Linux | EPICS Build | MacOS | Windows |
---|---|---|---|
A wrapper to start arbitrary interactive commands in the background, with telnet access to stdin/stdout.
The procServ upstream repository is on GitHub.
Distribution tars are also available through SourceForge.
-
asciidoc (package: asciidoc), to create documentation in different formats (man, pdf, html)
NOTE: The distribution tar contains the doc in all available formats, so you don't need asciidoc to make and install procServ. -
libtelnet (package: libtelnet)
NOTE: The distribution tar contains the libtelnet sources, so it will be compiled into procServ automatically, if not found.
Automated builds are provided by CloudBees, Travis and AppVeyor.
procServ is part of official Linux distributions:
- Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install procserv
- Fedora/RHEL:
yum install procServ
The source repository also contains the packaging extras. These are not part of the distribution tar.
- Unpack procServ at the appropriate place within your EPICS structure.
- Inside that directory, run
./configure --with-epics-top=TOP
where TOP is the relative path to the EPICS TOP directory.
(For a structure created with epicsMakeBaseExt.pl, the appropriate place for the procServ subdir would be underTOP/src
, with../..
being the relative path to specify to configure - which is the default.) - Build your EPICS structure.
Requires autoconf >=2.61, automake >= 1.10
Optional asciidoc >= 8.4, FOP >= 0.95, xsltproc >= 1.1.24
$ git clone https://github.com/ralphlange/procServ.git
$ cd procserv
$ make
$ ./configure --enable-doc
$ make
Note: When building from the repository you must explicitly
use --enable-doc
or --disable-doc
. Omitting this
option assumes the distribution behaviour, that
the documentation should be installed, but doesn't
need to be built.
In general,
sh configure
make
should be enough. If you have autoconf
and automake
packages,
then for a really clean build type
sh autoreconf -fi
sh configure
make distclean
make
If you plan to control procServ from a non-localhost address, you will need to use
sh configure --enable-access-from-anywhere
as the configure step.
The executable is also available for download on SourceForge.
Michael Davidsaver has created SysV-style rc scripts to configure and run EPICS IOCs using procServ.
You can look at the Debian package or at the upstream repository.
In the .bat
file to launch procServ you should add
set CYGWIN=nodosfilewarning
to suppress warnings about using windows style paths.
If you plan to control procServ from a non-localhost address,
you will need to run it with --allow
to allow remote access
to the child console.
To run on a non-Cygwin Windows system, procServ only needs Cygwin1.dll
,
e.g. in the same directory as the executable.
Using Windows style paths ('\
' delimiter) in arguments to procServ
is usually OK and suggested under command.com
.
If you have problems try replacing them with Cygwin syntax,
i.e. "/cygdrive/c/my/path
" rather than "C:\my\path
".
Under command.com
, the caret sign '^
' has to be escaped using '^^
'.
If you wish to run a .bat
file rather than an executable as child under
procServ, you should use something along the lines of
%ComSpec% /c runIOC.bat st.cmd
as arguments to procServ to launch your .bat
file.