site.
NOTE: The Linux RPM reference is for 2.4.1 because that is all we have. We need a general page to get to the RPMs, not one per release.
Pegasus is distributed as open source under the MIT open-source license. The distribution is available via CVS and snapshot images in tar and zip file formats on the web site. The source code from CVS can be found at the following Open Group CVS server;
CVS write accounts are managed by Martin Kirk of The Open Group (m.kirk@opengroup.org)
Pegasus is regularly tested against a variety of platforms by the
development group. The results of the nightly tests can be found
here: Nightly
test status . The Release notes provides additional details
regarding the platforms.
PEP 230 is the release notes PEP for 2.5.
We have worked to minimize the dependence of Pegasus on other software packages and tools. Currently Pegasus has the following dependencies:
1. GNUMAKE - To simplify the building of Pegasus across multiple platforms we have standardized on a set of build tools including: GNUMAKE. We are using GNUMAKE 3.79.1 successfully both in Windows and Linux environments.
GNUMAKE is available from :
2. FLEX and BISON - These tools were used to develop the MOF compiler and WQL parser. These tools are required only for development of the parsers, not for building Pegasus.3. DOC++ - The Pegasus documentation is taken from a combination of text files and the Pegasus header files themselves. This documentation is formatted with DOC++ and GAWK. These tools are required to build the interface documentation set.
4. ICU Internationalization libraries - These libraries are used as the basis for message catalogs for message internationalization. See the ICU website (http://oss.software.ibm.com/icu/) for more information on these libraries
5. OpenSSL - If it
is intended to use SSL on the
communication protocol, the OpenSSL libraries are required.
NOTE: A set of the required tools for windows platforms is available on the openpegasus web site. www.openpegasus.org
The manpages for each of the commands are in rpm/manLinux/man1.Z directory (on CVS)
To see simple help for each of the commands, use the "--help" flag.
Here is a list of useful commands:The documentation is currently in preparation. Much of Pegasus is documented in the PEGASUS PEPs which are the basis for approval of Pegasus functionality, changes, plans, etc. These documents are openly available on the PEGASUS web site. The preliminary documentation is not provided with this release. The current documentation is maintained both as a manual created under the tool DOC++ in the runtime subdirectory manual/html (see doc/devManual to create), as an api document also creatable from the source tree (see doc/apidoc) and as other miscellaneous documentation in the doc directory. Also there is a set of release notes. Normally the release notes for the current release are available in the root source directory of CVS.
Note that the Pegasus WEB site at The Open Group will be the source of most documentation in the future and today is the source of most discussion and design documentation.
Contributors are welcome to participate in the OpenPegasus development effort. Join the mailing list by visiting www.openpegasus.org and clicking on Mailing Lists.
RPM installation instructions can be found here: http://www.openpegasus.org/pr
Verify Dependencies
Before
you install Pegasus be sure you have the proper set of software
Pegasus is dependent on. See Dependencies
section.
Before installing or running OpenPegasus, environment variables may
have to be defined or updated.
PEP
200 contains the list of environment variables and setup necessary
to use OpenPegasus.
Before using Pegasus you must populate the repository. Typically, this is done during the build process when you run the makefile. However, you can also do it manually after the Pegasus has been built.
The providers included with Pegasus are automatically entered into the repository by running the following command: make repository
The 'make repository' in the pegasus directory does three things:
Pegasus registers providers with a set of provider registration classes, not using the provider qualifier as is done in most DMTF CIM CIMOM implementations today. This set of classes is close to but not exactly the same as the experimental DMTF definition (See the DMTF Interop schema, experimental versions starting with 2.6). This will be harmonized in the future when the DMTF scheme is moved to final status.
Registration is performed by creating instances of the registration classes that represent the provider module, providers, classes, etc. to be registered. The easiest way to create a new registration today is to copy from one of the existing registration MOFs. See the providers/sample/load directory for examples of several registration instance implementations that do work with OpenPegasus today.
To build OpenPegasus on Linux, ensure that you you have the environment variables set (PEGASUS_HOME, PEGASUS_ROOT, PEGASUS_PLATFORM. For 32 bit linux, the definition of PEGASUS_PLATFORM is normally LINUX_IX86_GNU).
Use of Windows 2000 SP3 or later is recommended. OpenPegasus is regularly tested on both Windows 2000 and Windows XP using the Microsoft compilers.
Today we build OpenPegasus on Windows using a set of make files contained in the source distribution, the Microsoft compilers (DevStudio 5.x is not supported, Visual Studio 6.0, SP5 is supported) and the GNUMAKE make utility. Note that you MUST have the OpenPegasus mu.exe utility compiled and available before trying to compile OpenPegasus on the normal windows platform. The following is the basic setup steps for the environment.
Setup the environment variables and path for the Micrososft Visual C compiler. Typically this can be done by running the VCVARS32.BAT file supplied with Microsoft Visual C++. (contained in the same directory as cl.exe).
For Windows, try the following for an example environment:
REM call the standard Microsoft .bat for VC 6 setup.
call 'C:/Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio\VC98\Bin\Vcvars32.bat'
REM Set debug to something if you want compile in debug mode
set PEGASUS_DEBUG=true
REM set PEGASUS_ROOT to top of source tree
set PEGASUS_ROOT=C:/cimom/pegasus (Note: The '/' characters are intentional and required by the OpenPegasus build system)
REM set PEGASUS_HOME to where you want repository and executables
set PEGASUS_HOME=%PEGASUS_ROOT%
REM setup the path to the runtime files.
set path=%path%;%PEGASUS_HOME%\bin
In order to provide a consistent build structure across multiple platforms, we developed a small utility to provide a consistent set of small utilities across these platforms. The MU utility is a simple utility that contains many commands. For example:
C:\> mu rm myfile.cpp yourfile.cpp
You may type "mu" to get a list of valid commands. Here are some of them:
rm, rmdirhier, mkdirhier, echo, touch, pwd, copy, move, compare depend
The MU utility supports globing (expansion of wildcards) so you can do things like this:
C:\> mu rm *.obj *.exe
MU is required to build under the Windows environment. MU is
available as part
of the distribution of OpenPegasus.
To build with SSL you need the OpenSSL libraries and header files. They are NOT distributed with OpenPegasus. Make sure you have them in a standard directory so OpenPegasus can find them. If that's not the case, set the environment variable OPENSSL_HOME= to point where your OpenSSL installation is.
Also have the PEGASUS_HAS_SSL=yes variable set. Then just run 'make' in Pegasus directory and you will have OpenPegasus with SSL enabled. See "Creating SSL certificates" below for more information on how to use SSL.
Refer to the SSL Admin guide found in the doc directory for details on using OpenPegasus with SSL.OpenPegasus includes an extensive set of test facilities as part of the CVS environment, including:
ICU (International Components for Unicode) refers to the set of
libraries that OpenPegasus uses to run globalized. For example: these
libraries are used
to
load messages in different languages, format currency and numbers
according to
a specific locale etc. In order to enable globalization in OpenPegasus,
OpenPegasus
must be built with ICU enabled, ie. the right environment variables
must be
set prior to running "make". Refer to the GlobalizationHOWTO.htm in the
docs
directory for details.
When users run "make poststarttests"
to verify the integrity of a OpenPegasus download, a series of tests
are
run that
require the cimserver to be running. These tests currently depend on
specific
messages returned from the server. When ICU is enabled, all messages
come from the resource bundles and these usually do not match the
hardcoded default messages within OpenPegasus. These hardcoded default
messages are what the various test programs expect in order to complete
successfully. If the ICU enabled server is started without
disabling message loading from the bundles, "make poststartests" will
fail.
In order to run "make poststarttests" successfully with ICU enabled, an
environment variable called PEGASUS_USE_DEFAULT_MESSAGES must exist
prior to
starting the server. Once this is defined, when the cimserver starts,
all
messages generated will be the default hardcoded messages. This will
enable
"make poststarttests" to complete successfully. Once "make
poststarttests" is
complete, you should stop the cimserver and then undefine
PEGASUS_USE_DEFAULT_MESSAGES. If this variable is left defined,
OpenPegasus
will not be able to load messages
using ICU resource bundles.
When
running the make tests command with ICU enabled, the PEGASUS_MSG_HOME
environment variable must be set to the home directory where the ICU
resource bundles are built. By default the resource bundles are built
into directories below PEGASUS_HOME/msg, so that should be the setting
for PEGASUS_MSG_HOME.
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Copyright (c) 2005 EMC Corporation;
Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.; IBM Corp.; The Open Group;
VERITAS Software Corporation
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