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2 <!-- -*- DocBook -*- -->
3 <!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
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5 <!ENTITY % trans SYSTEM "po4a/maint-guide.en.ent"> %trans;
6 <!ENTITY % common SYSTEM "common.ent"> %common;
7 <!ENTITY % version SYSTEM "version.ent"> %version;
8 ]>
9 <book lang="en">
10 <!-- This is UTF-8 encoded. -->
11 <!--
12 This is reorganized to make this document robust for translation
13 when some externally referenced information changes.
14
15 If you want to add extra contents to this document, please do so by
16 * adding tag like &othercredit; in English and provide it for each language.
17 * add extra content within msgstr but within <footnote>...</footnote>
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21 Please try to correct something in translation. If you think contents needs fix,
22 Let's fix it in the root cause.
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24 Please understand to keep this document focused. Not everything you think important
25 for new maintainer should be written down. Something social needs to be elsewhere.
26 Some thing should be left to the practice. Something needs to be left for exercise
27 for people to check official documentations.
28 -->
29 <title>Debian New Maintainers' Guide</title>
30 <bookinfo>
31 <authorgroup>
32 <!-- do not use firstname and surname tags it braks Japanese. The same with othercredit -->
33 <author> <personname>Josip Rodin</personname> <email>joy-mg@debian.org</email> <contrib>original contents</contrib> </author>
34 <author> <personname>Osamu Aoki</personname> <email>osamu@debian.org</email> <contrib>updated contents</contrib> </author>
35 <!-- translator credits in po4a/translator.*.ent -->
36 &othercredit;
37 </authorgroup>
38 <releaseinfo>version &docversion;</releaseinfo>
39 <pubdate>&docisodate;</pubdate>
40 <copyright><year>1998-2002</year> <holder>Josip Rodin</holder></copyright>
41 <copyright><year>2005-2011</year> <holder>Osamu Aoki</holder></copyright>
42 <copyright><year>2010</year> <holder>Craig Small</holder></copyright>
43 <copyright><year>2010</year> <holder>Raphaël Hertzog</holder></copyright>
44 <legalnotice>
45 <para>
46 This document may be used under the terms the GNU General Public License
47 version 2 or higher.
48 </para>
49 <para>
50 This document was made using with these two documents as examples:
51 </para>
52 <itemizedlist>
53 <listitem>
54 <para>
55 Making a Debian Package (AKA the Debmake Manual), copyright © 1997 Jaldhar
56 Vyas.
57 </para>
58 </listitem>
59 <listitem>
60 <para>
61 The New-Maintainer's Debian Packaging Howto, copyright © 1997 Will Lowe.
62 </para>
63 </listitem>
64 </itemizedlist>
65 </legalnotice>
66 <!-- toc -->
67 </bookinfo>
68 <chapter id="start"><title>Getting started The Right Way</title>
69 <para>
70 This document tries to describe the building of a Debian package to ordinary
71 Debian users and prospective developers. It uses fairly non-technical language, and
72 it's well covered with working examples. There is an old Latin saying:
73 <emphasis>Longum iter est per praecepta, breve et efficax per
74 exempla</emphasis> (It's a long way by the rules, but short and efficient with
75 examples).
76 </para>
77 <para>
78 This document has been updated for the Debian <literal>&base-release;</literal>
79 release.
80 <footnote><para> The document assumes you are using a
81 <literal>&base-release;</literal> or newer system. If you need to follow this
82 text in an older system (including an older Ubuntu system etc.), you must
83 install backported <systemitem role="package">dpkg</systemitem> and
84 <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> packages, at least.
85 </para> </footnote>
86 </para>
87 <para>
88 One of the things that makes Debian such a top-notch distribution is its
89 package system. While there is a vast quantity of software already in the
90 Debian format, sometimes you need to install software that isn't. You may be
91 wondering how you can make your own packages; and perhaps you think it is a very
92 difficult task. Well, if you are a real novice on Linux, it is hard, but if
93 you were a rookie, you wouldn't be reading this document now&nbsp;:-)
94 You do need to know a little about Unix programming but you certainly
95 don't need to be a wizard.
96 <footnote><para>
97 You can learn about the basic handling of a Debian system from the
98 <ulink url="&debref;">Debian Reference</ulink>. It contains some pointers to
99 learn about Unix programming, too.
100 </para></footnote>
101 </para>
102 <para>
103 One thing is certain, though: to properly create and maintain Debian packages
104 takes many hours. Make no mistake, for our system to work the maintainers
105 need to be both technically competent and diligent.
106 </para>
107 <para>
108 If you need some help on packaging, please read <xref linkend="helpme"/>.
109 </para>
110 <para>
111 Newer versions of this document should always be available online at
112 <ulink url="&maint-guide;"/> and in the
113 <systemitem role="package">maint-guide</systemitem> package.
114 The translations may be available in packages such as
115 <systemitem role="package">maint-guide-es</systemitem>.
116 Please note that this documentation may be slightly outdated.
117 </para>
118 <para>
119 Since this is a tutorial, I choose to explain each detailed step for some
120 important topics. Some of them may look irrelevant to you. Please be patient.
121 I have also intentionally skipped some corner cases and provided only pointers
122 to keep this document simple.
123 </para>
124 <section id="socialdynamics"><title>Social dynamics of Debian</title>
125 <para>
126 Here are some observations of Debian's social dynamics, presented in the hope
127 that it will prepare you for interactions with Debian.
128 </para>
129 <itemizedlist>
130 <listitem><para>We all are volunteers.</para>
131 <itemizedlist>
132 <listitem><para>You cannot impose on others what to do.</para></listitem>
133 <listitem><para>You should be motivated to do things by yourself.</para></listitem>
134 </itemizedlist></listitem>
135 <listitem><para>Friendly cooperation is the driving force.</para>
136 <itemizedlist>
137 <listitem><para>Your contribution should not overstrain others.</para></listitem>
138 <listitem><para>Your contribution is valuable only when others appreciate it.</para></listitem>
139 </itemizedlist></listitem>
140 <listitem><para>Debian is not your school where you get automatic attention of teachers.</para>
141 <itemizedlist>
142 <listitem><para>You should be able to learn many things by yourself.</para></listitem>
143 <listitem><para>Attention from other volunteers is a very scarce resource.</para></listitem>
144 </itemizedlist></listitem>
145 <listitem><para>Debian is constantly improving.</para>
146 <itemizedlist>
147 <listitem><para>You are expected to make high quality packages.</para></listitem>
148 <listitem><para>You should adapt yourself to change.</para></listitem>
149 </itemizedlist></listitem>
150 </itemizedlist>
151 <para>
152 There are several types of people interacting around Debian with different
153 roles.
154 </para>
155 <itemizedlist>
156 <listitem>
157 <para>
158 <emphasis role="strong">upstream author</emphasis>: the person who made the
159 original program.
160 </para>
161 </listitem>
162 <listitem>
163 <para>
164 <emphasis role="strong">upstream maintainer</emphasis>: the person who
165 currently maintains the program.
166 </para>
167 </listitem>
168 <listitem>
169 <para>
170 <emphasis role="strong">maintainer</emphasis>: the person making the Debian
171 package of the program.
172 </para>
173 </listitem>
174 <listitem>
175 <para>
176 <emphasis role="strong">sponsor</emphasis>: a person who helps maintainers to
177 upload packages to the official Debian package archive (after checking their
178 contents).
179 </para>
180 </listitem>
181 <listitem>
182 <para>
183 <emphasis role="strong">mentor</emphasis>: a person who helps novice
184 maintainers with packaging etc.
185 </para>
186 </listitem>
187 <listitem>
188 <para>
189 <emphasis role="strong">Debian Developer</emphasis> (DD): a member of
190 the Debian project with full upload rights to the official Debian package
191 archive.
192 </para>
193 </listitem>
194 <listitem>
195 <para>
196 <emphasis role="strong">Debian Maintainer</emphasis> (DM): a person with
197 limited upload rights to the official Debian package archive.
198 </para>
199 </listitem>
200 </itemizedlist>
201 <para>
202 Please note that you cannot become an official
203 <emphasis role="strong">Debian Developer</emphasis> (DD) overnight, because it
204 takes more than technical skill. Please do not be discouraged by this. If it
205 is useful to others, you can still upload your package either as a
206 <emphasis role="strong">maintainer</emphasis> through a
207 <emphasis role="strong">sponsor</emphasis> or as a
208 <emphasis role="strong">Debian Maintainer</emphasis>.
209 </para>
210 <para>
211 Please note that you do not need to create any new package to become an
212 official Debian Developer. Contributing to the existing packages can provide a
213 path to becoming an official Debian Developer too. There are many packages
214 waiting for good maintainers (see <xref linkend="choose"/>).
215 </para>
216 <para>
217 Since we focus only on technical aspects of packaging in this document,
218 please refer to the following to learn how Debian functions and how you can get involved.
219 </para>
220 <itemizedlist>
221 <listitem><para><ulink url="&logiciellibre;">Debian: 17 years of Free Software, "do-ocracy", and democracy</ulink> (Introductory slides) </para> </listitem>
222 <listitem><para><ulink url="&debianorghelp;">How can you help Debian?</ulink> (official) </para> </listitem>
223 <listitem><para><ulink url="&debianfaqhelp;">The Debian GNU/Linux FAQ, Chapter 13 - "Contributing to the Debian Project"</ulink> (semi-official) </para> </listitem>
224 <listitem><para><ulink url="&debianwikihelp;">Debian Wiki, HelpDebian</ulink> (supplemental) </para> </listitem>
225 <listitem><para><ulink url="&nm-do;">Debian New Maintainer site</ulink> (official) </para> </listitem>
226 <listitem><para><ulink url="&debianmentorfaq;">Debian Mentors FAQ</ulink> (supplemental) </para> </listitem>
227 </itemizedlist>
228 </section>
229 <section id="needprogs"><title>Programs needed for development</title>
230 <para>
231 Before you start anything, you should make sure that you have properly
232 installed some additional packages needed for development. Note that the list
233 doesn't contain any packages marked <literal>essential</literal> or
234 <literal>required</literal> - we expect that you have those installed already.
235 </para>
236 <para>
237 The following packages come with the standard Debian installation, so you
238 probably have them already (along with any additional packages they depend on).
239 Still, you should check it with <literal>aptitude show
240 <replaceable>package</replaceable></literal>
241 or with <literal>dpkg -s <replaceable>package</replaceable></literal>.
242 </para>
243 <para>
244 The most important package to install on your development system is the
245 <systemitem role="package">build-essential</systemitem> package. Once you try
246 to install that, it will <emphasis>pull in</emphasis> other packages required to
247 have a basic build environment.
248 </para>
249 <para>
250 For some types of packages, that is all you will require; however, there is
251 another set of packages that while not essential for all package builds are
252 useful to have installed or may be required by your package:
253 </para>
254 <itemizedlist>
255 <listitem>
256 <para>
257 <systemitem role="package">autoconf</systemitem>, <systemitem
258 role="package">automake</systemitem>, and <systemitem
259 role="package">autotools-dev</systemitem> - many newer programs use configure
260 scripts and <filename>Makefile</filename> files preprocessed with the help of
261 programs like these (see <literal>info autoconf</literal>, <literal>info
262 automake</literal>). <systemitem role="package">autotools-dev</systemitem>
263 keeps up-to-date versions of certain auto files and has documentation about the
264 best way to use those files.
265 </para>
266 </listitem>
267 <listitem>
268 <para>
269 <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> and
270 <systemitem role="package">dh-make</systemitem> -
271 <systemitem role="package">dh-make</systemitem> is necessary to create
272 the skeleton of our example package, and it will use some of the
273 <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> tools for creating
274 packages. They are not essential for this purpose, but are
275 <emphasis>highly</emphasis> recommended for new maintainers. It makes
276 the whole process very much easier to start, and to control afterwards.
277 (See <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dh_make</refentrytitle>
278 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>, <citerefentry>
279 <refentrytitle>debhelper</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
280 </citerefentry>.) <footnote><para> There are also some more specialized
281 but similar packages such as
282 <systemitem role="package">dh-make-perl</systemitem>,
283 <systemitem role="package">dh-make-php</systemitem>, etc. </para>
284 </footnote>
285 </para>
286 </listitem>
287 <listitem>
288 <para>
289 <systemitem role="package">devscripts</systemitem> - this package contains some
290 useful scripts that can be helpful for maintainers, but they are also
291 not necessary for building packages. Packages recommended and suggested
292 by this package are worth looking into. (See <ulink url="&devscripts-readme;"/>.)
293 </para>
294 </listitem>
295 <listitem>
296 <para>
297 <systemitem role="package">fakeroot</systemitem> - this utility lets you
298 emulate being root which is necessary for some parts of the build process.
299 (See <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>fakeroot</refentrytitle>
300 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.)
301 </para>
302 </listitem>
303 <listitem>
304 <para>
305 <systemitem role="package">file</systemitem> - this handy program can determine
306 what type a file is. (See <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>file</refentrytitle>
307 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.)
308 </para>
309 </listitem>
310 <listitem>
311 <para>
312 <systemitem role="package">gfortran</systemitem> - the GNU Fortran 95 compiler,
313 necessary if your program is written in Fortran. (See <citerefentry>
314 <refentrytitle>gfortran</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
315 </citerefentry>.)
316 </para>
317 </listitem>
318 <listitem>
319 <para>
320 <systemitem role="package">git</systemitem> - this package provides a popular
321 version control system designed to handle very large projects with speed and
322 efficiency; it is used for many high profile open source projects, most notably
323 the Linux kernel. (See <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>git</refentrytitle>
324 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>,
325 <ulink url="&git-doc;">git Manual</ulink>.)
326 </para>
327 </listitem>
328 <listitem>
329 <para>
330 <systemitem role="package">gnupg</systemitem> - a tool that enables you to
331 digitally <emphasis>sign</emphasis> packages. This is especially important if
332 you want to distribute it to other people, and you will certainly be doing that
333 when your work gets included in the Debian distribution. (See <citerefentry>
334 <refentrytitle>gpg</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.)
335 </para>
336 </listitem>
337 <listitem>
338 <para>
339 <systemitem role="package">gpc</systemitem> - the GNU Pascal compiler,
340 necessary if your program is written in Pascal. Worthy of note here is
341 <systemitem role="package">fp-compiler</systemitem>, the Free Pascal Compiler,
342 which is also good at this task. (See <citerefentry>
343 <refentrytitle>gpc</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>,
344 <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>ppc386</refentrytitle>
345 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.)
346 </para>
347 </listitem>
348 <listitem>
349 <para>
350 <systemitem role="package">lintian</systemitem> - this is the Debian package
351 checker, which can let you know of any common mistakes after you build the
352 package, and explains the errors found. (See <citerefentry>
353 <refentrytitle>lintian</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
354 </citerefentry>,
355 <ulink url="&lintian-doc;">Lintian User's Manual</ulink>.)
356 </para>
357 </listitem>
358 <listitem>
359 <para>
360 <systemitem role="package">patch</systemitem> - this very useful utility will
361 take a file containing a difference listing (produced by the
362 <command>diff</command> program) and apply it to the original file, producing a
363 patched version. (See <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>patch</refentrytitle>
364 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.)
365 </para>
366 </listitem>
367 <listitem>
368 <para>
369 <systemitem role="package">patchutils</systemitem> - this package contains some
370 utilities to work with patches such as the <command>lsdiff</command>,
371 <command>interdiff</command> and <command>filterdiff</command> commands.
372 </para>
373 </listitem>
374 <listitem>
375 <para>
376 <systemitem role="package">pbuilder</systemitem> - this package contains
377 programs which are used for creating and maintaining <command>chroot</command>
378 environment. Building Debian package in this <command>chroot</command>
379 environment verifies the proper build dependency and avoid FTBFS (Fails To
380 Build From Source) bugs. (see <citerefentry>
381 <refentrytitle>pbuilder</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
382 </citerefentry> and <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>pdebuild</refentrytitle>
383 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>)
384 </para>
385 </listitem>
386 <listitem>
387 <para>
388 <systemitem role="package">perl</systemitem> - Perl is one of the most used
389 interpreted scripting languages on today's Unix-like systems, often referred to
390 as Unix's Swiss Army Chainsaw. (See <citerefentry>
391 <refentrytitle>perl</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.)
392 </para>
393 </listitem>
394 <listitem>
395 <para>
396 <systemitem role="package">python</systemitem> - Python is another of the most
397 used interpreted scripting languages on the Debian system, combining
398 remarkable power with very clear syntax. (See <citerefentry>
399 <refentrytitle>python</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.)
400 </para>
401 </listitem>
402 <listitem>
403 <para>
404 <systemitem role="package">quilt</systemitem> - this package helps you to
405 manage large numbers of patches by keeping track of the changes each patch
406 makes. Patches can be applied, un-applied, refreshed, and more. (See
407 <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>quilt</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
408 <ulink url="&quilt-pdf;">quilt.pdf</ulink>.)
409 </para>
410 </listitem>
411 <listitem>
412 <para>
413 <systemitem role="package">xutils-dev</systemitem> - some programs, usually
414 those made for X11, also use these programs to generate
415 <filename>Makefile</filename> files from sets of macro functions. (See
416 <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>imake</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
417 </citerefentry>, <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>xmkmf</refentrytitle>
418 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.)
419 </para>
420 </listitem>
421 </itemizedlist>
422 <para>
423 The short descriptions that are given above only serve to introduce you to what
424 each package does. Before continuing please read the documentation
425 of each relevant program including ones installed through the package dependency such as
426 <command>make</command>, at least, for the standard usage. It may seem like heavy
427 going now, but later on you'll be <emphasis>very</emphasis> glad you read it.
428 If you have specific questions later, I would suggest re-reading the documents
429 mentioned above.
430 </para>
431 </section>
432 <section id="needdocs"><title>Documentation needed for development</title>
433 <para>
434 The following is the <emphasis>very important</emphasis> documentation which
435 you should read along with this document:
436 </para>
437 <itemizedlist>
438 <listitem>
439 <para>
440 <systemitem role="package">debian-policy</systemitem> - the <ulink url="&debian-policy;">Debian Policy
441 Manual</ulink> includes explanations of the structure and contents of the
442 Debian archive, several OS design issues, the <ulink url="&fhs;">Filesystem Hierarchy Standard</ulink>
443 (FHS, which says where each file and directory should be), etc. For you, the most
444 important thing is that it describes requirements that each package must
445 satisfy to be included in the distribution. (See the local copies of
446 <ulink url="&policy-pdf;">policy.pdf</ulink> and <ulink url="&fhs-pdf;">fhs-2.3.pdf</ulink>.)
447 </para>
448 </listitem>
449 <listitem>
450 <para>
451 <systemitem role="package">developers-reference</systemitem>
452 - the <ulink url="&developers-reference;">Debian Developer's Reference</ulink>
453 describes all matters not specifically about the technical
454 details of packaging, like the structure of the archive, how to rename, orphan,
455 or adopt packages, how to do NMUs, how to manage bugs, best packaging practices,
456 when and where to upload etc. (See the local copy of
457 <ulink url="&developers-refpdf;">developers-reference.pdf</ulink>.)
458 </para>
459 </listitem>
460 </itemizedlist>
461 <para>
462 The following is the <emphasis>important</emphasis> documentation which
463 you should read along with this document:
464 </para>
465 <itemizedlist>
466 <listitem>
467 <para>
468 <ulink url="&autotools-tutorial;">Autotools
469 Tutorial</ulink> provides a very good tutorial for <ulink url="&gnu-build-system;">the GNU Build System known
470 as the GNU Autotools</ulink> whose most important components are Autoconf,
471 Automake, Libtool, and gettext.
472 </para>
473 </listitem>
474 <listitem>
475 <para>
476 <systemitem role="package">gnu-standards</systemitem> - this package contains
477 two pieces of documentation from the GNU project:
478 <ulink url="&gnu-standard;">GNU Coding Standards</ulink>, and
479 <ulink url="&gnu-maintainer;">Information for Maintainers of GNU Software</ulink>.
480 Although Debian does not require these to
481 be followed, these are still helpful as guidelines and common sense.
482 (See the local copies of
483 <ulink url="&gnu-standard-pdf;">standards.pdf</ulink> and
484 <ulink url="&gnu-maintainer-pdf;">maintain.pdf</ulink>.)
485 </para>
486 </listitem>
487 </itemizedlist>
488 <para>
489 If this document contradicts any of the documents mentioned above, they
490 are correct. Please file a bug report on the
491 <systemitem role="package">maint-guide</systemitem> package using
492 <command>reportbug</command>.
493 </para>
494 </section>
495 <section id="helpme"><title>Where to ask for help</title>
496 <para>
497 Before you decide to ask your question in some public place, please read the fine documentation.
498 </para>
499 <itemizedlist>
500 <listitem>
501 <para>
502 files in <filename>/usr/share/doc/<replaceable>package</replaceable></filename> for all pertinent packages
503 </para>
504 </listitem>
505 <listitem>
506 <para>
507 contents of <literal><command>man</command> <replaceable>command</replaceable></literal> for all pertinent commands
508 </para>
509 </listitem>
510 <listitem>
511 <para>
512 contents of <literal><command>info</command> <replaceable>command</replaceable></literal> for all pertinent commands
513 </para>
514 </listitem>
515 <listitem>
516 <para>
517 contents of <ulink url="&debian-mentors-ldo;">debian-mentors@lists.debian.org mailing list archive</ulink>
518 </para>
519 </listitem>
520 <listitem>
521 <para>
522 contents of <ulink url="&debian-devel-ldo;">debian-devel@lists.debian.org mailing list archive</ulink>
523 </para>
524 </listitem>
525 </itemizedlist>
526 <para>
527 You can use web search engines more effectively by including search strings
528 such as <literal>site:lists.debian.org</literal> to limit the domain.
529 </para>
530 <para>
531 Making a small test package is a good way to learn details of packaging.
532 Inspecting existing well maintained packages is the best way to learn how other
533 people make packages.
534 </para>
535 <para>
536 If you still have questions about packaging that you couldn't find answers to
537 in the available documentation and web resources, you can ask them interactively.
538 </para>
539 <itemizedlist>
540 <listitem>
541 <para>
542 <ulink url="&debian-mentors-ldo;">debian-mentors@lists.debian.org mailing list</ulink>. (This mailing list is for the novice.)
543 </para>
544 </listitem>
545 <listitem>
546 <para>
547 <ulink url="&debian-devel-ldo;">debian-devel@lists.debian.org mailing list</ulink>. (This mailing list is for the expert.)
548 </para>
549 </listitem>
550 <listitem>
551 <para>
552 <ulink url="&irc-debian;">IRC</ulink> such as <literal>#debian-mentors</literal>.
553 </para>
554 </listitem>
555 </itemizedlist>
556 <para>
557 The more experienced Debian developers will gladly help you, if you ask
558 properly after making your required efforts.
559 </para>
560 <para>
561 When you receive a bug report (yes, actual bug reports!), you will know that it
562 is time for you to dig into the
563 <ulink url="&bts;">Debian Bug Tracking System</ulink>
564 and read the documentation there, to be able to
565 deal with the reports efficiently. I highly recommend reading the
566 <ulink url="&devref-bug-handling;">Debian Developer's Reference, 5.8.
567 "Handling bugs"</ulink>.
568 </para>
569 <para>
570 Even if it all worked well, it's time to start praying. Why? Because in just
571 a few hours (or days) users from all around the world will start to use your
572 package, and if you made some critical error you'll get mailbombed by numerous
573 angry Debian users... Just kidding. :-)
574 </para>
575 <para>
576 Relax and be ready for bug reports, because there is a lot more work to be done
577 before your package will be fully in line with Debian policies and its best
578 practice guidelines (once again, read the <emphasis>real
579 documentation</emphasis> for details). Good luck!
580 </para>
581 </section>
582 </chapter>
583 <chapter id="first"><title>First steps</title>
584 <para>
585 Let's start by creating a package of your own (or, even better,
586 adopting an existing one).
587 </para>
588 <section id="workflow"><title>Debian package building workflow</title>
589 <para>
590 If you are making a Debian package with an upstream program, the
591 typical workflow of Debian package building involves generating several
592 specifically named files for each step as follows.
593 </para>
594 <itemizedlist>
595 <listitem>
596 <para>Get a copy of the upstream software, usually in a compressed tar format.</para>
597 <itemizedlist>
598 <listitem><literal><replaceable>package</replaceable>-<replaceable>version</replaceable>.tar.gz</literal></listitem>
599 </itemizedlist>
600 </listitem>
601 <listitem>
602 <para>
603 Add Debian-specific packaging modifications to the upstream program under the
604 <filename>debian</filename> directory, and create a non-native source package
605 (that is, the set of input files used for Debian package building) in
606 <literal>3.0 (quilt)</literal> format.
607 </para>
608 <itemizedlist>
609 <listitem><literal><replaceable>package</replaceable>_<replaceable>version</replaceable>.orig.tar.gz</literal></listitem>
610 <listitem><literal><replaceable>package</replaceable>_<replaceable>version</replaceable>-<replaceable>revision</replaceable>.debian.tar.gz</literal>
611 <footnote><para>For the older style of non-native Debian source packages in <literal>1.0</literal> format,
612 <literal><replaceable>package</replaceable>_<replaceable>version</replaceable>-<replaceable>revision</replaceable>.diff.gz</literal>
613 is used instead. </para></footnote></listitem>
614 <listitem><literal><replaceable>package</replaceable>_<replaceable>version</replaceable>-<replaceable>revision</replaceable>.dsc</literal></listitem>
615 </itemizedlist>
616 </listitem>
617 <listitem>
618 <para>
619 Build Debian binary packages, which are ordinary installable package files in <literal>.deb</literal> format (or <literal>.udeb</literal> format, used by the Debian Installer) from the Debian source package.
620 </para>
621 <itemizedlist>
622 <listitem><literal><replaceable>package</replaceable>_<replaceable>version</replaceable>-<replaceable>revision</replaceable>_<replaceable>arch</replaceable>.deb</literal></listitem>
623 </itemizedlist>
624 </listitem>
625 </itemizedlist>
626 <para>
627 Please note that the character separating
628 <literal><replaceable>package</replaceable></literal> and
629 <literal><replaceable>version</replaceable></literal> was changed from
630 <literal>-</literal> (hyphen) in the tarball name to
631 <literal>_</literal> (underscore) in the Debian package filenames.
632 </para>
633 <para>
634 In the file names above, replace
635 the <literal><replaceable>package</replaceable></literal> part with the <emphasis role="strong">package name</emphasis>,
636 the <literal><replaceable>version</replaceable></literal> part with the <emphasis role="strong">upstream version</emphasis>,
637 the <literal><replaceable>revision</replaceable></literal> part with the <emphasis role="strong">Debian revision</emphasis>,
638 and the <literal><replaceable>arch</replaceable></literal> part with the <emphasis role="strong">package architecture</emphasis>,
639 as defined in the Debian Policy Manual.
640 <footnote> <para> See
641 <ulink url="&policy-source;">5.6.1 Source</ulink>,
642 <ulink url="&policy-package;">5.6.7 Package</ulink>, and
643 <ulink url="&policy-version;">5.6.12 Version</ulink>.
644 The <emphasis role="strong">package architecture</emphasis> follows the
645 Debian Policy Manual: <ulink url="&policy-architecture;">5.6.8 Architecture</ulink>
646 and is automatically assigned by the package build process.</para></footnote>
647 </para>
648 <para>
649 If instead you are making a Debian-specific package with no upstream, the
650 typical workflow of Debian package building is simpler.
651 </para>
652 <itemizedlist>
653 <listitem>
654 <para>
655 Create a native Debian source package in the <literal>3.0 (native)</literal>
656 format using a single compressed tar file in which all files are included.
657 </para>
658 <itemizedlist>
659 <listitem><literal><replaceable>package</replaceable>_<replaceable>version</replaceable>.tar.gz</literal></listitem>
660 <listitem><literal><replaceable>package</replaceable>_<replaceable>version</replaceable>.dsc</literal></listitem>
661 </itemizedlist>
662 </listitem>
663 <listitem>
664 <para>
665 Build Debian binary packages from the native Debian source package.
666 </para>
667 <itemizedlist>
668 <listitem><literal><replaceable>package</replaceable>_<replaceable>version</replaceable>_<replaceable>arch</replaceable>.deb</literal></listitem>
669 </itemizedlist>
670 </listitem>
671 </itemizedlist>
672 <para>
673 Each step of this outline is explained with detailed examples in later sections.
674 </para>
675 </section>
676 <section id="choose"><title>Choose your program</title>
677 <para>
678 You have probably chosen the package you want to create. The first thing you
679 need to do is check if the package is in the distribution archive already by
680 using the following.
681 </para>
682 <itemizedlist>
683 <listitem>
684 <para>the <command>aptitude</command> command</para>
685 </listitem>
686 <listitem>
687 <para>the <ulink url="&packages-do;">Debian packages</ulink> web page</para>
688 </listitem>
689 <listitem>
690 <para>the <ulink url="&packages-qa-do;">Debian Package Tracking System</ulink> web page</para>
691 </listitem>
692 </itemizedlist>
693 <para>
694 If the package already exists, well, install it! :-) If it happens to be
695 <emphasis role="strong">orphaned</emphasis> (that is, if its
696 maintainer is set to <ulink url="&qa-do;">Debian QA Group</ulink>),
697 you may be able to pick it up if it's still available. You may also
698 adopt a package whose maintainer has filed a Request for Adoption
699 (<emphasis role="strong">RFA</emphasis>).<footnote> <para>See
700 <ulink url="&devref-adopt;">Debian Developer's Reference 5.9.5.
701 "Adopting a package"</ulink>.</para> </footnote>
702 </para>
703 <para>
704 There are several package ownership status resources.
705 </para>
706 <itemizedlist>
707 <listitem>
708 <para> <ulink url="&wnpp-do;">Work-Needing and Prospective Packages</ulink> </para>
709 </listitem>
710 <listitem>
711 <para> <ulink url="&wnpp-bts;">Debian Bug report logs: Bugs in pseudo-package <systemitem role="package">wnpp</systemitem> in <literal>unstable</literal></ulink> </para>
712 </listitem>
713 <listitem>
714 <para> <ulink url="&wnpp-dn;">Debian Packages that Need Lovin'</ulink> </para>
715 </listitem>
716 <listitem>
717 <para> <ulink url="&wnpp-debtags;">Browse <systemitem role="package">wnpp</systemitem> bugs based on debtags</ulink> </para>
718 </listitem>
719 </itemizedlist>
720 <para>
721 As a side note, it's important to point out that Debian already has packages
722 for most kinds of programs, and the number of packages already in the Debian
723 archive is much larger than that of contributors with upload rights. Thus,
724 contributions to packages already in the archive are far more appreciated (and
725 more likely to receive sponsorship) by other developers <footnote><para> Having
726 said that, there will of course always be new programs that are worth
727 packaging. </para> </footnote>. You can contribute in various ways.
728 </para>
729 <itemizedlist>
730 <listitem>
731 <para>
732 taking over orphaned, yet actively used, packages
733 </para>
734 </listitem>
735 <listitem>
736 <para>
737 joining <ulink url="&teams;">packaging teams</ulink>
738 </para>
739 </listitem>
740 <listitem>
741 <para>
742 triaging bugs of very popular packages
743 </para>
744 </listitem>
745 <listitem>
746 <para>
747 preparing <ulink url="&devref-nmu;">QA or NMU uploads</ulink>
748 </para>
749 </listitem>
750 </itemizedlist>
751 <para>
752 If you are able to adopt the package, get the sources (with something like
753 <literal>apt-get source <replaceable>packagename</replaceable></literal>) and
754 examine them. This document unfortunately doesn't include comprehensive
755 information about adopting packages. Thankfully you shouldn't have a hard time
756 figuring out how the package works since someone has already done the initial
757 setup for you. Keep reading, though; a lot of the advice below will still be
758 applicable for your case.
759 </para>
760 <para>
761 If the package is new, and you decide you'd like to see it in Debian, proceed
762 as follows:
763 </para>
764 <itemizedlist>
765 <listitem>
766 <para>
767 First, you must know that the program works, and have tried it for some time to
768 confirm its usefulness.
769 </para>
770 </listitem>
771 <listitem>
772 <para>
773 You must check that no one else is already working on the package on the
774 <ulink url="&wnpp-do;">Work-Needing and Prospective Packages</ulink> site.
775 If no one else is working on it, file an ITP (Intent
776 To Package) bug report to the <systemitem role="package">wnpp</systemitem>
777 pseudo-package using <command>reportbug</command>. If someone's already on it,
778 contact them if you feel you need to. If not - find another interesting
779 program that nobody is maintaining.
780 </para>
781 </listitem>
782 <listitem>
783 <para>
784 The software <emphasis role="strong">must have a license</emphasis>.
785 </para>
786 <itemizedlist>
787 <listitem>
788 <para>
789 For the <literal>main</literal> section, Debian Policy requires it
790 <emphasis role="strong">to be fully compliant with the Debian Free Software
791 Guidelines</emphasis> (<ulink url="&dfsg;">DFSG</ulink>)
792 and <emphasis role="strong">not to require a package outside of
793 <literal>main</literal></emphasis> for compilation or execution. This
794 is the desired case.
795 </para>
796 </listitem>
797 <listitem>
798 <para>
799 For the <literal>contrib</literal> section, it must comply with the
800 DFSG but it may require a package outside of <literal>main</literal> for
801 compilation or execution.
802 </para>
803 </listitem>
804 <listitem>
805 <para>
806 For the <literal>non-free</literal> section, it may be non-compliant
807 with the DFSG but it <emphasis role="strong">must be distributable</emphasis>.
808 </para>
809 </listitem>
810 <listitem>
811 <para>
812 If you are unsure about where it should go, post the license text on
813 <ulink url="&debian-legal-ldo;">debian-legal@lists.debian.org</ulink>
814 and ask for advice.
815 </para>
816 </listitem>
817 </itemizedlist>
818 </listitem>
819 <listitem>
820 <para>
821 The program should <emphasis role="strong">not</emphasis> introduce security
822 and maintenance concerns to the Debian system.
823 </para>
824 <itemizedlist>
825 <listitem>
826 <para>
827 The program should be well documented and its code needs to be understandable
828 (i.e. not obfuscated).
829 </para>
830 </listitem>
831 <listitem>
832 <para>
833 You should contact the program's author(s) to check if they agree with packaging it
834 and are amicable to Debian. It is important to be able to consult with the author(s)
835 in case of any problems with the program, so don't try to package
836 unmaintained software.
837 </para>
838 </listitem>
839 <listitem>
840 <para>
841 The program certainly should <emphasis role="strong">not</emphasis> run setuid
842 root, or even better, it shouldn't need to be setuid or setgid to anything.
843 </para>
844 </listitem>
845 <listitem>
846 <para>
847 The program should not be a daemon, or go in an
848 <filename>*/sbin</filename> directory, or open a port as root.
849 </para>
850 </listitem>
851 </itemizedlist>
852 </listitem>
853 </itemizedlist>
854 <para>
855 Of course, the last one is just a safety measures, and intended to save you from
856 enraging users if you do something wrong in some setuid daemon... When you gain
857 more experience in packaging, you'll be able to package such software.
858 </para>
859 <para>
860 As a new maintainer, you are encouraged to get some experience in packaging
861 with easier packages and discouraged from creating complicated packages.
862 </para>
863 <itemizedlist>
864 <listitem><para>Simple packages</para>
865 <itemizedlist>
866 <listitem><para>single binary package, arch = all (collection of data such as wallpaper graphics)</para></listitem>
867 <listitem><para>single binary package, arch = all (executables written in an interpreted language such as POSIX shell)</para></listitem>
868 </itemizedlist>
869 </listitem>
870 <listitem><para>Intermediate complexity packages</para>
871 <itemizedlist>
872 <listitem><para>single binary package, arch = any (ELF binary executables compiled from languages such as C and C++)</para></listitem>
873 <listitem><para>multiple binary packages, arch = any + all (packages for ELF binary executables + documentation)</para></listitem>
874 <listitem><para>upstream source in a format other than <filename>tar.gz</filename> or <filename>tar.bz2</filename></para></listitem>
875 <listitem><para>upstream source containing undistributable contents</para></listitem>
876 </itemizedlist>
877 </listitem>
878 <listitem><para>High complexity packages</para>
879 <itemizedlist>
880 <listitem><para>interpreter module package used by other packages</para></listitem>
881 <listitem><para>generic ELF library package used by other packages</para></listitem>
882 <listitem><para>multiple binary packages including an ELF library package</para></listitem>
883 <listitem><para>source package with multiple upstream sources</para></listitem>
884 <listitem><para>kernel module packages</para></listitem>
885 <listitem><para>kernel patch packages</para></listitem>
886 <listitem><para>any package with non-trivial maintainer scripts</para></listitem>
887 </itemizedlist>
888 </listitem>
889 </itemizedlist>
890 <para>
891 Packaging high complexity packages is not too hard, but it requires a bit more
892 knowledge. You should seek specific guidance for every complex feature. For
893 example, some languages have their own sub-policy documents:
894 </para>
895 <itemizedlist>
896 <listitem><para><ulink url="&policy-perl;">Perl policy</ulink></para></listitem>
897 <listitem><para><ulink url="&policy-python;">Python policy</ulink></para></listitem>
898 <listitem><para><ulink url="&policy-java;">Java policy</ulink></para></listitem>
899 </itemizedlist>
900 <para>
901 There is another old Latin saying: <emphasis>fabricando fit faber</emphasis>
902 (practice makes perfect). It is <emphasis>highly</emphasis> recommended to
903 practice and experiment with all the steps of Debian packaging with simple packages
904 while reading this tutorial. A trivial upstream tarball
905 <filename>hello-sh-1.0.tar.gz</filename> created as followings may offer
906 a good starting point.<footnote><para>Do not worry about the missing
907 <filename>Makefile</filename>. You can install the <command>hello</command>
908 command by simply using <command>debhelper</command> as in
909 <xref linkend="install"/>, or by modifying the upstream source to add a new
910 <filename>Makefile</filename> with the <literal>install</literal> target as in
911 <xref linkend="modify"/>.</para></footnote>
912 </para>
913 <screen>
914 $ mkdir -p hello-sh/hello-sh-1.0; cd hello-sh/hello-sh-1.0
915 $ cat &gt; hello &lt;&lt;EOF
916 #!/bin/sh
917 # (C) 2011 Foo Bar, GPL2+
918 echo "Hello!"
919 EOF
920 $ chmod 755 hello
921 $ cd ..
922 $ tar -cvzf hello-sh-1.0.tar.gz hello-sh-1.0
923 </screen>
924 </section>
925 <section id="getit"><title>Get the program, and try it out</title>
926 <para>
927 So the first thing to do is to find and download the original source code.
928 Presumably you already have the source file that you picked up at the
929 author's homepage. Sources for free Unix programs usually come in
930 <command>tar</command>+<command>gzip</command> format with the extension
931 <filename>.tar.gz</filename>,
932 <command>tar</command>+<command>bzip2</command> format with the extension
933 <filename>.tar.bz2</filename>, or
934 <command>tar</command>+<command>xz</command> format with the extension
935 <filename>.tar.xz</filename>. These usually contain a directory called
936 <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>-<replaceable>version</replaceable></filename>
937 with all the sources inside.
938 </para>
939 <para>
940 If the latest version of the source is available through a VCS such as Git,
941 Subversion, or CVS, you need to get it with <literal>git
942 clone</literal>, <literal>svn co</literal>, or <literal>cvs co</literal> and
943 repack it into <command>tar</command>+<command>gzip</command> format yourself
944 by using the <literal>--exclude-vcs</literal> option.
945 </para>
946 <para>
947 If your program's source comes as some other sort of archive (for instance, the
948 filename ends in <filename>.Z</filename> or
949 <filename>.zip</filename><footnote><para> You can identify the archive format
950 using the <command>file</command> command when the file extension is not
951 enough. </para> </footnote>), you should also unpack it with the
952 appropriate tools and repack it.
953 </para>
954 <para>
955 If your program's source comes with some contents which do not comply with
956 DFSG, you should also unpack it to remove such contents and repack it with a
957 modified upstream version containing <literal>dfsg</literal>.
958 </para>
959 <para>
960 As an example, I'll use a program called <command>gentoo</command>, a GTK+
961 file manager.
962 <footnote><para> This program is already packaged. The
963 <ulink url="&gentoo-package;">current version</ulink> uses Autotools as its
964 build structure and is substantially different from the following examples,
965 which were based on version 0.9.12.</para>
966 </footnote>
967 </para>
968 <para>
969 Create a subdirectory under your home directory named
970 <filename>debian</filename> or <filename>deb</filename> or anything you find
971 appropriate (e.g. just <filename>~/gentoo</filename> would do fine in this
972 case). Place the downloaded archive in it, and extract it (with <literal>tar
973 xzf gentoo-0.9.12.tar.gz</literal>). Make sure there are no warning
974 messages, even <emphasis>irrelevant</emphasis> ones, because other
975 people's unpacking tools may or may not ignore these anomalies, so they
976 may have problems unpacking them. Your shell command line may look
977 something like this:
978 </para>
979 <screen>
980 $ mkdir ~/gentoo ; cd ~/gentoo
981 $ wget http://<replaceable>www.example.org</replaceable>/gentoo-0.9.12.tar.gz
982 $ tar xvzf gentoo-0.9.12.tar.gz
983 $ ls -F
984 gentoo-0.9.12/
985 gentoo-0.9.12.tar.gz
986 </screen>
987 <para>
988 Now you have another subdirectory, called <filename>gentoo-0.9.12</filename>.
989 Change to that directory and <emphasis>thoroughly</emphasis> read the provided
990 documentation. Usually there are files named <filename>README*</filename>,
991 <filename>INSTALL*</filename>, <filename>*.lsm</filename> or
992 <filename>*.html</filename>. You must find instructions on how to
993 compile and install the program (most probably they'll assume you want to
994 install to the <filename>/usr/local/bin</filename> directory; you won't be doing
995 that, but more on that later in <xref linkend="destdir"/>).
996 </para>
997 <para>
998 You should start packaging with a completely clean (pristine) source directory,
999 or simply with freshly unpacked sources.
1000 </para>
1001 </section>
1002 <section id="simplemake"><title>Simple build systems</title>
1003 <para>
1004 Simple programs usually come with a <filename>Makefile</filename> and can
1005 be compiled just by invoking <literal>make</literal>.<footnote><para>
1006 Many modern programs come with a script <filename>configure</filename> which
1007 when executed creates a <filename>Makefile</filename> customized for
1008 your system.</para></footnote> Some of them support
1009 <literal>make check</literal>, which runs included self-tests. Installation
1010 to the destination directories is usually done with <literal>make
1011 install</literal>.
1012 </para>
1013 <para>
1014 Now try to compile and run your program, to make sure it works properly and
1015 doesn't break something else while it's installing or running.
1016 </para>
1017 <para>
1018 Also, you can usually run <literal>make clean</literal> (or better
1019 <literal>make distclean</literal>) to clean up the build directory. Sometimes
1020 there's even a <literal>make uninstall</literal> which can be used to remove
1021 all the installed files.
1022 </para>
1023 </section>
1024 <section id="portable"><title>Popular portable build systems</title>
1025 <para>
1026 A lot of free software programs are written in the <ulink url="&c-program;">C</ulink> and
1027 <ulink url="&cxx;">C++</ulink> languages. Many of these use Autotools or
1028 CMake to make them portable across different platforms. These build tools need
1029 to be used to generate the <filename>Makefile</filename> and other
1030 required source files first. Then, such programs are built using the usual
1031 <literal>make; make install</literal>.
1032 </para>
1033 <para>
1034 <ulink url="&gnu-build-system;">Autotools</ulink> is the GNU build
1035 system comprising <ulink url="&autoconf;">Autoconf</ulink>,
1036 <ulink url="&automake;">Automake</ulink>,
1037 <ulink url="&libtool;">Libtool</ulink>, and
1038 <ulink url="&gettext;">gettext</ulink>. You can recognize
1039 such sources by the <filename>configure.ac</filename>,
1040 <filename>Makefile.am</filename>, and <filename>Makefile.in</filename> files.
1041 <footnote><para>Autotools is too big to deal in this small tutorial. This
1042 section is meant to provide keywords and references only. Please make sure to read the
1043 <ulink url="&autotools-tutorial;">Autotools Tutorial</ulink> and
1044 <ulink url="&autotools-readme;"/>, if you need to use it.</para></footnote>
1045 </para>
1046 <para>
1047 The first step of the Autotools workflow is usually that upstream runs
1048 <literal>autoreconf -i -f</literal> in the source directory and
1049 distributes the generated files along with the source.
1050 </para>
1051 <screen>
1052 configure.ac-----+-&gt; autoreconf -+-&gt; configure
1053 Makefile.am -----+ | +-&gt; Makefile.in
1054 src/Makefile.am -+ | +-&gt; src/Makefile.in
1055 | +-&gt; config.h.in
1056 automake
1057 aclocal
1058 aclocal.m4
1059 autoheader
1060 </screen>
1061 <para>
1062 Editing <filename>configure.ac</filename> and <filename>Makefile.am</filename>
1063 files requires some knowledge of <command>autoconf</command> and
1064 <command>automake</command>. See <literal>info autoconf</literal> and
1065 <literal>info automake</literal>.
1066 </para>
1067 <para>
1068 The second step of the Autotools workflow is usually that the user obtains this
1069 distributed source and runs <literal>./configure &amp;&amp; make</literal> in
1070 the source directory to compile the program into an executable command
1071 <command><replaceable>binary</replaceable></command>.
1072 </para>
1073 <screen>
1074 Makefile.in -----+ +-&gt; Makefile -----+-&gt; make -&gt; <replaceable>binary</replaceable>
1075 src/Makefile.in -+-&gt; ./configure -+-&gt; src/Makefile -+
1076 config.h.in -----+ +-&gt; config.h -----+
1077 |
1078 config.status -+
1079 config.guess --+
1080 </screen>
1081 <para>
1082 You can change many things in the <filename>Makefile</filename>; for
1083 instance you can change the default location for file installation
1084 using the option <command>./configure --prefix=/usr</command>.
1085 </para>
1086 <para>
1087 Although it is not required, updating the <filename>configure</filename> and
1088 other files with <literal>autoreconf -i -f</literal> may improve
1089 the compatibility of the source.
1090 <footnote><para>You can automate this by using
1091 <systemitem role="package">dh-autoreconf</systemitem> package.
1092 See <xref linkend="customrules"/>.</para></footnote>
1093 </para>
1094 <para>
1095 <ulink url="&cmake;">CMake</ulink> is an alternative
1096 build system. You can recognize such sources by the
1097 <filename>CMakeLists.txt</filename> file.
1098 </para>
1099 </section>
1100 <section id="namever"><title>Package name and version</title>
1101 <para>
1102 If the upstream source comes as <filename>gentoo-0.9.12.tar.gz</filename>, you can
1103 take <literal>gentoo</literal> as the (source) <emphasis role="strong">package name</emphasis>
1104 and <literal>0.9.12</literal> as the <emphasis role="strong">upstream version</emphasis>.
1105 These are used in the <filename>debian/changelog</filename> file described later in
1106 <xref linkend="changelog"/>, too.
1107 </para>
1108 <para>
1109 Although this simple approach works most of the times, you may need to adjust
1110 <emphasis role="strong">package name</emphasis> and
1111 <emphasis role="strong">upstream version</emphasis> by renaming the upstream
1112 source to follow Debian Policy and existing convention.
1113 </para>
1114 <para>
1115 You must choose the <emphasis role="strong">package name</emphasis>
1116 to consist only of lower case letters (<literal>a-z</literal>), digits
1117 (<literal>0-9</literal>), plus (<literal>+</literal>) and minus
1118 (<literal>-</literal>) signs, and periods (<literal>.</literal>). It must be
1119 at least two characters long, must start with an alphanumeric character, and
1120 must not be the same as existing ones.
1121 It is a good idea to keep its length within 30 characters.
1122 <footnote><para>The default package name field length of <command>aptitude</command> is 30. For more than 90% of packages, the package name is less than 24 characters.</para></footnote>
1123 </para>
1124 <!--
1125 Osamu's archive stat (2011-04-23, sid, kfreebsd-amd64):
1126 === stat for package name string length ===
1127 11 1947 36.9% mode
1128 14 1717 54.7% 50% median
1129 23 611 91.0% 90%
1130 32 89 99.0% 99%
1131 41 12 99.9% 99.9%
1132 52 1 100.0%
1133 Previous 20 chars is becoming too short for 17% of packages
1134 Default aptitude setting display up to 30 chars (98.3%).
1135 -->
1136 <para>
1137 If upstream uses some generic term such as <literal>test-suite</literal> for
1138 its name, it is a good idea to rename it to identify its contents explicitly and avoid namespace pollution.
1139 <footnote><para>If you follow the
1140 <ulink url="&devref-newpackage;">Debian Developer's Reference 5.1. "New packages"</ulink>,
1141 the ITP process will usually catch this kind of issues.</para></footnote>
1142 </para>
1143 <para>
1144 You should choose the <emphasis role="strong">upstream version</emphasis>
1145 to consist only of
1146 alphanumerics (<literal>0-9A-Za-z</literal>), plus (<literal>+</literal>),
1147 tildes (<literal>~</literal>), and periods (<literal>.</literal>). It must
1148 start with a digit (<literal>0-9</literal>). <footnote><para>This stricter
1149 rule should help you avoid confusing file names.</para></footnote>
1150 It is good idea to keep its length within 8 characters if possible.
1151 <footnote><para>The default version field length of <command>aptitude</command> is 10. The Debian revision with preceding hyphen usually consumes 2. For more than 80% of packages, the upstream version is less than 8 characters and the Debian revision is less than 2 characters. For more than 90% of packages, the upstream version is less than 10 characters and the Debian revision is less than 3 characters.</para></footnote>
1152 </para>
1153 <!--
1154 Osamu's archive stat (2011-04-23, sid, kfreebsd-amd64):
1155 === stat for upstream version string length ===
1156 5 9765 60.2% 50% median and mode
1157 6 3765 73.3%
1158 7 2789 82.9%
1159 8 1158 86.9%
1160 9 501 88.6%
1161 10 773 91.3% 90%
1162 18 55 99.1% 99%
1163 27 11 99.9% 99.9
1164 35 6 100.0%
1165 === stat for debian revision string length ===
1166 1 22556 83.3% 50% median and mode
1167 2 1106 87.2%
1168 3 1312 91.7% 90%
1169 4 2127 99.1% 99%
1170 7 14 99.9% 99.9%
1171
1172 aptitude display 10 = 8char for up + 1char (for -) + 1char for deb
1173 90chars as max for file name of binary debs (package+up+deb+arch+.deb)
1174 -->
1175 <para>
1176 If upstream does not use a normal versioning scheme such as
1177 <literal>2.30.32</literal> but uses some kind of date such as
1178 <literal>09Oct23</literal>, a random codename string, or a VCS hash value as part
1179 of the version, make sure to remove them from the
1180 <emphasis role="strong">upstream version</emphasis>. Such information can be
1181 recorded in the <filename>debian/changelog</filename> file. If you need to
1182 invent a version string, use the <literal>YYYYMMDD</literal> format such as
1183 <literal>20110429</literal> as upstream version. This ensures that
1184 <command>dpkg</command> interprets later versions correctly as upgrades.
1185 </para>
1186 <para>
1187 Version strings <footnote><para>Version strings may be
1188 <emphasis role="strong">upstream version</emphasis>
1189 (<literal><replaceable>version</replaceable></literal>),
1190 <emphasis role="strong">Debian revision</emphasis>
1191 (<literal><replaceable>revision</replaceable></literal>), or
1192 <emphasis role="strong">version</emphasis>
1193 (<literal><replaceable>version</replaceable>-<replaceable>revision</replaceable></literal>).
1194 See <xref linkend="newrevision"/> for how the
1195 <emphasis role="strong">Debian revision</emphasis> is incremented.
1196 </para></footnote>
1197 can be compared using <citerefentry>
1198 <refentrytitle>dpkg</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> as follows.
1199 </para>
1200 <screen>
1201 $ dpkg --compare-versions <replaceable>ver1</replaceable> <replaceable>op</replaceable> <replaceable>ver2</replaceable>
1202 </screen>
1203 <para>
1204 The version comparison rule can be summarized as:
1205 </para>
1206 <itemizedlist>
1207 <listitem><para>Strings are compared from the head to the tail.</para></listitem>
1208 <listitem><para>Letters are larger than digits.</para></listitem>
1209 <listitem><para>Numbers are compared as integers.</para></listitem>
1210 <listitem><para>Letters are compared in ASCII code order.</para></listitem>
1211 <listitem><para>There are special rules for period
1212 (<literal>.</literal>), plus (<literal>+</literal>), and tilde
1213 (<literal>~</literal>) characters, as follows.</para>
1214 <para>
1215 <literal>0.0</literal> &lt;
1216 <literal>0.5</literal> &lt;
1217 <literal>0.10</literal> &lt;
1218 <literal>0.99</literal> &lt;
1219 <literal>1</literal> &lt;
1220 <literal>1.0~rc1</literal> &lt;
1221 <literal>1.0</literal> &lt;
1222 <literal>1.0+b1</literal> &lt;
1223 <literal>1.0+nmu1</literal> &lt;
1224 <literal>1.1</literal> &lt;
1225 <literal>2.0</literal>
1226 </para>
1227 </listitem>
1228 </itemizedlist>
1229 <para>
1230 One tricky case occurs when upstream releases
1231 <filename>gentoo-0.9.12-ReleaseCandidate-99.tar.gz</filename> as the
1232 pre-release of <filename>gentoo-0.9.12.tar.gz</filename>. You need to make
1233 sure that the upgrade works properly by renaming the upstream source to
1234 <filename>gentoo-0.9.12~rc99.tar.gz</filename>.
1235 </para>
1236 </section>
1237 <section id="dh-make"><title>Setting up <command>dh_make</command></title>
1238 <para>
1239 Set up the shell environment variables <literal>$DEBEMAIL</literal> and
1240 <literal>$DEBFULLNAME</literal> so that various Debian maintenance
1241 tools recognize your email address and name to use for packages. <footnote><para> The
1242 following text assumes you are using Bash as your login shell. If you use
1243 some other login shell such as Z shell, use their corresponding
1244 configuration files instead of <filename>~/.bashrc</filename>. </para> </footnote>
1245 </para>
1246 <screen>
1247 $ cat &gt;&gt;~/.bashrc &lt;&lt;EOF
1248 DEBEMAIL=your.email.address@example.org
1249 DEBFULLNAME=Firstname Lastname
1250 export DEBEMAIL DEBFULLNAME
1251 EOF
1252 $ . ~/.bashrc
1253 </screen>
1254 </section>
1255 <section id="non-native-dh-make"><title>Initial non-native Debian package</title>
1256 <para>
1257 Normal Debian packages are non-native Debian packages made from upstream
1258 programs. If you wish to create a non-native Debian package of an upstream
1259 source <filename>gentoo-0.9.12.tar.gz</filename>, you can create an initial
1260 non-native Debian package for it by issuing the <command>dh_make</command>
1261 command as follows.
1262 </para>
1263 <screen>
1264 $ cd ~/gentoo
1265 $ wget http://example.org/gentoo-0.9.12.tar.gz
1266 $ tar -xvzf gentoo-0.9.12.tar.gz
1267 $ cd gentoo-0.9.12
1268 $ dh_make -f ../gentoo-0.9.12.tar.gz
1269 </screen>
1270 <para>
1271 Of course, replace the filename with the name of your original source archive.
1272 <footnote><para> If the upstream source provides the
1273 <filename>debian</filename> directory and its contents, run the
1274 <command>dh_make</command> command with the extra option
1275 <literal>--addmissing</literal>. The new source <literal>3.0 (quilt)</literal> format is
1276 robust enough not to break even for these packages. You may need to update the contents
1277 provided by the upstream for your Debian package. </para> </footnote> See
1278 <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dh_make</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
1279 </citerefentry> for details.
1280 </para>
1281 <para>
1282 You should see some output asking you what sort of package you want
1283 to create. Gentoo is a single binary package - it creates only one binary package, i.e,
1284 one <filename>.deb</filename> file - so we will select the first option
1285 (with the <literal>s</literal> key), check the information on the screen, and
1286 confirm by pressing <literal><replaceable>ENTER</replaceable></literal>.
1287 <footnote><para> There are several choices here: <literal>s</literal> for
1288 Single binary package, <literal>i</literal> for arch-Independent package, <literal>m</literal> for
1289 Multiple binary packages, <literal>l</literal> for Library package, <literal>k</literal> for
1290 Kernel module package, <literal>n</literal> for kernel patch package, and <literal>b</literal>
1291 for <systemitem role="package">cdbs</systemitem> package. This document focuses on the
1292 use of the <command>dh</command> command (from the package
1293 <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem>) to create a single binary package,
1294 but also touches on how to use it for arch-independent or
1295 multiple binary packages. The package
1296 <systemitem role="package">cdbs</systemitem> offers an alternative packaging script
1297 infrastructure to the <command>dh</command> command and is outside the scope of
1298 this document. </para> </footnote>
1299 </para>
1300 <para>
1301 This execution of <command>dh_make</command> creates a copy of the upstream
1302 tarball as <filename>gentoo_0.9.12.orig.tar.gz</filename> in the
1303 parent directory to accommodate the creation of the non-native Debian source
1304 package with the name <filename>debian.tar.gz</filename> later.
1305 </para>
1306 <screen>
1307 $ cd ~/gentoo ; ls -F
1308 gentoo-0.9.12/
1309 gentoo-0.9.12.tar.gz
1310 gentoo_0.9.12.orig.tar.gz
1311 </screen>
1312 <para>
1313 Please note two key features of this filename
1314 <filename>gentoo_0.9.12.orig.tar.gz</filename>:
1315 </para>
1316 <itemizedlist>
1317 <listitem>
1318 <para>
1319 Package name and version are separated by the character <literal>_</literal>
1320 (underscore).
1321 </para>
1322 </listitem>
1323 <listitem>
1324 <para>
1325 The string <filename>.orig</filename> is inserted before the
1326 <filename>.tar.gz</filename>.
1327 </para>
1328 </listitem>
1329 </itemizedlist>
1330 <para>
1331 You should also notice that many template files are created in the source under
1332 the <filename>debian</filename> directory. These will be explained in
1333 <xref linkend="dreq"/> and <xref linkend="dother"/>. You should also understand
1334 that packaging cannot be a fully automated process. You will need to modify the upstream
1335 source for Debian (see <xref linkend="modify"/>). After this, you need to
1336 use the proper methods for building Debian packages (<xref linkend="build"/>),
1337 testing them (<xref linkend="checkit"/>), and uploading them (<xref linkend="upload"/>).
1338 All the steps will be explained.
1339 </para>
1340 <para>
1341 If you accidentally erased some template files while working on them, you can
1342 recover them by running <command>dh_make</command> with the
1343 <literal>--addmissing</literal> option again in a Debian package source tree.
1344 </para>
1345 <para>
1346 Updating an existing package may get complicated since it may be using older
1347 techniques. While learning the basics, please stick to creating a fresh
1348 package; further explanations are given in <xref linkend="update"/>.
1349 </para>
1350 <para>
1351 Please note that the source file does not need to contain any build system
1352 discussed in <xref linkend="simplemake"/> and <xref linkend="portable"/>. It
1353 could be just a collection of graphical data etc. Installation of files may be
1354 carried out using only <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> configuration
1355 files such as <filename>debian/install</filename> (see
1356 <xref linkend="install"/>).
1357 </para>
1358 </section>
1359 <section id="native-dh-make"><title>Initial native Debian package</title>
1360 <para>
1361 If a package contains source files you are only maintaining for Debian,
1362 possibly only for local use, it may be simpler to create it as a Debian
1363 native package. If you have source
1364 files in <filename>~/mypackage-1.0</filename>, you can create an initial native
1365 Debian package for it by issuing the <command>dh_make</command> command as
1366 follows.
1367 </para>
1368 <screen>
1369 $ cd ~/mypackage-1.0
1370 $ dh_make --native
1371 </screen>
1372 <para>
1373 Then the <filename>debian</filename> directory and its contents are created
1374 just like <xref linkend="non-native-dh-make"/>. This does not create a tarball
1375 since this is a native Debian package. But that is the only difference.
1376 The rest of the packaging activities are practically the same.
1377 </para>
1378 </section>
1379 </chapter>
1380 <chapter id="modify"><title>Modifying the source</title>
1381 <para>
1382 Please note that there isn't space here to go into <emphasis>all</emphasis> the
1383 details of fixing upstream sources, but here are some basic steps and problems
1384 people often run across.
1385 </para>
1386 <section id="quiltrc"><title>Setting up <command>quilt</command></title>
1387 <para>
1388 The program <command>quilt</command> offers a basic method for recording
1389 modifications to the upstream source for Debian packaging. It's
1390 useful to have a slightly customized default, so let's create an alias
1391 <command>dquilt</command> for Debian packaging by adding the following
1392 line to <filename>~/.bashrc</filename>.
1393 </para>
1394 <screen>
1395 alias dquilt="quilt --quiltrc=~/.quiltrc-dpkg"
1396 </screen>
1397 <para>
1398 Then let's create <filename>~/.quiltrc-dpkg</filename> as follows.
1399 </para>
1400 <screen>
1401 d=. ; while [ ! -d $d/debian -a `readlink -e $d` != / ]; do d=$d/..; done
1402 if [ -d $d/debian ] &amp;&amp; [ -z $QUILT_PATCHES ]; then
1403 # if in Debian packaging tree with unset $QUILT_PATCHES
1404 QUILT_PATCHES="debian/patches"
1405 QUILT_PATCH_OPTS="--reject-format=unified"
1406 QUILT_DIFF_ARGS="-p ab --no-timestamps --no-index --color=auto"
1407 QUILT_REFRESH_ARGS="-p ab --no-timestamps --no-index"
1408 QUILT_COLORS="diff_hdr=1;32:diff_add=1;34:diff_rem=1;31:diff_hunk=1;33:diff_ctx=35:diff_cctx=33"
1409 if ! [ -d $d/debian/patches ]; then mkdir $d/debian/patches; fi
1410 fi
1411 </screen>
1412 <para>
1413 See <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>quilt</refentrytitle>
1414 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> and
1415 <ulink url="&quilt-pdf;">quilt.pdf</ulink> on how to use
1416 <command>quilt</command>.
1417 </para>
1418 </section>
1419 <section id="fixupstream"><title>Fixing upstream bugs</title>
1420 <para>
1421 Let's assume you find an error in the upstream <filename>Makefile</filename>
1422 as follows where <literal>install: gentoo</literal> should have been
1423 <literal>install: gentoo-target</literal>.
1424 </para>
1425 <screen>
1426 install: gentoo
1427 install ./gentoo $(BIN)
1428 install icons/* $(ICONS)
1429 install gentoorc-example $(HOME)/.gentoorc
1430 </screen>
1431 <para>
1432 Let's fix this and record it with the <command>dquilt</command> command as
1433 <filename>fix-gentoo-target.patch</filename>. <footnote><para> The
1434 <filename>debian/patches</filename> directory should exist now if you ran
1435 <command>dh_make</command> as described before. This example operation creates
1436 it just in case you are updating an existing package. </para> </footnote>
1437 </para>
1438 <screen>
1439 $ mkdir debian/patches
1440 $ dquilt new fix-gentoo-target.patch
1441 $ dquilt add Makefile
1442 </screen>
1443 <para>
1444 You change the <filename>Makefile</filename> file as follows.
1445 </para>
1446 <screen>
1447 install: gentoo-target
1448 install ./gentoo $(BIN)
1449 install icons/* $(ICONS)
1450 install gentoorc-example $(HOME)/.gentoorc
1451 </screen>
1452 <para>
1453 Ask <command>dquilt</command> to generate the patch to create
1454 <filename>debian/patches/fix-gentoo-target.patch</filename> and add its
1455 description following <ulink url="&dep3;">DEP-3: Patch Tagging Guidelines</ulink>.
1456 </para>
1457 <screen>
1458 $ dquilt refresh
1459 $ dquilt header -e
1460 ... describe patch
1461 </screen>
1462 </section>
1463 <section id="destdir"><title>Installation of files to their destination</title>
1464 <para>
1465 Most third-party software installs itself in the <filename>/usr/local</filename>
1466 directory hierarchy. On Debian this is reserved for private use
1467 by the system administrator, so packages must not use directories such
1468 as <filename>/usr/local/bin</filename> but should instead use system
1469 directories such as <filename>/usr/bin</filename>, obeying the
1470 <ulink url="&fhs;">Filesystem Hierarchy Standard</ulink> (FHS).
1471 </para>
1472 <para>
1473 Normally, <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>make</refentrytitle>
1474 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> is used to automate building the
1475 program, and executing <literal>make install</literal> installs programs
1476 directly to the desired destination (following the
1477 <literal>install</literal> target in the
1478 <filename>Makefile</filename>). In order for Debian to provide
1479 pre-built installable packages, it modifies the build system to install
1480 programs into a file tree image created under a temporary directory
1481 instead of the actual destination.
1482 </para>
1483 <para>
1484 These two differences between normal program installation on one hand and the
1485 Debian packaging system on the other can be transparently addressed by the
1486 <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> package through the
1487 <command>dh_auto_configure</command> and <command>dh_auto_install</command>
1488 commands if the following conditions are met.
1489 </para>
1490 <itemizedlist>
1491 <listitem>
1492 <para>
1493 The <filename>Makefile</filename> must follow GNU conventions and
1494 support the <literal>$(DESTDIR)</literal> variable.
1495 <footnote><para> See <ulink url="&gnu-destdir;">GNU Coding Standards: 7.2.4 DESTDIR: Support for Staged Installs</ulink>.</para></footnote>
1496 </para>
1497 </listitem>
1498 <listitem>
1499 <para>
1500 The source must follow the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard (FHS).
1501 </para>
1502 </listitem>
1503 </itemizedlist>
1504 <para>
1505 Programs that use GNU <command>autoconf</command> follow the GNU conventions
1506 automatically, so they can be trivial to package. On the basis of
1507 this and other heuristics, it is estimated that the
1508 <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> package will work for
1509 about 90% of packages without making any intrusive changes to their
1510 build system. So packaging is not as complicated as it may seem.
1511 </para>
1512 <para>
1513 If you need to make changes in the <filename>Makefile</filename>, you
1514 should be careful to support the <literal>$(DESTDIR)</literal>
1515 variable. Although it is unset by default, the <literal>$(DESTDIR)</literal>
1516 variable is prepended to each file path used for the program
1517 installation. The packaging script will set
1518 <literal>$(DESTDIR)</literal> to the temporary directory.
1519 </para>
1520 <para>
1521 For a source package generating a single binary package, the temporary directory used
1522 by the <command>dh_auto_install</command> command will be set to
1523 <filename>debian/<replaceable>package</replaceable></filename>.
1524 <footnote><para> For a source package generating multiple binary packages, the
1525 <command>dh_auto_install</command> command uses <filename>debian/tmp</filename>
1526 as the temporary directory while the <command>dh_install</command> command with
1527 the help of
1528 <filename>debian/<replaceable>package-1</replaceable>.install</filename> and
1529 <filename>debian/<replaceable>package-2</replaceable>.install</filename> files
1530 will split the contents of <filename>debian/tmp</filename> into
1531 <filename>debian/<replaceable>package-1</replaceable></filename> and
1532 <filename>debian/<replaceable>package-2</replaceable></filename> temporary
1533 directories, to create
1534 <filename><replaceable>package-1</replaceable>_*.deb</filename> and
1535 <filename><replaceable>package-2</replaceable>_*.deb</filename> binary
1536 packages.
1537 </para> </footnote> Everything that is contained in the temporary directory
1538 will be installed on users' systems when they install your package; the only
1539 difference is that <command>dpkg</command> will be installing the
1540 files to paths relative to the root directory rather than your working
1541 directory.
1542 </para>
1543 <para>
1544 Bear in mind that even though your program installs in
1545 <filename>debian/<replaceable>package</replaceable></filename>, it still needs
1546 to behave correctly when installed from the <filename>.deb</filename>
1547 package under the root directory. So you must not allow the build
1548 system to hardcode strings like
1549 <literal>/home/me/deb/<replaceable>package</replaceable>-<replaceable>version</replaceable>/usr/share/<replaceable>package</replaceable></literal>
1550 into files in the package.
1551 </para>
1552 <para>
1553 Here's the relevant part of <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem>'s
1554 <filename>Makefile</filename><footnote><para> This is just an example to
1555 show what a <filename>Makefile</filename> should look like. If the
1556 <filename>Makefile</filename> is created by the
1557 <command>./configure</command> command, the correct way to fix this kind of
1558 <filename>Makefile</filename> is to execute <command>./configure</command>
1559 from the <command>dh_auto_configure</command> command with default
1560 options including <literal>--prefix=/usr</literal>. </para> </footnote>:
1561 </para>
1562 <screen>
1563 # Where to put executable commands on 'make install'?
1564 BIN = /usr/local/bin
1565 # Where to put icons on 'make install'?
1566 ICONS = /usr/local/share/gentoo
1567 </screen>
1568 <para>
1569 We see that the files are set to install under <filename>/usr/local</filename>.
1570 As explained above, that directory hierarchy is reserved for local use on
1571 Debian, so change those paths to:
1572 </para>
1573 <screen>
1574 # Where to put executable commands on 'make install'?
1575 BIN = $(DESTDIR)/usr/bin
1576 # Where to put icons on 'make install'?
1577 ICONS = $(DESTDIR)/usr/share/gentoo
1578 </screen>
1579 <para>
1580 The exact locations that should be used for binaries, icons,
1581 documentation, etc. are specified in the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard
1582 (FHS). You should browse through it and read the sections relevant to
1583 your package.
1584 </para>
1585 <para>
1586 So, we should install executable commands in <filename>/usr/bin</filename> instead of
1587 <filename>/usr/local/bin</filename>, the manual page in
1588 <filename>/usr/share/man/man1</filename> instead of
1589 <filename>/usr/local/man/man1</filename>, and so on. Notice how there's no manual
1590 page mentioned in <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem>'s
1591 <filename>Makefile</filename>, but since Debian Policy requires that every
1592 program has one, we'll make one later and install it in
1593 <filename>/usr/share/man/man1</filename>.
1594 </para>
1595 <para>
1596 Some programs don't use <filename>Makefile</filename> variables to define paths
1597 such as these. This means you might have to edit some real C sources in order
1598 to fix them to use the right locations. But where to search, and exactly what
1599 for? You can find this out by issuing:
1600 </para>
1601 <screen>
1602 $ grep -nr --include='*.[c|h]' -e 'usr/local/lib' .
1603 </screen>
1604 <para>
1605 <command>grep</command> will run recursively through the source tree and tell
1606 you the filename and the line number for all matches.
1607 </para>
1608 <para>
1609 Edit those files and in those lines replace <literal>usr/local/lib</literal>
1610 with <literal>usr/lib</literal>. This can be done automatically as follows:
1611 </para>
1612 <screen>
1613 $ sed -i -e 's#usr/local/lib#usr/lib#g' \
1614 $(find . -type f -name '*.[c|h]')
1615 </screen>
1616 <para>
1617 If you want to confirm each substitution instead, this can be done interactively as follows:
1618 </para>
1619 <screen>
1620 $ vim '+argdo %s#usr/local/lib#usr/lib#gce|update' +q \
1621 $(find . -type f -name '*.[c|h]')
1622 </screen>
1623
1624 <para>
1625 Next you should find the <literal>install</literal> target (searching
1626 for the line that starts with <literal>install:</literal> will usually
1627 work) and rename all references to directories other than ones defined
1628 at the top of the <filename>Makefile</filename>.
1629 </para>
1630 <para>
1631 Originally, <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem>'s
1632 <literal>install</literal> target said:
1633 </para>
1634 <screen>
1635 install: gentoo-target
1636 install ./gentoo $(BIN)
1637 install icons/* $(ICONS)
1638 install gentoorc-example $(HOME)/.gentoorc
1639 </screen>
1640 <para>
1641 Let's fix this upstream bug and record it with the <command>dquilt</command> command as
1642 <filename>debian/patches/install.patch</filename>.
1643 </para>
1644 <screen>
1645 $ dquilt new install.patch
1646 $ dquilt add Makefile
1647 </screen>
1648 <para>
1649 In your editor, change this for the Debian package as follows:
1650 </para>
1651 <screen>
1652 install: gentoo-target
1653 install -d $(BIN) $(ICONS) $(DESTDIR)/etc
1654 install ./gentoo $(BIN)
1655 install -m644 icons/* $(ICONS)
1656 install -m644 gentoorc-example $(DESTDIR)/etc/gentoorc
1657 </screen>
1658 <para>
1659 You'll have noticed that there's now an <literal>install -d</literal> command
1660 before the other commands in the rule. The original
1661 <filename>Makefile</filename> didn't have it because usually
1662 <literal>/usr/local/bin</literal> and other directories already exist on the
1663 system where you are running <literal>make install</literal>. However, since we will
1664 be installing into a newly created private directory tree, we will have to
1665 create each and every one of those directories.
1666 </para>
1667 <para>
1668 We can also add in other things at the end of the rule, like the installation
1669 of additional documentation that the upstream authors sometimes omit:
1670 </para>
1671 <screen>
1672 install -d $(DESTDIR)/usr/share/doc/gentoo/html
1673 cp -a docs/* $(DESTDIR)/usr/share/doc/gentoo/html
1674 </screen>
1675 <para>
1676 Check carefully, and if everything is okay, ask <command>dquilt</command> to
1677 generate the patch to create <filename>debian/patches/install.patch</filename>
1678 and add its description.
1679 </para>
1680 <screen>
1681 $ dquilt refresh
1682 $ dquilt header -e
1683 ... describe patch
1684 </screen>
1685 <para>
1686 Now you have a series of patches.
1687 </para>
1688 <orderedlist numeration="arabic">
1689 <listitem>
1690 <para>
1691 Upstream bug fix: <filename>debian/patches/fix-gentoo-target.patch</filename>
1692 </para>
1693 </listitem>
1694 <listitem>
1695 <para>
1696 Debian specific packaging modification:
1697 <filename>debian/patches/install.patch</filename>
1698 </para>
1699 </listitem>
1700 </orderedlist>
1701 <para>
1702 Whenever you make changes that are not specific to the Debian package
1703 such as <filename>debian/patches/fix-gentoo-target.patch</filename>, be sure to
1704 send them to the upstream maintainer so they can be included in the next
1705 version of the program and be useful to everyone else. Also remember
1706 to avoid making your fixes specific to Debian or Linux - or even Unix!
1707 Make them portable. This will make your fixes much easier to apply.
1708 </para>
1709 <para>
1710 Note that you don't have to send the <filename>debian/*</filename> files
1711 upstream.
1712 </para>
1713 </section>
1714 <section id="difflibs"><title>Differing libraries</title>
1715 <para>
1716 There is one other common problem: libraries are often different from platform
1717 to platform. For example, a <filename>Makefile</filename> can contain a
1718 reference to a library which doesn't exist on the Debian system. In that case, we
1719 need to change it to a library which does exist in Debian, and serves the same
1720 purpose.
1721 </para>
1722 <para>
1723 Let's assume a line in your program's <filename>Makefile</filename> (or
1724 <filename>Makefile.in</filename>) as the following.
1725 </para>
1726 <screen>
1727 LIBS = -lfoo -lbar
1728 </screen>
1729 <para>
1730 If your program doesn't compile since the <literal>foo</literal> library
1731 doesn't exist and its equivalent is provided by the <literal>foo2</literal>
1732 library on the Debian system, you can fix this build problem as
1733 <filename>debian/patches/foo2.patch</filename> by changing
1734 <literal>foo</literal> into <literal>foo2</literal>.<footnote><para>If there
1735 are API changes from the <literal>foo</literal> library to the
1736 <literal>foo2</literal> library, required changes to the source code need to be
1737 made to match the new API.</para> </footnote>
1738 </para>
1739 <screen>
1740 $ dquilt new foo2.patch
1741 $ dquilt add Makefile
1742 $ sed -i -e 's/-lfoo/-lfoo2/g' Makefile
1743 $ dquilt refresh
1744 $ dquilt header -e
1745 ... describe patch
1746 </screen>
1747 </section>
1748 </chapter>
1749 <chapter id="dreq"><title>Required files under the <filename>debian</filename> directory</title>
1750 <para>
1751 There is a new subdirectory under the program's source directory, called
1752 <filename>debian</filename>. There are a number of files in this directory
1753 that we should edit in order to customize the behavior of the package. The
1754 most important of them are <filename>control</filename>,
1755 <filename>changelog</filename>, <filename>copyright</filename>, and
1756 <filename>rules</filename>, which are required for all packages.
1757 <footnote><para>
1758 In this chapter, files in the <filename>debian</filename> directory are
1759 referred to without the leading <filename>debian/</filename> for simplicity whenever
1760 the meaning is obvious.
1761 </para></footnote>
1762 </para>
1763 <section id="control"><title><filename>control</filename></title>
1764 <para>
1765 This file contains various values which <command>dpkg</command>,
1766 <command>dselect</command>, <command>apt-get</command>,
1767 <command>apt-cache</command>, <command>aptitude</command>, and other package
1768 management tools will use to manage the package. It is defined by the
1769 <ulink url="&policy-control;">Debian Policy Manual, 5 "Control files and their fields"</ulink>.
1770 </para>
1771 <para>
1772 Here is the <filename>control</filename> file <command>dh_make</command>
1773 created for us:
1774 </para>
1775 <screen>
1776 1 Source: gentoo
1777 2 Section: unknown
1778 3 Priority: extra
1779 4 Maintainer: Josip Rodin &lt;joy-mg@debian.org&gt;
1780 5 Build-Depends: debhelper (&gt;= 7.0.50~)
1781 6 Standards-Version: 3.8.4
1782 7 Homepage: &lt;insert the upstream URL, if relevant&gt;
1783 8
1784 9 Package: gentoo
1785 10 Architecture: any
1786 11 Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}
1787 12 Description: &lt;insert up to 60 chars description&gt;
1788 13 &lt;insert long description, indented with spaces&gt;
1789 </screen>
1790 <para>
1791 (I've added the line numbers.)
1792 </para>
1793 <para>
1794 Lines 1-7 are the control information for the source package.
1795 Lines 9-13 are the control information for the binary package.
1796 </para>
1797 <para>
1798 Line 1 is the name of the source package.
1799 </para>
1800 <para>
1801 Line 2 is the section of the distribution the source package goes into.
1802 </para>
1803 <para>
1804 As you may have noticed, the Debian archive is divided into multiple areas:
1805 <literal>main</literal> (the free software), <literal>non-free</literal> (the
1806 not really free software) and <literal>contrib</literal> (free software that
1807 depends on non-free software). Each of these is divided into sections that
1808 classify packages into rough categories. So we have <literal>admin</literal>
1809 for administrator-only programs,
1810 <literal>devel</literal> for programmer tools, <literal>doc</literal> for
1811 documentation, <literal>libs</literal> for libraries, <literal>mail</literal>
1812 for email readers and daemons, <literal>net</literal> for network apps and
1813 daemons, <literal>x11</literal> for X11 programs that don't fit anywhere else,
1814 and many more.
1815 <footnote> <para>See
1816 <ulink url="&policy-subsections;">Debian Policy Manual, 2.4 "Sections"</ulink> and
1817 <ulink url="&sections-unstable;">List of sections in <literal>sid</literal></ulink>.</para>
1818 </footnote>
1819 </para>
1820 <para>
1821 Let's change it then to x11. (A <literal>main/</literal> prefix is implied so
1822 we can omit it.)
1823 </para>
1824 <para>
1825 Line 3 describes how important it is that the user installs this package.
1826 <footnote> <para>See
1827 <ulink url="&policy-priorities;">Debian Policy Manual, 2.5 "Priorities"</ulink>.
1828 </para>
1829 </footnote>
1830 </para>
1831 <itemizedlist>
1832 <listitem>
1833 <para>
1834 The <literal>optional</literal> priority will usually work for new packages
1835 that do not conflict with others claiming <literal>required</literal>,
1836 <literal>important</literal>, or <literal>standard</literal> priority.
1837 </para>
1838 </listitem>
1839 <listitem>
1840 <para>
1841 The <literal>extra</literal> priority will usually work for new packages that
1842 conflict with others with non-<literal>extra</literal> priorities.
1843 </para>
1844 </listitem>
1845 </itemizedlist>
1846 <para>
1847 Section and priority are used by front-ends like <command>aptitude</command>
1848 when they sort packages and select defaults. Once you upload the package to
1849 Debian, the value of these two fields can be overridden by the archive
1850 maintainers, in which case you will be notified by email.
1851 </para>
1852 <para>
1853 As this is a normal priority package and doesn't conflict with anything else,
1854 we will change the priority to <literal>optional</literal>.
1855 </para>
1856 <para>
1857 Line 4 is the name and email address of the maintainer. Make sure that this
1858 field includes a valid <literal>To</literal> header for email, because after
1859 you upload it, the bug tracking system will use it to deliver bug emails to
1860 you. Avoid using commas, ampersands, or parentheses.
1861 </para>
1862 <para>
1863 Line 5 includes the list of packages required to build your package as
1864 the <literal>Build-Depends</literal> field. You can also have the
1865 <literal>Build-Depends-Indep</literal> field as an additional line, here.
1866 <footnote><para>See
1867 <ulink url="&policy-relationships;#s-sourcebinarydeps">Debian Policy Manual, 7.7 "Relationships between source and binary packages - Build-Depends, Build-Depends-Indep, Build-Conflicts, Build-Conflicts-Indep"</ulink>.</para></footnote>
1868 Some packages like
1869 <systemitem role="package">gcc</systemitem> and
1870 <systemitem role="package">make</systemitem> which are required by the
1871 <systemitem role="package">build-essential</systemitem> package are implied. If you need
1872 to have other tools to build your package, you should add them to these fields.
1873 Multiple entries are separated with commas; read on for the explanation of
1874 binary package dependencies to find out more about the syntax of these lines.
1875 </para>
1876 <itemizedlist>
1877 <listitem>
1878 <para>
1879 For all packages packaged with the <command>dh</command> command in the
1880 <filename>debian/rules</filename> file, you must have <literal>debhelper
1881 (&gt;=7.0.50~)</literal> in the <literal>Build-Depends</literal> field to
1882 satisfy the Debian Policy requirement for the <literal>clean</literal> target.
1883 </para>
1884 </listitem>
1885 <listitem>
1886 <para>
1887 Source packages which have binary packages with <literal>Architecture:
1888 any</literal> are rebuilt by the autobuilder. Since this autobuilder
1889 procedure installs only the packages listed in the
1890 <literal>Build-Depends</literal> field before running
1891 <literal>debian/rules build</literal> (see <xref
1892 linkend="autobuilder"/>), the <literal>Build-Depends</literal> field
1893 needs to list practically all the required packages and
1894 <literal>Build-Depends-Indep</literal> is rarely used.
1895 </para>
1896 </listitem>
1897 <listitem>
1898 <para>
1899 For source packages with binary packages all of which are <literal>Architecture:
1900 all</literal>, the <literal>Build-Depends-Indep</literal> field may list all
1901 the required packages unless they are already listed in the
1902 <literal>Build-Depends</literal> field to satisfy the Debian Policy requirement
1903 for the <literal>clean</literal> target.
1904 </para>
1905 </listitem>
1906 </itemizedlist>
1907 <para>
1908 If you are not sure which one should be used, use the
1909 <literal>Build-Depends</literal> field to be on the safe side.
1910 <footnote><para> This somewhat strange situation is a feature well documented
1911 in the <ulink url="&policy-build-depends-indep;">Debian Policy
1912 Manual, Footnotes 55</ulink>. This is not due to the use of the
1913 <command>dh</command> command in the <filename>debian/rules</filename> file but
1914 due to how the <command>dpkg-buildpackage</command> works. The same situation
1915 applies to the <ulink url="https://bugs.launchpad.net/launchpad-buildd/+bug/238141">auto build system
1916 for Ubuntu</ulink>. </para> </footnote>
1917 </para>
1918 <para>
1919 To find out what packages your package needs to be built run the command:
1920 </para>
1921 <screen>
1922 $ dpkg-depcheck -d ./configure
1923 </screen>
1924 <para>
1925 To manually find exact build dependencies for
1926 <command><replaceable>/usr/bin/foo</replaceable></command>, execute
1927 </para>
1928 <screen>
1929 $ objdump -p <replaceable>/usr/bin/foo</replaceable> | grep NEEDED
1930 </screen>
1931 <para>
1932 and for each library listed, e.g., <command>libfoo.so.6</command>, execute
1933 </para>
1934 <screen>
1935 $ dpkg -S libfoo.so.6
1936 </screen>
1937 <para>
1938 Then just take the <literal>-dev</literal> version of every package as a
1939 <literal>Build-Depends</literal> entry. If you use <command>ldd</command> for
1940 this purpose, it will report indirect lib dependencies as well, resulting in
1941 the problem of excessive build dependencies.
1942 </para>
1943 <para>
1944 <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem> also happens to require
1945 <systemitem role="package">xlibs-dev</systemitem>, <systemitem role="package">libgtk1.2-dev</systemitem> and <systemitem role="package">libglib1.2-dev</systemitem> to build, so we'll add them here
1946 next to <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem>.
1947 </para>
1948 <para>
1949 Line 6 is the version of the <ulink url="&debian-policy;">Debian Policy
1950 Manual</ulink> standards this package follows, the one you read while making
1951 your package.
1952 </para>
1953 <para>
1954 On line 7 you can put the URL of the software's upstream homepage.
1955 </para>
1956 <para>
1957 Line 9 is the name of the binary package. This is usually the same as the name
1958 of the source package, but it doesn't necessarily have to be that way.
1959 </para>
1960 <para>
1961 Line 10 describes the architectures the binary package can be compiled for.
1962 This value is usually one of the following depending
1963 on the type of the binary package.
1964 <footnote><para>See
1965 <ulink url="&policy-architecture;">Debian Policy Manual 5.6.8 "Architecture"</ulink>
1966 for exact details.
1967 </para></footnote>
1968 </para>
1969 <itemizedlist>
1970 <listitem><para><literal>Architecture: any</literal></para>
1971 <itemizedlist>
1972 <listitem><para>The generated binary package is an architecture dependent one
1973 usually in a compiled language.</para></listitem>
1974 </itemizedlist>
1975 </listitem>
1976 <listitem><para><literal>Architecture: all</literal></para>
1977 <itemizedlist>
1978 <listitem><para>The generated binary package is an architecture independent
1979 one usually consisting of text, images, or scripts in an interpreted
1980 language.</para></listitem>
1981 </itemizedlist>
1982 </listitem>
1983 </itemizedlist>
1984 <para>
1985 We leave line 10 as is since this is written in C.
1986 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>dpkg-gencontrol</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>
1987 will fill in the appropriate architecture value for any machine this source
1988 package gets compiled on.
1989 </para>
1990 <para>
1991 If your package is architecture independent (for example, a shell or Perl
1992 script, or a document), change this to <literal>all</literal>, and read later
1993 in <xref linkend="rules"/> about using the <literal>binary-indep</literal> rule
1994 instead of <literal>binary-arch</literal> for building the package.
1995 </para>
1996 <para>
1997 Line 11 shows one of the most powerful features of the Debian packaging system.
1998 Packages can relate to each other in various ways. Apart from
1999 <literal>Depends</literal>, other relationship fields are
2000 <literal>Recommends</literal>, <literal>Suggests</literal>,
2001 <literal>Pre-Depends</literal>, <literal>Breaks</literal>,
2002 <literal>Conflicts</literal>, <literal>Provides</literal>, and
2003 <literal>Replaces</literal>.
2004 </para>
2005 <para>
2006 The package management tools usually behave the same way when dealing with
2007 these relations; if not, it will be explained. (See <citerefentry>
2008 <refentrytitle>dpkg</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>8</manvolnum> </citerefentry>,
2009 <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dselect</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
2010 </citerefentry>, <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>apt</refentrytitle>
2011 <manvolnum>8</manvolnum> </citerefentry>, <citerefentry>
2012 <refentrytitle>aptitude</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
2013 </citerefentry>, etc.)
2014 </para>
2015 <para>
2016 Here is a simplified description of package relationships.
2017 <footnote><para>See
2018 <ulink url="&policy-relationships;">Debian Policy Manual, 7 "Declaring relationships between packages"</ulink>.
2019 </para></footnote>
2020 </para>
2021 <itemizedlist>
2022 <listitem>
2023 <para>
2024 <literal>Depends</literal>
2025 </para>
2026 <para>
2027 The package will not be installed unless the packages it depends on are
2028 installed. Use this if your program absolutely will not run (or will cause
2029 severe breakage) unless a particular package is present.
2030 </para>
2031 </listitem>
2032 <listitem>
2033 <para>
2034 <literal>Recommends</literal>
2035 </para>
2036 <para>
2037 Use this for packages that are not strictly necessary but are typically used
2038 with your program. When a user installs your program, all front-ends will
2039 probably prompt them to install the recommended packages.
2040 <command>aptitude</command> and <command>apt-get</command> install recommended
2041 packages along with your package by default (but the user can disable this
2042 behavior). <command>dpkg</command> will ignore this field.
2043 </para>
2044 </listitem>
2045 <listitem>
2046 <para>
2047 <literal>Suggests</literal>
2048 </para>
2049 <para>
2050 Use this for packages which will work nicely with your program but are not at
2051 all necessary. When a user installs your program, they will probably not be
2052 prompted to install suggested packages. <command>aptitude</command> can
2053 be configured to install suggested packages along with your package but this is
2054 not its default. <command>dpkg</command> and <command>apt-get</command> will
2055 ignore this field.
2056 </para>
2057 </listitem>
2058 <listitem>
2059 <para>
2060 <literal>Pre-Depends</literal>
2061 </para>
2062 <para>
2063 This is stronger than <literal>Depends</literal>. The package will not be
2064 installed unless the packages it pre-depends on are installed and
2065 <emphasis>correctly configured</emphasis>. Use this <emphasis>very</emphasis>
2066 sparingly and only after discussing it on the <ulink url="&debian-devel-ldo;">debian-devel@lists.debian.org</ulink>
2067 mailing list. Read: don't use it at all. :-)
2068 </para>
2069 </listitem>
2070 <listitem>
2071 <para>
2072 <literal>Conflicts</literal>
2073 </para>
2074 <para>
2075 The package will not be installed until all the packages it conflicts with have
2076 been removed. Use this if your program absolutely will not run or will cause
2077 severe problems if a particular package is present.
2078 </para>
2079 </listitem>
2080 <listitem>
2081 <para>
2082 <literal>Breaks</literal>
2083 </para>
2084 <para>
2085 When installed the package will break all the listed packages.
2086 Normally a <literal>Breaks</literal> entry specifies that it applies to versions earlier than a certain value.
2087 The resolution is generally to use higher-level package management tools to upgrade the listed packages.
2088 </para>
2089 </listitem>
2090 <listitem>
2091 <para>
2092 <literal>Provides</literal>
2093 </para>
2094 <para>
2095 For some types of packages where there are multiple alternatives virtual names
2096 have been defined. You can get the full list in the
2097 <ulink url="&virtual-package;">virtual-package-names-list.txt.gz</ulink>
2098 file. Use this if your program provides a function of an existing virtual
2099 package.
2100 </para>
2101 </listitem>
2102 <listitem>
2103 <para>
2104 <literal>Replaces</literal>
2105 </para>
2106 <para>
2107 Use this when your program replaces files from another package, or completely
2108 replaces another package (used in conjunction with
2109 <literal>Conflicts</literal>). Files from the named packages will be
2110 overwritten with the files from your package.
2111 </para>
2112 </listitem>
2113 </itemizedlist>
2114 <para>
2115 All these fields have uniform syntax. They are a list of package names
2116 separated by commas. These package names may also be lists of alternative
2117 package names, separated by vertical bar symbols <literal>|</literal> (pipe
2118 symbols).
2119 </para>
2120 <para>
2121 The fields may restrict their applicability to particular versions of each
2122 named package. The restriction of each individual package is listed in
2123 parentheses after its name, and should contain a relation from the list below
2124 followed by a version number value.
2125 The relations allowed are: <literal>&lt;&lt;</literal>,
2126 <literal>&lt;=</literal>, <literal>=</literal>, <literal>&gt;=</literal>, and
2127 <literal>&gt;&gt;</literal> for strictly lower, lower or equal, exactly equal,
2128 greater or equal, and strictly greater, respectively. For example,
2129 </para>
2130 <screen>
2131 Depends: foo (&gt;= 1.2), libbar1 (= 1.3.4)
2132 Conflicts: baz
2133 Recommends: libbaz4 (&gt;&gt; 4.0.7)
2134 Suggests: quux
2135 Replaces: quux (&lt;&lt; 5), quux-foo (&lt;= 7.6)
2136 </screen>
2137 <para>
2138 The last feature you need to know about is
2139 <literal>${shlibs:Depends}</literal>, <literal>${perl:Depends}</literal>,
2140 <literal>${misc:Depends}</literal>, etc.
2141 </para>
2142 <para>
2143 <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dh_shlibdeps</refentrytitle>
2144 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> calculates shared library dependencies
2145 for binary packages. It generates a list of <ulink url="&elf;">ELF</ulink> executables and shared
2146 libraries it has found for each binary package. This list is used for
2147 substituting <literal>${shlibs:Depends}</literal>.
2148 </para>
2149 <para>
2150 <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dh_perl</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
2151 </citerefentry> calculates Perl dependencies. It generates a list of a
2152 dependencies on <literal>perl</literal> or <literal>perlapi</literal> for each binary package. This list is used for
2153 substituting <literal>${perl:Depends}</literal>.
2154 </para>
2155 <para>
2156 Some <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> commands may cause the
2157 generated package to depend on some additional packages. All such commands
2158 generate a list of required packages for each binary package.
2159 This list is used for substituting <literal>${misc:Depends}</literal>.
2160 </para>
2161 <para>
2162 <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dh_gencontrol</refentrytitle>
2163 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> generates
2164 <filename>DEBIAN/control</filename> for each binary package while
2165 substituting <literal>${shlibs:Depends}</literal>,
2166 <literal>${perl:Depends}</literal>, <literal>${misc:Depends}</literal>, etc.
2167 </para>
2168 <para>
2169 Having said all that, we can leave the <literal>Depends</literal> field exactly
2170 as it is now, and insert another line after it saying <literal>Suggests:
2171 file</literal>, because <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem> can use
2172 some features provided by the <systemitem role="package">file</systemitem>
2173 package.
2174 </para>
2175 <para> Line 9 is the Homepage URL. Let's assume this to be at
2176 <ulink url="&gentoo;"/>.
2177 </para>
2178 <para>
2179 Line 12 is the short description. Terminals are conventionally 80 columns wide so
2180 this shouldn't be longer than about 60 characters. I'll change it to
2181 <literal>fully GUI-configurable, two-pane X file manager</literal>.
2182 </para>
2183 <para>
2184 Line 13 is where the long description goes. This should be a paragraph which
2185 gives more details about the package. Column 1 of each line should be empty.
2186 There must be no blank lines, but you can put a single <literal>.</literal>
2187 (dot) in a column to simulate that. Also, there must be no more than one blank
2188 line after the long description. <footnote><para>These descriptions are in
2189 English. Translations of these descriptions are provided by
2190 <ulink url="&ddtp;">The Debian Description Translation Project - DDTP</ulink>.</para></footnote>
2191 </para>
2192 <para>
2193 We can insert <literal>Vcs-*</literal> fields to document the Version Control
2194 System (VCS) location between lines 6 and 7.
2195 <footnote><para>See
2196 <ulink url="&devref-bpp-vcs;">Debian Developer's Reference, 6.2.5. "Version Control System location"</ulink>.
2197 </para></footnote>
2198 Let's assume that the <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem>
2199 package has its VCS located in the Debian Alioth Git Service at
2200 <literal>git://git.debian.org/git/collab-maint/gentoo.git</literal>.
2201 </para>
2202 <para>
2203 Finally, here is the updated <filename>control</filename> file:
2204 </para>
2205 <screen>
2206 1 Source: gentoo
2207 2 Section: x11
2208 3 Priority: optional
2209 4 Maintainer: Josip Rodin &lt;joy-mg@debian.org&gt;
2210 5 Build-Depends: debhelper (&gt;= 7.0.5), xlibs-dev, libgtk1.2-dev, libglib1.2-dev
2211 6 Standards-Version: 3.8.4
2212 7 Vcs-Git: git://git.debian.org/git/collab-maint/gentoo.git
2213 8 Vcs-browser: http://git.debian.org/?p=collab-maint/gentoo.git
2214 9 Homepage: &gentoo;
2215 10
2216 11 Package: gentoo
2217 12 Architecture: any
2218 13 Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}
2219 14 Suggests: file
2220 15 Description: fully GUI-configurable, two-pane X file manager
2221 16 gentoo is a two-pane file manager for the X Window System. gentoo lets the
2222 17 user do (almost) all of the configuration and customizing from within the
2223 18 program itself. If you still prefer to hand-edit configuration files,
2224 19 they're fairly easy to work with since they are written in an XML format.
2225 20 .
2226 21 gentoo features a fairly complex and powerful file identification system,
2227 22 coupled to an object-oriented style system, which together give you a lot
2228 23 of control over how files of different types are displayed and acted upon.
2229 24 Additionally, over a hundred pixmap images are available for use in file
2230 25 type descriptions.
2231 26 .
2232 29 gentoo was written from scratch in ANSI C, and it utilizes the GTK+ toolkit
2233 30 for its interface.
2234 </screen>
2235 <para>
2236 (I've added the line numbers.)
2237 </para>
2238 </section>
2239 <section id="copyright"><title><filename>copyright</filename></title>
2240 <para>
2241 This file contains information about the copyright and license of the upstream sources.
2242 <ulink url="&policy-copyright;">Debian Policy Manual, 12.5 "Copyright information"</ulink>
2243 dictates its content and
2244 <ulink url="&dep5;">DEP-5: Machine-parseable <filename>debian/copyright</filename></ulink>
2245 provides guidelines for its format.
2246 </para>
2247 <para>
2248 <command>dh_make</command> can give you a template
2249 <filename>copyright</filename> file. Let's use the <literal>--copyright
2250 gpl2</literal> option here to get a template file for the <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem> package released under GPL-2.
2251 </para>
2252 <para>
2253 You must fill in missing information to complete this file, such as the place you got the package
2254 from, the actual copyright notice, and the license. For certain
2255 common free software licenses (GNU GPL-1, GNU GPL-2, GNU GPL-3,
2256 LGPL-2, LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3, GNU FDL-1.2, GNU FDL-1.3, Apache-2.0, or the Artistic
2257 license), you can just refer to the appropriate file in the
2258 <filename>/usr/share/common-licenses/</filename> directory that exists on every
2259 Debian system. Otherwise, you must include the complete license.
2260 </para>
2261 <para>
2262 In short, here's what <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem>'s
2263 <filename>copyright</filename> file should look like:
2264 </para>
2265 <screen>
2266 1 Format-Specification: http://svn.debian.org/wsvn/dep/web/deps/dep5.mdwn?op=file&amp;rev=135
2267 2 Name: gentoo
2268 3 Maintainer: Josip Rodin &lt;joy-mg@debian.org&gt;
2269 4 Source: http://sourceforge.net/projects/gentoo/files/
2270 5
2271 6 Copyright: 1998-2010 Emil Brink &lt;emil@obsession.se&gt;
2272 7 License: GPL-2+
2273 8
2274 9 Files: icons/*
2275 10 Copyright: 1998 Johan Hanson &lt;johan@tiq.com&gt;
2276 11 License: GPL-2+
2277 12
2278 13 Files: debian/*
2279 14 Copyright: 1998-2010 Josip Rodin &lt;joy-mg@debian.org&gt;
2280 15 License: GPL-2+
2281 16
2282 17 License: GPL-2+
2283 18 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
2284 19 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
2285 20 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
2286 21 (at your option) any later version.
2287 22 .
2288 23 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
2289 24 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
2290 25 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
2291 26 GNU General Public License for more details.
2292 27 .
2293 28 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
2294 29 with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
2295 30 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
2296 31 .
2297 32 On Debian systems, the full text of the GNU General Public
2298 33 License version 2 can be found in the file
2299 34 `/usr/share/common-licenses/GPL-2'.
2300 </screen>
2301 <para>
2302 (I've added the line numbers.)
2303 </para>
2304 <para>
2305 Please follow the HOWTO provided by the ftpmasters and sent to
2306 debian-devel-announce: <ulink url="&howto-copyright;"/>.
2307 </para>
2308 </section>
2309 <section id="changelog"><title><filename>changelog</filename></title>
2310 <para>
2311 This is a required file, which has a special format described in
2312 <ulink url="&policy-dpkgchangelog;">Debian Policy Manual, 4.4 "debian/changelog"</ulink>.
2313 This format is used by <command>dpkg</command> and other programs to obtain the
2314 version number, revision, distribution, and urgency of your package.
2315 </para>
2316 <para>
2317 For you, it is also important, since it is good to have documented all changes
2318 you have done. It will help people downloading your package to see whether
2319 there are issues with the package that they should know about. It will be
2320 saved as <filename>/usr/share/doc/gentoo/changelog.Debian.gz</filename> in the
2321 binary package.
2322 </para>
2323 <para>
2324 <command>dh_make</command> created a default one, and this is what it looks
2325 like:
2326 </para>
2327 <screen>
2328 1 gentoo (0.9.12-1) unstable; urgency=low
2329 2
2330 3 * Initial release (Closes: #<replaceable>nnnn</replaceable>) &lt;<replaceable>nnnn</replaceable> is the bug number of your ITP&gt;
2331 4
2332 5 -- Josip Rodin &lt;joy-mg@debian.org&gt; Mon, 22 Mar 2010 00:37:31 +0100
2333 6
2334 </screen>
2335 <para>
2336 (I've added the line numbers.)
2337 </para>
2338 <para>
2339 Line 1 is the package name, version, distribution, and urgency. The name must
2340 match the source package name; distribution should be
2341 <literal>unstable</literal> (or even <literal>experimental</literal>)
2342 <footnote><para> Some people use invalid distribution values such as
2343 <literal>UNRELEASED</literal> to prevent a package being accidentally uploaded
2344 when updating a package in a shared VCS. </para> </footnote>, and urgency
2345 shouldn't be changed to anything higher than <literal>low</literal>. :-)
2346 </para>
2347 <para>
2348 Lines 3-5 are a log entry, where you document changes made in this package
2349 revision (not the upstream changes - there is a special file for that purpose,
2350 created by the upstream authors, which you will later install as
2351 <filename>/usr/share/doc/gentoo/changelog.gz</filename>). Let's assume your
2352 ITP (Intent To Package) bug report number was <literal>12345</literal>. New
2353 lines must be inserted just below the uppermost line that begins with
2354 <literal>*</literal> (asterisk). You can do it with <citerefentry>
2355 <refentrytitle>dch</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>, or
2356 manually with a text editor.
2357 </para>
2358 <para>
2359 You will end up with something like this:
2360 </para>
2361 <screen>
2362 1 gentoo (0.9.12-1) unstable; urgency=low
2363 2
2364 3 * Initial Release. Closes: #12345
2365 4 * This is my first Debian package.
2366 5 * Adjusted the Makefile to fix $(DESTDIR) problems.
2367 6
2368 7 -- Josip Rodin &lt;joy-mg@debian.org&gt; Mon, 22 Mar 2010 00:37:31 +0100
2369 8
2370 </screen>
2371 <para>
2372 (I've added the line numbers.)
2373 </para>
2374 <para>
2375 You can read more about updating the <filename>changelog</filename> file later
2376 in <xref linkend="update"/>.
2377 </para>
2378 </section>
2379 <section id="rules"><title><filename>rules</filename></title>
2380 <para>
2381 Now we need to take a look at the exact rules which <citerefentry>
2382 <refentrytitle>dpkg-buildpackage</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
2383 </citerefentry> will use to actually create the package. This file is in fact
2384 another <filename>Makefile</filename>, but different from the one(s) in the
2385 upstream source. Unlike other files in <filename>debian</filename>, this one
2386 is marked as executable.
2387 </para>
2388 <section id="targets"><title>Targets of the <filename>rules</filename> file</title>
2389 <para>
2390 Every <filename>rules</filename> file, like any other
2391 <filename>Makefile</filename>, consists of several rules, each of
2392 which defines a target and how it is carried out.
2393 <footnote><para>You can start learning how to write <filename>Makefile</filename> from
2394 <ulink url="&debref-make;">Debian Reference, 12.2. "Make"</ulink>.
2395 The full documentation is available as
2396 <ulink url="&gnu-make;"></ulink> or as the
2397 <systemitem role="package">make-doc</systemitem> package in the <literal>non-free</literal> archive area.
2398 </para></footnote>
2399 A new rule begins with its target declaration in the first column. The
2400 following lines beginning with the TAB code (ASCII 9) specify the recipe for
2401 carrying out that target.
2402 Empty lines and lines beginning with <literal>#</literal> (hash) are treated as
2403 comments and ignored.
2404 <footnote><para><ulink url="&policy-debianrules;">Debian
2405 Policy Manual, 4.9 "Main building script: debian/rules"</ulink> explains the
2406 details.</para></footnote>
2407 </para>
2408 <para>
2409 A rule that you want to execute is invoked by its target name as a command line argument. For
2410 example, <literal>debian/rules <replaceable>build</replaceable></literal> and
2411 <literal>fakeroot make -f debian/rules <replaceable>binary</replaceable></literal>
2412 execute rules for <literal><replaceable>build</replaceable></literal> and
2413 <literal><replaceable>binary</replaceable></literal> targets respectively.
2414 </para>
2415 <para>
2416 Here is a simplified explanation of the targets:
2417 </para>
2418 <itemizedlist>
2419 <listitem>
2420 <para>
2421 <literal>clean</literal> target: to clean all compiled, generated, and useless
2422 files in the build-tree. (Required)
2423 </para>
2424 </listitem>
2425 <listitem>
2426 <para>
2427 <literal>build</literal> target: to build the source into compiled programs and
2428 formatted documents in the build-tree. (Required)
2429 </para>
2430 </listitem>
2431 <listitem>
2432 <para>
2433 <literal>install</literal> target: to install files into a file tree for each
2434 binary package under the <filename>debian</filename> directory. If defined,
2435 <literal>binary*</literal> targets effectively depend on this target.
2436 (Optional)
2437 </para>
2438 </listitem>
2439 <listitem>
2440 <para>
2441 <literal>binary</literal> target: to create all binary packages (effectively
2442 a combination of <literal>binary-arch</literal> and
2443 <literal>binary-indep</literal> targets). (Required)<footnote><para> This
2444 target is used by <literal>dpkg-buildpackage</literal> as in <xref linkend="completebuild"/>. </para> </footnote>
2445 </para>
2446 </listitem>
2447 <listitem>
2448 <para>
2449 <literal>binary-arch</literal> target: to create arch-dependent
2450 (<literal>Architecture: any</literal>) binary packages in the parent directory.
2451 (Required)<footnote><para> This target is used by <literal>dpkg-buildpackage
2452 -B</literal> as in <xref linkend="autobuilder"/>. </para> </footnote>
2453 </para>
2454 </listitem>
2455 <listitem>
2456 <para>
2457 <literal>binary-indep</literal> target: to create arch-independent
2458 (<literal>Architecture: all</literal>) binary packages in the parent directory.
2459 (Required)<footnote><para> This target is used by <literal>dpkg-buildpackage
2460 -A</literal>. </para> </footnote>
2461 </para>
2462 </listitem>
2463 <listitem>
2464 <para>
2465 <literal>get-orig-source</literal> target: to obtain the most recent version of
2466 the original source package from an upstream archive. (Optional)
2467 </para>
2468 </listitem>
2469 </itemizedlist>
2470 <para>
2471 You are probably overwhelmed by now, but things are much simpler upon examination of the
2472 <filename>rules</filename> file that <command>dh_make</command> gives us as a
2473 default.
2474 </para>
2475 </section>
2476 <section id="defaultrules"><title>Default <filename>rules</filename> file</title>
2477 <para>
2478 Newer <command>dh_make</command> generates a very simple but powerful default
2479 <filename>rules</filename> file using the <command>dh</command> command:
2480 </para>
2481 <screen>
2482 1 #!/usr/bin/make -f
2483 2 # -*- makefile -*-
2484 3 # Sample debian/rules that uses debhelper.
2485 4 # This file was originally written by Joey Hess and Craig Small.
2486 5 # As a special exception, when this file is copied by dh-make into a
2487 6 # dh-make output file, you may use that output file without restriction.
2488 7 # This special exception was added by Craig Small in version 0.37 of dh-make.
2489 8
2490 9 # Uncomment this to turn on verbose mode.
2491 10 #export DH_VERBOSE=1
2492 11
2493 12 %:
2494 13 dh $@
2495 </screen>
2496 <para>
2497 (I've added the line numbers. In the actual <filename>rules</filename> file,
2498 the leading spaces are a TAB code.)
2499 </para>
2500 <para>
2501 You are probably familiar with lines like line 1 from shell and Perl scripts.
2502 It tells the operating system that this file is to be processed with
2503 <filename>/usr/bin/make</filename>.
2504 </para>
2505 <para>
2506 Line 10 can be uncommented to set the <literal>DH_VERBOSE</literal> variable to 1,
2507 so that the <command>dh</command> command outputs which
2508 <command>dh_*</command> commands it is executing.
2509 You can also add a line <literal>export DH_OPTIONS=-v</literal> here,
2510 so that each <command>dh_*</command> command outputs which commands it
2511 is executing. This helps you to understand
2512 exactly what is going on behind this simple <filename>rules</filename> file and
2513 to debug its problems. This new <command>dh</command> is designed to form a core part of the
2514 <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> tools, and not to hide
2515 anything from you.
2516 </para>
2517 <para>
2518 Lines 12 and 13 are where all the work is done with an implicit rule using the pattern rule. The percent sign means "any
2519 targets", which then call a single program, <command>dh</command>, with the target
2520 name. <footnote><para> This uses the new <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> v7 features. Its design concepts are
2521 explained in <ulink url="&debhelper-slides;">Not Your
2522 Grandpa's Debhelper</ulink> presented at DebConf9 by the <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> upstream. Under
2523 <literal>lenny</literal>, <command>dh_make</command> created a much more
2524 complicated <filename>rules</filename> file with explicit rules
2525 and many <command>dh_*</command> scripts listed for each one, most of
2526 which are now unnecessary (and show the package's age). The new <command>dh</command> command is
2527 simpler and frees us from doing the routine work "manually". You still have full power to
2528 customize the process with <literal>override_dh_*</literal> targets. See <xref linkend="customrules"/>. It is based only on the <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> package and does not obfuscate the
2529 package building process as the <systemitem role="package">cdbs</systemitem>
2530 package tends to. </para> </footnote> The <command>dh</command> command is a wrapper
2531 script which runs appropriate sequences of <command>dh_*</command> programs
2532 depending on its argument. <footnote><para> You can verify the actual sequences of
2533 <command>dh_*</command> programs invoked for a given
2534 <literal><replaceable>target</replaceable></literal> without really running them by invoking <literal>dh --no-act
2535 <replaceable>target</replaceable></literal> or <literal>debian/rules --
2536 '--no-act <replaceable>target</replaceable>'</literal>. </para> </footnote>
2537 </para>
2538 <itemizedlist>
2539 <listitem>
2540 <para>
2541 <literal>debian/rules clean</literal> runs <literal>dh clean</literal>, which
2542 in turn runs the following:
2543 </para>
2544 <screen>
2545 dh_testdir
2546 dh_auto_clean
2547 dh_clean
2548 </screen>
2549 </listitem>
2550 <listitem>
2551 <para>
2552 <literal>debian/rules build</literal> runs <literal>dh build</literal>; which
2553 in turn runs the following:
2554 </para>
2555 <screen>
2556 dh_testdir
2557 dh_auto_configure
2558 dh_auto_build
2559 dh_auto_test
2560 </screen>
2561 </listitem>
2562 <listitem>
2563 <para>
2564 <literal>fakeroot debian/rules binary</literal> runs <literal>fakeroot dh
2565 binary</literal>; which in turn runs the following<footnote><para> This assumes
2566 that the <systemitem role="package">python-support</systemitem> package is
2567 installed on the system. </para> </footnote>:
2568 </para>
2569 <screen>
2570 dh_testroot
2571 dh_prep
2572 dh_installdirs
2573 dh_auto_install
2574 dh_install
2575 dh_installdocs
2576 dh_installchangelogs
2577 dh_installexamples
2578 dh_installman
2579 dh_installcatalogs
2580 dh_installcron
2581 dh_installdebconf
2582 dh_installemacsen
2583 dh_installifupdown
2584 dh_installinfo
2585 dh_pysupport
2586 dh_installinit
2587 dh_installmenu
2588 dh_installmime
2589 dh_installmodules
2590 dh_installlogcheck
2591 dh_installlogrotate
2592 dh_installpam
2593 dh_installppp
2594 dh_installudev
2595 dh_installwm
2596 dh_installxfonts
2597 dh_bugfiles
2598 dh_lintian
2599 dh_gconf
2600 dh_icons
2601 dh_perl
2602 dh_usrlocal
2603 dh_link
2604 dh_compress
2605 dh_fixperms
2606 dh_strip
2607 dh_makeshlibs
2608 dh_shlibdeps
2609 dh_installdeb
2610 dh_gencontrol
2611 dh_md5sums
2612 dh_builddeb
2613 </screen>
2614 </listitem>
2615 <listitem>
2616 <para>
2617 <literal>fakeroot debian/rules binary-arch</literal> runs <literal>fakeroot dh
2618 binary-arch</literal>; which in turn runs the same sequence as
2619 <literal>fakeroot dh binary</literal> but with the <literal>-a</literal> option
2620 appended for each command.
2621 </para>
2622 </listitem>
2623 <listitem>
2624 <para>
2625 <literal>fakeroot debian/rules binary-indep</literal> runs <literal>fakeroot dh
2626 binary-indep</literal>; which in turn runs almost the same sequence as
2627 <literal>fakeroot dh binary</literal> but excluding
2628 <command>dh_strip</command>, <command>dh_makeshlibs</command>, and
2629 <command>dh_shlibdeps</command> with the <literal>-i</literal> option appended
2630 for each remaining command.
2631 </para>
2632 </listitem>
2633 </itemizedlist>
2634 <para>
2635 The functions of <command>dh_*</command> commands are largely self-evident from
2636 their names. <footnote><para> For complete information on what all these
2637 <command>dh_*</command> scripts do exactly, and what their other options are,
2638 please read their respective manual pages and the <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> documentation. </para> </footnote> There
2639 are a few notable ones that are worth giving (over)simplified explanations here assuming
2640 a typical build environment based on a <filename>Makefile</filename>.
2641 <footnote><para> These commands support other build environments such as
2642 <filename>setup.py</filename> which can be listed by executing
2643 <literal>dh_auto_build --list</literal> in a package source directory. </para>
2644 </footnote>
2645 </para>
2646 <itemizedlist>
2647 <listitem>
2648 <para>
2649 <command>dh_auto_clean</command> usually executes the following if a
2650 <filename>Makefile</filename> exists with the <literal>distclean</literal>
2651 target. <footnote><para> It actually looks for the first available target
2652 in the <filename>Makefile</filename> out of
2653 <literal>distclean</literal>, <literal>realclean</literal>, or
2654 <literal>clean</literal>, and executes that.
2655 </para> </footnote>
2656 </para>
2657 <screen>
2658 make distclean
2659 </screen>
2660 </listitem>
2661 <listitem>
2662 <para>
2663 <command>dh_auto_configure</command> usually executes the following if
2664 <filename>./configure</filename> exists (arguments abbreviated for
2665 readability).
2666 </para>
2667 <screen>
2668 ./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc --localstatedir=/var ...
2669 </screen>
2670 </listitem>
2671 <listitem>
2672 <para>
2673 <command>dh_auto_build</command> usually executes the following to execute the
2674 first target of <filename>Makefile</filename> if it exists.
2675 </para>
2676 <screen>
2677 make
2678 </screen>
2679 </listitem>
2680 <listitem>
2681 <para>
2682 <command>dh_auto_test</command> usually executes the following if a
2683 <filename>Makefile</filename> exists with the <literal>test</literal> target.
2684 <footnote><para> It actually looks for the first available target in
2685 the <filename>Makefile</filename> out of <literal>test</literal> or
2686 <literal>check</literal>, and executes that.</para> </footnote>
2687 </para>
2688 <screen>
2689 make test
2690 </screen>
2691 </listitem>
2692 <listitem>
2693 <para>
2694 <command>dh_auto_install</command> usually executes the following if a
2695 <filename>Makefile</filename> exists with the <literal>install</literal> target
2696 (line folded for readability).
2697 </para>
2698 <screen>
2699 make install \
2700 DESTDIR=<replaceable>/path/to</replaceable>/<replaceable>package</replaceable>_<replaceable>version</replaceable>-<replaceable>revision</replaceable>/debian/<replaceable>package</replaceable>
2701 </screen>
2702 </listitem>
2703 </itemizedlist>
2704 <para>
2705 All targets which require the <command>fakeroot</command> command will contain
2706 <command>dh_testroot</command>, which exits with an error if you are not
2707 using this command to pretend to be root.
2708 </para>
2709 <para>
2710 The important part to know about the <filename>rules</filename> file created by
2711 <command>dh_make</command> is that it is just a suggestion. It will work for
2712 most packages but for more complicated ones, don't be afraid to customize it to
2713 fit your needs.
2714 </para>
2715 <para>
2716 Although <literal>install</literal> is not a required target, it is supported.
2717 <literal>fakeroot dh install</literal> behaves like <literal>fakeroot dh
2718 binary</literal> but stops after <command>dh_fixperms</command>.
2719 </para>
2720 </section>
2721 <section id="customrules"><title>Customization of <filename>rules</filename> file</title>
2722 <para>
2723 There are many ways to customize the <filename>rules</filename> file created
2724 with the new <command>dh</command> command.
2725 </para>
2726 <para>
2727 The <literal>dh $@</literal> command can be customized as follows.
2728 <footnote><para> If a package installs the
2729 <filename>/usr/share/perl5/Debian/Debhelper/Sequence/<replaceable>custom_name</replaceable>.pm</filename>
2730 file, you should activate its customization function by <literal>dh --with
2731 <replaceable>custom-name</replaceable> $@</literal>. </para> </footnote>
2732 </para>
2733 <itemizedlist>
2734 <listitem>
2735 <para>
2736 Add support for the <command>dh_pysupport</command> command. (The best choice
2737 for Python.) <footnote><para> Use of the <command>dh_pysupport</command>
2738 command is preferred over use of the <command>dh_pycentral</command> command.
2739 Do not use the <command>dh_python</command> command. </para> </footnote>
2740 </para>
2741 <itemizedlist>
2742 <listitem>
2743 <para>
2744 Include the <systemitem role="package">python-support</systemitem> package in
2745 <literal>Build-Depends</literal>.
2746 </para>
2747 </listitem>
2748 <listitem>
2749 <para>
2750 Use <literal>dh $@</literal> as usual. (Use of <command>dh_pysupport</command> is the default)
2751 </para>
2752 </listitem>
2753 <listitem>
2754 <para>
2755 This handles Python modules using the <systemitem role="package">python-support</systemitem> framework.
2756 </para>
2757 </listitem>
2758 </itemizedlist>
2759 </listitem>
2760 <listitem>
2761 <para>
2762 Add support for the <command>dh_pycentral</command> command.
2763 </para>
2764 <itemizedlist>
2765 <listitem>
2766 <para>
2767 Include the <systemitem role="package">python-central</systemitem> package in
2768 <literal>Build-Depends</literal>.
2769 </para>
2770 </listitem>
2771 <listitem>
2772 <para>
2773 Use <literal>dh --with python-central $@</literal> instead.
2774 </para>
2775 </listitem>
2776 <listitem>
2777 <para>
2778 This also deactivates the <command>dh_pysupport</command> command.
2779 </para>
2780 </listitem>
2781 <listitem>
2782 <para>
2783 This handles Python modules using the <systemitem role="package">python-central</systemitem> framework.
2784 </para>
2785 </listitem>
2786 </itemizedlist>
2787 </listitem>
2788 <listitem>
2789 <para>
2790 Add support for the <command>dh_installtex</command> command.
2791 </para>
2792 <itemizedlist>
2793 <listitem>
2794 <para>
2795 Include the <systemitem role="package">tex-common</systemitem> package in
2796 <literal>Build-Depends</literal>.
2797 </para>
2798 </listitem>
2799 <listitem>
2800 <para>
2801 Use <literal>dh --with tex $@</literal> instead.
2802 </para>
2803 </listitem>
2804 <listitem>
2805 <para>
2806 This registers Type 1 fonts, hyphenation patterns, and formats with TeX.
2807 </para>
2808 </listitem>
2809 </itemizedlist>
2810 </listitem>
2811 <listitem>
2812 <para>
2813 Add support for the <command>dh_quilt_patch</command> and
2814 <command>dh_quilt_unpatch</command> commands.
2815 </para>
2816 <itemizedlist>
2817 <listitem>
2818 <para>
2819 Include the <systemitem role="package">quilt</systemitem> package in
2820 <literal>Build-Depends</literal>.
2821 </para>
2822 </listitem>
2823 <listitem>
2824 <para>
2825 Use <literal>dh --with quilt $@</literal> instead.
2826 </para>
2827 </listitem>
2828 <listitem>
2829 <para>
2830 This applies and un-applies patches to the upstream source from files in the
2831 <filename>debian/patches</filename> directory for a source package in the <literal>1.0</literal> format.
2832 </para>
2833 </listitem>
2834 <listitem>
2835 <para>
2836 This is not needed if you use the new <literal>3.0 (quilt)</literal> source
2837 package format.
2838 </para>
2839 </listitem>
2840 </itemizedlist>
2841 </listitem>
2842 <listitem>
2843 <para>
2844 Add support for the <command>dh_dkms</command> command.
2845 </para>
2846 <itemizedlist>
2847 <listitem>
2848 <para>
2849 Include the <systemitem role="package">dkms</systemitem> package in
2850 <literal>Build-Depends</literal>.
2851 </para>
2852 </listitem>
2853 <listitem>
2854 <para>
2855 Use <literal>dh --with dkms $@</literal> instead.
2856 </para>
2857 </listitem>
2858 <listitem>
2859 <para>
2860 This correctly handles DKMS usage by kernel module packages.
2861 </para>
2862 </listitem>
2863 </itemizedlist>
2864 </listitem>
2865 <listitem>
2866 <para>
2867 Add support for the <command>dh_autotools-dev_updateconfig</command> and
2868 <command>dh_autotools-dev_restoreconfig</command> commands.
2869 </para>
2870 <itemizedlist>
2871 <listitem>
2872 <para>
2873 Include the <systemitem role="package">autotools-dev</systemitem> package in
2874 <literal>Build-Depends</literal>.
2875 </para>
2876 </listitem>
2877 <listitem>
2878 <para>
2879 Use <literal>dh --with autotools-dev $@</literal> instead.
2880 </para>
2881 </listitem>
2882 <listitem>
2883 <para>
2884 This updates and restores <filename>config.sub</filename> and
2885 <filename>config.guess</filename>.
2886 </para>
2887 </listitem>
2888 </itemizedlist>
2889 </listitem>
2890 <listitem>
2891 <para>
2892 Add support for the <command>dh_autoreconf</command> and
2893 <command>dh_autoreconf_clean</command> commands.
2894 </para>
2895 <itemizedlist>
2896 <listitem>
2897 <para>
2898 Include the <systemitem role="package">dh-autoreconf</systemitem> package in
2899 <literal>Build-Depends</literal>.
2900 </para>
2901 </listitem>
2902 <listitem>
2903 <para>
2904 Use <literal>dh --with autoreconf $@</literal> instead.
2905 </para>
2906 </listitem>
2907 <listitem>
2908 <para>
2909 This updates the GNU Build System files and restores them after the build.
2910 </para>
2911 </listitem>
2912 </itemizedlist>
2913 </listitem>
2914 <listitem>
2915 <para>
2916 Add support for the <command>bash</command> completion feature.
2917 </para>
2918 <itemizedlist>
2919 <listitem>
2920 <para>
2921 Includes the <systemitem role="package">bash-completion</systemitem> package in
2922 <literal>Build-Depends</literal>.
2923 </para>
2924 </listitem>
2925 <listitem>
2926 <para>
2927 Use <literal>dh --with bash-completion $@</literal> instead.
2928 </para>
2929 </listitem>
2930 <listitem>
2931 <para>
2932 This installs <command>bash</command> completions using a configuration file at
2933 <filename>debian/<replaceable>package</replaceable>.bash-completion</filename>.
2934 </para>
2935 </listitem>
2936 </itemizedlist>
2937 </listitem>
2938 </itemizedlist>
2939 <para>
2940 Many <command>dh_*</command> commands invoked by the new <command>dh</command>
2941 command can be customized by the corresponding configuration files in the
2942 <filename>debian</filename> directory. See <xref linkend="dother"/> and the
2943 manpage of each command for the customization of such features.
2944 </para>
2945 <para>
2946 You may need to run <command>dh_*</command> commands invoked via the new <command>dh</command>
2947 with added arguments, or to run additional commands with them, or to skip them.
2948 For such cases, you create an
2949 <literal>override_dh_<replaceable>foo</replaceable></literal> target with its
2950 rule in the <filename>rules</filename> file defining an
2951 <literal>override_dh_<replaceable>foo</replaceable></literal> target for the
2952 <command>dh_<replaceable>foo</replaceable></command> command you want to
2953 change. It basically says <emphasis>run me instead</emphasis>.
2954 <footnote><para> Under <literal>lenny</literal>, if you wanted to change the
2955 behavior of a <command>dh_*</command> script you found the relevant line in the
2956 <filename>rules</filename> file and adjusted it. </para> </footnote>
2957 </para>
2958 <para>
2959 Please note that the <command>dh_auto_*</command> commands tend to do more than
2960 what has been discussed in this (over)simplified explanation to take care of all the
2961 corner cases. It is a bad idea to use <literal>override_dh_*</literal> targets
2962 to substitute simplified equivalent commands (except for the
2963 <literal>override_dh_auto_clean</literal> target) since it may
2964 bypass such smart <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> features.
2965 </para>
2966 <para>
2967 So, for instance, if you want to store system configuration data in the
2968 <filename>/etc/gentoo</filename> directory instead of the usual
2969 <filename>/etc</filename> directory for the recent
2970 <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem> package using Autotools, you can override the default
2971 <literal>--sysconfig=/etc</literal> argument given by the
2972 <command>dh_auto_configure</command> command to the
2973 <command>./configure</command> command by the following.
2974 </para>
2975 <screen>
2976 override_dh_auto_configure:
2977 dh_auto_configure -- --sysconfig=/etc/gentoo
2978 </screen>
2979 <para>
2980 The arguments given after <literal>--</literal> are appended to the default
2981 arguments of the auto-executed program to override them. Using the
2982 <command>dh_auto_configure</command> command is better than directly invoking the
2983 <command>./configure</command> command here since it will only override the
2984 <literal>--sysconfig</literal> argument and retains any other, benign arguments
2985 to the <command>./configure</command> command.
2986 </para>
2987 <para>
2988 If the <filename>Makefile</filename> in the source for <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem> requires you to specify
2989 <literal>build</literal> as its target to build it <footnote><para>
2990 <command>dh_auto_build</command> without any arguments will execute the first
2991 target in the <filename>Makefile</filename>. </para> </footnote>, you
2992 create an <literal>override_dh_auto_build</literal> target to enable this.
2993 </para>
2994 <screen>
2995 override_dh_auto_build:
2996 dh_auto_build -- build
2997 </screen>
2998 <para>
2999 This ensures <literal>$(MAKE)</literal> is run with all the default arguments given by the
3000 <command>dh_auto_build</command> command plus the <literal>build</literal> argument.
3001 </para>
3002 <para>
3003 If the <filename>Makefile</filename> in the source for <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem> requires you to specify the
3004 <literal>packageclean</literal> target to clean it for the Debian package instead
3005 of using <literal>distclean</literal> or <literal>clean</literal> targets,
3006 you can create an
3007 <literal>override_dh_auto_clean</literal> target to enable thit.
3008 </para>
3009 <screen>
3010 override_dh_auto_clean:
3011 $(MAKE) packageclean
3012 </screen>
3013 <para>
3014 If the <filename>Makefile</filename> in the source for <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem> contains a <literal>test</literal> target
3015 which you do not want to run for the Debian package building process, you can
3016 use an empty <literal>override_dh_auto_test</literal> target to skip it.
3017 </para>
3018 <screen>
3019 override_dh_auto_test:
3020 </screen>
3021 <para>
3022 If <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem> has an unusual upstream
3023 changelog file called <filename>FIXES</filename>,
3024 <command>dh_installchangelogs</command> will not install that file by default.
3025 The <command>dh_installchangelogs</command> command requires
3026 <filename>FIXES</filename> as its argument to install it. <footnote><para> The
3027 <filename>debian/changelog</filename> and <filename>debian/NEWS</filename>
3028 files are always automatically installed. The upstream changelog is found
3029 by converting filenames to lower case and matching them against
3030 <filename>changelog</filename>, <filename>changes</filename>,
3031 <filename>changelog.txt</filename>, and <filename>changes.txt</filename>.
3032 </para> </footnote>
3033 </para>
3034 <screen>
3035 override_dh_installchangelogs:
3036 dh_installchangelogs FIXES
3037 </screen>
3038 <para>
3039 When you use the new <command>dh</command> command, use of explicit targets
3040 such as the ones listed in <xref linkend="targets"/>, other than the
3041 <literal>get-orig-source</literal> target, may make it difficult to understand
3042 their exact effects. Please limit explicit targets to
3043 <literal>override_dh_*</literal> targets and completely independent ones, if
3044 possible.
3045 </para>
3046 </section>
3047 </section>
3048 </chapter>
3049 <chapter id="dother"><title>Other files under the <filename>debian</filename> directory</title>
3050 <para>
3051 To control most of what <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> does
3052 while building the package, you put optional configuration files under the
3053 <filename>debian</filename> directory. This chapter will provide an overview of
3054 what each of these does and its format. Please read the <ulink url="&debian-policy;">Debian Policy
3055 Manual</ulink> and <ulink url="&developers-reference;">Debian Developer's
3056 Reference</ulink> for guidelines for packaging.
3057 </para>
3058 <para>
3059 The <command>dh_make</command> command will create some template configuration
3060 files under the <filename>debian</filename> directory. Most of them come with
3061 filenames suffixed by <literal>.ex</literal>. Some of them come with filenames
3062 prefixed by the binary package name such as
3063 <literal><replaceable>package</replaceable></literal>. Take a look at all of
3064 them.
3065 <footnote><para>
3066 In this chapter, files in the <filename>debian</filename> directory are
3067 referred to without the leading <filename>debian/</filename> for simplicity whenever
3068 the meaning is obvious.
3069 </para></footnote>
3070 </para>
3071 <para>
3072 Some template configuration files for <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem>
3073 may not be created by the <command>dh_make</command> command. In
3074 such cases, you need to create them with an editor.
3075 </para>
3076 <para>
3077 If you wish or need to activate any of these, please do the following:
3078 </para>
3079 <itemizedlist>
3080 <listitem>
3081 <para>
3082 rename template files by removing the <literal>.ex</literal> or
3083 <literal>.EX</literal> suffix if they have one;
3084 </para>
3085 </listitem>
3086 <listitem>
3087 <para>
3088 rename the configuration files to use the actual binary package
3089 name in place of <literal><replaceable>package</replaceable></literal>;
3090 </para>
3091 </listitem>
3092 <listitem>
3093 <para>
3094 modify template file contents to suit your needs;
3095 </para>
3096 </listitem>
3097 <listitem>
3098 <para>
3099 remove template files which you do not need;
3100 </para>
3101 </listitem>
3102 <listitem>
3103 <para>
3104 modify the <filename>control</filename> file (see <xref linkend="control"/>),
3105 if necessary;
3106 </para>
3107 </listitem>
3108 <listitem>
3109 <para>
3110 modify the <filename>rules</filename> file (see <xref linkend="rules"/>), if
3111 necessary.
3112 </para>
3113 </listitem>
3114 </itemizedlist>
3115 <para>
3116 Any <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> configuration files
3117 without a <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable></filename> prefix, such as
3118 <filename>install</filename>, apply to the first binary package. When there are
3119 many binary packages, their configurations can be specified by prefixing their
3120 name to their configuration filenames such as
3121 <filename><replaceable>package-1</replaceable>.install</filename>,
3122 <filename><replaceable>package-2</replaceable>.install</filename>, etc.
3123 </para>
3124 <section id="readme"><title><filename>README.Debian</filename></title>
3125 <para>
3126 Any extra details or discrepancies between the original package and your Debian
3127 version should be documented here.
3128 </para>
3129 <para>
3130 <command>dh_make</command> created a default one; this is what it looks like:
3131 </para>
3132 <screen>
3133 gentoo for Debian
3134 -----------------
3135 &lt;possible notes regarding this package - if none, delete this file&gt;
3136 -- Josip Rodin &lt;joy-mg@debian.org&gt;, Wed, 11 Nov 1998 21:02:14 +0100
3137 </screen>
3138 <para>
3139 If you have nothing to be documented, remove this file. See <citerefentry>
3140 <refentrytitle>dh_installdocs</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
3141 </citerefentry>.
3142 </para>
3143 </section>
3144 <section id="compat"><title><filename>compat</filename></title>
3145 <para>
3146 The <filename>compat</filename> file defines the <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> compatibility level. Currently, you
3147 should set it to the <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> v7 as
3148 follows:
3149 </para>
3150 <screen>
3151 $ echo 7 &gt; debian/compat
3152 </screen>
3153 </section>
3154 <section id="conffiles"><title><filename>conffiles</filename></title>
3155 <para>
3156 One of the most annoying things about software is when you spend a great deal
3157 of time and effort customizing a program, only to have an upgrade stomp all
3158 over your changes. Debian solves this problem by marking such configuration files as conffiles.
3159 <footnote><para>See <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dpkg</refentrytitle>
3160 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> and
3161 <ulink url="&policy-conffiles;">Debian Policy Manual "D.2.5 Conffiles"</ulink>.
3162 </para></footnote>
3163 When you upgrade a package, you'll be asked whether you want to keep
3164 your old configuration files or not.
3165 </para>
3166 <para>
3167 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>dh_installdeb</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
3168 </citerefentry> <emphasis>automatically</emphasis> flags any files under
3169 the <filename>/etc</filename> directory as conffiles, so if your program only
3170 has conffiles there you do not need to specify them in this file. For most
3171 package types, the only place conffiles should ever be is under
3172 <filename>/etc</filename>, and so this file doesn't need to exist.
3173 </para>
3174 <para>
3175 If your program uses configuration files but also rewrites them on its own,
3176 it's best not to make them conffiles because <command>dpkg</command> will
3177 then prompt users to verify the changes all the time.
3178 </para>
3179 <para>
3180 If the program you're packaging requires every user to modify the configuration
3181 files in the <filename>/etc</filename> directory, there are two popular ways to
3182 arrange for them to not be conffiles, keeping <command>dpkg</command> quiet.
3183 </para>
3184 <itemizedlist>
3185 <listitem>
3186 <para>
3187 Create a symlink under the <filename>/etc</filename> directory pointing to a
3188 file under the <filename>/var</filename> directory generated by the
3189 maintainer scripts.
3190 </para>
3191 </listitem>
3192 <listitem>
3193 <para>
3194 Create a file generated by the maintainer scripts under the <filename>/etc</filename> directory.
3195 </para>
3196 </listitem>
3197 </itemizedlist>
3198 <para>
3199 For information on maintainer scripts, see <xref linkend="maintscripts"/>.
3200 </para>
3201 </section>
3202 <section id="crond"><title><filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.cron.*</filename></title>
3203 <para>
3204 If your package requires regularly scheduled tasks to operate properly, you can
3205 use these files to set that up. You can set up regular tasks that either happen
3206 hourly, daily, weekly, or monthly, or alternatively happen at any other time that
3207 you wish. The filenames are:
3208 </para>
3209 <itemizedlist>
3210 <listitem>
3211 <para>
3212 <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.cron.hourly</filename> - Installed as
3213 <filename>/etc/cron.hourly/<replaceable>package</replaceable></filename>; run
3214 once an hour.
3215 </para>
3216 </listitem>
3217 <listitem>
3218 <para>
3219 <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.cron.daily</filename> - Installed as
3220 <filename>/etc/cron.daily/<replaceable>package</replaceable></filename>; run
3221 once a day.
3222 </para>
3223 </listitem>
3224 <listitem>
3225 <para>
3226 <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.cron.weekly</filename> - Installed as
3227 <filename>/etc/cron.weekly/<replaceable>package</replaceable></filename>; run
3228 once a week.
3229 </para>
3230 </listitem>
3231 <listitem>
3232 <para>
3233 <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.cron.monthly</filename> - Installed as
3234 <filename>/etc/cron.monthly/<replaceable>package</replaceable></filename>: run
3235 once a month.
3236 </para>
3237 </listitem>
3238 <listitem>
3239 <para>
3240 <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.cron.d</filename> - Installed as
3241 <filename>/etc/cron.d/<replaceable>package</replaceable></filename>: for any
3242 other time.
3243 </para>
3244 </listitem>
3245 </itemizedlist>
3246 <para>
3247 Most of these files are shell scripts, with the exception of
3248 <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.cron.d</filename> which follows
3249 the format of <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>crontab</refentrytitle>
3250 <manvolnum>5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.
3251 </para>
3252 <para>
3253 No explicit <filename>cron.*</filename> file is needed to set up log rotation;
3254 for that, see
3255 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>dh_installlogrotate</refentrytitle>
3256 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> and
3257 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>logrotate</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
3258 </para>
3259 </section>
3260 <section id="dirs"><title><filename>dirs</filename></title>
3261 <para>
3262 This file specifies any directories which we need but which are not created by the normal installation
3263 procedure (<literal>make install DESTDIR=...</literal> invoked by
3264 <literal>dh_auto_install</literal>). This generally
3265 means there is a problem with the <filename>Makefile</filename>.
3266 </para>
3267 <para>
3268 Files listed in an <filename>install</filename> file don't need their
3269 directories created first. See <xref linkend="install"/>.
3270 </para>
3271 <para>
3272 It is best to try to run the installation first and only use this if you
3273 run into trouble. There is no preceding slash on the directory names listed in
3274 the <filename>dirs</filename> file.
3275 </para>
3276 </section>
3277 <section id="doc-base"><title><filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.doc-base</filename></title>
3278 <para>
3279 If your package has documentation other than manual and info pages, you
3280 should use the <systemitem role="package">doc-base</systemitem> file to
3281 register it, so the user can find it with e.g. <citerefentry>
3282 <refentrytitle>dhelp</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>,
3283 <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dwww</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
3284 </citerefentry>, or <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>doccentral</refentrytitle>
3285 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.
3286 </para>
3287 <para>
3288 This usually includes HTML, PS and PDF files, shipped in
3289 <filename>/usr/share/doc/<replaceable>packagename</replaceable>/</filename>.
3290 </para>
3291 <para>
3292 This is what <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem>'s doc-base file
3293 <filename>gentoo.doc-base</filename> looks like:
3294 </para>
3295 <screen>
3296 Document: gentoo
3297 Title: Gentoo Manual
3298 Author: Emil Brink
3299 Abstract: This manual describes what Gentoo is, and how it can be used.
3300 Section: File Management
3301 Format: HTML
3302 Index: /usr/share/doc/gentoo/html/index.html
3303 Files: /usr/share/doc/gentoo/html/*.html
3304 </screen>
3305 <para>
3306 For information on the file format, see <citerefentry>
3307 <refentrytitle>install-docs</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
3308 </citerefentry> and the <systemitem role="package">doc-base</systemitem>
3309 manual, in <ulink url="&doc-base;">Debian doc-base Manual</ulink>.
3310 </para>
3311 <para>
3312 For more details on installing additional documentation, look in <xref linkend="destdir"/>.
3313 </para>
3314 </section>
3315 <section id="docs"><title><filename>docs</filename></title>
3316 <para>
3317 This file specifies the file names of documentation files we can have
3318 <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dh_installdocs</refentrytitle>
3319 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> install into the temporary directory
3320 for us.
3321 </para>
3322 <para>
3323 By default, it will include all existing files in the top-level source
3324 directory that are called <filename>BUGS</filename>,
3325 <filename>README*</filename>, <filename>TODO</filename> etc.
3326 </para>
3327 <para>
3328 For <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem>, some other files
3329 are also included:
3330 </para>
3331 <screen>
3332 BUGS
3333 CONFIG-CHANGES
3334 CREDITS
3335 NEWS
3336 README
3337 README.gtkrc
3338 TODO
3339 </screen>
3340 </section>
3341 <section id="emacsen"><title><filename>emacsen-*</filename></title>
3342 <para>
3343 If your package supplies Emacs files that can be bytecompiled at package
3344 installation time, you can use these files to set it up.
3345 </para>
3346 <para>
3347 They are installed into the temporary directory by <citerefentry>
3348 <refentrytitle>dh_installemacsen</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
3349 </citerefentry>.
3350 </para>
3351 <para>
3352 If you don't need these, remove them.
3353 </para>
3354 </section>
3355 <section id="examples"><title><filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.examples</filename></title>
3356 <para>
3357 The <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dh_installexamples</refentrytitle>
3358 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> command installs files and directories
3359 listed in this file as example files.
3360 </para>
3361 </section>
3362 <section id="initd"><title><filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.init</filename> and <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.default</filename></title>
3363 <para>
3364 If your package is a daemon that needs to be run at system start-up, you've
3365 obviously disregarded my initial recommendation, haven't you? :-)
3366 </para>
3367 <para>
3368 The <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.init</filename> file is
3369 installed as the
3370 <filename>/etc/init.d/<replaceable>package</replaceable></filename> script
3371 which starts and stops the daemon.
3372 Its fairly generic skeleton template is provided by the
3373 <command>dh_make</command> command as <filename>init.d.ex</filename>. You'll
3374 likely have to rename and edit it, a lot, while making sure to provide
3375 <ulink url="&lsb;">Linux Standard Base</ulink> (LSB) compliant headers. It
3376 gets installed into the temporary directory by <citerefentry>
3377 <refentrytitle>dh_installinit</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
3378 </citerefentry>.
3379 </para>
3380 <para>
3381 The <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.default</filename> file will
3382 be installed as
3383 <filename>/etc/default/<replaceable>package</replaceable></filename>. This
3384 file sets defaults that are sourced by the init script. This
3385 <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.default</filename> file
3386 is most often used to disable running a daemon, or to set some default flags or
3387 timeouts. If your init script has certain configurable
3388 features, you can set them in the <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.default</filename> file,
3389 instead of in the init script itself.
3390 </para>
3391 <para>
3392 If your upstream program provides a file for the init script, you can either use it or not. If you
3393 don't use their init script then create a new one in
3394 <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.init</filename>. However
3395 if the upstream init script looks fine and installs in the right place you
3396 still need to set up the <filename>rc*</filename> symlinks. To do this you will
3397 need to override <command>dh_installinit</command> in the
3398 <filename>rules</filename> file with the following lines:
3399 </para>
3400 <screen>
3401 override_dh_installinit:
3402 dh_installinit --onlyscripts
3403 </screen>
3404 <para>
3405 If you don't need this, remove the files.
3406 </para>
3407 </section>
3408 <section id="install"><title><filename>install</filename></title>
3409 <para>
3410 If there are files that need to be installed into your package but your
3411 standard <literal>make install</literal> won't do it, put the filenames and
3412 destinations into this <filename>install</filename> file. They are installed
3413 by <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dh_install</refentrytitle>
3414 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.<footnote><para> This replaces the
3415 deprecated <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dh_movefiles</refentrytitle>
3416 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> command which is configured by the
3417 <filename>files</filename> file. </para> </footnote> You should first check
3418 there is not a more specific tool to use. For example, documents should be in
3419 the <filename>docs</filename> file and not in this one.
3420 </para>
3421 <para>
3422 This <filename>install</filename> file has one line per file installed, with
3423 the name of the file (relative to the top build directory) then a space then
3424 the installation directory (relative to the install directory). One example of where this is used is if a binary <filename>src/<replaceable>bar</replaceable></filename> is left uninstalled; the
3425 <filename>install</filename> file might look like:
3426 </para>
3427 <screen>
3428 src/<replaceable>bar</replaceable> usr/bin
3429 </screen>
3430 <para>
3431 This means when this package is installed, there will be an executable command
3432 <filename>/usr/bin/<replaceable>bar</replaceable></filename>.
3433 </para>
3434 <para>
3435 Alternatively, this <filename>install</filename> can have the name of the file
3436 only without the installation directory when the relative directory path does
3437 not change. This format is usually used for a large package that splits the
3438 output of its build into multiple binary packages using
3439 <filename><replaceable>package-1</replaceable>.install</filename>,
3440 <filename><replaceable>package-2</replaceable>.install</filename>, etc.
3441 </para>
3442 <para>
3443 The <command>dh_install</command> command will fall back to looking in
3444 <filename>debian/tmp</filename> for files, if it doesn't find them in the
3445 current directory (or wherever you've told it to look using
3446 <literal>--sourcedir</literal>).
3447 </para>
3448 </section>
3449 <section id="info"><title><filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.info</filename></title>
3450 <para>
3451 If your package has info pages, you should install them using <citerefentry>
3452 <refentrytitle>dh_installinfo</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
3453 </citerefentry> by listing them in a
3454 <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.info</filename> file.
3455 </para>
3456 </section>
3457 <section id="lintian"><title><filename>{<replaceable>package</replaceable>.,source/}lintian-overrides</filename></title>
3458 <para>
3459 If <systemitem role="package">lintian</systemitem> reports an erroneous
3460 diagnostic for a case where Debian policy allows exceptions to some rule, you can
3461 use <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.lintian-overrides</filename>
3462 or <filename>source/lintian-overrides</filename> to quieten it. Please read
3463 <ulink url="&lintian-doc;">Lintian User's Manual</ulink> and refrain
3464 from abusing this.
3465 </para>
3466 <para>
3467 <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.lintian-overrides</filename> is
3468 for the binary package named <systemitem role="package"><replaceable>package</replaceable></systemitem> and is installed
3469 into
3470 <filename>usr/share/lintian/overrides/<replaceable>package</replaceable></filename>
3471 by the <command>dh_lintian</command> command.
3472 </para>
3473 <para>
3474 <filename>source/lintian-overrides</filename> is for the source package. This
3475 is not installed.
3476 </para>
3477 </section>
3478 <section id="manpage"><title><filename>manpage.*</filename></title>
3479 <para>
3480 Your program(s) should have a manual page. If they don't, you should create
3481 them. The <command>dh_make</command> command creates some template files for
3482 manual pages. These need to be copied and edited for each command missing its
3483 manual page. Please make sure to remove unused templates.
3484 </para>
3485 <section id="manpage1"><title><filename>manpage.1.ex</filename></title>
3486 <para>
3487 Manual pages are normally written in <citerefentry>
3488 <refentrytitle>nroff</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.
3489 The <filename>manpage.1.ex</filename> template is written in
3490 <command>nroff</command>, too. See the <citerefentry>
3491 <refentrytitle>man</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>7</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
3492 manual page for a brief description of how to edit such a file.
3493 </para>
3494 <para>
3495 The final manual page file name should give the name of the program it is
3496 documenting, so we will rename it from <literal>manpage</literal> to
3497 <literal>gentoo</literal>. The file name also includes <literal>.1</literal>
3498 as the first suffix, which means it's a manual page for a user command. Be
3499 sure to verify that this section is indeed the correct one. Here's a short
3500 list of manual page sections:
3501 </para>
3502 <informaltable id="manpage-sections" pgwide="0" frame="topbot" rowsep="1" colsep="1">
3503 <tgroup cols="3">
3504 <colspec colwidth="8*" align="left"/> <colspec colwidth="24*" align="left"/> <colspec colwidth="40*" align="left"/>
3505 <thead>
3506 <row> <entry>Section</entry> <entry>Description</entry> <entry>Notes</entry> </row>
3507 </thead>
3508 <tbody>
3509 <row> <entry>1</entry> <entry>User command</entry> <entry>Executable commands or scripts</entry> </row>
3510 <row> <entry>2</entry> <entry>System calls</entry> <entry>Functions provided by the kernel</entry> </row>
3511 <row> <entry>3</entry> <entry>Library calls</entry> <entry>Functions within system libraries</entry> </row>
3512 <row> <entry>4</entry> <entry>Special files</entry> <entry>Usually found in <filename>/dev</filename></entry> </row>
3513 <row> <entry>5</entry> <entry>File formats</entry> <entry>E.g. <filename>/etc/passwd</filename>'s format</entry> </row>
3514 <row> <entry>6</entry> <entry>Games</entry> <entry>Games or other frivolous programs</entry> </row>
3515 <row> <entry>7</entry> <entry>Macro packages</entry> <entry>Such as <command>man</command> macros</entry> </row>
3516 <row> <entry>8</entry> <entry>System administration</entry> <entry>Programs typically only run by root</entry> </row>
3517 <row> <entry>9</entry> <entry>Kernel routines</entry> <entry>Non-standard calls and internals</entry> </row>
3518 </tbody>
3519 </tgroup>
3520 </informaltable>
3521 <para>
3522 So <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem>'s man page should be called
3523 <filename>gentoo.1</filename>. If there was no <filename>gentoo.1</filename>
3524 man page in the original source, you should create it by renaming the
3525 <filename>manpage.1.ex</filename> template to <filename>gentoo.1</filename> and
3526 editing it using information from the example and from the upstream docs.
3527 </para>
3528 <para>
3529 You can use the <command>help2man</command> command to generate a man page out
3530 of the <literal>--help</literal> and <literal>--version</literal> output of each
3531 program, too. <footnote><para> Note that <command>help2man</command>'s
3532 placeholder man page will claim that more detailed documentation is
3533 available in the info system. If the command is missing an
3534 <command>info</command> page, you
3535 should manually edit the man page created by the
3536 <command>help2man</command> command. </para> </footnote>
3537 </para>
3538 </section>
3539 <section id="manpagesgml"><title><filename>manpage.sgml.ex</filename></title>
3540 <para>
3541 If on the other hand you prefer writing SGML instead of
3542 <command>nroff</command>, you can use the <filename>manpage.sgml.ex</filename>
3543 template. If you do this, you have to:
3544 </para>
3545 <itemizedlist>
3546 <listitem>
3547 <para>
3548 rename the file to something like <filename>gentoo.sgml</filename>.
3549 </para>
3550 </listitem>
3551 <listitem>
3552 <para>
3553 install the <systemitem role="package">docbook-to-man</systemitem> package
3554 </para>
3555 </listitem>
3556 <listitem>
3557 <para>
3558 add <literal>docbook-to-man</literal> to the <literal>Build-Depends</literal>
3559 line in the <filename>control</filename> file
3560 </para>
3561 </listitem>
3562 <listitem>
3563 <para>
3564 add an <literal>override_dh_auto_build</literal> target to your
3565 <filename>rules</filename> file:
3566 </para>
3567 <screen>
3568 override_dh_auto_build:
3569 docbook-to-man debian/gentoo.sgml &gt; debian/gentoo.1
3570 dh_auto_build
3571 </screen>
3572 </listitem>
3573 </itemizedlist>
3574 </section>
3575 <section id="manpagexml"><title><filename>manpage.xml.ex</filename></title>
3576 <para>
3577 If you prefer XML over SGML, you can use the <literal>manpage.xml.ex</literal>
3578 template. If you do this, you have to:
3579 </para>
3580 <itemizedlist>
3581 <listitem>
3582 <para>
3583 rename the source file to something like <literal>gentoo.1.xml</literal>
3584 </para>
3585 </listitem>
3586 <listitem>
3587 <para>
3588 install the <systemitem role="package">docbook-xsl</systemitem> package and an
3589 XSLT processor like <systemitem role="package">xsltproc</systemitem>
3590 (recommended)
3591 </para>
3592 </listitem>
3593 <listitem>
3594 <para>
3595 add the <literal>docbook-xsl</literal>, <literal>docbook-xml</literal>, and
3596 <literal>xsltproc</literal> packages to the <literal>Build-Depends</literal>
3597 line in the <literal>control</literal> file
3598 </para>
3599 </listitem>
3600 <listitem>
3601 <para>
3602 add an <literal>override_dh_auto_build</literal> target to your
3603 <filename>rules</filename> file:
3604 </para>
3605 <screen>
3606 override_dh_auto_build:
3607 xsltproc --nonet \
3608 --param make.year.ranges 1 \
3609 --param make.single.year.ranges 1 \
3610 --param man.charmap.use.subset 0 \
3611 -o debian/ \
3612 http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl/current/manpages/docbook.xsl\
3613 debian/gentoo.1.xml
3614 dh_auto_build
3615 </screen>
3616 </listitem>
3617 </itemizedlist>
3618 </section>
3619 </section>
3620 <section id="manpages"><title><filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.manpages</filename></title>
3621 <para>
3622 If your package has manual pages, you should install them using <citerefentry>
3623 <refentrytitle>dh_installman</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
3624 </citerefentry> by listing them in a
3625 <filename><replaceable>package</replaceable>.manpages</filename> file.
3626 </para>
3627 <para>
3628 To install <filename>docs/gentoo.1</filename> as a manpage for the <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem> package, create a
3629 <filename>gentoo.manpages</filename> file as follows.
3630 </para>
3631 <screen>
3632 docs/gentoo.1
3633 </screen>
3634 </section>
3635 <section id="menu"><title><filename>menu</filename></title>
3636 <para>
3637 X Window System users usually have a window manager with a menu that can be
3638 customized to launch programs. If they have installed the Debian <systemitem role="package">menu</systemitem> package, a set of menus for every program on
3639 the system will be created for them.
3640 </para>
3641 <para>
3642 Here's the default <filename>menu.ex</filename> file that
3643 <command>dh_make</command> created.
3644 </para>
3645 <screen>
3646 ?package(gentoo):needs=X11|text|vc|wm \
3647 section=Applications/see-menu-manual\
3648 title=gentoo command=/usr/bin/gentoo
3649 </screen>
3650 <para>
3651 The first field after the colon character is <literal>needs</literal>, and it
3652 specifies what kind of interface the program needs. Change this to one of the
3653 listed alternatives, e.g. <literal>text</literal> or <literal>X11</literal>.
3654 </para>
3655 <para>
3656 The next is the <literal>section</literal> that the menu and submenu entry
3657 should appear in.
3658 <footnote><para> The current list of sections is in
3659 <ulink url="&menu-structure;">The Debian Menu sub-policy 2.1 "Preferred menu structure"</ulink>.
3660 There was a major reorganization of menu structure for <literal>squeeze</literal>.
3661 </para> </footnote>
3662 </para>
3663 <para>
3664 The <literal>title</literal> field is the name of the program. You can start
3665 this one in uppercase if you like. Just keep it short.
3666 </para>
3667 <para>
3668 Finally, the <literal>command</literal> field is the command that runs the
3669 program.
3670 </para>
3671 <para>
3672 Let's change the file name to <filename>menu</filename> and change the menu
3673 entry to this:
3674 </para>
3675 <screen>
3676 ?package(gentoo): needs=X11 \
3677 section=Applications/Tools \
3678 title=Gentoo command=gentoo
3679 </screen>
3680 <para>
3681 You can also add other fields like <literal>longtitle</literal>,
3682 <literal>icon</literal>, <literal>hints</literal> etc. See <citerefentry>
3683 <refentrytitle>dh_installmenu</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
3684 </citerefentry>, <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>menufile</refentrytitle>
3685 <manvolnum>5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>, <citerefentry>
3686 <refentrytitle>update-menus</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
3687 </citerefentry>, and
3688 <ulink url="&policy-menu;">The Debian Menu sub-policy</ulink> for more
3689 information.
3690 </para>
3691 </section>
3692 <section id="news"><title><filename>NEWS</filename></title>
3693 <para>
3694 The <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dh_installchangelogs</refentrytitle>
3695 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> command installs this.
3696 </para>
3697 </section>
3698 <section id="maintscripts"><title><filename>{pre,post}{inst,rm}</filename></title>
3699 <para>
3700 These <filename>postinst</filename>, <filename>preinst</filename>,
3701 <filename>postrm</filename>, and <filename>prerm</filename> files
3702 <footnote><para> Despite this use of the <command>bash</command>
3703 shorthand expression <filename>{pre,post}{inst,rm}</filename> to indicate these
3704 filenames, you should use pure POSIX syntax for these maintainer scripts for
3705 compatibility with <command>dash</command> as the system shell. </para> </footnote> are
3706 called <emphasis>maintainer scripts</emphasis>. They are scripts which are put
3707 in the control area of the package and run by <command>dpkg</command> when your
3708 package is installed, upgraded, or removed.
3709 </para>
3710 <para>
3711 As a novice maintainer, you should avoid any manual editing of
3712 maintainer scripts because they are problematic. For more
3713 information refer to the <ulink url="&policy-mantainerscripts;">Debian
3714 Policy Manual, 6 "Package maintainer scripts and installation
3715 procedure"</ulink>, and take a look at the example files provided by
3716 <command>dh_make</command>.
3717 </para>
3718 <para>
3719 If you did not listen to me and have created custom maintainer
3720 scripts for a package, you should make sure to test them not only
3721 for <emphasis role="strong">install</emphasis> and
3722 <emphasis role="strong">upgrade</emphasis> but also for
3723 <emphasis role="strong">remove</emphasis> and
3724 <emphasis role="strong">purge</emphasis>.
3725 </para>
3726 <para>
3727 Upgrades to the new version should be silent and non-intrusive (existing users
3728 should not notice the upgrade except by discovering that old bugs have been
3729 fixed and perhaps that there are new features).
3730 </para>
3731 <para>
3732 When the upgrade is necessarily intrusive (eg., config files scattered through
3733 various home directories with totally different structure), you may
3734 consider as the last resort switching the package to a safe fallback state
3735 (e.g., disabling a service) and providing the proper documentation
3736 required by policy (<filename>README.Debian</filename> and
3737 <filename>NEWS.Debian</filename>). Don't bother the user with
3738 <command>debconf</command> notes invoked from these maintainer scripts
3739 for upgrades.
3740 </para>
3741 <para>
3742 The <systemitem role="package">ucf</systemitem> package provides a
3743 <emphasis>conffile-like</emphasis> handling infrastructure to preserve user
3744 changes for files that may not be labeled as <emphasis>conffiles</emphasis> such
3745 as those managed by the maintainer scripts. This should
3746 minimize issues associated with them.
3747 </para>
3748 <para>
3749 These maintainer scripts are among the Debian enhancements that
3750 explain <emphasis role="strong">why people choose Debian</emphasis>. You must
3751 be very careful not to turn them into a source of annoyance.
3752 </para>
3753 </section>
3754 <section id="todo"><title><filename>TODO</filename></title>
3755 <para>
3756 The <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dh_installdocs</refentrytitle>
3757 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> command installs this.
3758 </para>
3759 </section>
3760 <section id="watch"><title><filename>watch</filename></title>
3761 <para>
3762 The <filename>watch</filename> file format is documented in the <citerefentry>
3763 <refentrytitle>uscan</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
3764 manpage. The <filename>watch</filename> file configures the
3765 <command>uscan</command> program (in the <systemitem role="package">devscripts</systemitem> package) to watch the site where you
3766 originally got the source from. This is also used by the
3767 <ulink url="&dehs;">Debian External Health Status (DEHS)</ulink> service.
3768 </para>
3769 <para>
3770 Here are its contents:
3771 </para>
3772 <screen>
3773 # watch control file for uscan
3774 version=3
3775 &sf-net;/gentoo/gentoo-(.+)\.tar\.gz debian uupdate
3776 </screen>
3777 <para>
3778 Normally with a <filename>watch</filename> file, the URL at
3779 <literal>&sf-net;/gentoo</literal> is downloaded and searched for links of
3780 the form <literal>&lt;a href=...&gt;</literal>. The basename (just the part
3781 after the final <literal>/</literal>) of each linked URL is compared against
3782 the Perl regular expression pattern (see <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>perlre</refentrytitle>
3783 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>)
3784 <literal>gentoo-(.+)\.tar\.gz</literal>. Out of the files that match, the one with
3785 the greatest version number is downloaded and the <command>uupdate</command>
3786 program is run to create an updated source tree.
3787 </para>
3788 <para>
3789 Although this is true for other sites, the SourceForge download service at
3790 <ulink url="&sf-net;"/> is an exception. When the
3791 <filename>watch</filename> file has an URL matching the Perl regexp
3792 <literal>^http://sf\.net/</literal>, the <command>uscan</command> program
3793 replaces it with <literal>&qa-do;watch/sf.php/</literal> and
3794 then applies this rule. The URL redirector service at <ulink url="&qa-do;"/> is designed to offer
3795 a stable redirect service to the desired file for any
3796 <filename>watch</filename> pattern of the form
3797 <literal>&sf-net;/<replaceable>project</replaceable>/<replaceable>tar-name</replaceable>-(.+)\.tar\.gz</literal>.
3798 This solves issues related to periodically changing SourceForge URLs.
3799 </para>
3800 </section>
3801 <section id="sourcef"><title><filename>source/format</filename></title>
3802 <para>
3803 In the <filename>debian/source/format</filename> file, there should be a single
3804 line indicating the desired format for the source package (check <citerefentry>
3805 <refentrytitle>dpkg-source</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
3806 </citerefentry> for an exhaustive list). After <literal>squeeze</literal>, it
3807 should say either:
3808 </para>
3809 <itemizedlist>
3810 <listitem>
3811 <para>
3812 <literal>3.0 (native)</literal> for Debian native packages or
3813 </para>
3814 </listitem>
3815 <listitem>
3816 <para>
3817 <literal>3.0 (quilt)</literal> for everything else.
3818 </para>
3819 </listitem>
3820 </itemizedlist>
3821 <para>
3822 The newer <literal>3.0 (quilt)</literal> source format records modifications in
3823 a <command>quilt</command> patch series within
3824 <filename>debian/patches</filename>. Those changes are then automatically
3825 applied during extraction of the source package. <footnote><para> See
3826 <ulink url="&debsrc3;">DebSrc3.0</ulink> for a summary on the switch to the new <literal>3.0
3827 (quilt)</literal> and <literal>3.0 (native)</literal> source formats. </para>
3828 </footnote> The Debian modifications are simply stored in a
3829 <filename>debian.tar.gz</filename> archive containing all files under the
3830 <filename>debian</filename> directory. This new format supports inclusion of
3831 binary files such as PNG icons by the package maintainer without requiring
3832 tricks. <footnote><para>Actually, this new format also supports multiple
3833 upstream tarballs and more compression methods. These are beyond the scope of
3834 this document.</para> </footnote>
3835 </para>
3836 <para>
3837 When <command>dpkg-source</command> extracts a source package in <literal>3.0
3838 (quilt)</literal> source format, it automatically applies all patches listed in
3839 <filename>debian/patches/series</filename>. You can avoid applying patches at
3840 the end of the extraction with the <literal>--skip-patches</literal> option.
3841 </para>
3842 </section>
3843 <section id="sourcel"><title><filename>source/local-options</filename></title>
3844 <para>
3845 When you want to manage Debian packaging activities under a VCS, you typically
3846 create one branch (e.g. <literal>upstream</literal>) tracking the upstream
3847 source and another branch (e.g. typically <literal>master</literal> for Git)
3848 tracking the Debian package. For the latter, you usually want to have
3849 unpatched upstream source with your <filename>debian/*</filename> files for the
3850 Debian packaging to ease merging of the new upstream source.
3851 </para>
3852 <para>
3853 After you build a package, the source is normally left patched. You need to
3854 unpatch it manually by running <literal>dquilt pop -a</literal> before
3855 committing to the <literal>master</literal> branch. You can automate this by
3856 adding the optional <filename>debian/source/local-options</filename> file
3857 containing <literal>unapply-patches</literal>. This file is not included in
3858 the generated source package and changes the local build behavior only. This
3859 file may contain <literal>abort-on-upstream-changes</literal>, too (see
3860 <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dpkg-source</refentrytitle>
3861 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>).
3862 </para>
3863 <screen>
3864 unapply-patches
3865 abort-on-upstream-changes
3866 </screen>
3867 </section>
3868 <section id="sourceopt"><title><filename>source/options</filename></title>
3869 <para>
3870 The autogenerated files in the source tree can be quite annoying for packaging
3871 since they generate meaningless large patch files. There are custom modules
3872 such as <command>dh_autoreconf</command> to ease this problem as described in
3873 <xref linkend="customrules"/>.
3874 </para>
3875 <para>
3876 You can provide a Perl regular expression to the
3877 <literal>--extend-diff-ignore</literal> option argument of <citerefentry>
3878 <refentrytitle>dpkg-source</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
3879 </citerefentry> to ignore changes made to the autogenerated files while
3880 creating the source package.
3881 </para>
3882 <para>
3883 As a general solution to address this problem of the autogenerated files,
3884 you can store such a <command>dpkg-source</command> option argument in the
3885 <filename>source/options</filename> file of the source package. The following
3886 will skip creating patch files for <filename>config.sub</filename>,
3887 <filename>config.guess</filename>, and <filename>Makefile</filename>.
3888 </para>
3889 <screen>
3890 extend-diff-ignore = "(^|/)(config\.sub|config\.guess|Makefile)$"
3891 </screen>
3892 </section>
3893 <section id="patches"><title><filename>patches/*</filename></title>
3894 <para>
3895 The old <literal>1.0</literal> source format created a single large
3896 <filename>diff.gz</filename> file containing package maintenance files in
3897 <filename>debian</filename> and patch files for the source. Such a package is a
3898 bit cumbersome to inspect and understand for each source tree modification
3899 later. This is not so nice.
3900 </para>
3901 <para>
3902 The newer <literal>3.0 (quilt)</literal> source format stores patches in
3903 <filename>debian/patches/*</filename> files using the <command>quilt</command>
3904 command. These patches and other package data which are all contained under
3905 the <filename>debian</filename> directory are packaged as the
3906 <filename>debian.tar.gz</filename> file. Since the
3907 <command>dpkg-source</command> command can handle <command>quilt</command>
3908 formatted patch data in the <literal>3.0 (quilt)</literal> source without the
3909 <systemitem role="package">quilt</systemitem> package, it does not need a
3910 <literal>Build-Depends</literal> on <systemitem role="package">quilt</systemitem>.
3911 <footnote><para> Several methods of patch set maintenance have been proposed and are in use for Debian
3912 packages. The <command>quilt</command> system is the preferred maintenance
3913 system in use. Others include <command>dpatch</command>,
3914 <command>dbs</command>, and <command>cdbs</command>. Many of these keep such
3915 patches as <filename>debian/patches/*</filename> files. </para> </footnote>
3916 </para>
3917 <para>
3918 The <command>quilt</command> command is explained in <citerefentry>
3919 <refentrytitle>quilt</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.
3920 It records modifications to the source as a stack of <literal>-p1</literal>
3921 patch files in the <filename>debian/patches</filename> directory and the source
3922 tree is untouched outside of the <filename>debian</filename> directory. The
3923 order of these patches is recorded in the
3924 <filename>debian/patches/series</filename> file. You can apply (=push),
3925 un-apply (=pop), and refresh patches easily. <footnote><para> If you are
3926 asking a sponsor to upload your package, this kind of clear separation and
3927 documentation of your changes is very important to expedite the package review
3928 by your sponsor. </para> </footnote>
3929 </para>
3930 <para>
3931 For <xref linkend="modify"/>, we created three patches in
3932 <filename>debian/patches</filename>.
3933 </para>
3934 <para>
3935 Since Debian patches are located in <filename>debian/patches</filename>, please
3936 make sure to set up the <command>dquilt</command> command properly as described
3937 in <xref linkend="quiltrc"/>.
3938 </para>
3939 <para>
3940 When anyone (including yourself) provides a patch
3941 <filename><replaceable>foo</replaceable>.patch</filename> to the source later,
3942 modifying a <literal>3.0 (quilt)</literal> source package is
3943 quite simple:
3944 </para>
3945 <screen>
3946 $ dpkg-source -x gentoo_0.9.12.dsc
3947 $ cd gentoo-0.9.12
3948 $ dquilt import ../<replaceable>foo</replaceable>.patch
3949 $ dquilt push
3950 $ dquilt refresh
3951 $ dquilt header -e
3952 ... describe patch
3953 </screen>
3954 <para>
3955 The patches stored in the newer <literal>3.0 (quilt)</literal> source format
3956 must be <emphasis>fuzz</emphasis> free. You can ensure this with <literal>dquilt
3957 pop -a; while dquilt push; do dquilt refresh; done</literal>.
3958 </para>
3959 </section>
3960 </chapter>
3961 <chapter id="build"><title>Building the package</title>
3962 <para>
3963 We should now be ready to build the package.
3964 </para>
3965 <section id="completebuild"><title>Complete (re)build</title>
3966 <para>
3967 In order to perform a complete (re)build of a package properly, you
3968 need to make sure you have installed
3969 </para>
3970 <itemizedlist>
3971 <listitem>
3972 <para>
3973 the <systemitem role="package">build-essential</systemitem> package,
3974 </para>
3975 </listitem>
3976 <listitem>
3977 <para>
3978 packages listed in the <literal>Build-Depends</literal> field (see <xref linkend="control"/>), and
3979 </para>
3980 </listitem>
3981 <listitem>
3982 <para>
3983 packages listed in the <literal>Build-Depends-indep</literal> field (see <xref linkend="control"/>).
3984 </para>
3985 </listitem>
3986 </itemizedlist>
3987 <para>
3988 Then you issue the following command in the source directory:
3989 </para>
3990 <screen>
3991 $ dpkg-buildpackage
3992 </screen>
3993 <para>
3994 This will do everything to make full binary and source packages for you. It
3995 will:
3996 </para>
3997 <itemizedlist>
3998 <listitem>
3999 <para>
4000 clean the source tree (<literal>debian/rules clean</literal>)
4001 </para>
4002 </listitem>
4003 <listitem>
4004 <para>
4005 build the source package (<literal>dpkg-source -b</literal>)
4006 </para>
4007 </listitem>
4008 <listitem>
4009 <para>
4010 build the program (<literal>debian/rules build</literal>)
4011 </para>
4012 </listitem>
4013 <listitem>
4014 <para>
4015 build binary packages (<literal>fakeroot debian/rules binary</literal>)
4016 </para>
4017 </listitem>
4018 <listitem>
4019 <para>
4020 sign the source <filename>.dsc</filename> file, using <command>gpg</command>
4021 </para>
4022 </listitem>
4023 <listitem>
4024 <para>
4025 create and sign the upload <filename>.changes</filename> file, using
4026 <command>dpkg-genchanges</command> and <command>gpg</command>
4027 </para>
4028 </listitem>
4029 </itemizedlist>
4030 <para>
4031 The only input that will be required of you is your GPG secret pass phrase,
4032 twice.
4033 <footnote><para>
4034 This GPG key must be signed by a Debian developer to get connected to the web
4035 of trust and must be registered to <ulink url="&keyring;">the Debian
4036 keyring</ulink>. This enables your uploaded packages to be accepted to the
4037 Debian archives. See
4038 <ulink url="&keycreate;">Creating a new GPG key</ulink> and
4039 <ulink url="&keysigning; ">Debian Wiki on Keysigning</ulink>.
4040 </para></footnote>
4041 If you are building Debian packages only for your own local use, you can skip
4042 promptings for the GPG signatures on the <filename>.dsc</filename> file and the
4043 <filename>.changes</filename> file like this:
4044 </para>
4045 <screen>
4046 $ dpkg-buildpackage -us -uc
4047 </screen>
4048 <para>
4049 For a non-native Debian package, e.g.,
4050 <systemitem role="package">gentoo</systemitem>, you will see the following
4051 files in the parent directory (<filename>~/gentoo</filename>) after building
4052 packages:
4053 </para>
4054 <itemizedlist>
4055 <listitem>
4056 <para>
4057 <filename>gentoo_0.9.12.orig.tar.gz</filename>
4058 </para>
4059 <para>
4060 This is the original upstream source code tarball, merely renamed to the above so that
4061 it adheres to the Debian standard. Note that this was created initially by the
4062 <literal>dh_make -f ../gentoo-0.9.12.tar.gz</literal>.
4063 </para>
4064 </listitem>
4065 <listitem>
4066 <para>
4067 <filename>gentoo_0.9.12-1.dsc</filename>
4068 </para>
4069 <para>
4070 This is a summary of the contents of the source code. The file is generated
4071 from your <filename>control</filename> file, and is used when unpacking the
4072 source with <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dpkg-source</refentrytitle>
4073 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>. This file is GPG signed, so that
4074 people can be sure that it's really yours.
4075 </para>
4076 </listitem>
4077 <listitem>
4078 <para>
4079 <filename>gentoo_0.9.12-1.debian.tar.gz</filename>
4080 </para>
4081 <para>
4082 This compressed tarball contains your <filename>debian</filename> directory
4083 contents. Each and every addition you made to the original source code is
4084 stored as a <command>quilt</command> patch in
4085 <filename>debian/patches</filename>.
4086 </para>
4087 <para>
4088 If someone else wants to re-create your package from scratch, they can easily
4089 do so using the above three files. The extraction procedure is trivial: just
4090 copy the three files somewhere else and run <literal>dpkg-source -x
4091 gentoo_0.9.12-1.dsc</literal>. <footnote><para> You can avoid applying
4092 <command>quilt</command> patches in the <literal>3.0 (quilt)</literal> source
4093 format at the end of the extraction with the <literal>--skip-patches</literal>
4094 option. Alternatively, you can run <literal>dquilt pop -a</literal> after
4095 normal operation. </para> </footnote>
4096 </para>
4097 </listitem>
4098 <listitem>
4099 <para>
4100 <filename>gentoo_0.9.12-1_i386.deb</filename>
4101 </para>
4102 <para>
4103 This is your completed binary package. You can use <command>dpkg</command> to
4104 install and remove this just like any other package.
4105 </para>
4106 </listitem>
4107 <listitem>
4108 <para>
4109 <filename>gentoo_0.9.12-1_i386.changes</filename>
4110 </para>
4111 <para>
4112 This file describes all the changes made in the current package revision;
4113 it is used by the Debian FTP archive maintenance programs to install the binary
4114 and source packages. It is partly generated from the
4115 <filename>changelog</filename> file and the <filename>.dsc</filename> file.
4116 This file is GPG signed, so that people can be sure that it's really yours.
4117 </para>
4118 <para>
4119 As you keep working on the package, its behavior will change and new features will
4120 be added. People downloading your package can look at this file and quickly
4121 see what has changed. Debian archive maintenance programs will also post the
4122 contents of this file to the <ulink url="&debian-devel-announce-ldo;">debian-devel-announce@lists.debian.org</ulink>
4123 mailing list.
4124 </para>
4125 </listitem>
4126 </itemizedlist>
4127 <para>
4128 The long strings of numbers in the <filename>.dsc</filename> and
4129 <filename>.changes</filename> files are SHA1/SHA256 checksums for the files
4130 mentioned. Anyone downloading your files can test them with <citerefentry>
4131 <refentrytitle>sha1sum</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
4132 </citerefentry> or <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>sha256sum</refentrytitle>
4133 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> and if the numbers don't match,
4134 they'll know the file is corrupt or has been tampered with.
4135 </para>
4136 <para>
4137 For a native Debian package, e.g.,
4138 <systemitem role="package">mypackage</systemitem>, you will see the following
4139 files in the parent directory after building packages:
4140 </para>
4141 <itemizedlist>
4142 <listitem>
4143 <para>
4144 <filename>mypackage_1.0.tar.gz</filename>
4145 </para>
4146 <para>
4147 This is the source code tarball created from the
4148 <filename>mypackage-1.0</filename> directory by the
4149 <command>dpkg-source</command> command. (Its suffix is not <filename>orig.tar.gz</filename>.)
4150 </para>
4151 </listitem>
4152 <listitem>
4153 <para>
4154 <filename>mypackage_1.0.dsc</filename>
4155 </para>
4156 <para>
4157 This is a summary of the contents of the source code as in the non-native
4158 Debian package. (There is no Debian revision.)
4159 </para>
4160 </listitem>
4161 <listitem>
4162 <para>
4163 <filename>mypackage_1.0_i386.deb</filename>
4164 </para>
4165 <para>
4166 This is your completed binary package as in the non-native Debian package.
4167 (There is no Debian revision.)
4168 </para>
4169 </listitem>
4170 <listitem>
4171 <para>
4172 <filename>mypackage_1.0_i386.changes</filename>
4173 </para>
4174 <para>
4175 This file describes all the changes made in the current package version as in
4176 the non-native Debian package. (There is no Debian revision.)
4177 </para>
4178 </listitem>
4179 </itemizedlist>
4180 </section>
4181 <section id="autobuilder"><title>Autobuilder</title>
4182 <para>
4183 Debian supports many <ulink url="&ports;">ports</ulink>
4184 with the <ulink url="&buildd;">autobuilder
4185 network</ulink> running <command>buildd</command> daemons on computers
4186 of many different architectures. Although you do not need to do this yourself, you
4187 should be aware of what will happen to your packages. Let's look into roughly
4188 how they rebuild your packages for multiple architectures.
4189 <footnote><para> The actual autobuilder system involves much more complicated
4190 schemes than the one documented here. Such details are beyond the scope of
4191 this document. </para> </footnote>
4192 </para>
4193 <para>
4194 For <literal>Architecture: any</literal> packages, the autobuilder system
4195 performs a rebuild. It ensures the installation of
4196 </para>
4197 <itemizedlist>
4198 <listitem>
4199 <para>
4200 the <systemitem role="package">build-essential</systemitem> package, and
4201 </para>
4202 </listitem>
4203 <listitem>
4204 <para>
4205 packages listed in the <literal>Build-Depends</literal> field (see <xref linkend="control"/>).
4206 </para>
4207 </listitem>
4208 </itemizedlist>
4209 <para>
4210 Then it issues the following command in the source directory:
4211 </para>
4212 <screen>
4213 $ dpkg-buildpackage -B
4214 </screen>
4215 <para>
4216 This will do everything to make architecture dependent binary packages on
4217 another architecture. It will:
4218 </para>
4219 <itemizedlist>
4220 <listitem>
4221 <para>
4222 clean the source tree (<literal>debian/rules clean</literal>)
4223 </para>
4224 </listitem>
4225 <listitem>
4226 <para>
4227 build the program (<literal>debian/rules build</literal>)
4228 </para>
4229 </listitem>
4230 <listitem>
4231 <para>
4232 build architecture dependent binary packages (<literal>fakeroot debian/rules
4233 binary-arch</literal>)
4234 </para>
4235 </listitem>
4236 <listitem>
4237 <para>
4238 sign the source <filename>.dsc</filename> file, using <command>gpg</command>
4239 </para>
4240 </listitem>
4241 <listitem>
4242 <para>
4243 create and sign the upload <filename>.changes</filename> file, using
4244 <command>dpkg-genchanges</command> and <command>gpg</command>
4245 </para>
4246 </listitem>
4247 </itemizedlist>
4248 <para>
4249 This is why you see your package for other architectures.
4250 </para>
4251 <para>
4252 Although packages listed in the <literal>Build-Depends-Indep</literal> field
4253 are required to be installed for our normal packaging work (see
4254 <xref linkend="completebuild"/>), they are not required to be installed for the
4255 autobuilder system since it builds only architecture dependent binary packages.
4256 <footnote><para> Unlike under the <systemitem role="package">pbuilder</systemitem> package, the <command>chroot</command>
4257 environment under the <systemitem role="package">sbuild</systemitem> package
4258 used by the autobuilder system does not enforce the use of a minimal
4259 system and may have many leftover packages installed. </para>
4260 </footnote> This distinction between normal packaging and autobuilding
4261 procedures is what dictates whether you should record such required
4262 packages in the <literal>Build-Depends</literal> or
4263 <literal>Build-Depends-Indep</literal> fields of the
4264 <filename>debian/control</filename> file (see <xref linkend="control"/>).
4265 </para>
4266 </section>
4267 <section id="debuild"><title><command>debuild</command> command</title>
4268 <para>
4269 You can automate the <command>dpkg-buildpackage</command> command's
4270 package build process further with the
4271 <command>debuild</command> command. See <citerefentry>
4272 <refentrytitle>debuild</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
4273 </citerefentry>.
4274 </para>
4275 <para>
4276 Customization of the <command>debuild</command> command can be done through
4277 <filename>/etc/devscripts.conf</filename> or
4278 <filename>~/.devscripts</filename>. I would suggest at least the following items:
4279 </para>
4280 <screen>
4281 DEBSIGN_KEYID=Your_GPG_keyID
4282 DEBUILD_LINTIAN_OPTS=-i -I --show-overrides
4283 </screen>
4284 <para>
4285 With these, packages are signed by your specified GPG key ID (good for
4286 sponsoring packages) and checked in detail by the <command>lintian</command> command.
4287 </para>
4288 <para>
4289 Cleaning the source and rebuilding the package from your user account is as simple as:
4290 </para>
4291 <screen>
4292 $ debuild
4293 </screen>
4294 <para>
4295 Here, if you are building Debian packages only for your own local use, you can skip
4296 promptings for the GPG signatures on the <filename>.dsc</filename> file and the
4297 <filename>.changes</filename> file like this:
4298 </para>
4299 <screen>
4300 $ debuild -us -uc
4301 </screen>
4302 <para>
4303 You can clean the source tree as simply as:
4304 </para>
4305 <screen>
4306 $ debuild clean
4307 </screen>
4308 </section>
4309 <section id="pbuilder"><title><systemitem role="package">pbuilder</systemitem> package</title>
4310 <para>
4311 For a clean room (<command>chroot</command>) build environment to verify the
4312 build dependencies, the <systemitem role="package">pbuilder</systemitem>
4313 package is very useful. <footnote><para> Since the <systemitem
4314 role="package">pbuilder</systemitem> package is still evolving, you should
4315 check the actual configuration situation by consulting the latest official
4316 documentation.</para> </footnote> This ensures a clean build from the source
4317 under the <literal>sid</literal> auto-builder for different architectures and
4318 avoids a severity serious FTBFS (Fails To Build From Source) bug which is
4319 always in the RC (release critical) category.
4320 <footnote><para>See <ulink url="&buildd-do;"/> for more on
4321 Debian package auto-building.</para></footnote>
4322 </para>
4323 <para>
4324 Let's customize the <systemitem role="package">pbuilder</systemitem> package as
4325 follows:
4326 </para>
4327 <itemizedlist>
4328 <listitem>
4329 <para>
4330 setting the <filename>/var/cache/pbuilder/result</filename> directory writable by
4331 for your user account.
4332 </para>
4333 </listitem>
4334 <listitem>
4335 <para>
4336 creating a directory, e.g.
4337 <filename><replaceable>/var/cache/pbuilder/hooks</replaceable></filename>,
4338 writable by the user, to place hook scripts in.
4339 </para>
4340 </listitem>
4341 <listitem>
4342 <para>
4343 configuring <filename>~/.pbuilderrc</filename> or
4344 <filename>/etc/pbuilderrc</filename> to include the followsing.
4345 </para>
4346 <screen>
4347 AUTO_DEBSIGN=${AUTO_DEBSIGN:-yes}
4348 HOOKDIR=<replaceable>/var/cache/pbuilder/hooks</replaceable>
4349 </screen>
4350 </listitem>
4351 </itemizedlist>
4352 <para>
4353 This will allow you to sign generated packages with your secret GPG key in the
4354 <filename>~/.gnupg/</filename> directory.
4355 </para>
4356 <para>
4357 First let's initialize the local <systemitem role="package">pbuilder</systemitem> <command>chroot</command> system as
4358 follows.
4359 </para>
4360 <screen>
4361 $ sudo pbuilder create
4362 </screen>
4363 <para>
4364 If you already have a completed source package, issue the following commands
4365 in the directory where the
4366 <filename><replaceable>foo</replaceable>.orig.tar.gz</filename>,
4367 <filename><replaceable>foo</replaceable>.debian.tar.gz</filename>, and
4368 <filename><replaceable>foo</replaceable>.dsc</filename> files exist to update
4369 the local <systemitem role="package">pbuilder</systemitem>
4370 <command>chroot</command> system and to build binary packages in it.
4371 </para>
4372 <screen>
4373 $ sudo pbuilder --update
4374 $ sudo pbuilder --build <replaceable>foo_version</replaceable>.dsc
4375 </screen>
4376 <para>
4377 The newly built packages without the GPG signatures will be located in
4378 <filename>/var/cache/pbuilder/result/</filename> with non-root ownership.
4379 </para>
4380 <para>
4381 The GPG signatures on the <filename>.dsc</filename> file and the
4382 <filename>.changes</filename> file can be generated as:
4383 </para>
4384 <screen>
4385 $ cd /var/cache/pbuilder/result/
4386 $ debsign <replaceable>foo_version</replaceable>.dsc
4387 $ debsign <replaceable>foo_version_arch</replaceable>.changes
4388 </screen>
4389 <para>
4390 If you have an updated source tree but have not generated the matching
4391 source package, issue the following commands in the source directory where the
4392 <filename>debian</filename> directory exists, instead.
4393 </para>
4394 <screen>
4395 $ sudo pbuilder --update
4396 $ pdebuild
4397 </screen>
4398 <para>
4399 Here, if you are building Debian packages only for your local use, you can skip
4400 promptings for the GPG signatures on the <filename>.dsc</filename> file and the
4401 <filename>.changes</filename> file as:
4402 </para>
4403 <screen>
4404 $ AUTO_DEBSIGN=no pdebuild
4405 </screen>
4406 <para>
4407 You can log into its <command>chroot</command> environment with the
4408 <literal>pbuilder --login --save-after-login</literal> command and configure it
4409 as you wish. This environment can be saved by leaving its shell prompt with
4410 <literal>^D</literal> (Control-D).
4411 </para>
4412 <para>
4413 The latest version of the <command>lintian</command> command can be executed in
4414 the <literal>chroot</literal> environment using the hook script
4415 <filename><replaceable>/var/cache/pbuilder/hooks</replaceable>/B90lintian</filename>
4416 configured as follows. <footnote><para> This assumes
4417 <literal>HOOKDIR=/var/cache/pbuilder/hooks</literal>. You can find many
4418 examples of hook scripts in the
4419 <filename>/usr/share/doc/pbuilder/examples</filename> directory. </para>
4420 </footnote>
4421 </para>
4422 <screen>
4423 #!/bin/sh
4424 set -e
4425 install_packages() {
4426 apt-get -y --force-yes install $@
4427 }
4428 install_packages lintian
4429 echo +++ lintian output +++
4430 su -c lintian -i -I --show-overrides /tmp/buildd/*.changes - pbuilder
4431 # use this version if you don't want lintian to fail the build
4432 #su -c lintian -i -I --show-overrides /tmp/buildd/*.changes; : - pbuilder
4433 echo +++ end of lintian output +++
4434 </screen>
4435 <para>
4436 You need to have access to the latest <literal>sid</literal> environment to
4437 build packages properly for <literal>sid</literal>. In practice,
4438 <literal>sid</literal> may be experiencing issues which makes it undesirable
4439 for you to migrate your whole system. The <systemitem role="package">pbuilder</systemitem> package can help you to cope with this
4440 kind of situation.
4441 </para>
4442 <para>
4443 You may need to update your <literal>stable</literal> packages after their
4444 release for <literal>stable-proposed-updates</literal>,
4445 <literal>stable/updates</literal>, etc. <footnote><para> There are some
4446 restrictions for such updates of your <literal>stable</literal> package.
4447 </para> </footnote> For such occasions, the fact you may be running a <literal>sid</literal>
4448 system is not a good enough excuse for failing to update them promptly. The <systemitem role="package">pbuilder</systemitem> package can help you to access
4449 environments of almost any Debian derivative distribution of the same
4450 architecture.
4451 </para>
4452 <para>
4453 See <ulink url="&pbuilder;"/>,
4454 <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>pdebuild</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
4455 </citerefentry>, <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>pbuilderrc</refentrytitle>
4456 <manvolnum>5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>, and <citerefentry>
4457 <refentrytitle>pbuilder</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
4458 </citerefentry>.
4459 </para>
4460 </section>
4461 <section id="git-buildpackage"><title><command>git-buildpackage</command> command and similars</title>
4462 <para>
4463 If your upstream uses a source code management system (VCS)
4464 <footnote><para>See <ulink url="&debref-vcs;">Version control systems</ulink> for more.</para></footnote>
4465 to maintain their code, you should consider using it as well. This makes merging
4466 and cherry-picking upstream patches much easier. There are several specialized
4467 wrapper script packages for Debian package building for each VCS.
4468 </para>
4469 <itemizedlist>
4470 <listitem>
4471 <para>
4472 <systemitem role="package">git-buildpackage</systemitem>: a suite to help with
4473 Debian packages in Git repositories.
4474 </para>
4475 </listitem>
4476 <listitem>
4477 <para>
4478 <systemitem role="package">svn-buildpackage</systemitem>: helper programs to
4479 maintain Debian packages with Subversion.
4480 </para>
4481 </listitem>
4482 <listitem>
4483 <para>
4484 <systemitem role="package">cvs-buildpackage</systemitem>: a set of Debian
4485 package scripts for CVS source trees.
4486 </para>
4487 </listitem>
4488 </itemizedlist>
4489 <para>
4490 For advanced audiences, there are packages which <emphasis>automate</emphasis>
4491 the building of packages under a VCS-managed source tree. I will not explain them
4492 in this tutorial.
4493 <footnote><para> Here are some web resources available for advanced audiences. </para>
4494 <itemizedlist>
4495 <listitem> <para> <ulink url="&git-buildpackage-doc;">Building Debian Packages with git-buildpackage</ulink> </para> </listitem>
4496 <listitem> <para> <ulink url="&debian-packages-git;">debian packages in git</ulink> </para> </listitem>
4497 <listitem> <para> <ulink url="&git-debian-packaging;">Using Git for Debian Packaging</ulink> </para> </listitem>
4498 <listitem> <para> <ulink url="&git-dpm;">git-dpm: Debian packages in Git manager</ulink> </para> </listitem>
4499 <listitem> <para> <ulink url="&topgit;">Using TopGit to generate quilt series for Debian packaging</ulink> </para> </listitem>
4500 </itemizedlist>
4501 </footnote>
4502 </para>
4503 </section>
4504 <section id="quickrebuild"><title>Quick rebuild</title>
4505 <para>
4506 With a large package, you may not want to rebuild from scratch every time while
4507 you're tuning details in <filename>debian/rules</filename>. For testing purposes,
4508 you can make a <filename>.deb</filename> file without rebuilding the upstream
4509 sources like this<footnote><para> Environment variables which are normally
4510 configured to proper values are not set by this method. Never create real
4511 packages to be uploaded using this <emphasis role="strong">quick</emphasis>
4512 method. </para> </footnote>:
4513 </para>
4514 <screen>
4515 $ fakeroot debian/rules binary
4516 </screen>
4517 <para>
4518 Or simply do the following to see if it builds or not:
4519 </para>
4520 <screen>
4521 $ fakeroot debian/rules build
4522 </screen>
4523 <para>
4524 Once you are finished with your tuning, remember to rebuild following the
4525 proper procedure. You may not be able to upload correctly if you try to upload
4526 <filename>.deb</filename> files built this way.
4527 </para>
4528 </section>
4529 </chapter>
4530 <chapter id="checkit"><title>Checking the package for errors</title>
4531 <para>
4532 There are some techniques you should know for checking a package for errors
4533 before uploading it to the public archives.
4534 </para>
4535 <para>
4536 It's also a good idea to carry out testing on a machine other than your own. You must watch
4537 closely for any warnings or errors for all the tests described here.
4538 </para>
4539 <section id="inadvent"><title>Suspicious changes</title>
4540 <para>
4541 If you find a new autogenerated patch file such as
4542 <filename>debian-changes-*</filename> in the
4543 <filename>debian/patches</filename> directory after building your non-native
4544 Debian package in <literal>3.0 (quilt)</literal> format, chances are you
4545 changed some files by accident or the build script modified the upstream
4546 source. If it is your mistake, fix it. If it is caused by the build script,
4547 fix the root cause with <command>dh-autoreconf</command> as in
4548 <xref linkend="customrules"/> or work around it with
4549 <filename>source/options</filename> as in <xref linkend="sourceopt"/>.
4550 </para>
4551 </section>
4552 <section id="pinstall"><title>Verifying a package's installation</title>
4553 <para>
4554 You must test your package for whether it installs without problem. The <citerefentry>
4555 <refentrytitle>debi</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
4556 command helps you to test installing all the generated binary packages.
4557 </para>
4558 <screen>
4559 $ sudo debi gentoo_0.9.12-1_i386.changes
4560 </screen>
4561 <para>
4562 To prevent installation problem on different systems, you must make
4563 sure that there are no filenames conflicting with other existing packages,
4564 using the
4565 <filename>Contents-<replaceable>i386</replaceable></filename> file downloaded
4566 from the Debian archive.
4567 The <command>apt-file</command> command may be handy for this task. If there
4568 are collisions, please take action to avoid this real problem, whether by
4569 renaming the file, moving a common file to a separate package that
4570 multiple packages can depend on, using the alternatives mechanism (see
4571 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>update-alternatives</refentrytitle>
4572 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>) in coordination with the
4573 maintainers of other affected packages, or declaring a
4574 <literal>Conflicts</literal> relationship in the
4575 <filename>debian/control</filename> file.
4576 </para>
4577 </section>
4578 <section id="pmaintscripts"><title>Verifying a package's maintainer scripts</title>
4579 <para>
4580 All maintainer scripts (that is,
4581 <filename>preinst</filename>, <filename>prerm</filename>,
4582 <filename>postinst</filename>, and <filename>postrm</filename> files) are
4583 hard to write correctly unless they are auto-generated by the
4584 <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> programs. So do not use them if you are
4585 a novice maintainer (see <xref linkend="maintscripts"/>).
4586 </para>
4587 <para>
4588 If the package makes use of these non-trivial maintainer scripts, be sure to test not only for install but also for remove,
4589 purge, and upgrade processes. Many maintainer script bugs show up
4590 when packages are removed or purged. Use the <command>dpkg</command> command
4591 as follows to test them.
4592 </para>
4593 <screen>
4594 $ sudo dpkg -r gentoo
4595 $ sudo dpkg -P gentoo
4596 $ sudo dpkg -i gentoo_<replaceable>version</replaceable>-<replaceable>revision</replaceable>_<replaceable>i386</replaceable>.deb
4597 </screen>
4598 <para>
4599 This should be done with sequences such as the following.
4600 </para>
4601 <itemizedlist>
4602 <listitem>
4603 <para>
4604 install the previous version (if needed).
4605 </para>
4606 </listitem>
4607 <listitem>
4608 <para>
4609 upgrade it from the previous version.
4610 </para>
4611 </listitem>
4612 <listitem>
4613 <para>
4614 downgrade it back to the previous version (optional).
4615 </para>
4616 </listitem>
4617 <listitem>
4618 <para>
4619 purge it.
4620 </para>
4621 </listitem>
4622 <listitem>
4623 <para>
4624 install the new package.
4625 </para>
4626 </listitem>
4627 <listitem>
4628 <para>
4629 remove it.
4630 </para>
4631 </listitem>
4632 <listitem>
4633 <para>
4634 install it again.
4635 </para>
4636 </listitem>
4637 <listitem>
4638 <para>
4639 purge it.
4640 </para>
4641 </listitem>
4642 </itemizedlist>
4643 <para>
4644 If this is your first package, you should create dummy packages with different
4645 versions to test your package in advance to prevent future problems.
4646 </para>
4647 <para>
4648 Bear in mind that if your package has previously been released in Debian,
4649 people will often be upgrading to your package from the version that was in the
4650 last Debian release. Remember to test upgrades from that version too.
4651 </para>
4652 <para>
4653 Although downgrading is not officially supported, supporting it is a
4654 friendly gesture.
4655 </para>
4656 </section>
4657 <section id="lintians"><title>Using <systemitem role="package">lintian</systemitem></title>
4658 <para>
4659 Run <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>lintian</refentrytitle>
4660 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> on your <filename>.changes</filename>
4661 file. The <command>lintian</command> command runs many test scripts to check
4662 for many common packaging errors. <footnote><para> You do not need to provide
4663 the <command>lintian</command> option <literal>-i -I --show-overrides</literal>
4664 if you customized <filename>/etc/devscripts.conf</filename> or
4665 <filename>~/.devscripts</filename> as described in <xref linkend="debuild"/>.
4666 </para> </footnote>
4667 </para>
4668 <screen>
4669 $ lintian -i -I --show-overrides gentoo_0.9.12-1_i386.changes
4670 </screen>
4671 <para>
4672 Of course, replace the filename with the name of the
4673 <filename>.changes</filename> file generated for your package. The output of
4674 the <command>lintian</command> command uses the following flags.
4675 </para>
4676 <itemizedlist>
4677 <listitem>
4678 <para>
4679 <literal>E:</literal> for error; a sure policy violation or packaging error.
4680 </para>
4681 </listitem>
4682 <listitem>
4683 <para>
4684 <literal>W:</literal> for warning; a possible policy violation or packaging
4685 error.
4686 </para>
4687 </listitem>
4688 <listitem>
4689 <para>
4690 <literal>I:</literal> for info; information on certain aspects of packaging.
4691 </para>
4692 </listitem>
4693 <listitem>
4694 <para>
4695 <literal>N:</literal> for note; a detailed message to help your debugging.
4696 </para>
4697 </listitem>
4698 <listitem>
4699 <para>
4700 <literal>O:</literal> for overridden; a message overridden by the
4701 <filename>lintian-overrides</filename> files but displayed by the
4702 <literal>--show-overrides</literal> option.
4703 </para>
4704 </listitem>
4705 </itemizedlist>
4706 <para>
4707 When you see warnings, tune the package to avoid them or verify that the warnings are
4708 spurious. If spurious, set up <filename>lintian-overrides</filename> files as
4709 described in <xref linkend="lintian"/>.
4710 </para>
4711 <para>
4712 Note that you can build the package with <command>dpkg-buildpackage</command>
4713 and run <command>lintian</command> on it in one command, if you use <citerefentry>
4714 <refentrytitle>debuild</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
4715 or <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>pdebuild</refentrytitle>
4716 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.
4717 </para>
4718 </section>
4719 <section id="debc"><title>The <command>debc</command> command</title>
4720 <para>
4721 You can list files in the binary Debian package with the <citerefentry>
4722 <refentrytitle>debc</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
4723 command.
4724 </para>
4725 <screen>
4726 $ debc <replaceable>package</replaceable>.changes
4727 </screen>
4728 </section>
4729 <section id="debdiff"><title>The <command>debdiff</command> command</title>
4730 <para>
4731 You can compare file contents in two source Debian packages with the
4732 <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>debdiff</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
4733 </citerefentry> command.
4734 </para>
4735 <screen>
4736 $ debdiff <replaceable>old-package</replaceable>.dsc <replaceable>new-package</replaceable>.dsc
4737 </screen>
4738 <para>
4739 You can also compare file lists in two sets of binary Debian packages with the
4740 <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>debdiff</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
4741 </citerefentry> command.
4742 </para>
4743 <screen>
4744 $ debdiff <replaceable>old-package</replaceable>.changes <replaceable>new-package</replaceable>.changes
4745 </screen>
4746 <para>
4747 These are useful to identify what has been changed in the source packages
4748 and to check for inadvertent changes made when updating binary
4749 packages, such as unintentionally misplacing or removing files.
4750 </para>
4751 </section>
4752 <section id="interdiff"><title>The <command>interdiff</command> command</title>
4753 <para>
4754 You can compare two <filename>diff.gz</filename> files with the <citerefentry>
4755 <refentrytitle>interdiff</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
4756 </citerefentry> command. This is useful for verifying that no inadvertent
4757 changes were made to the source by the maintainer when updating packages in the
4758 old <literal>1.0</literal> source format.
4759 </para>
4760 <screen>
4761 $ interdiff -z <replaceable>old-package</replaceable>.diff.gz <replaceable>new-package</replaceable>.diff.gz
4762 </screen>
4763 <para>
4764 The new <literal>3.0</literal> source format stores changes in multiple patch
4765 files as described in <xref linkend="patches"/>. You can trace changes of each
4766 <filename>debian/patches/*</filename> file using <command>interdiff</command>, too.
4767 </para>
4768 </section>
4769 <section id="mc"><title>The <command>mc</command> command</title>
4770 <para>
4771 Many of these file inspection operations can be made into an intuitive process
4772 by using a file manager like <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>mc</refentrytitle>
4773 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> which will let you browse not only the
4774 contents of <filename>*.deb</filename> package files but also
4775 <filename>*.udeb</filename>, <filename>*.debian.tar.gz</filename>,
4776 <filename>*.diff.gz</filename>, and <filename>*.orig.tar.gz</filename> files.
4777 </para>
4778 <para>
4779 Be on the lookout for extra unneeded files or zero length files, both in the
4780 binary and source package. Often cruft doesn't get cleaned up properly; adjust
4781 your <filename>rules</filename> file to compensate for this.
4782 </para>
4783 </section>
4784 </chapter>
4785 <chapter id="upload"><title>Uploading the package</title>
4786 <para>
4787 Now that you have tested your new package thoroughly, you want to release it to
4788 a public archive to share it.
4789 </para>
4790 <section id="upload-debian"><title>Uploading to the Debian archive</title>
4791 <para>
4792 Once you become an official developer,
4793 <footnote><para>
4794 See <xref linkend="socialdynamics"/>.
4795 </para></footnote>
4796 you can upload the package to the Debian archive.
4797 <footnote><para>
4798 There are publicly accessible archives such as <ulink url="&mentors-dn;"/>
4799 which work almost the same way as the Debian archive and provide an upload area for
4800 non-DDs. You can set up an equivalent archive by yourself using the tools
4801 listed at <ulink url="&deb-archive;"/>. So this section is useful for
4802 non-DDs, too.
4803 </para></footnote>
4804 You can do this manually, but it's easier to use the existing
4805 automated tools, like <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dupload</refentrytitle>
4806 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> or <citerefentry>
4807 <refentrytitle>dput</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>.
4808 We'll describe how it's done with <command>dupload</command>. <footnote><para>
4809 The <systemitem role="package">dput</systemitem> package seems to come with
4810 more features and to be becoming more popular than the <systemitem role="package">dupload</systemitem> package. It uses the
4811 file <filename>/etc/dput</filename> for its global configuration and the
4812 file <filename>~/.dput.cf</filename> for per-user configuration. It supports
4813 Ubuntu-related services out-of-the-box, too. </para> </footnote>
4814 </para>
4815 <para>
4816 First you have to set up <command>dupload</command>'s config file. You can
4817 either edit the system-wide <filename>/etc/dupload.conf</filename> file, or
4818 have your own <filename>~/.dupload.conf</filename> file override the few things
4819 you want to change.
4820 </para>
4821 <para>
4822 You can read the <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>dupload.conf</refentrytitle>
4823 <manvolnum>5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> manual page to understand what each of
4824 these options means.
4825 </para>
4826 <para>
4827 The <literal>$default_host</literal> option determines which of the upload
4828 queues will be used by default. <literal>anonymous-ftp-master</literal> is the
4829 primary one, but it's possible that you will want to use another one.
4830 <footnote><para>See <ulink url="&devref-upload;">Debian Developer's Reference 5.6. "Uploading a package"</ulink>.</para></footnote>
4831 </para>
4832 <para>
4833 While connected to the Internet, you can upload your package as follows:
4834 </para>
4835 <screen>
4836 $ dupload gentoo_0.9.12-1_i386.changes
4837 </screen>
4838 <para>
4839 <command>dupload</command> checks that the SHA1/SHA256 file checksums
4840 match those listed in the <filename>.changes</filename> file. If they do not
4841 match, it will warn you to rebuild it as described in <xref linkend="completebuild"/> so it can be properly uploaded.
4842 </para>
4843 <!--
4844 No more use of ftp-master nor faster queue. It is not so
4845 useful these days. If you upload to ftp-master, <command>dupload</command>
4846 will ask for your password on Debian machines, and then upload the packages.
4847 -->
4848 <para>
4849 If you encounter an upload problem at <ulink url="&uploadqueue;"/>, you can fix this
4850 by manually uploading a GPG-signed <filename>*.commands</filename> file to there
4851 with <command>ftp</command>. <footnote><para> See <ulink url="&uploadqueue-readme;"/>. Alternatively, you can
4852 use the <command>dcut</command> command from the <systemitem
4853 role="package">dput</systemitem> package. </para> </footnote> For example, using
4854 <filename>hello.commands</filename>:
4855 </para>
4856 <screen>
4857 -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
4858 Hash: SHA1
4859 Uploader: Foo Bar &lt;Foo.Bar@example.org&gt;
4860 Commands:
4861 rm hello_1.0-1_i386.deb
4862 mv hello_1.0-1.dsx hello_1.0-1.dsc
4863 -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
4864 Version: GnuPG v1.4.10 (GNU/Linux)
4865
4866 [...]
4867 -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
4868 </screen>
4869 </section>
4870 <section id="option-sa"><title>Including <filename>orig.tar.gz</filename> for upload</title>
4871 <para>
4872 When you first upload the package to the archive, you need to include the
4873 original <filename>orig.tar.gz</filename> source, too. If the Debian revision
4874 number of this package is neither <literal>1</literal> nor
4875 <literal>0</literal>, you must provide the <command>dpkg-buildpackage</command>
4876 option <literal>-sa</literal>.
4877 </para>
4878 <para>
4879 For the <command>dpkg-buildpackage</command> command:
4880 </para>
4881 <screen>
4882 $ dpkg-buildpackage -sa
4883 </screen>
4884 <para>
4885 For the <command>debuild</command> command:
4886 </para>
4887 <screen>
4888 $ debuild -sa
4889 </screen>
4890 <para>
4891 For the <command>pdebuild</command> command:
4892 </para>
4893 <screen>
4894 $ pdebuild --debbuildopts -sa
4895 </screen>
4896 <para>
4897 On the other hand, the <literal>-sd</literal> option will force the exclusion
4898 of the original <filename>orig.tar.gz</filename> source.
4899 </para>
4900 </section>
4901 <section id="skipped-uploads"><title>Skipped uploads</title>
4902 <para>
4903 If you created multiple entries in <filename>debian/changelog</filename> by
4904 skipping uploads, you must create a proper <filename>*_.changes</filename> file
4905 which includes all changes from the last upload.
4906 This can be done by specifying the <command>dpkg-buildpackage</command> option
4907 <literal>-v</literal> with the version, e.g.,
4908 <literal><replaceable>1.2</replaceable></literal>.
4909 </para>
4910 <para>
4911 For the <command>dpkg-buildpackage</command> command:
4912 </para>
4913 <screen>
4914 $ dpkg-buildpackage -v<replaceable>1.2</replaceable>
4915 </screen>
4916 <para>
4917 For the <command>debuild</command> command:
4918 </para>
4919 <screen>
4920 $ debuild -v<replaceable>1.2</replaceable>
4921 </screen>
4922 <para>
4923 For the <command>pdebuild</command> command:
4924 </para>
4925 <screen>
4926 $ pdebuild --debbuildopts "-v<replaceable>1.2</replaceable>"
4927 </screen>
4928 </section>
4929 </chapter>
4930 <chapter id="update"><title>Updating the package</title>
4931 <para>
4932 After you release a package, you will soon need to update it.
4933 </para>
4934 <section id="newrevision"><title>New Debian revision</title>
4935 <para>
4936 Let's say that a bug report was filed against your package as
4937 <literal>#654321</literal>, and it describes a problem that you can solve.
4938 Here's what you need to do to create a new Debian revision of the package.
4939 </para>
4940 <itemizedlist>
4941 <listitem>
4942 <para>
4943 If this is to be recorded as a new patch, do the following.
4944 </para>
4945 <itemizedlist>
4946 <listitem>
4947 <para>
4948 <literal>dquilt new <replaceable>bugname.patch</replaceable></literal> to set
4949 the patch name;
4950 </para>
4951 </listitem>
4952 <listitem>
4953 <para>
4954 <literal>dquilt add <replaceable>buggy-file</replaceable></literal> to declare
4955 the file to be modified;
4956 </para>
4957 </listitem>
4958 <listitem>
4959 <para>
4960 Correct the problem in the package source for the upstream bug;
4961 </para>
4962 </listitem>
4963 <listitem>
4964 <para>
4965 <literal>dquilt refresh</literal> to record it to
4966 <filename><replaceable>bugname.patch</replaceable></filename>;
4967 </para>
4968 </listitem>
4969 <listitem>
4970 <para>
4971 <literal>dquilt header -e</literal> to add its description;
4972 </para>
4973 </listitem>
4974 </itemizedlist>
4975 </listitem>
4976 <listitem>
4977 <para>
4978 If this is to update an existing patch, do the following.
4979 </para>
4980 <itemizedlist>
4981 <listitem>
4982 <para>
4983 <literal>dquilt pop <replaceable>foo.patch</replaceable></literal> to recall
4984 the existing <filename><replaceable>foo.patch</replaceable></filename>;
4985 </para>
4986 </listitem>
4987 <listitem>
4988 <para>
4989 Correct the problem in the old
4990 <filename><replaceable>foo.patch</replaceable></filename>;
4991 </para>
4992 </listitem>
4993 <listitem>
4994 <para>
4995 <literal>dquilt refresh</literal> to update
4996 <filename><replaceable>foo.patch</replaceable></filename>;
4997 </para>
4998 </listitem>
4999 <listitem>
5000 <para>
5001 <literal>dquilt header -e</literal> to update its description;
5002 </para>
5003 </listitem>
5004 <listitem>
5005 <para>
5006 <literal>while dquilt push; do dquilt refresh; done</literal> to apply all
5007 patches while removing <emphasis>fuzz</emphasis>;
5008 </para>
5009 </listitem>
5010 </itemizedlist>
5011 </listitem>
5012 <listitem>
5013 <para>
5014 Add a new revision at the top of the Debian <filename>changelog</filename>
5015 file, for example with <literal>dch -i</literal>, or explicitly with
5016 <literal>dch -v
5017 <replaceable>version</replaceable>-<replaceable>revision</replaceable></literal>
5018 and then insert the comments using your preferred editor. <footnote><para>To
5019 get the date in the required format, use <literal>LANG=C date -R</literal>.
5020 </para> </footnote>
5021 </para>
5022 </listitem>
5023 <listitem>
5024 <para>
5025 Include a short description of the bug and the solution in the changelog entry,
5026 followed by <literal>Closes: #654321</literal>. That way, the bug report will
5027 be <emphasis>automagically</emphasis> closed by the archive maintenance
5028 software the moment your package gets accepted into the Debian archive.
5029 </para>
5030 </listitem>
5031 <listitem>
5032 <para>
5033 Repeat what you did in the above to fix more bugs while updating the Debian
5034 <filename>changelog</filename> file with <literal>dch</literal> as needed.
5035 </para>
5036 </listitem>
5037 <listitem>
5038 <para>
5039 Repeat what you did in <xref linkend="completebuild"/>, <xref linkend="checkit"/>, and <xref linkend="upload"/>. The difference is that
5040 this time, the original source archive won't be included, as it hasn't been
5041 changed and it already exists in the Debian archive.
5042 </para>
5043 </listitem>
5044 </itemizedlist>
5045 <para>
5046 One tricky case can occur when you make a local package to experiment with
5047 the packaging before uploading the normal version to the official archive,
5048 e.g.,
5049 <literal><replaceable>1.0.1</replaceable>-<replaceable>1</replaceable></literal>.
5050 For smoother upgrades, it is a good idea to create a
5051 <filename>changelog</filename> entry with a version string as
5052 <literal><replaceable>1.0.1</replaceable>-<replaceable>1~rc1</replaceable></literal>.
5053 You may unclutter <filename>changelog</filename>
5054 by consolidating such local change entries into a single entry for the official package.
5055 See <xref linkend="namever"/> for the order of version strings.
5056 </para>
5057 <para>
5058 </para>
5059 </section>
5060 <section id="inspectnewupstream"><title>Inspection of the new upstream release</title>
5061 <para>
5062 When preparing packages of a new upstream release for the Debian archive, you
5063 must check the new upstream release, first.
5064 </para>
5065 <para>
5066 Start by reading the upstream <filename>changelog</filename>,
5067 <filename>NEWS</filename>, and whatever other documentation they may have
5068 released with the new version.
5069 </para>
5070 <para>
5071 You can then inspect changes between the old and new upstream sources as follows,
5072 watching out for anything suspicious.
5073 </para>
5074 <screen>
5075 $ diff -urN <replaceable>foo</replaceable>-<replaceable>oldversion</replaceable> <replaceable>foo</replaceable>-<replaceable>newversion</replaceable>
5076 </screen>
5077 <para>
5078 Changes to some auto-generated files by Autotools such as
5079 <filename>missing</filename>, <filename>aclocal.m4</filename>,
5080 <filename>config.guess</filename>, <filename>config.h.in</filename>,
5081 <filename>config.sub</filename>, <filename>configure</filename>,
5082 <filename>depcomp</filename>, <filename>install-sh</filename>,
5083 <filename>ltmain.sh</filename>, and <filename>Makefile.in</filename> may be
5084 ignored. You may delete them before running <command>diff</command> on the
5085 source for inspection.
5086 </para>
5087 </section>
5088 <section id="newupstream"><title>New upstream release</title>
5089 <para>
5090 If a package <systemitem role="package"><replaceable>foo</replaceable></systemitem> is properly packaged
5091 in the newer <literal>3.0 (native)</literal> or <literal>3.0 (quilt)</literal>
5092 formats, packaging a new upstream version is essentially moving the old
5093 <filename>debian</filename> directory to the new source. This can be done by
5094 running <literal>tar xvzf
5095 /<replaceable>path</replaceable>/<replaceable>to</replaceable>/<replaceable>foo</replaceable>_<replaceable>oldversion</replaceable>.debian.tar.gz</literal>
5096 in the new extracted source. <footnote><para> If a package <systemitem role="package"><replaceable>foo</replaceable></systemitem> is packaged in the
5097 old <literal>1.0</literal> format, this can be done by running <literal>zcat
5098 /<replaceable>path</replaceable>/<replaceable>to</replaceable>/<replaceable>foo</replaceable>_<replaceable>oldversion</replaceable>.diff.gz|patch
5099 -p1</literal> in the new extracted source, instead. </para> </footnote> Of
5100 course, you need to do some obvious chores.
5101 </para>
5102 <itemizedlist>
5103 <listitem>
5104 <para>
5105 Create a copy of the upstream source as the
5106 <filename>foo_<replaceable>newversion</replaceable>.tar.gz</filename> file.
5107 </para>
5108 </listitem>
5109 <listitem>
5110 <para>
5111 Update the Debian <filename>changelog</filename> file with <literal>dch -v
5112 <replaceable>newversion</replaceable>-<replaceable>1</replaceable></literal>.
5113 </para>
5114 <itemizedlist>
5115 <listitem>
5116 <para>
5117 Add an entry with <literal>New upstream release</literal>.
5118 </para>
5119 </listitem>
5120 <listitem>
5121 <para>
5122 Describe concisely the changes <emphasis>in the new upstream release</emphasis>
5123 that fix reported bugs and close those bugs by adding <literal>Closes: #<replaceable>bug_number</replaceable></literal>.
5124 </para>
5125 </listitem>
5126 <listitem>
5127 <para>
5128 Describe concisely the changes <emphasis>to the new upstream release</emphasis>
5129 by the maintainer that fix reported bugs and close those bugs by adding <literal>Closes: #<replaceable>bug_number</replaceable></literal>.
5130 </para>
5131 </listitem>
5132 </itemizedlist>
5133 </listitem>
5134 <listitem>
5135 <para>
5136 <literal>while dquilt push; do dquilt refresh; done</literal> to apply all
5137 patches while removing <emphasis>fuzz</emphasis>.
5138 </para>
5139 </listitem>
5140 </itemizedlist>
5141 <para>
5142 If the patch/merge did not apply cleanly, inspect the situation (clues are left
5143 in <filename>.rej</filename> files).
5144 </para>
5145 <itemizedlist>
5146 <listitem>
5147 <para>
5148 If a patch you applied to the source was integrated into the upstream source,
5149 </para>
5150 <itemizedlist>
5151 <listitem>
5152 <para>
5153 <literal>dquilt delete</literal> to remove it.
5154 </para>
5155 </listitem>
5156 </itemizedlist>
5157 </listitem>
5158 <listitem>
5159 <para>
5160 If a patch you applied to the source conflicted with new changes in the
5161 upstream source,
5162 </para>
5163 <itemizedlist>
5164 <listitem>
5165 <para>
5166 <literal>dquilt push -f</literal> to apply old patches while forcing rejects as
5167 <filename><replaceable>baz</replaceable>.rej</filename>.
5168 </para>
5169 </listitem>
5170 <listitem>
5171 <para>
5172 Edit the <filename><replaceable>baz</replaceable></filename> file manually to
5173 bring about the intended effect of
5174 <filename><replaceable>baz</replaceable>.rej</filename>.
5175 </para>
5176 </listitem>
5177 <listitem>
5178 <para>
5179 <literal>dquilt refresh</literal> to update the patch.
5180 </para>
5181 </listitem>
5182 </itemizedlist>
5183 </listitem>
5184 <listitem>
5185 <para>
5186 Continue as usual with <literal>while dquilt push; do dquilt refresh; done</literal>.
5187 </para>
5188 </listitem>
5189 </itemizedlist>
5190 <para>
5191 This process can be automated using the <citerefentry>
5192 <refentrytitle>uupdate</refentrytitle> <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
5193 command as follows:
5194 </para>
5195 <screen>
5196 $ apt-get source <replaceable>foo</replaceable>
5197 ...
5198 dpkg-source: info: extracting <replaceable>foo</replaceable> in <replaceable>foo</replaceable>-<replaceable>oldversion</replaceable>
5199 dpkg-source: info: unpacking <replaceable>foo</replaceable>_<replaceable>oldversion</replaceable>.orig.tar.gz
5200 dpkg-source: info: applying <replaceable>foo</replaceable>_<replaceable>oldversion</replaceable>-1.debian.tar.gz
5201 $ ls -F
5202 <replaceable>foo</replaceable>-<replaceable>oldversion</replaceable>/
5203 <replaceable>foo</replaceable>_<replaceable>oldversion</replaceable>-1.debian.tar.gz
5204 <replaceable>foo</replaceable>_<replaceable>oldversion</replaceable>-1.dsc
5205 <replaceable>foo</replaceable>_<replaceable>oldversion</replaceable>.orig.tar.gz
5206 $ wget http://example.org/<replaceable>foo</replaceable>/<replaceable>foo</replaceable>-<replaceable>newversion</replaceable>.tar.gz
5207 $ cd <replaceable>foo</replaceable>-<replaceable>oldversion</replaceable>
5208 $ uupdate -v <replaceable>newversion</replaceable> ../<replaceable>foo</replaceable>-<replaceable>newversion</replaceable>.tar.gz
5209 $ cd ../<replaceable>foo</replaceable>-<replaceable>newversion</replaceable>
5210 $ while dquilt push; do dquilt refresh; done
5211 $ dch
5212 ... document changes made
5213 </screen>
5214 <para>
5215 If you set up a <filename>debian/watch</filename> file as described in <xref linkend="watch"/>, you can skip the <command>wget</command> command. You
5216 simply run <citerefentry> <refentrytitle>uscan</refentrytitle>
5217 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> in the
5218 <filename><replaceable>foo</replaceable>-<replaceable>oldversion</replaceable></filename>
5219 directory instead of the <command>uupdate</command> command. This will
5220 <emphasis>automagically</emphasis> look for the updated source, download it,
5221 and run the <command>uupdate</command> command. <footnote><para> If the
5222 <command>uscan</command> command downloads the updated source but it does not
5223 run the <command>uupdate</command> command, you should correct the
5224 <filename>debian/watch</filename> file to have <literal>debian
5225 uupdate</literal> at the end of the URL. </para> </footnote>
5226 </para>
5227 <para>
5228 You can release this updated source by repeating what you did in <xref linkend="completebuild"/>, <xref linkend="checkit"/>, and <xref linkend="upload"/>.
5229 </para>
5230 </section>
5231 <section id="packagestyle"><title>Updating the packaging style</title>
5232 <para>
5233 Updating the package style is not a required activity for the update of a
5234 package. However, doing so lets you use the full capabilities of the modern
5235 <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> system and the <literal>3.0</literal>
5236 source format. <footnote><para> If your sponsor or other
5237 maintainers object to updating the existing packaging style, don't bother
5238 arguing. There are more important things to do. </para>
5239 </footnote>
5240 </para>
5241 <itemizedlist>
5242 <listitem>
5243 <para>
5244 If you need to recreate deleted template files for any reason, you can run
5245 <command>dh_make</command> again in the same Debian package source tree with
5246 the <literal>--addmissing</literal> option. Then edit them appropriately.
5247 </para>
5248 </listitem>
5249 <listitem>
5250 <para>
5251 If the package has not been updated to use the <systemitem role="package">debhelper</systemitem> v7 <command>dh</command> syntax for the
5252 <filename>debian/rules</filename> file, update it to use <command>dh</command>.
5253 Update the <filename>debian/control</filename> file accordingly.
5254 </para>
5255 </listitem>
5256 <listitem>
5257 <para>
5258 If you want to update the <filename>rules</filename> file created with the
5259 <filename>Makefile</filename> inclusion mechanism of the Common Debian Build
5260 System (<systemitem role="package">cdbs</systemitem>) to the
5261 <command>dh</command> syntax, see
5262 <ulink url="&cdbs-doc;">cdbs-doc.pdf.gz</ulink> and understand its
5263 <literal>DEB_*</literal> configuration variables.
5264 <!--
5265 <footnote><para> In the
5266 <systemitem role="package">cdbs</systemitem> (0.4.74) package, there are some
5267 negative descriptions of the <filename>rules</filename> file created by the
5268 <command>dh_make</command> command for the non-<systemitem role="package">cdbs</systemitem> choices. Do not worry about it. It applies
5269 only for <literal>lenny</literal> which created explicit targets with long lists
5270 of <command>dh_*</command> commands. </para> </footnote>
5271 -->
5272 </para>
5273 </listitem>
5274 <listitem>
5275 <para>
5276 If you have a <literal>1.0</literal> source package without the
5277 <filename><replaceable>foo</replaceable>.diff.gz</filename> file, you can
5278 update it to the newer <literal>3.0 (native)</literal> source format by
5279 creating <filename>debian/source/format</filename> with <literal>3.0
5280 (native)</literal>. The rest of the <filename>debian/*</filename> files can just be
5281 copied.
5282 </para>
5283 </listitem>
5284 <listitem>
5285 <para>
5286 If you have a <literal>1.0</literal> source package with the
5287 <filename><replaceable>foo</replaceable>.diff.gz</filename> file, you can
5288 update it to the newer <literal>3.0 (quilt)</literal> source format by creating
5289 <filename>debian/source/format</filename> with <literal>3.0 (quilt)</literal>.
5290 The rest of the <filename>debian/*</filename> files can just be copied. Import the
5291 <filename>big.diff</filename> file generated by the command <literal>filterdiff -z -x
5292 '*/debian/*' <replaceable>foo</replaceable>.diff.gz &gt; big.diff</literal>
5293 to your <command>quilt</command> system, if needed. <footnote><para>
5294 You can split <filename>big.diff</filename> into many small incremental patches
5295 using the <command>splitdiff</command> command. </para> </footnote>
5296 </para>
5297 </listitem>
5298 <listitem>
5299 <para>
5300 If it was packaged using another patch system such as <systemitem role="package">dpatch</systemitem>, <systemitem role="package">dbs</systemitem>, or <systemitem role="package">cdbs</systemitem> with <literal>-p0</literal>,
5301 <literal>-p1</literal>, or <literal>-p2</literal>, convert it to the
5302 <systemitem role="package">quilt</systemitem> command using
5303 <filename>deb3</filename> at <ulink url="&deb3;"/>.
5304 </para>
5305 </listitem>
5306 <listitem>
5307 <para>
5308 If it was packaged with the <command>dh</command> command with the
5309 <literal>--with quilt</literal> option or with the
5310 <command>dh_quilt_patch</command> and <command>dh_quilt_unpatch</command>
5311 commands, remove these and make it use the newer <literal>3.0
5312 (native)</literal> source format.
5313 </para>
5314 </listitem>
5315 </itemizedlist>
5316 <para>
5317 You need to do the other tasks described in <xref linkend="newupstream"/>, too.
5318 </para>
5319 </section>
5320 <section id="reminders"><title>Reminders for updating packages</title>
5321 <para>
5322 Here are few reminders for updating packages.
5323 </para>
5324 <itemizedlist>
5325 <listitem>
5326 <para>
5327 Preserve old <filename>changelog</filename> entries (sounds obvious, but there
5328 have been cases of people typing <literal>dch</literal> when they should have typed
5329 <literal>dch -i</literal>.)
5330 </para>
5331 </listitem>
5332 <listitem>
5333 <para>
5334 Existing Debian changes need to be reevaluated; throw away stuff that upstream
5335 has incorporated (in one form or another) and remember to keep stuff that
5336 hasn't been incorporated by upstream, unless there is a compelling reason not
5337 to.
5338 </para>
5339 </listitem>
5340 <listitem>
5341 <para>
5342 If any changes were made to the build system (hopefully you'd know from
5343 inspecting upstream changes) then update the <filename>debian/rules</filename>
5344 and <filename>debian/control</filename> build dependencies if necessary.
5345 </para>
5346 </listitem>
5347 <listitem>
5348 <para>
5349 Check the <ulink url="&bts;">Debian Bug Tracking
5350 System (BTS)</ulink> to see if someone has provided patches to bugs that are
5351 currently open.
5352 </para>
5353 </listitem>
5354 <listitem>
5355 <para>
5356 Check the contents of the <filename>.changes</filename> file to make sure you
5357 are uploading to the correct distribution, the proper bug closures are listed
5358 in the <literal>Closes</literal> field, the <literal>Maintainer</literal> and
5359 <literal>Changed-By</literal> fields match, the file is GPG-signed, etc.
5360 </para>
5361 </listitem>
5362 </itemizedlist>
5363 </section>
5364 </chapter>
5365 </book>

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