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    A package management system is a collection of tools to automate the process of installing, upgrading, configuring, and removing software packages from a computer. The term is most commonly used with regards to Unix-like systems, particularly Linux, as these systems rely heavily on it, with thousands of discrete packages on a typical installation being common.

    In such a system, software is distributed in packages, usually encapsulated into a single file. As well as the software itself, packages often include other important information, such as the full name, a description of its purpose, the version number, vendor of the software, checksum information, and a list of other packages, known as dependencies, that are required for the software to run properly. This meta-information is typically entered into a local package database.

    The differences between a package management system and an installer are:



        Package management system
            Function
                Challenges with shared libraries
                Front-ends for locally compiled packages
                Conversion of binary packages
                Maintenance of configuration
                Repositories
                Upgrade suppression
                Free software systems
                Proprietary software systems
                Package management built into applications
            See also

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    Function
    Package management systems are charged with the task of organising all of the packages installed on a system and maintaining their usability. These systems meet these goals using various combinations of the following techniques:
      Verification of file checksums to help prevent differences between the local and official versions of a package
      Checking of digital signatures
      Simple installation, upgrade, and removal facilities (c.f. file archiver)
      Dependency tracking to deliver working software from a package
      Update checking to provide the latest version of software, which often includes bug fixes and security updates
      Grouping of packages by function to help eliminate user confusion when installing or maintaining them.

    Several of the widely used package management systems take advantage of simple backends for actually installing the packages. For instance, yum relies on rpm as a backend, and apt relies on dpkg.

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    Challenges with shared libraries
    On systems where applications share pieces of machine instructions (i.e. packages' binaries are dynamic, as opposed to static), such as most Linux distributions, dependency checking becomes a necessity when installing and uninstalling packages. Some of the more advanced package management features are recursive and cascading package removal (c.f. DLL hell), in which all packages that depend on the target package and all packages that only the target package depends on, are also removed, respectively.

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    Front-ends for locally compiled packages
    It is common for local administrators to install software not available in the repositories available through the package management. An example would be a newer version of a software application than that supplied with a distribution, or an alternative to that chosen by the distribution. If the additional software is distributed in source-only form, this approach requires local compilation. However, if additional software is locally added, the state of the local system may fall out of synchronization with the state of the package manager's database. If so, the local administrator user will be required to take additional measures to ensure the entire system is kept up to date. The package manager may no longer be able to do so automatically.

    There are tools available to ensure that locally compiled packages are integrated with the package management. For distributions based on .deb and .rpm files as well as Slackware Linux, there is checkinstall, and for recipe-based systems such as Gentoo Linux and hybrid systems such as Arch Linux, it is usually easy to write a recipe first, which then ensures that the package fits into the local package database.

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    Conversion of binary packages

    Alien is a program that converts between different Linux package formats. It supports conversion between Linux Standard Base, RPM, deb, Stampede (.slp) and Slackware (tgz) packages.

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    Maintenance of configuration
    Particularly troublesome with software upgrades are upgrades of configuration files. Since package management systems, at least on Unix systems, originated as extensions of file archiving utilities, they can usually only either overwrite or retain configuration files, rather than applying rules to them. There are exceptions to this that usually apply to kernel configuration (which, if broken, will render the computer unusable after a restart). Problems can be caused if the format of configuration files changes. For instance, if the old configuration file does not explicitly disable new options that should be disabled. Some package management systems, such as Debian's dpkg, allow configuration during installation. In other situations, it is desirable to install packages with the default configuration and then overwrite this configuration, for instance, in headless installations to a large number of computers. (This kind of pre-configured installation is also supported by dpkg.)

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    Repositories
    In order to give users easy control over the kinds of software that they are allowing to be installed on their system (and sometimes due to legal or convenience reasons on the distributors' side), software is often downloaded from a number of repositories.

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    Upgrade suppression
    When a user interacts with the package management software to bring about an upgrade, it is customary to present the user with the list of things to be done (usually the list of packages to be upgraded, and possibly giving the old and new version numbers), and allow him to either accept the upgrade in bulk, or select individual packages for upgrades. Many package management systems can be configured to never upgrade certain packages, or only upgrade them when critical vulnerabilities or instabilities are found in the previous version, as defined by the packager of the software. This process is sometimes called version pinning. For instance, yum supports this with the syntax exclude=openoffice
      , (to suppress upgrading openoffice in both cases) and the Debian tools with a more complex and more powerful syntax.

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    Free software systems

    By the nature of free software, packages under similar and compatible licenses are available for use on a number of operating systems. These packages can be easily combined and distributed using configurable and internally complex packaging systems to handle many permutations of software and manage version-specific dependencies and conflicts. Some packaging systems of free software are also themselves released as free software.

    For binary packages

      dpkg, used originally by Debian GNU/Linux and now by other systems, uses the .deb format and was the first to have a widely known dependency resolution tool, Deb Installer, APT.
      fink, for Mac OS X, derives partially from dpkg/apt and partially from ports.

    For installing from a recipe

      A recipe file contains information on how to download, unpack, compile and install a package in GoboLinux distribution using its Compile tool.

    Hybrid systems


    Meta package managers

    The following unify package management for several or all Linux and sometimes Unix variants. These, too, are based on the concept of a recipe file.
      klik aims to provide an easy way of getting software packages for most major distributions without the dependency problems so common in many other package formats.
      epm, developed by Easy Software Products (creators of CUPS), is a "meta packager", that allows to create native packages for all Linux and Unix operating systems (.deb, .rpm, .tgz for Linux, pkg for Solaris and
        BSD, .dmg for OS X,...) controlled from a single
          .list file.

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    Proprietary software systems
    A wide variety of package management systems are in common use today by proprietary software operating systems, handling the installation of both proprietary and free packages.


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    Package management built into applications
    Some package management systems are not part of the native operating system, such as fink for Mac OS X or Cygwin's Unix-like environment for Windows. Several dynamic programming languages have their own package management systems used for language modules. Other software may also come with its own system for managing modules, as do the programming languages Perl (see CPAN) and PHP (see PHP Extension and Application Repository).

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    See also
     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Package management system". link