I try to pack some map files for our geoserver in an internal rpm package. For the build part, this is just to copy the files. I think this works as expected. But it takes terribly long to pack those 20GB of images.
I've read that rpm internally compresses the data and that this can be done with several different compression algorithms. But, I don't have a clue which compression my rpm chooses and how I can influence this. I could not find any options for the rpmbuild command, nor for the specfile nor for the general rpm options I can list with rpmbuild --showrc
I´m not very experienced with rpmbuild and specfiles, but after reading lots of man pages and tutorials on rpm.org I have no further ideas.
The specfile I use looks like:
%define debug_package %{nil}
%global mapsversion 0.9
# If this is a snapshot, put the date here and uncomment
#global snapshot_version 20100519
# This is the version in a form acceptable
# an an RPM version string (i.e. no '-')
# Hier werden die Makros definiert.
%global rpmversion %(echo %{mapsversion} | tr '-' '_')
%global pkgversion %{mapsversion}%{?snapshot_version:-SNAPSHOT}
%global pkgname %{name}
Name: geoserver-maps-part2
Version: %{rpmversion}
Release: 1%{?dist}
Summary: Swiss Maps for GeoServer
Group: Application/ourApp
License: Copyright (c) 2011
URL: http://doc.polyalert.local
#Source0: %{name}-%{version}.tgz
BuildArch: noarch
BuildRoot: %{_tmppath}/%{name}-%{version}-%{release}-root-%(%{__id_u} -n)
Requires: geoserver
%define mapshome /opt/geoserver/swisstopo
%define mapssource /home/user/polyalert_env/geoserver/swisstopo
%description
Swiss Maps for GeoServer
%prep
%build
/bin/true
%install
rm -rf $RPM_BUILD_ROOT
mkdir -p $RPM_BUILD_ROOT%{mapshome}
cp -a %{mapssource}/pk100 $RPM_BUILD_ROOT%{mapshome}
%clean
rm -rf $RPM_BUILD_ROOT
%pre
%post
%preun
%files
%{mapshome}/pk100
%changelog
* Tue Feb 14 2012 user - 1.0
- First version of specfile
I call rpmbuild like this:
rpmbuild -bb --define "_topdir $TOP_DIR" --define "_gpg_name ourkey" --define "_signature gpg" --sign $TOP_DIR/SPECS/$SPEC_FILE_NAME $RPM_BUILD_PARAMETER
Any suggestions?
I have used "%define _binary_payload w9.xzdio" on RHEL 6.6. As I understand, the default compression tool used in RHEL 6 is xz, but the default compression level appears to be 2, even though 7 is supposed to be xz's default. I kicked it up to 9 and some giant RPMs went from 653MB to 439MB. I was able to save a total of 1 gigabyte over the default compression.
I ran into the same issue with Ant building a runnable Jar RPM with Spring Boot Loader complaining of this:
Caused by: java.lang.IllegalStateException: Unable to open nested entry 'BOOT-INF/lib/accessors-smart-1.2.jar'. It has been compressed and nested jar files must be stored without compression. Please check the mechanism used to create your executable jar file
My ant build task was like this:
My solution to build an RPM with a runnable JAR was to disable the repacking, setting the macro definitions on the spec file did not do it for me.
Adding this to the spec file was what worked for me:
Reference: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=219731
Thanks to the previous posters for helping to focus in on the issue too.
Erion
Please check the file /usr/lib/rpm/macros in your build machine, (the file maybe diff in path), it has a total support list of compression methods there: e.g.:
so here just as Aaron said, you can set it here for universal, or set specifically for your proj. spec.
I was working with some RPM stuff today and accidentally stumbled upon the answer for ya!
Put these in your
spec
file:That will still use
gzip
but pass it-0
for a level, which should just store. On my RPM, it made it grow from 21MB to 76MB, so I'm pretty sure this is your answer!BTW, I found that in one of the
macro
files - you can also dobzdio
and any number from0
to9
to usebzip2
. This was on RHEL4; later versions of RPM seem to support more compression options; but again, for what you want, the above should be what you need.