Before you can install CA Access Control using a native package, you must customize the CA Access Control package to specify that you accept the license agreement. You can also specify custom installation settings when you customize a package.
You customize a package by extracting the installation parameters file from the package, modifying it as required, and then loading it back into the package. Some commands are available in the customization script so that you do not have to modify the parameters file.
Note: We recommend that you do not modify the package manually. Instead, use the script as described in the following procedure to customize the CA Access Control package.
You can find the installp format native packaging (bff files) for each of the supported AIX operating systems in the NativePackages directory of the CA Access Control Endpoint Components for UNIX DVD.
To customize the bff native package files
In the read/write location on the file system, the package (a bff file) can be customized as required.
Important! This location needs to have disk space that is at least twice the size of the package, so that it can hold temporary repackaging files.
The pre.tar file is compressed tar file containing installation messages and the CA Access Control license agreement.
Note: You can find the customize_eac_bff script file and the pre.tar file in the same location where the native packages are.
customize_eac_bff -a [-d pkg_location] pkg_name
You specify this keyword in the next step.
customize_eac_bff -w keyword [-d pkg_location] pkg_name
customize_eac_bff -r -l lang [-d pkg_location] pkg_name
customize_eac_bff -i install_loc [-d pkg_location] pkg_name
customize_eac_bff -s -c certfile -k keyfile [-d pkg_location] pkg_name
customize_eac_bff -g -f tmp_params [-d pkg_location] pkg_name
This file lets you set the installation defaults for the package. For example, activate the POSTEXIT setting (remove the preceding # character) and point it to post-installation script file you want to run.
customize_eac_bff -s -f tmp_params [-d pkg_location] pkg_name
You can now use the package to install CA Access Control with the customized defaults.
| Copyright © 2012 CA. All rights reserved. | Tell Technical Publications how we can improve this information |