Is it possible to make rpmbuild to preserve symlinks on packaging?
The current behavior is to create copies of files, which I would like to avoid.
Sure it supports symlinks. But you actually have to package symlink and not copy the contents to the buildroot. Example spec packaging a symlink to /bin directory called /newbin
Name: test
Version: 1.0
Release: 1%{?dist}
Summary: nothing
License: GPLv2
Source0: nothing
%description
%install
rm -rf %{buildroot}
mkdir %{buildroot}
ln -sf /bin %{buildroot}/newbin
%files
/newbin
You'll also need nothing file in your SOURCES directory to succesfully build rpm out of this. Tested with rpm 4.9.1.2
%install. For instance, let's say that a previous version of the package installed a second file, "%{buildroot}/newlib", but the current version does not install that file. The current version of the package won't be aware of that file and thus it won't be removed from the buildroot (following your suggestion). In general, the current rpmbuild instance isn't aware of any old cruft that may be in the build root. Better just to nuke the whole buildroot before the install step.
Jul 28, 2014 at 20:14
I know this Q is old, but here's how I do it.
In the %install section, simply touch the file that will be the symlink.
touch %{buildroot}[path to your file]
In the %files section, you specify it as a %ghost file:
%ghost [path to symlink file]
By doing this, it'll be listed as part of the package's files and will also be automatically removed when the package is uninstalled.
Finally, create the symlink in the %post section:
ln -sf [file to link to] [symlink]
If the symbolic link is relative it will get installed as you expect.
Use the -r, --relative option to ln.
I don't think so. I've used the post-install script set up symlinks in my packages.