Building your own Quagga RPM

(Tested on CentOS 6, CentOS 7 and Fedora 22.)

  1. Install the following packages to build the RPMs:

     yum install git autoconf automake libtool make gawk readline-devel \
     texinfo dejagnu net-snmp-devel groff rpm-build net-snmp-devel \
     libcap-devel texi2html
    

    (use dnf install on new Fedora instead of yum install)

  2. Checkout Quagga under a unpriviledged user account

     git clone git://git.savannah.nongnu.org/quagga.git quagga
    
  3. Run Bootstrap and make distribution tar.gz

     cd quagga
     ./bootstrap.sh
     ./configure --with-pkg-extra-version=-MyRPMVersion
     make dist
    

    Note: configure parameters are not important for the RPM building - except the with-pkg-extra-version if you want to give the RPM a specific name to mark your own unoffical build

  4. Create RPM directory structure and populate with sources

     mkdir rpmbuild
     mkdir rpmbuild/SOURCES
     mkdir rpmbuild/SPECS
     cp redhat/*.spec rpmbuild/SPECS/
     cp quagga*.tar.gz rpmbuild/SOURCES/
    
  5. Edit rpm/SPECS/quagga.spec with configuration as needed Look at the beginning of the file and adjust the following parameters to enable or disable features as required:

     ################# Quagga configure options ####################
     # with-feature options
     %{!?with_snmp:         %global  with_snmp       1 }
     %{!?with_vtysh:        %global  with_vtysh      1 }
     %{!?with_ospf_te:      %global  with_ospf_te    1 }
     %{!?with_opaque_lsa:   %global  with_opaque_lsa 1 }
     %{!?with_tcp_zebra:	   %global  with_tcp_zebra  0 }
     %{!?with_vtysh:        %global  with_vtysh      1 }
     %{!?with_pam:          %global  with_pam        1 }
     %{!?with_ospfclient:   %global  with_ospfclient 1 }
     %{!?with_ospfapi:      %global  with_ospfapi    1 }
     %{!?with_irdp:         %global  with_irdp       1 }
     %{!?with_rtadv:        %global  with_rtadv      1 }
     %{!?with_isisd:        %global  with_isisd      1 }
     %{!?with_pimd:         %global  with_pimd       1 }
     %{!?with_shared:       %global  with_shared     1 }
     %{!?with_multipath:    %global  with_multipath  64 }
     %{!?quagga_user:       %global  quagga_user     quagga }
     %{!?vty_group:         %global  vty_group       quaggavt }
     %{!?with_fpm:          %global  with_fpm        0 }
     %{!?with_watchquagga:  %global  with_watchquagga 1 }
    
  6. Build the RPM

     rpmbuild --define "_topdir `pwd`/rpmbuild" -ba rpmbuild/SPECS/quagga.spec
    

DONE.

If all works correctly, then you should end up with the RPMs under rpmbuild/RPMS and the Source RPM under rpmbuild/SRPMS

Enabling daemons after installation of the package:

init.d based systems (ie CentOS 6):

  1. Enable the daemons as needed to run after boot (Zebra is mandatory)

     chkconfig zebra on
     chkconfig ospfd on
     chkconfig ospf6d on
     chkconfig bgpd on
     ... etc
    
  2. If you want to run watchquagga, then configure /etc/sysconfig/quagga and uncomment the line with the daemons for watchquagga to monitor, then enable watchquagga

     chkconfig watchquagga on
    
  3. Check your firewall / IPtables to make sure the routing protocols are allowed.

  4. Start the daemons (or reboot)

     service zebra start
     service bgpd start
     service ospfd start
     ... etc
    

Configuration is stored in /etc/quagga/*.conf files.

systemd based systems (ie CentOS 7, Fedora 22)

  1. Enable the daemons as needed to run after boot (Zebra is mandatory)

     systemctl enable zebra
     systemctl enable ospfd
     systemctl enable ospf6d
     systemctl enable bgpd
     ... etc
    

    Note: There is no watchquagga on systemd based systems. Systemd contains the functionality of monitoring and restarting daemons.

  2. Check your firewall / IPtables to make sure the routing protocols are allowed.

  3. Start the daemons (or reboot)

     systemctl start zebra
     systemctl start bgpd
     systemctl start ospfd
     ... etc
    

Configuration is stored in /etc/quagga/*.conf files.