// file : bpkg/pkg-install.cli // copyright : Copyright (c) 2014-2018 Code Synthesis Ltd // license : MIT; see accompanying LICENSE file include ; "\section=1" "\name=bpkg-pkg-install" "\summary=install package" namespace bpkg { { " ", "\h|SYNOPSIS| \c{\b{bpkg pkg-install}|\b{install} [] [] ( [])...\n \b{bpkg pkg-install}|\b{install} [] [] \b{--all}|\b{-a}} \h|DESCRIPTION| The \cb{pkg-install} command installs the specified packages (the first form) or all held packages (the second form, see \l{bpkg-pkg-status(1)}). Additionally, immediate or all dependencies of these packages can be also installed by specifying the \c{\b{--immediate}|\b{-i}} or \c{\b{--recursive}|\b{-r}} options, respectively. Underneath, this command doesn't do much more than run \cb{b install}. In the first form the specified packages must have been previously configured with \l{bpkg-pkg-build(1)} or \l{bpkg-pkg-configure(1)}. Additional command line variables (, normally \cb{config.*}) can be passed to the build system by either specifying them before the packages, in which case they apply to the whole configuration, or after a specific package, in which case they apply only to this package. In particular, this mechanism can be used to specify the installation directory, for example: \ bpkg install config.install.root=/usr/local \ config.install.sudo=sudo libfoo libbar \ Alternatively, the installation directory can be specified once when creating the configuration (\l{bpkg-cfg-create(1)})." } class pkg_install_options: configuration_options { "\h|PKG-INSTALL OPTIONS|" bool --all|-a { "Install all held packages." } bool --immediate|-i { "Also install immediate dependencies." } bool --recursive|-r { "Also install all dependencies, recursively." } }; }