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1 <!doctype debiandoc system [
2 <!-- include version information so we don't have to hard code it
3 within the document -->
4 <!entity % versiondata SYSTEM "version.ent"> %versiondata;
5 ]>
6 <debiandoc>
8 <book>
9 <titlepag>
10 <title>Debian Policy Manual</title>
11 <author><qref id="authors">The Debian Policy Mailing List</qref></author>
12 <version>version &version;, &date;</version>
14 <abstract>
15 This manual describes the policy requirements for the Debian
16 GNU/Linux distribution. This includes the structure and
17 contents of the Debian archive and several design issues of
18 the operating system, as well as technical requirements that
19 each package must satisfy to be included in the distribution.
20 </abstract>
22 <copyright>
23 <copyrightsummary>
24 Copyright &copy; 1996,1997,1998 Ian Jackson
25 and Christian Schwarz.
26 </copyrightsummary>
27 <p>
28 These are the copyright dates of the original Policy manual.
29 Since then, this manual has been updated by many others. No
30 comprehensive collection of copyright notices for subsequent
31 work exists.
32 </p>
34 <p>
35 This manual is free software; you may redistribute it and/or
36 modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
37 as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version
38 2, or (at your option) any later version.
39 </p>
41 <p>
42 This is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
43 <em>without any warranty</em>; without even the implied
44 warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular
45 purpose. See the GNU General Public License for more
46 details.
47 </p>
49 <p>
50 A copy of the GNU General Public License is available as
51 <file>/usr/share/common-licenses/GPL</file> in the Debian GNU/Linux
52 distribution or on the World Wide Web at
53 <url id="http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html"
54 name="the GNU General Public Licence">. You can also
55 obtain it by writing to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
56 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
57 </p>
58 </copyright>
59 </titlepag>
61 <toc detail="sect1">
63 <chapt id="scope">
64 <heading>About this manual</heading>
65 <sect>
66 <heading>Scope</heading>
67 <p>
68 This manual describes the policy requirements for the Debian
69 GNU/Linux distribution. This includes the structure and
70 contents of the Debian archive and several design issues of the
71 operating system, as well as technical requirements that
72 each package must satisfy to be included in the
73 distribution.
74 </p>
76 <p>
77 This manual also describes Debian policy as it relates to
78 creating Debian packages. It is not a tutorial on how to build
79 packages, nor is it exhaustive where it comes to describing
80 the behavior of the packaging system. Instead, this manual
81 attempts to define the interface to the package management
82 system that the developers have to be conversant with.<footnote>
83 Informally, the criteria used for inclusion is that the
84 material meet one of the following requirements:
85 <taglist compact="compact">
86 <tag>Standard interfaces</tag>
87 <item>
88 The material presented represents an interface to
89 the packaging system that is mandated for use, and
90 is used by, a significant number of packages, and
91 therefore should not be changed without peer
92 review. Package maintainers can then rely on this
93 interface not changing, and the package management
94 software authors need to ensure compatibility with
95 this interface definition. (Control file and
96 changelog file formats are examples.)
97 </item>
98 <tag>Chosen Convention</tag>
99 <item>
100 If there are a number of technically viable choices
101 that can be made, but one needs to select one of
102 these options for inter-operability. The version
103 number format is one example.
104 </item>
105 </taglist>
106 Please note that these are not mutually exclusive;
107 selected conventions often become parts of standard
108 interfaces.
109 </footnote>
110 </p>
113 The footnotes present in this manual are
114 merely informative, and are not part of Debian policy itself.
115 </p>
118 The appendices to this manual are not necessarily normative,
119 either. Please see <ref id="pkg-scope"> for more information.
120 </p>
123 In the normative part of this manual,
124 the words <em>must</em>, <em>should</em> and
125 <em>may</em>, and the adjectives <em>required</em>,
126 <em>recommended</em> and <em>optional</em>, are used to
127 distinguish the significance of the various guidelines in
128 this policy document. Packages that do not conform to the
129 guidelines denoted by <em>must</em> (or <em>required</em>)
130 will generally not be considered acceptable for the Debian
131 distribution. Non-conformance with guidelines denoted by
132 <em>should</em> (or <em>recommended</em>) will generally be
133 considered a bug, but will not necessarily render a package
134 unsuitable for distribution. Guidelines denoted by
135 <em>may</em> (or <em>optional</em>) are truly optional and
136 adherence is left to the maintainer's discretion.
137 </p>
140 These classifications are roughly equivalent to the bug
141 severities <em>serious</em> (for <em>must</em> or
142 <em>required</em> directive violations), <em>minor</em>,
143 <em>normal</em> or <em>important</em>
144 (for <em>should</em> or <em>recommended</em> directive
145 violations) and <em>wishlist</em> (for <em>optional</em>
146 items).
147 <footnote>
148 Compare RFC 2119. Note, however, that these words are
149 used in a different way in this document.
150 </footnote>
151 </p>
154 Much of the information presented in this manual will be
155 useful even when building a package which is to be
156 distributed in some other way or is intended for local use
157 only.
158 </p>
159 </sect>
161 <sect>
162 <heading>New versions of this document</heading>
165 This manual is distributed via the Debian package
166 <package><url name="debian-policy"
167 id="http://packages.debian.org/debian-policy"></package>
168 (<httpsite>packages.debian.org</httpsite>
169 <httppath>/debian-policy</httppath>).
170 </p>
173 The current version of this document is also available from
174 the Debian web mirrors at
175 <tt><url name="/doc/debian-policy/"
176 id="http://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy/"></tt>.
178 <httpsite>www.debian.org</httpsite>
179 <httppath>/doc/debian-policy/</httppath>)
180 Also available from the same directory are several other
181 formats: <file>policy.html.tar.gz</file>
182 (<httppath>/doc/debian-policy/policy.html.tar.gz</httppath>),
183 <file>policy.pdf.gz</file>
184 (<httppath>/doc/debian-policy/policy.pdf.gz</httppath>)
185 and <file>policy.ps.gz</file>
186 (<httppath>/doc/debian-policy/policy.ps.gz</httppath>).
187 </p>
190 The <package>debian-policy</package> package also includes the file
191 <file>upgrading-checklist.txt.gz</file> which indicates policy
192 changes between versions of this document.
193 </p>
194 </sect>
196 <sect id="authors">
197 <heading>Authors and Maintainers</heading>
200 Originally called "Debian GNU/Linux Policy Manual", this
201 manual was initially written in 1996 by Ian Jackson.
202 It was revised on November 27th, 1996 by David A. Morris.
203 Christian Schwarz added new sections on March 15th, 1997,
204 and reworked/restructured it in April-July 1997.
205 Christoph Lameter contributed the "Web Standard".
206 Julian Gilbey largely restructured it in 2001.
207 </p>
210 Since September 1998, the responsibility for the contents of
211 this document lies on the <url name="debian-policy mailing list"
212 id="mailto:debian-policy@lists.debian.org">. Proposals
213 are discussed there and inserted into policy after a certain
214 consensus is established.
215 <!-- insert shameless policy-process plug here eventually -->
216 The actual editing is done by a group of maintainers that have
217 no editorial powers. These are the current maintainers:
219 <enumlist>
220 <item>Julian Gilbey</item>
221 <item>Branden Robinson</item>
222 <item>Josip Rodin</item>
223 <item>Manoj Srivastava</item>
224 </enumlist>
225 </p>
228 While the authors of this document have tried hard to avoid
229 typos and other errors, these do still occur. If you discover
230 an error in this manual or if you want to give any
231 comments, suggestions, or criticisms please send an email to
232 the Debian Policy List,
233 <email>debian-policy@lists.debian.org</email>, or submit a
234 bug report against the <tt>debian-policy</tt> package.
235 </p>
238 Please do not try to reach the individual authors or maintainers
239 of the Policy Manual regarding changes to the Policy.
240 </p>
241 </sect>
243 <sect id="related">
244 <heading>Related documents</heading>
247 There are several other documents other than this Policy Manual
248 that are necessary to fully understand some Debian policies and
249 procedures.
250 </p>
253 The external "sub-policy" documents are referred to in:
254 <list compact="compact">
255 <item><ref id="fhs"></item>
256 <item><ref id="virtual_pkg"></item>
257 <item><ref id="menus"></item>
258 <item><ref id="mime"></item>
259 <item><ref id="perl"></item>
260 <item><ref id="maintscriptprompt"></item>
261 <item><ref id="emacs"></item>
262 </list>
263 </p>
266 In addition to those, which carry the weight of policy, there
267 is the Debian Developer's Reference. This document describes
268 procedures and resources for Debian developers, but it is
269 <em>not</em> normative; rather, it includes things that don't
270 belong in the Policy, such as best practices for developers.
271 </p>
274 The Developer's Reference is available in the
275 <package>developers-reference</package> package.
276 It's also available from the Debian web mirrors at
277 <tt><url name="/doc/developers-reference/"
278 id="http://www.debian.org/doc/developers-reference/"></tt>.
279 </p>
280 </sect>
282 <sect id="definitions">
283 <heading>Definitions</heading>
286 The following terms are used in this Policy Manual:
287 <taglist>
288 <tag>ASCII</tag>
289 <item>
290 The character encoding specified by ANSI X3.4-1986 and its
291 predecessor standards, referred to in MIME as US-ASCII, and
292 corresponding to an encoding in eight bits per character of
293 the first 128 <url id="http://www.unicode.org/"
294 name="Unicode"> characters, with the eighth bit always zero.
295 </item>
296 <tag>UTF-8</tag>
297 <item>
298 The transformation format (sometimes called encoding) of
299 <url id="http://www.unicode.org/" name="Unicode"> defined by
300 <url id="http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3629.txt"
301 name="RFC 3629">. UTF-8 has the useful property of having
302 ASCII as a subset, so any text encoded in ASCII is trivially
303 also valid UTF-8.
304 </item>
305 </taglist>
306 </p>
307 </sect>
308 </chapt>
311 <chapt id="archive">
312 <heading>The Debian Archive</heading>
315 The Debian GNU/Linux system is maintained and distributed as a
316 collection of <em>packages</em>. Since there are so many of
317 them (currently well over 15000), they are split into
318 <em>sections</em> and given <em>priorities</em> to simplify
319 the handling of them.
320 </p>
323 The effort of the Debian project is to build a free operating
324 system, but not every package we want to make accessible is
325 <em>free</em> in our sense (see the Debian Free Software
326 Guidelines, below), or may be imported/exported without
327 restrictions. Thus, the archive is split into areas<footnote>
328 The Debian archive software uses the term "component" internally
329 and in the Release file format to refer to the division of an
330 archive. The Debian Social Contract simply refers to "areas."
331 This document uses terminology similar to the Social Contract.
332 </footnote> based on their licenses and other restrictions.
333 </p>
336 The aims of this are:
338 <list compact="compact">
339 <item>to allow us to make as much software available as we can</item>
340 <item>to allow us to encourage everyone to write free software,
341 and</item>
342 <item>to allow us to make it easy for people to produce
343 CD-ROMs of our system without violating any licenses,
344 import/export restrictions, or any other laws.</item>
345 </list>
346 </p>
349 The <em>main</em> archive area forms the <em>Debian GNU/Linux
350 distribution</em>.
351 </p>
354 Packages in the other archive areas (<tt>contrib</tt>,
355 <tt>non-free</tt>) are not considered to be part of the Debian
356 distribution, although we support their use and provide
357 infrastructure for them (such as our bug-tracking system and
358 mailing lists). This Debian Policy Manual applies to these
359 packages as well.
360 </p>
362 <sect id="dfsg">
363 <heading>The Debian Free Software Guidelines</heading>
365 The Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) form our
366 definition of "free software". These are:
367 <taglist>
368 <tag>1. Free Redistribution
369 </tag>
370 <item>
371 The license of a Debian component may not restrict any
372 party from selling or giving away the software as a
373 component of an aggregate software distribution
374 containing programs from several different
375 sources. The license may not require a royalty or
376 other fee for such sale.
377 </item>
378 <tag>2. Source Code
379 </tag>
380 <item>
381 The program must include source code, and must allow
382 distribution in source code as well as compiled form.
383 </item>
384 <tag>3. Derived Works
385 </tag>
386 <item>
387 The license must allow modifications and derived
388 works, and must allow them to be distributed under the
389 same terms as the license of the original software.
390 </item>
391 <tag>4. Integrity of The Author's Source Code
392 </tag>
393 <item>
394 The license may restrict source-code from being
395 distributed in modified form <em>only</em> if the
396 license allows the distribution of "patch files"
397 with the source code for the purpose of modifying the
398 program at build time. The license must explicitly
399 permit distribution of software built from modified
400 source code. The license may require derived works to
401 carry a different name or version number from the
402 original software. (This is a compromise. The Debian
403 Project encourages all authors to not restrict any
404 files, source or binary, from being modified.)
405 </item>
406 <tag>5. No Discrimination Against Persons or Groups
407 </tag>
408 <item>
409 The license must not discriminate against any person
410 or group of persons.
411 </item>
412 <tag>6. No Discrimination Against Fields of Endeavor
413 </tag>
414 <item>
415 The license must not restrict anyone from making use
416 of the program in a specific field of endeavor. For
417 example, it may not restrict the program from being
418 used in a business, or from being used for genetic
419 research.
420 </item>
421 <tag>7. Distribution of License
422 </tag>
423 <item>
424 The rights attached to the program must apply to all
425 to whom the program is redistributed without the need
426 for execution of an additional license by those
427 parties.
428 </item>
429 <tag>8. License Must Not Be Specific to Debian
430 </tag>
431 <item>
432 The rights attached to the program must not depend on
433 the program's being part of a Debian system. If the
434 program is extracted from Debian and used or
435 distributed without Debian but otherwise within the
436 terms of the program's license, all parties to whom
437 the program is redistributed must have the same
438 rights as those that are granted in conjunction with
439 the Debian system.
440 </item>
441 <tag>9. License Must Not Contaminate Other Software
442 </tag>
443 <item>
444 The license must not place restrictions on other
445 software that is distributed along with the licensed
446 software. For example, the license must not insist
447 that all other programs distributed on the same medium
448 must be free software.
449 </item>
450 <tag>10. Example Licenses
451 </tag>
452 <item>
453 The "GPL," "BSD," and "Artistic" licenses are examples of
454 licenses that we consider <em>free</em>.
455 </item>
456 </taglist>
457 </p>
458 </sect>
460 <sect id="sections">
461 <heading>Archive areas</heading>
463 <sect1 id="main">
464 <heading>The main archive area</heading>
467 Every package in <em>main</em> must comply with the DFSG
468 (Debian Free Software Guidelines).
469 </p>
472 In addition, the packages in <em>main</em>
473 <list compact="compact">
474 <item>
475 must not require a package outside of <em>main</em>
476 for compilation or execution (thus, the package must
477 not declare a "Depends", "Recommends", or
478 "Build-Depends" relationship on a non-<em>main</em>
479 package),
480 </item>
481 <item>
482 must not be so buggy that we refuse to support them,
484 </item>
485 <item>
486 must meet all policy requirements presented in this
487 manual.
488 </item>
489 </list>
490 </p>
492 </sect1>
494 <sect1 id="contrib">
495 <heading>The contrib archive area</heading>
498 Every package in <em>contrib</em> must comply with the DFSG.
499 </p>
502 In addition, the packages in <em>contrib</em>
503 <list compact="compact">
504 <item>
505 must not be so buggy that we refuse to support them,
507 </item>
508 <item>
509 must meet all policy requirements presented in this
510 manual.
511 </item>
512 </list>
513 </p>
517 Examples of packages which would be included in
518 <em>contrib</em> are:
519 <list compact="compact">
520 <item>
521 free packages which require <em>contrib</em>,
522 <em>non-free</em> packages or packages which are not
523 in our archive at all for compilation or execution,
525 </item>
526 <item>
527 wrapper packages or other sorts of free accessories for
528 non-free programs.
529 </item>
530 </list>
531 </p>
532 </sect1>
534 <sect1 id="non-free">
535 <heading>The non-free archive area</heading>
538 Packages must be placed in <em>non-free</em> if they are
539 not compliant with the DFSG or are encumbered by patents
540 or other legal issues that make their distribution
541 problematic.
542 </p>
545 In addition, the packages in <em>non-free</em>
546 <list compact="compact">
547 <item>
548 must not be so buggy that we refuse to support them,
550 </item>
551 <item>
552 must meet all policy requirements presented in this
553 manual that it is possible for them to meet.
554 <footnote>
555 It is possible that there are policy
556 requirements which the package is unable to
557 meet, for example, if the source is
558 unavailable. These situations will need to be
559 handled on a case-by-case basis.
560 </footnote>
561 </item>
562 </list>
563 </p>
564 </sect1>
566 </sect>
568 <sect id="pkgcopyright">
569 <heading>Copyright considerations</heading>
572 Every package must be accompanied by a verbatim copy of its
573 copyright information and distribution license in the file
574 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var>/copyright</file>
575 (see <ref id="copyrightfile"> for further details).
576 </p>
579 We reserve the right to restrict files from being included
580 anywhere in our archives if
581 <list compact="compact">
582 <item>
583 their use or distribution would break a law,
584 </item>
585 <item>
586 there is an ethical conflict in their distribution or
587 use,
588 </item>
589 <item>
590 we would have to sign a license for them, or
591 </item>
592 <item>
593 their distribution would conflict with other project
594 policies.
595 </item>
596 </list>
597 </p>
600 Programs whose authors encourage the user to make
601 donations are fine for the main distribution, provided
602 that the authors do not claim that not donating is
603 immoral, unethical, illegal or something similar; in such
604 a case they must go in <em>non-free</em>.
605 </p>
608 Packages whose copyright permission notices (or patent
609 problems) do not even allow redistribution of binaries
610 only, and where no special permission has been obtained,
611 must not be placed on the Debian FTP site and its mirrors
612 at all.
613 </p>
616 Note that under international copyright law (this applies
617 in the United States, too), <em>no</em> distribution or
618 modification of a work is allowed without an explicit
619 notice saying so. Therefore a program without a copyright
620 notice <em>is</em> copyrighted and you may not do anything
621 to it without risking being sued! Likewise if a program
622 has a copyright notice but no statement saying what is
623 permitted then nothing is permitted.
624 </p>
627 Many authors are unaware of the problems that restrictive
628 copyrights (or lack of copyright notices) can cause for
629 the users of their supposedly-free software. It is often
630 worthwhile contacting such authors diplomatically to ask
631 them to modify their license terms. However, this can be a
632 politically difficult thing to do and you should ask for
633 advice on the <tt>debian-legal</tt> mailing list first, as
634 explained below.
635 </p>
638 When in doubt about a copyright, send mail to
639 <email>debian-legal@lists.debian.org</email>. Be prepared
640 to provide us with the copyright statement. Software
641 covered by the GPL, public domain software and BSD-like
642 copyrights are safe; be wary of the phrases "commercial
643 use prohibited" and "distribution restricted".
644 </p>
645 </sect>
647 <sect id="subsections">
648 <heading>Sections</heading>
651 The packages in the archive areas <em>main</em>,
652 <em>contrib</em> and <em>non-free</em> are grouped further into
653 <em>sections</em> to simplify handling.
654 </p>
657 The archive area and section for each package should be
658 specified in the package's <tt>Section</tt> control record (see
659 <ref id="f-Section">). However, the maintainer of the Debian
660 archive may override this selection to ensure the consistency of
661 the Debian distribution. The <tt>Section</tt> field should be
662 of the form:
663 <list compact="compact">
664 <item>
665 <em>section</em> if the package is in the
666 <em>main</em> archive area,
667 </item>
668 <item>
669 <em>area/section</em> if the package is in
670 the <em>contrib</em> or <em>non-free</em>
671 archive areas.
672 </item>
673 </list>
674 </p>
677 The Debian archive maintainers provide the authoritative
678 list of sections. At present, they are:
679 <em>admin</em>, <em>cli-mono</em>, <em>comm</em>, <em>database</em>,
680 <em>devel</em>, <em>debug</em>, <em>doc</em>, <em>editors</em>,
681 <em>electronics</em>, <em>embedded</em>, <em>fonts</em>,
682 <em>games</em>, <em>gnome</em>, <em>graphics</em>, <em>gnu-r</em>,
683 <em>gnustep</em>, <em>hamradio</em>, <em>haskell</em>,
684 <em>httpd</em>, <em>interpreters</em>, <em>java</em>, <em>kde</em>,
685 <em>kernel</em>, <em>libs</em>, <em>libdevel</em>, <em>lisp</em>,
686 <em>localization</em>, <em>mail</em>, <em>math</em>, <em>misc</em>,
687 <em>net</em>, <em>news</em>, <em>ocaml</em>, <em>oldlibs</em>,
688 <em>otherosfs</em>, <em>perl</em>, <em>php</em>, <em>python</em>,
689 <em>ruby</em>, <em>science</em>, <em>shells</em>, <em>sound</em>,
690 <em>tex</em>, <em>text</em>, <em>utils</em>, <em>vcs</em>,
691 <em>video</em>, <em>web</em>, <em>x11</em>, <em>xfce</em>,
692 <em>zope</em>.
693 </p>
694 </sect>
696 <sect id="priorities">
697 <heading>Priorities</heading>
700 Each package should have a <em>priority</em> value, which is
701 included in the package's <em>control record</em>
702 (see <ref id="f-Priority">).
703 This information is used by the Debian package management tools to
704 separate high-priority packages from less-important packages.
705 </p>
708 The following <em>priority levels</em> are recognized by the
709 Debian package management tools.
710 <taglist>
711 <tag><tt>required</tt></tag>
712 <item>
713 Packages which are necessary for the proper
714 functioning of the system (usually, this means that
715 dpkg functionality depends on these packages).
716 Removing a <tt>required</tt> package may cause your
717 system to become totally broken and you may not even
718 be able to use <prgn>dpkg</prgn> to put things back,
719 so only do so if you know what you are doing. Systems
720 with only the <tt>required</tt> packages are probably
721 unusable, but they do have enough functionality to
722 allow the sysadmin to boot and install more software.
723 </item>
724 <tag><tt>important</tt></tag>
725 <item>
726 Important programs, including those which one would
727 expect to find on any Unix-like system. If the
728 expectation is that an experienced Unix person who
729 found it missing would say "What on earth is going on,
730 where is <prgn>foo</prgn>?", it must be an
731 <tt>important</tt> package.<footnote>
732 This is an important criterion because we are
733 trying to produce, amongst other things, a free
734 Unix.
735 </footnote>
736 Other packages without which the system will not run
737 well or be usable must also have priority
738 <tt>important</tt>. This does
739 <em>not</em> include Emacs, the X Window System, TeX
740 or any other large applications. The
741 <tt>important</tt> packages are just a bare minimum of
742 commonly-expected and necessary tools.
743 </item>
744 <tag><tt>standard</tt></tag>
745 <item>
746 These packages provide a reasonably small but not too
747 limited character-mode system. This is what will be
748 installed by default if the user doesn't select anything
749 else. It doesn't include many large applications.
750 </item>
751 <tag><tt>optional</tt></tag>
752 <item>
753 (In a sense everything that isn't required is
754 optional, but that's not what is meant here.) This is
755 all the software that you might reasonably want to
756 install if you didn't know what it was and don't have
757 specialized requirements. This is a much larger system
758 and includes the X Window System, a full TeX
759 distribution, and many applications. Note that
760 optional packages should not conflict with each other.
761 </item>
762 <tag><tt>extra</tt></tag>
763 <item>
764 This contains all packages that conflict with others
765 with required, important, standard or optional
766 priorities, or are only likely to be useful if you
767 already know what they are or have specialized
768 requirements (such as packages containing only detached
769 debugging symbols).
770 </item>
771 </taglist>
772 </p>
775 Packages must not depend on packages with lower priority
776 values (excluding build-time dependencies). In order to
777 ensure this, the priorities of one or more packages may need
778 to be adjusted.
779 </p>
780 </sect>
782 </chapt>
785 <chapt id="binary">
786 <heading>Binary packages</heading>
789 The Debian GNU/Linux distribution is based on the Debian
790 package management system, called <prgn>dpkg</prgn>. Thus,
791 all packages in the Debian distribution must be provided
792 in the <tt>.deb</tt> file format.
793 </p>
795 <sect>
796 <heading>The package name</heading>
799 Every package must have a name that's unique within the Debian
800 archive.
801 </p>
804 The package name is included in the control field
805 <tt>Package</tt>, the format of which is described
806 in <ref id="f-Package">.
807 The package name is also included as a part of the file name
808 of the <tt>.deb</tt> file.
809 </p>
810 </sect>
812 <sect id="versions">
813 <heading>The version of a package</heading>
816 Every package has a version number recorded in its
817 <tt>Version</tt> control file field, described in
818 <ref id="f-Version">.
819 </p>
822 The package management system imposes an ordering on version
823 numbers, so that it can tell whether packages are being up- or
824 downgraded and so that package system front end applications
825 can tell whether a package it finds available is newer than
826 the one installed on the system. The version number format
827 has the most significant parts (as far as comparison is
828 concerned) at the beginning.
829 </p>
832 If an upstream package has problematic version numbers they
833 should be converted to a sane form for use in the
834 <tt>Version</tt> field.
835 </p>
837 <sect1>
838 <heading>Version numbers based on dates</heading>
841 In general, Debian packages should use the same version
842 numbers as the upstream sources.
843 </p>
846 However, in some cases where the upstream version number is
847 based on a date (e.g., a development "snapshot" release) the
848 package management system cannot handle these version
849 numbers without epochs. For example, dpkg will consider
850 "96May01" to be greater than "96Dec24".
851 </p>
854 To prevent having to use epochs for every new upstream
855 version, the date based portion of the version number
856 should be changed to the following format in such cases:
857 "19960501", "19961224". It is up to the maintainer whether
858 they want to bother the upstream maintainer to change
859 the version numbers upstream, too.
860 </p>
863 Note that other version formats based on dates which are
864 parsed correctly by the package management system should
865 <em>not</em> be changed.
866 </p>
869 Native Debian packages (i.e., packages which have been
870 written especially for Debian) whose version numbers include
871 dates should always use the "YYYYMMDD" format.
872 </p>
873 </sect1>
875 </sect>
877 <sect>
878 <heading>The maintainer of a package</heading>
881 Every package must have a Debian maintainer (the
882 maintainer may be one person or a group of people
883 reachable from a common email address, such as a mailing
884 list). The maintainer is responsible for ensuring that
885 the package is placed in the appropriate distributions.
886 </p>
889 The maintainer must be specified in the
890 <tt>Maintainer</tt> control field with their correct name
891 and a working email address. If one person maintains
892 several packages, they should try to avoid having
893 different forms of their name and email address in
894 the <tt>Maintainer</tt> fields of those packages.
895 </p>
898 The format of the <tt>Maintainer</tt> control field is
899 described in <ref id="f-Maintainer">.
900 </p>
903 If the maintainer of a package quits from the Debian
904 project, "Debian QA Group"
905 <email>packages@qa.debian.org</email> takes over the
906 maintainer-ship of the package until someone else
907 volunteers for that task. These packages are called
908 <em>orphaned packages</em>.<footnote>
909 The detailed procedure for doing this gracefully can
910 be found in the Debian Developer's Reference,
911 see <ref id="related">.
912 </footnote>
913 </p>
914 </sect>
916 <sect id="descriptions">
917 <heading>The description of a package</heading>
920 Every Debian package must have an extended description
921 stored in the appropriate field of the control record.
922 The technical information about the format of the
923 <tt>Description</tt> field is in <ref id="f-Description">.
924 </p>
927 The description should describe the package (the program) to a
928 user (system administrator) who has never met it before so that
929 they have enough information to decide whether they want to
930 install it. This description should not just be copied verbatim
931 from the program's documentation.
932 </p>
935 Put important information first, both in the synopsis and
936 extended description. Sometimes only the first part of the
937 synopsis or of the description will be displayed. You can
938 assume that there will usually be a way to see the whole
939 extended description.
940 </p>
943 The description should also give information about the
944 significant dependencies and conflicts between this package
945 and others, so that the user knows why these dependencies and
946 conflicts have been declared.
947 </p>
950 Instructions for configuring or using the package should
951 not be included (that is what installation scripts,
952 manual pages, info files, etc., are for). Copyright
953 statements and other administrivia should not be included
954 either (that is what the copyright file is for).
955 </p>
957 <sect1 id="synopsis"><heading>The single line synopsis</heading>
960 The single line synopsis should be kept brief - certainly
961 under 80 characters.
962 </p>
965 Do not include the package name in the synopsis line. The
966 display software knows how to display this already, and you
967 do not need to state it. Remember that in many situations
968 the user may only see the synopsis line - make it as
969 informative as you can.
970 </p>
972 </sect1>
974 <sect1 id="extendeddesc"><heading>The extended description</heading>
977 Do not try to continue the single line synopsis into the
978 extended description. This will not work correctly when
979 the full description is displayed, and makes no sense
980 where only the summary (the single line synopsis) is
981 available.
982 </p>
985 The extended description should describe what the package
986 does and how it relates to the rest of the system (in terms
987 of, for example, which subsystem it is which part of).
988 </p>
991 The description field needs to make sense to anyone, even
992 people who have no idea about any of the things the
993 package deals with.<footnote>
994 The blurb that comes with a program in its
995 announcements and/or <prgn>README</prgn> files is
996 rarely suitable for use in a description. It is
997 usually aimed at people who are already in the
998 community where the package is used.
999 </footnote>
1000 </p>
1002 </sect1>
1004 </sect>
1006 <sect>
1007 <heading>Dependencies</heading>
1010 Every package must specify the dependency information
1011 about other packages that are required for the first to
1012 work correctly.
1013 </p>
1016 For example, a dependency entry must be provided for any
1017 shared libraries required by a dynamically-linked executable
1018 binary in a package.
1019 </p>
1022 Packages are not required to declare any dependencies they
1023 have on other packages which are marked <tt>Essential</tt>
1024 (see below), and should not do so unless they depend on a
1025 particular version of that package.<footnote>
1027 Essential is needed in part to avoid unresolvable dependency
1028 loops on upgrade. If packages add unnecessary dependencies
1029 on packages in this set, the chances that there
1030 <strong>will</strong> be an unresolvable dependency loop
1031 caused by forcing these Essential packages to be configured
1032 first before they need to be is greatly increased. It also
1033 increases the chances that frontends will be unable to
1034 <strong>calculate</strong> an upgrade path, even if one
1035 exists.
1036 </p>
1038 Also, functionality is rarely ever removed from the
1039 Essential set, but <em>packages</em> have been removed from
1040 the Essential set when the functionality moved to a
1041 different package. So depending on these packages <em>just
1042 in case</em> they stop being essential does way more harm
1043 than good.
1044 </p>
1045 </footnote>
1046 </p>
1049 Sometimes, a package requires another package to be installed
1050 <em>and</em> configured before it can be installed. In this
1051 case, you must specify a <tt>Pre-Depends</tt> entry for
1052 the package.
1053 </p>
1056 You should not specify a <tt>Pre-Depends</tt> entry for a
1057 package before this has been discussed on the
1058 <tt>debian-devel</tt> mailing list and a consensus about
1059 doing that has been reached.
1060 </p>
1063 The format of the package interrelationship control fields is
1064 described in <ref id="relationships">.
1065 </p>
1066 </sect>
1068 <sect id="virtual_pkg">
1069 <heading>Virtual packages</heading>
1072 Sometimes, there are several packages which offer
1073 more-or-less the same functionality. In this case, it's
1074 useful to define a <em>virtual package</em> whose name
1075 describes that common functionality. (The virtual
1076 packages only exist logically, not physically; that's why
1077 they are called <em>virtual</em>.) The packages with this
1078 particular function will then <em>provide</em> the virtual
1079 package. Thus, any other package requiring that function
1080 can simply depend on the virtual package without having to
1081 specify all possible packages individually.
1082 </p>
1085 All packages should use virtual package names where
1086 appropriate, and arrange to create new ones if necessary.
1087 They should not use virtual package names (except privately,
1088 amongst a cooperating group of packages) unless they have
1089 been agreed upon and appear in the list of virtual package
1090 names. (See also <ref id="virtual">)
1091 </p>
1094 The latest version of the authoritative list of virtual
1095 package names can be found in the <tt>debian-policy</tt> package.
1096 It is also available from the Debian web mirrors at
1097 <tt><url name="/doc/packaging-manuals/virtual-package-names-list.txt"
1098 id="http://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/virtual-package-names-list.txt"></tt>.
1099 </p>
1102 The procedure for updating the list is described in the preface
1103 to the list.
1104 </p>
1106 </sect>
1108 <sect>
1109 <heading>Base system</heading>
1112 The <tt>base system</tt> is a minimum subset of the Debian
1113 GNU/Linux system that is installed before everything else
1114 on a new system. Only very few packages are allowed to form
1115 part of the base system, in order to keep the required disk
1116 usage very small.
1117 </p>
1120 The base system consists of all those packages with priority
1121 <tt>required</tt> or <tt>important</tt>. Many of them will
1122 be tagged <tt>essential</tt> (see below).
1123 </p>
1124 </sect>
1126 <sect>
1127 <heading>Essential packages</heading>
1130 Essential is defined as the minimal set of functionality that
1131 must be available and usable on the system at all times, even
1132 when packages are in an unconfigured (but unpacked) state.
1133 Packages are tagged <tt>essential</tt> for a system using the
1134 <tt>Essential</tt> control file field. The format of the
1135 <tt>Essential</tt> control field is described in <ref
1136 id="f-Essential">.
1137 </p>
1140 Since these packages cannot be easily removed (one has to
1141 specify an extra <em>force option</em> to
1142 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> to do so), this flag must not be used
1143 unless absolutely necessary. A shared library package
1144 must not be tagged <tt>essential</tt>; dependencies will
1145 prevent its premature removal, and we need to be able to
1146 remove it when it has been superseded.
1147 </p>
1150 Since dpkg will not prevent upgrading of other packages
1151 while an <tt>essential</tt> package is in an unconfigured
1152 state, all <tt>essential</tt> packages must supply all of
1153 their core functionality even when unconfigured. If the
1154 package cannot satisfy this requirement it must not be
1155 tagged as essential, and any packages depending on this
1156 package must instead have explicit dependency fields as
1157 appropriate.
1158 </p>
1161 Maintainers should take great care in adding any programs,
1162 interfaces, or functionality to <tt>essential</tt> packages.
1163 Packages may assume that functionality provided by
1164 <tt>essential</tt> packages is always available without
1165 declaring explicit dependencies, which means that removing
1166 functionality from the Essential set is very difficult and is
1167 almost never done. Any capability added to an
1168 <tt>essential</tt> package therefore creates an obligation to
1169 support that capability as part of the Essential set in
1170 perpetuity.
1171 </p>
1174 You must not tag any packages <tt>essential</tt> before
1175 this has been discussed on the <tt>debian-devel</tt>
1176 mailing list and a consensus about doing that has been
1177 reached.
1178 </p>
1179 </sect>
1181 <sect id="maintscripts">
1182 <heading>Maintainer Scripts</heading>
1185 The package installation scripts should avoid producing
1186 output which is unnecessary for the user to see and
1187 should rely on <prgn>dpkg</prgn> to stave off boredom on
1188 the part of a user installing many packages. This means,
1189 amongst other things, using the <tt>--quiet</tt> option on
1190 <prgn>install-info</prgn>.
1191 </p>
1194 Errors which occur during the execution of an installation
1195 script must be checked and the installation must not
1196 continue after an error.
1197 </p>
1200 Note that in general <ref id="scripts"> applies to package
1201 maintainer scripts, too.
1202 </p>
1205 You should not use <prgn>dpkg-divert</prgn> on a file
1206 belonging to another package without consulting the
1207 maintainer of that package first.
1208 </p>
1211 All packages which supply an instance of a common command
1212 name (or, in general, filename) should generally use
1213 <prgn>update-alternatives</prgn>, so that they may be
1214 installed together. If <prgn>update-alternatives</prgn>
1215 is not used, then each package must use
1216 <tt>Conflicts</tt> to ensure that other packages are
1217 de-installed. (In this case, it may be appropriate to
1218 specify a conflict against earlier versions of something
1219 that previously did not use
1220 <prgn>update-alternatives</prgn>; this is an exception to
1221 the usual rule that versioned conflicts should be
1222 avoided.)
1223 </p>
1225 <sect1 id="maintscriptprompt">
1226 <heading>Prompting in maintainer scripts</heading>
1228 Package maintainer scripts may prompt the user if
1229 necessary. Prompting must be done by communicating
1230 through a program, such as <prgn>debconf</prgn>, which
1231 conforms to the Debian Configuration Management
1232 Specification, version 2 or higher.
1233 </p>
1236 Packages which are essential, or which are dependencies of
1237 essential packages, may fall back on another prompting method
1238 if no such interface is available when they are executed.
1239 </p>
1242 The Debian Configuration Management Specification is included
1243 in the <file>debconf_specification</file> files in the
1244 <package>debian-policy</package> package.
1245 It is also available from the Debian web mirrors at
1246 <tt><url name="/doc/packaging-manuals/debconf_specification.html"
1247 id="http://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/debconf_specification.html"></tt>.
1248 </p>
1251 Packages which use the Debian Configuration Management
1252 Specification may contain an additional
1253 <prgn>config</prgn> script and a <tt>templates</tt>
1254 file in their control archive<footnote>
1255 The control.tar.gz inside the .deb.
1256 See <manref name="deb" section="5">.
1257 </footnote>.
1258 The <prgn>config</prgn> script might be run before the
1259 <prgn>preinst</prgn> script, and before the package is unpacked
1260 or any of its dependencies or pre-dependencies are satisfied.
1261 Therefore it must work using only the tools present in
1262 <em>essential</em> packages.<footnote>
1263 <package>Debconf</package> or another tool that
1264 implements the Debian Configuration Management
1265 Specification will also be installed, and any
1266 versioned dependencies on it will be satisfied
1267 before preconfiguration begins.
1268 </footnote>
1269 </p>
1272 Packages which use the Debian Configuration Management
1273 Specification must allow for translation of their user-visible
1274 messages by using a gettext-based system such as the one
1275 provided by the <package>po-debconf</package> package.
1276 </p>
1279 Packages should try to minimize the amount of prompting
1280 they need to do, and they should ensure that the user
1281 will only ever be asked each question once. This means
1282 that packages should try to use appropriate shared
1283 configuration files (such as <file>/etc/papersize</file> and
1284 <file>/etc/news/server</file>), and shared
1285 <package>debconf</package> variables rather than each
1286 prompting for their own list of required pieces of
1287 information.
1288 </p>
1291 It also means that an upgrade should not ask the same
1292 questions again, unless the user has used
1293 <tt>dpkg --purge</tt> to remove the package's configuration.
1294 The answers to configuration questions should be stored in an
1295 appropriate place in <file>/etc</file> so that the user can
1296 modify them, and how this has been done should be
1297 documented.
1298 </p>
1301 If a package has a vitally important piece of
1302 information to pass to the user (such as "don't run me
1303 as I am, you must edit the following configuration files
1304 first or you risk your system emitting badly-formatted
1305 messages"), it should display this in the
1306 <prgn>config</prgn> or <prgn>postinst</prgn> script and
1307 prompt the user to hit return to acknowledge the
1308 message. Copyright messages do not count as vitally
1309 important (they belong in
1310 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var>/copyright</file>);
1311 neither do instructions on how to use a program (these
1312 should be in on-line documentation, where all the users
1313 can see them).
1314 </p>
1317 Any necessary prompting should almost always be confined
1318 to the <prgn>config</prgn> or <prgn>postinst</prgn>
1319 script. If it is done in the <prgn>postinst</prgn>, it
1320 should be protected with a conditional so that
1321 unnecessary prompting doesn't happen if a package's
1322 installation fails and the <prgn>postinst</prgn> is
1323 called with <tt>abort-upgrade</tt>,
1324 <tt>abort-remove</tt> or <tt>abort-deconfigure</tt>.
1325 </p>
1326 </sect1>
1328 </sect>
1330 </chapt>
1333 <chapt id="source">
1334 <heading>Source packages</heading>
1336 <sect id="standardsversion">
1337 <heading>Standards conformance</heading>
1340 Source packages should specify the most recent version number
1341 of this policy document with which your package complied
1342 when it was last updated.
1343 </p>
1346 This information may be used to file bug reports
1347 automatically if your package becomes too much out of date.
1348 </p>
1351 The version is specified in the <tt>Standards-Version</tt>
1352 control field.
1353 The format of the <tt>Standards-Version</tt> field is
1354 described in <ref id="f-Standards-Version">.
1355 </p>
1358 You should regularly, and especially if your package has
1359 become out of date, check for the newest Policy Manual
1360 available and update your package, if necessary. When your
1361 package complies with the new standards you should update the
1362 <tt>Standards-Version</tt> source package field and
1363 release it.<footnote>
1364 See the file <file>upgrading-checklist</file> for
1365 information about policy which has changed between
1366 different versions of this document.
1367 </footnote>
1368 </p>
1370 </sect>
1372 <sect id="pkg-relations">
1373 <heading>Package relationships</heading>
1376 Source packages should specify which binary packages they
1377 require to be installed or not to be installed in order to
1378 build correctly. For example, if building a package
1379 requires a certain compiler, then the compiler should be
1380 specified as a build-time dependency.
1381 </p>
1384 It is not necessary to explicitly specify build-time
1385 relationships on a minimal set of packages that are always
1386 needed to compile, link and put in a Debian package a
1387 standard "Hello World!" program written in C or C++. The
1388 required packages are called <em>build-essential</em>, and
1389 an informational list can be found in
1390 <file>/usr/share/doc/build-essential/list</file> (which is
1391 contained in the <tt>build-essential</tt>
1392 package).<footnote>
1393 Rationale:
1394 <list compact="compact">
1395 <item>
1396 This allows maintaining the list separately
1397 from the policy documents (the list does not
1398 need the kind of control that the policy
1399 documents do).
1400 </item>
1401 <item>
1402 Having a separate package allows one to install
1403 the build-essential packages on a machine, as
1404 well as allowing other packages such as tasks to
1405 require installation of the build-essential
1406 packages using the depends relation.
1407 </item>
1408 <item>
1409 The separate package allows bug reports against
1410 the list to be categorized separately from
1411 the policy management process in the BTS.
1412 </item>
1413 </list>
1414 </footnote>
1415 </p>
1418 When specifying the set of build-time dependencies, one
1419 should list only those packages explicitly required by the
1420 build. It is not necessary to list packages which are
1421 required merely because some other package in the list of
1422 build-time dependencies depends on them.<footnote>
1423 The reason for this is that dependencies change, and
1424 you should list all those packages, and <em>only</em>
1425 those packages that <em>you</em> need directly. What
1426 others need is their business. For example, if you
1427 only link against <file>libimlib</file>, you will need to
1428 build-depend on <package>libimlib2-dev</package> but
1429 not against any <tt>libjpeg*</tt> packages, even
1430 though <tt>libimlib2-dev</tt> currently depends on
1431 them: installation of <package>libimlib2-dev</package>
1432 will automatically ensure that all of its run-time
1433 dependencies are satisfied.
1434 </footnote>
1435 </p>
1438 If build-time dependencies are specified, it must be
1439 possible to build the package and produce working binaries
1440 on a system with only essential and build-essential
1441 packages installed and also those required to satisfy the
1442 build-time relationships (including any implied
1443 relationships). In particular, this means that version
1444 clauses should be used rigorously in build-time
1445 relationships so that one cannot produce bad or
1446 inconsistently configured packages when the relationships
1447 are properly satisfied.
1448 </p>
1451 <ref id="relationships"> explains the technical details.
1452 </p>
1453 </sect>
1455 <sect>
1456 <heading>Changes to the upstream sources</heading>
1459 If changes to the source code are made that are not
1460 specific to the needs of the Debian system, they should be
1461 sent to the upstream authors in whatever form they prefer
1462 so as to be included in the upstream version of the
1463 package.
1464 </p>
1467 If you need to configure the package differently for
1468 Debian or for Linux, and the upstream source doesn't
1469 provide a way to do so, you should add such configuration
1470 facilities (for example, a new <prgn>autoconf</prgn> test
1471 or <tt>#define</tt>) and send the patch to the upstream
1472 authors, with the default set to the way they originally
1473 had it. You can then easily override the default in your
1474 <file>debian/rules</file> or wherever is appropriate.
1475 </p>
1478 You should make sure that the <prgn>configure</prgn> utility
1479 detects the correct architecture specification string
1480 (refer to <ref id="arch-spec"> for details).
1481 </p>
1484 If you need to edit a <prgn>Makefile</prgn> where GNU-style
1485 <prgn>configure</prgn> scripts are used, you should edit the
1486 <file>.in</file> files rather than editing the
1487 <prgn>Makefile</prgn> directly. This allows the user to
1488 reconfigure the package if necessary. You should
1489 <em>not</em> configure the package and edit the generated
1490 <prgn>Makefile</prgn>! This makes it impossible for someone
1491 else to later reconfigure the package without losing the
1492 changes you made.
1493 </p>
1495 </sect>
1497 <sect id="dpkgchangelog">
1498 <heading>Debian changelog: <file>debian/changelog</file></heading>
1501 Changes in the Debian version of the package should be
1502 briefly explained in the Debian changelog file
1503 <file>debian/changelog</file>.<footnote>
1505 Mistakes in changelogs are usually best rectified by
1506 making a new changelog entry rather than "rewriting
1507 history" by editing old changelog entries.
1508 </p>
1509 </footnote>
1510 This includes modifications
1511 made in the Debian package compared to the upstream one
1512 as well as other changes and updates to the package.
1513 <footnote>
1514 Although there is nothing stopping an author who is also
1515 the Debian maintainer from using this changelog for all
1516 their changes, it will have to be renamed if the Debian
1517 and upstream maintainers become different people. In such
1518 a case, however, it might be better to maintain the package
1519 as a non-native package.
1520 </footnote>
1521 </p>
1524 The format of the <file>debian/changelog</file> allows the
1525 package building tools to discover which version of the package
1526 is being built and find out other release-specific information.
1527 </p>
1530 That format is a series of entries like this:
1532 <example compact="compact">
1533 <var>package</var> (<var>version</var>) <var>distribution(s)</var>; urgency=<var>urgency</var>
1534 <var>
1535 [optional blank line(s), stripped]
1536 </var>
1537 * <var>change details</var>
1538 <var>more change details</var>
1539 <var>
1540 [blank line(s), included in output of dpkg-parsechangelog]
1541 </var>
1542 * <var>even more change details</var>
1543 <var>
1544 [optional blank line(s), stripped]
1545 </var>
1546 -- <var>maintainer name</var> &lt;<var>email address</var>&gt;<var>[two spaces]</var> <var>date</var>
1547 </example>
1548 </p>
1551 <var>package</var> and <var>version</var> are the source
1552 package name and version number.
1553 </p>
1556 <var>distribution(s)</var> lists the distributions where
1557 this version should be installed when it is uploaded - it
1558 is copied to the <tt>Distribution</tt> field in the
1559 <file>.changes</file> file. See <ref id="f-Distribution">.
1560 </p>
1563 <var>urgency</var> is the value for the <tt>Urgency</tt>
1564 field in the <file>.changes</file> file for the upload
1565 (see <ref id="f-Urgency">). It is not possible to specify
1566 an urgency containing commas; commas are used to separate
1567 <tt><var>keyword</var>=<var>value</var></tt> settings in the
1568 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> changelog format (though there is
1569 currently only one useful <var>keyword</var>,
1570 <tt>urgency</tt>).
1571 </p>
1574 The change details may in fact be any series of lines
1575 starting with at least two spaces, but conventionally each
1576 change starts with an asterisk and a separating space and
1577 continuation lines are indented so as to bring them in
1578 line with the start of the text above. Blank lines may be
1579 used here to separate groups of changes, if desired.
1580 </p>
1583 If this upload resolves bugs recorded in the Bug Tracking
1584 System (BTS), they may be automatically closed on the
1585 inclusion of this package into the Debian archive by
1586 including the string: <tt>closes: Bug#<var>nnnnn</var></tt>
1587 in the change details.<footnote>
1588 To be precise, the string should match the following
1589 Perl regular expression:
1590 <example>
1591 /closes:\s*(?:bug)?\#?\s?\d+(?:,\s*(?:bug)?\#?\s?\d+)*/i
1592 </example>
1593 Then all of the bug numbers listed will be closed by the
1594 archive maintenance script (<prgn>katie</prgn>) using the
1595 <var>version</var> of the changelog entry.
1596 </footnote>
1597 This information is conveyed via the <tt>Closes</tt> field
1598 in the <tt>.changes</tt> file (see <ref id="f-Closes">).
1599 </p>
1602 The maintainer name and email address used in the changelog
1603 should be the details of the person uploading <em>this</em>
1604 version. They are <em>not</em> necessarily those of the
1605 usual package maintainer. The information here will be
1606 copied to the <tt>Changed-By</tt> field in the
1607 <tt>.changes</tt> file (see <ref id="f-Changed-By">),
1608 and then later used to send an acknowledgement when the
1609 upload has been installed.
1610 </p>
1613 The <var>date</var> must be in RFC822 format<footnote>
1614 This is generated by <tt>date -R</tt>.
1615 </footnote>; it must include the time zone specified
1616 numerically, with the time zone name or abbreviation
1617 optionally present as a comment in parentheses.
1618 </p>
1621 The first "title" line with the package name must start
1622 at the left hand margin. The "trailer" line with the
1623 maintainer and date details must be preceded by exactly
1624 one space. The maintainer details and the date must be
1625 separated by exactly two spaces.
1626 </p>
1629 The entire changelog must be encoded in UTF-8.
1630 </p>
1633 For more information on placement of the changelog files
1634 within binary packages, please see <ref id="changelogs">.
1635 </p>
1636 </sect>
1638 <sect id="dpkgcopyright">
1639 <heading>Copyright: <file>debian/copyright</file></heading>
1641 Every package must be accompanied by a verbatim copy of its
1642 copyright information and distribution license in the file
1643 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var>/copyright</file>
1644 (see <ref id="copyrightfile"> for further details). Also see
1645 <ref id="pkgcopyright"> for further considerations related
1646 to copyrights for packages.
1647 </p>
1648 </sect>
1649 <sect>
1650 <heading>Error trapping in makefiles</heading>
1653 When <prgn>make</prgn> invokes a command in a makefile
1654 (including your package's upstream makefiles and
1655 <file>debian/rules</file>), it does so using <prgn>sh</prgn>. This
1656 means that <prgn>sh</prgn>'s usual bad error handling
1657 properties apply: if you include a miniature script as one
1658 of the commands in your makefile you'll find that if you
1659 don't do anything about it then errors are not detected
1660 and <prgn>make</prgn> will blithely continue after
1661 problems.
1662 </p>
1665 Every time you put more than one shell command (this
1666 includes using a loop) in a makefile command you
1667 must make sure that errors are trapped. For
1668 simple compound commands, such as changing directory and
1669 then running a program, using <tt>&amp;&amp;</tt> rather
1670 than semicolon as a command separator is sufficient. For
1671 more complex commands including most loops and
1672 conditionals you should include a separate <tt>set -e</tt>
1673 command at the start of every makefile command that's
1674 actually one of these miniature shell scripts.
1675 </p>
1676 </sect>
1678 <sect id="timestamps">
1679 <heading>Time Stamps</heading>
1681 Maintainers should preserve the modification times of the
1682 upstream source files in a package, as far as is reasonably
1683 possible.<footnote>
1684 The rationale is that there is some information conveyed
1685 by knowing the age of the file, for example, you could
1686 recognize that some documentation is very old by looking
1687 at the modification time, so it would be nice if the
1688 modification time of the upstream source would be
1689 preserved.
1690 </footnote>
1691 </p>
1692 </sect>
1694 <sect id="restrictions">
1695 <heading>Restrictions on objects in source packages</heading>
1698 The source package may not contain any hard links<footnote>
1700 This is not currently detected when building source
1701 packages, but only when extracting
1702 them.
1703 </p>
1705 Hard links may be permitted at some point in the
1706 future, but would require a fair amount of
1707 work.
1708 </p>
1709 </footnote>, device special files, sockets or setuid or
1710 setgid files.<footnote>
1711 Setgid directories are allowed.
1712 </footnote>
1713 </p>
1714 </sect>
1716 <sect id="debianrules">
1717 <heading>Main building script: <file>debian/rules</file></heading>
1720 This file must be an executable makefile, and contains the
1721 package-specific recipes for compiling the package and
1722 building binary package(s) from the source.
1723 </p>
1726 It must start with the line <tt>#!/usr/bin/make -f</tt>,
1727 so that it can be invoked by saying its name rather than
1728 invoking <prgn>make</prgn> explicitly. That is, invoking
1729 either of <tt>make -f debian/rules <em>args...</em></tt>
1730 or <tt>./debian/rules <em>args...</em></tt> must result in
1731 identical behavior.
1732 </p>
1735 Since an interactive <file>debian/rules</file> script makes it
1736 impossible to auto-compile that package and also makes it
1737 hard for other people to reproduce the same binary
1738 package, all <em>required targets</em> must be
1739 non-interactive. At a minimum, required targets are the
1740 ones called by <prgn>dpkg-buildpackage</prgn>, namely,
1741 <em>clean</em>, <em>binary</em>, <em>binary-arch</em>,
1742 <em>binary-indep</em>, and <em>build</em>. It also follows
1743 that any target that these targets depend on must also be
1744 non-interactive.
1745 </p>
1748 The targets are as follows (required unless stated otherwise):
1749 <taglist>
1750 <tag><tt>build</tt></tag>
1751 <item>
1753 The <tt>build</tt> target should perform all the
1754 configuration and compilation of the package.
1755 If a package has an interactive pre-build
1756 configuration routine, the Debianized source package
1757 must either be built after this has taken place (so
1758 that the binary package can be built without rerunning
1759 the configuration) or the configuration routine
1760 modified to become non-interactive. (The latter is
1761 preferable if there are architecture-specific features
1762 detected by the configuration routine.)
1763 </p>
1766 For some packages, notably ones where the same
1767 source tree is compiled in different ways to produce
1768 two binary packages, the <tt>build</tt> target
1769 does not make much sense. For these packages it is
1770 good enough to provide two (or more) targets
1771 (<tt>build-a</tt> and <tt>build-b</tt> or whatever)
1772 for each of the ways of building the package, and a
1773 <tt>build</tt> target that does nothing. The
1774 <tt>binary</tt> target will have to build the
1775 package in each of the possible ways and make the
1776 binary package out of each.
1777 </p>
1780 The <tt>build</tt> target must not do anything
1781 that might require root privilege.
1782 </p>
1785 The <tt>build</tt> target may need to run the
1786 <tt>clean</tt> target first - see below.
1787 </p>
1790 When a package has a configuration and build routine
1791 which takes a long time, or when the makefiles are
1792 poorly designed, or when <tt>build</tt> needs to
1793 run <tt>clean</tt> first, it is a good idea to
1794 <tt>touch build</tt> when the build process is
1795 complete. This will ensure that if <tt>debian/rules
1796 build</tt> is run again it will not rebuild the whole
1797 program.<footnote>
1798 Another common way to do this is for <tt>build</tt>
1799 to depend on <prgn>build-stamp</prgn> and to do
1800 nothing else, and for the <prgn>build-stamp</prgn>
1801 target to do the building and to <tt>touch
1802 build-stamp</tt> on completion. This is
1803 especially useful if the build routine creates a
1804 file or directory called <tt>build</tt>; in such a
1805 case, <tt>build</tt> will need to be listed as
1806 a phony target (i.e., as a dependency of the
1807 <tt>.PHONY</tt> target). See the documentation of
1808 <prgn>make</prgn> for more information on phony
1809 targets.
1810 </footnote>
1811 </p>
1812 </item>
1814 <tag><tt>build-arch</tt> (optional),
1815 <tt>build-indep</tt> (optional)
1816 </tag>
1817 <item>
1819 A package may also provide both of the targets
1820 <tt>build-arch</tt> and <tt>build-indep</tt>.
1821 The <tt>build-arch</tt> target, if provided, should
1822 perform all the configuration and compilation required
1823 for producing all architecture-dependant binary packages
1824 (those packages for which the body of the
1825 <tt>Architecture</tt> field in <tt>debian/control</tt>
1826 is not <tt>all</tt>).
1827 Similarly, the <tt>build-indep</tt> target, if
1828 provided, should perform all the configuration and
1829 compilation required for producing all
1830 architecture-independent binary packages
1831 (those packages for which the body of the
1832 <tt>Architecture</tt> field in <tt>debian/control</tt>
1833 is <tt>all</tt>).
1834 The <tt>build</tt> target should depend on those of the
1835 targets <tt>build-arch</tt> and <tt>build-indep</tt> that
1836 are provided in the rules file.
1837 </p>
1840 If one or both of the targets <tt>build-arch</tt> and
1841 <tt>build-indep</tt> are not provided, then invoking
1842 <file>debian/rules</file> with one of the not-provided
1843 targets as arguments should produce a exit status code
1844 of 2. Usually this is provided automatically by make
1845 if the target is missing.
1846 </p>
1849 The <tt>build-arch</tt> and <tt>build-indep</tt> targets
1850 must not do anything that might require root privilege.
1851 </p>
1852 </item>
1854 <tag><tt>binary</tt>, <tt>binary-arch</tt>,
1855 <tt>binary-indep</tt>
1856 </tag>
1857 <item>
1859 The <tt>binary</tt> target must be all that is
1860 necessary for the user to build the binary package(s)
1861 produced from this source package. It is
1862 split into two parts: <prgn>binary-arch</prgn> builds
1863 the binary packages which are specific to a particular
1864 architecture, and <tt>binary-indep</tt> builds
1865 those which are not.
1866 </p>
1868 <tt>binary</tt> may be (and commonly is) a target with
1869 no commands which simply depends on
1870 <tt>binary-arch</tt> and <tt>binary-indep</tt>.
1871 </p>
1873 Both <tt>binary-*</tt> targets should depend on the
1874 <tt>build</tt> target, or on the appropriate
1875 <tt>build-arch</tt> or <tt>build-indep</tt> target, if
1876 provided, so that the package is built if it has not
1877 been already. It should then create the relevant
1878 binary package(s), using <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn> to
1879 make their control files and <prgn>dpkg-deb</prgn> to
1880 build them and place them in the parent of the top
1881 level directory.
1882 </p>
1885 Both the <tt>binary-arch</tt> and
1886 <tt>binary-indep</tt> targets <em>must</em> exist.
1887 If one of them has nothing to do (which will always be
1888 the case if the source generates only a single binary
1889 package, whether architecture-dependent or not), it
1890 must still exist and must always succeed.
1891 </p>
1894 The <tt>binary</tt> targets must be invoked as
1895 root.<footnote>
1896 The <prgn>fakeroot</prgn> package often allows one
1897 to build a package correctly even without being
1898 root.
1899 </footnote>
1900 </p>
1901 </item>
1903 <tag><tt>clean</tt></tag>
1904 <item>
1906 This must undo any effects that the <tt>build</tt>
1907 and <tt>binary</tt> targets may have had, except
1908 that it should leave alone any output files created in
1909 the parent directory by a run of a <tt>binary</tt>
1910 target.
1911 </p>
1914 If a <tt>build</tt> file is touched at the end of
1915 the <tt>build</tt> target, as suggested above, it
1916 should be removed as the first action that
1917 <tt>clean</tt> performs, so that running
1918 <tt>build</tt> again after an interrupted
1919 <tt>clean</tt> doesn't think that everything is
1920 already done.
1921 </p>
1924 The <tt>clean</tt> target may need to be
1925 invoked as root if <tt>binary</tt> has been
1926 invoked since the last <tt>clean</tt>, or if
1927 <tt>build</tt> has been invoked as root (since
1928 <tt>build</tt> may create directories, for
1929 example).
1930 </p>
1931 </item>
1933 <tag><tt>get-orig-source</tt> (optional)</tag>
1934 <item>
1936 This target fetches the most recent version of the
1937 original source package from a canonical archive site
1938 (via FTP or WWW, for example), does any necessary
1939 rearrangement to turn it into the original source
1940 tar file format described below, and leaves it in the
1941 current directory.
1942 </p>
1945 This target may be invoked in any directory, and
1946 should take care to clean up any temporary files it
1947 may have left.
1948 </p>
1951 This target is optional, but providing it if
1952 possible is a good idea.
1953 </p>
1954 </item>
1956 <tag><tt>patch</tt> (optional)</tag>
1957 <item>
1959 This target performs whatever additional actions are
1960 required to make the source ready for editing (unpacking
1961 additional upstream archives, applying patches, etc.).
1962 It is recommended to be implemented for any package where
1963 <tt>dpkg-source -x</tt> does not result in source ready
1964 for additional modification. See
1965 <ref id="readmesource">.
1966 </p>
1967 </item>
1968 </taglist>
1971 The <tt>build</tt>, <tt>binary</tt> and
1972 <tt>clean</tt> targets must be invoked with the current
1973 directory being the package's top-level directory.
1974 </p>
1978 Additional targets may exist in <file>debian/rules</file>,
1979 either as published or undocumented interfaces or for the
1980 package's internal use.
1981 </p>
1984 The architectures we build on and build for are determined
1985 by <prgn>make</prgn> variables using the utility
1986 <qref id="pkg-dpkg-architecture"><prgn>dpkg-architecture</prgn></qref>.
1987 You can determine the
1988 Debian architecture and the GNU style architecture
1989 specification string for the build machine (the machine type
1990 we are building on) as well as for the host machine (the
1991 machine type we are building for). Here is a list of
1992 supported <prgn>make</prgn> variables:
1993 <list compact="compact">
1994 <item>
1995 <tt>DEB_*_ARCH</tt> (the Debian architecture)
1996 </item>
1997 <item>
1998 <tt>DEB_*_ARCH_CPU</tt> (the Debian CPU name)
1999 </item>
2000 <item>
2001 <tt>DEB_*_ARCH_OS</tt> (the Debian System name)
2002 </item>
2003 <item>
2004 <tt>DEB_*_GNU_TYPE</tt> (the GNU style architecture
2005 specification string)
2006 </item>
2007 <item>
2008 <tt>DEB_*_GNU_CPU</tt> (the CPU part of
2009 <tt>DEB_*_GNU_TYPE</tt>)
2010 </item>
2011 <item>
2012 <tt>DEB_*_GNU_SYSTEM</tt> (the System part of
2013 <tt>DEB_*_GNU_TYPE</tt>)
2014 </list>
2015 where <tt>*</tt> is either <tt>BUILD</tt> for specification of
2016 the build machine or <tt>HOST</tt> for specification of the
2017 host machine.
2018 </p>
2021 Backward compatibility can be provided in the rules file
2022 by setting the needed variables to suitable default
2023 values; please refer to the documentation of
2024 <prgn>dpkg-architecture</prgn> for details.
2025 </p>
2028 It is important to understand that the <tt>DEB_*_ARCH</tt>
2029 string only determines which Debian architecture we are
2030 building on or for. It should not be used to get the CPU
2031 or system information; the <tt>DEB_*_ARCH_CPU</tt> and
2032 <tt>DEB_*_ARCH_OS</tt> variables should be used for that.
2033 GNU style variables should generally only be used with upstream
2034 build systems.
2035 </p>
2037 <sect1 id="debianrules-options">
2038 <heading><file>debian/rules</file> and
2039 <tt>DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS</tt></heading>
2042 Supporting the standardized environment variable
2043 <tt>DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS</tt> is recommended. This variable can
2044 contain several flags to change how a package is compiled and
2045 built. Each flag must be in the form <var>flag</var> or
2046 <var>flag</var>=<var>options</var>. If multiple flags are
2047 given, they must be separated by whitespace.<footnote>
2048 Some packages support any delimiter, but whitespace is the
2049 easiest to parse inside a makefile and avoids ambiguity with
2050 flag values that contain commas.
2051 </footnote>
2052 <var>flag</var> must start with a lowercase letter
2053 (<tt>a-z</tt>) and consist only of lowercase letters,
2054 numbers (<tt>0-9</tt>), and the characters
2055 <tt>-</tt> and <tt>_</tt> (hyphen and underscore).
2056 <var>options</var> must not contain whitespace. The same
2057 tag should not be given multiple times with conflicting
2058 values. Package maintainers may assume that
2059 <tt>DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS</tt> will not contain conflicting tags.
2060 </p>
2063 The meaning of the following tags has been standardized:
2064 <taglist>
2065 <tag>nocheck</tag>
2066 <item>
2067 This tag says to not run any build-time test suite
2068 provided by the package.
2069 </item>
2070 <tag>noopt</tag>
2071 <item>
2072 The presence of this tag means that the package should
2073 be compiled with a minimum of optimization. For C
2074 programs, it is best to add <tt>-O0</tt> to
2075 <tt>CFLAGS</tt> (although this is usually the default).
2076 Some programs might fail to build or run at this level
2077 of optimization; it may be necessary to use
2078 <tt>-O1</tt>, for example.
2079 </item>
2080 <tag>nostrip</tag>
2081 <item>
2082 This tag means that the debugging symbols should not be
2083 stripped from the binary during installation, so that
2084 debugging information may be included in the package.
2085 </item>
2086 <tag>parallel=n</tag>
2087 <item>
2088 This tag means that the package should be built using up
2089 to <tt>n</tt> parallel processes if the package build
2090 system supports this.<footnote>
2091 Packages built with <tt>make</tt> can often implement
2092 this by passing the <tt>-j</tt><var>n</var> option to
2093 <tt>make</tt>.
2094 </footnote>
2095 If the package build system does not support parallel
2096 builds, this string must be ignored. If the package
2097 build system only supports a lower level of concurrency
2098 than <var>n</var>, the package should be built using as
2099 many parallel processes as the package build system
2100 supports. It is up to the package maintainer to decide
2101 whether the package build times are long enough and the
2102 package build system is robust enough to make supporting
2103 parallel builds worthwhile.
2104 </item>
2105 </taglist>
2106 </p>
2109 Unknown flags must be ignored by <file>debian/rules</file>.
2110 </p>
2113 The following makefile snippet is an example of how one may
2114 implement the build options; you will probably have to
2115 massage this example in order to make it work for your
2116 package.
2117 <example compact="compact">
2118 CFLAGS = -Wall -g
2119 INSTALL = install
2120 INSTALL_FILE = $(INSTALL) -p -o root -g root -m 644
2121 INSTALL_PROGRAM = $(INSTALL) -p -o root -g root -m 755
2122 INSTALL_SCRIPT = $(INSTALL) -p -o root -g root -m 755
2123 INSTALL_DIR = $(INSTALL) -p -d -o root -g root -m 755
2125 ifneq (,$(filter noopt,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
2126 CFLAGS += -O0
2127 else
2128 CFLAGS += -O2
2129 endif
2130 ifeq (,$(filter nostrip,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
2131 INSTALL_PROGRAM += -s
2132 endif
2133 ifneq (,$(filter parallel=%,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
2134 NUMJOBS = $(patsubst parallel=%,%,$(filter parallel=%,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
2135 MAKEFLAGS += -j$(NUMJOBS)
2136 endif
2138 build:
2139 # ...
2140 ifeq (,$(filter nocheck,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
2141 # Code to run the package test suite.
2142 endif
2143 </example>
2144 </p>
2145 </sect1>
2146 </sect>
2148 <!-- FIXME: section pkg-srcsubstvars is the same as substvars -->
2149 <sect id="substvars">
2150 <heading>Variable substitutions: <file>debian/substvars</file></heading>
2153 When <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn>,
2154 <prgn>dpkg-genchanges</prgn> and <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn>
2155 generate control files they perform variable substitutions
2156 on their output just before writing it. Variable
2157 substitutions have the form <tt>${<var>variable</var>}</tt>.
2158 The optional file <file>debian/substvars</file> contains
2159 variable substitutions to be used; variables can also be set
2160 directly from <file>debian/rules</file> using the <tt>-V</tt>
2161 option to the source packaging commands, and certain
2162 predefined variables are also available.
2163 </p>
2166 The <file>debian/substvars</file> file is usually generated and
2167 modified dynamically by <file>debian/rules</file> targets, in
2168 which case it must be removed by the <tt>clean</tt> target.
2169 </p>
2172 See <manref name="deb-substvars" section="5"> for full
2173 details about source variable substitutions, including the
2174 format of <file>debian/substvars</file>.</p>
2175 </sect>
2177 <sect id="debianwatch">
2178 <heading>Optional upstream source location: <file>debian/watch</file></heading>
2181 This is an optional, recommended control file for the
2182 <tt>uscan</tt> utility which defines how to automatically
2183 scan ftp or http sites for newly available updates of the
2184 package. This is used by <url id="
2185 http://dehs.alioth.debian.org/"> and other Debian QA tools
2186 to help with quality control and maintenance of the
2187 distribution as a whole.
2188 </p>
2190 </sect>
2192 <sect id="debianfiles">
2193 <heading>Generated files list: <file>debian/files</file></heading>
2196 This file is not a permanent part of the source tree; it
2197 is used while building packages to record which files are
2198 being generated. <prgn>dpkg-genchanges</prgn> uses it
2199 when it generates a <file>.changes</file> file.
2200 </p>
2203 It should not exist in a shipped source package, and so it
2204 (and any backup files or temporary files such as
2205 <file>files.new</file><footnote>
2206 <file>files.new</file> is used as a temporary file by
2207 <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn> and
2208 <prgn>dpkg-distaddfile</prgn> - they write a new
2209 version of <tt>files</tt> here before renaming it,
2210 to avoid leaving a corrupted copy if an error
2211 occurs.
2212 </footnote>) should be removed by the
2213 <tt>clean</tt> target. It may also be wise to
2214 ensure a fresh start by emptying or removing it at the
2215 start of the <tt>binary</tt> target.
2216 </p>
2219 When <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn> is run for a binary
2220 package, it adds an entry to <file>debian/files</file> for the
2221 <file>.deb</file> file that will be created when <tt>dpkg-deb
2222 --build</tt> is run for that binary package. So for most
2223 packages all that needs to be done with this file is to
2224 delete it in the <tt>clean</tt> target.
2225 </p>
2228 If a package upload includes files besides the source
2229 package and any binary packages whose control files were
2230 made with <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn> then they should be
2231 placed in the parent of the package's top-level directory
2232 and <prgn>dpkg-distaddfile</prgn> should be called to add
2233 the file to the list in <file>debian/files</file>.</p>
2234 </sect>
2236 <sect id="embeddedfiles">
2237 <heading>Convenience copies of code</heading>
2240 Some software packages include in their distribution convenience
2241 copies of code from other software packages, generally so that
2242 users compiling from source don't have to download multiple
2243 packages. Debian packages should not make use of these
2244 convenience copies unless the included package is explicitly
2245 intended to be used in this way.<footnote>
2246 For example, parts of the GNU build system work like this.
2247 </footnote>
2248 If the included code is already in the Debian archive in the
2249 form of a library, the Debian packaging should ensure that
2250 binary packages reference the libraries already in Debian and
2251 the convenience copy is not used. If the included code is not
2252 already in Debian, it should be packaged separately as a
2253 prerequisite if possible.
2254 <footnote>
2255 Having multiple copies of the same code in Debian is
2256 inefficient, often creates either static linking or shared
2257 library conflicts, and, most importantly, increases the
2258 difficulty of handling security vulnerabilities in the
2259 duplicated code.
2260 </footnote>
2261 </p>
2262 </sect>
2264 <sect id="readmesource">
2265 <heading>Source package handling:
2266 <file>debian/README.source</file></heading>
2269 If running <prgn>dpkg-source -x</prgn> on a source package
2270 doesn't produce the source of the package, ready for editing,
2271 and allow one to make changes and run
2272 <prgn>dpkg-buildpackage</prgn> to produce a modified package
2273 without taking any additional steps, creating a
2274 <file>debian/README.source</file> documentation file is
2275 recommended. This file should explain how to do all of the
2276 following:
2277 <enumlist>
2278 <item>Generate the fully patched source, in a form ready for
2279 editing, that would be built to create Debian
2280 packages. Doing this with a <tt>patch</tt> target in
2281 <file>debian/rules</file> is recommended; see
2282 <ref id="debianrules">.</item>
2283 <item>Modify the source and save those modifications so that
2284 they will be applied when building the package.</item>
2285 <item>Remove source modifications that are currently being
2286 applied when building the package.</item>
2287 <item>Optionally, document what steps are necessary to
2288 upgrade the Debian source package to a new upstream version,
2289 if applicable.</item>
2290 </enumlist>
2291 This explanation should include specific commands and mention
2292 any additional required Debian packages. It should not assume
2293 familiarity with any specific Debian packaging system or patch
2294 management tools.
2295 </p>
2298 This explanation may refer to a documentation file installed by
2299 one of the package's build dependencies provided that the
2300 referenced documentation clearly explains these tasks and is not
2301 a general reference manual.
2302 </p>
2305 <file>debian/README.source</file> may also include any other
2306 information that would be helpful to someone modifying the
2307 source package. Even if the package doesn't fit the above
2308 description, maintainers are encouraged to document in a
2309 <file>debian/README.source</file> file any source package with a
2310 particularly complex or unintuitive source layout or build
2311 system (for example, a package that builds the same source
2312 multiple times to generate different binary packages).
2313 </p>
2314 </sect>
2315 </chapt>
2318 <chapt id="controlfields">
2319 <heading>Control files and their fields</heading>
2322 The package management system manipulates data represented in
2323 a common format, known as <em>control data</em>, stored in
2324 <em>control files</em>.
2325 Control files are used for source packages, binary packages and
2326 the <file>.changes</file> files which control the installation
2327 of uploaded files<footnote>
2328 <prgn>dpkg</prgn>'s internal databases are in a similar
2329 format.
2330 </footnote>.
2331 </p>
2333 <sect id="controlsyntax">
2334 <heading>Syntax of control files</heading>
2337 A control file consists of one or more paragraphs of
2338 fields<footnote>
2339 The paragraphs are also sometimes referred to as stanzas.
2340 </footnote>.
2341 The paragraphs are separated by blank lines. Some control
2342 files allow only one paragraph; others allow several, in
2343 which case each paragraph usually refers to a different
2344 package. (For example, in source packages, the first
2345 paragraph refers to the source package, and later paragraphs
2346 refer to binary packages generated from the source.)
2347 </p>
2350 Each paragraph consists of a series of data fields; each
2351 field consists of the field name, followed by a colon and
2352 then the data/value associated with that field. It ends at
2353 the end of the (logical) line. Horizontal whitespace
2354 (spaces and tabs) may occur immediately before or after the
2355 value and is ignored there; it is conventional to put a
2356 single space after the colon. For example, a field might
2358 <example compact="compact">
2359 Package: libc6
2360 </example>
2361 the field name is <tt>Package</tt> and the field value
2362 <tt>libc6</tt>.
2363 </p>
2366 Many fields' values may span several lines; in this case
2367 each continuation line must start with a space or a tab.
2368 Any trailing spaces or tabs at the end of individual
2369 lines of a field value are ignored.
2370 </p>
2373 In fields where it is specified that lines may not wrap,
2374 only a single line of data is allowed and whitespace is not
2375 significant in a field body. Whitespace must not appear
2376 inside names (of packages, architectures, files or anything
2377 else) or version numbers, or between the characters of
2378 multi-character version relationships.
2379 </p>
2382 Field names are not case-sensitive, but it is usual to
2383 capitalize the field names using mixed case as shown below.
2384 Field values are case-sensitive unless the description of the
2385 field says otherwise.
2386 </p>
2389 Blank lines, or lines consisting only of spaces and tabs,
2390 are not allowed within field values or between fields - that
2391 would mean a new paragraph.
2392 </p>
2395 All control files must be encoded in UTF-8.
2396 </p>
2397 </sect>
2399 <sect id="sourcecontrolfiles">
2400 <heading>Source package control files -- <file>debian/control</file></heading>
2403 The <file>debian/control</file> file contains the most vital
2404 (and version-independent) information about the source package
2405 and about the binary packages it creates.
2406 </p>
2409 The first paragraph of the control file contains information about
2410 the source package in general. The subsequent sets each describe a
2411 binary package that the source tree builds.
2412 </p>
2415 The fields in the general paragraph (the first one, for the source
2416 package) are:
2418 <list compact="compact">
2419 <item><qref id="f-Source"><tt>Source</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2420 <item><qref id="f-Maintainer"><tt>Maintainer</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2421 <item><qref id="f-Uploaders"><tt>Uploaders</tt></qref></item>
2422 <item><qref id="f-Section"><tt>Section</tt></qref> (recommended)</item>
2423 <item><qref id="f-Priority"><tt>Priority</tt></qref> (recommended)</item>
2424 <item><qref id="sourcebinarydeps"><tt>Build-Depends</tt> et al</qref></item>
2425 <item><qref id="f-Standards-Version"><tt>Standards-Version</tt></qref> (recommended)</item>
2426 <item><qref id="f-Homepage"><tt>Homepage</tt></qref></item>
2427 </list>
2428 </p>
2431 The fields in the binary package paragraphs are:
2433 <list compact="compact">
2434 <item><qref id="f-Package"><tt>Package</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2435 <item><qref id="f-Architecture"><tt>Architecture</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2436 <item><qref id="f-Section"><tt>Section</tt></qref> (recommended)</item>
2437 <item><qref id="f-Priority"><tt>Priority</tt></qref> (recommended)</item>
2438 <item><qref id="f-Essential"><tt>Essential</tt></qref></item>
2439 <item><qref id="binarydeps"><tt>Depends</tt> et al</qref></item>
2440 <item><qref id="f-Description"><tt>Description</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2441 <item><qref id="f-Homepage"><tt>Homepage</tt></qref></item>
2442 </list>
2443 </p>
2446 The syntax and semantics of the fields are described below.
2447 </p>
2449 <!-- stuff -->
2452 These fields are used by <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn> to
2453 generate control files for binary packages (see below), by
2454 <prgn>dpkg-genchanges</prgn> to generate the
2455 <tt>.changes</tt> file to accompany the upload, and by
2456 <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn> when it creates the
2457 <file>.dsc</file> source control file as part of a source
2458 archive. Many fields are permitted to span multiple lines in
2459 <file>debian/control</file> but not in any other control
2460 file. These tools are responsible for removing the line
2461 breaks from such fields when using fields from
2462 <file>debian/control</file> to generate other control files.
2463 </p>
2466 The fields here may contain variable references - their
2467 values will be substituted by <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn>,
2468 <prgn>dpkg-genchanges</prgn> or <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn>
2469 when they generate output control files.
2470 See <ref id="substvars"> for details.
2471 </p>
2474 In addition to the control file syntax described <qref
2475 id="controlsyntax">above</qref>, this file may also contain
2476 comment lines starting with <tt>#</tt> without any preceding
2477 whitespace. All such lines are ignored, even in the middle of
2478 continuation lines for a multiline field, and do not end a
2479 multiline field.
2480 </p>
2482 </sect>
2484 <sect id="binarycontrolfiles">
2485 <heading>Binary package control files -- <file>DEBIAN/control</file></heading>
2488 The <file>DEBIAN/control</file> file contains the most vital
2489 (and version-dependent) information about a binary package.
2490 </p>
2493 The fields in this file are:
2495 <list compact="compact">
2496 <item><qref id="f-Package"><tt>Package</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2497 <item><qref id="f-Source"><tt>Source</tt></qref></item>
2498 <item><qref id="f-Version"><tt>Version</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2499 <item><qref id="f-Section"><tt>Section</tt></qref> (recommended)</item>
2500 <item><qref id="f-Priority"><tt>Priority</tt></qref> (recommended)</item>
2501 <item><qref id="f-Architecture"><tt>Architecture</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2502 <item><qref id="f-Essential"><tt>Essential</tt></qref></item>
2503 <item><qref id="binarydeps"><tt>Depends</tt> et al</qref></item>
2504 <item><qref id="f-Installed-Size"><tt>Installed-Size</tt></qref></item>
2505 <item><qref id="f-Maintainer"><tt>Maintainer</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2506 <item><qref id="f-Description"><tt>Description</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2507 <item><qref id="f-Homepage"><tt>Homepage</tt></qref></item>
2508 </list>
2509 </p>
2510 </sect>
2512 <sect id="debiansourcecontrolfiles">
2513 <heading>Debian source control files -- <tt>.dsc</tt></heading>
2516 This file contains a series of fields, identified and
2517 separated just like the fields in the control file of
2518 a binary package. The fields are listed below; their
2519 syntax is described above, in <ref id="pkg-controlfields">.
2521 <list compact="compact">
2522 <item><qref id="f-Format"><tt>Format</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2523 <item><qref id="f-Source"><tt>Source</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2524 <item><qref id="f-Version"><tt>Version</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2525 <item><qref id="f-Maintainer"><tt>Maintainer</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2526 <item><qref id="f-Uploaders"><tt>Uploaders</tt></qref></item>
2527 <item><qref id="f-Binary"><tt>Binary</tt></qref></item>
2528 <item><qref id="f-Architecture"><tt>Architecture</tt></qref></item>
2529 <item><qref id="sourcebinarydeps"><tt>Build-Depends</tt> et al</qref></item>
2530 <item><qref id="f-Standards-Version"><tt>Standards-Version</tt></qref> (recommended)</item>
2531 <item><qref id="f-Files"><tt>Files</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2532 <item><qref id="f-Homepage"><tt>Homepage</tt></qref></item>
2533 </list>
2534 </p>
2537 The source package control file is generated by
2538 <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn> when it builds the source
2539 archive, from other files in the source package,
2540 described above. When unpacking, it is checked against
2541 the files and directories in the other parts of the
2542 source package.
2543 </p>
2545 </sect>
2547 <sect id="debianchangesfiles">
2548 <heading>Debian changes files -- <file>.changes</file></heading>
2551 The .changes files are used by the Debian archive maintenance
2552 software to process updates to packages. They contain one
2553 paragraph which contains information from the
2554 <tt>debian/control</tt> file and other data about the
2555 source package gathered via <tt>debian/changelog</tt>
2556 and <tt>debian/rules</tt>.
2557 </p>
2560 The fields in this file are:
2562 <list compact="compact">
2563 <item><qref id="f-Format"><tt>Format</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2564 <item><qref id="f-Date"><tt>Date</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2565 <item><qref id="f-Source"><tt>Source</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2566 <item><qref id="f-Binary"><tt>Binary</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2567 <item><qref id="f-Architecture"><tt>Architecture</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2568 <item><qref id="f-Version"><tt>Version</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2569 <item><qref id="f-Distribution"><tt>Distribution</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2570 <item><qref id="f-Urgency"><tt>Urgency</tt></qref> (recommended)</item>
2571 <item><qref id="f-Maintainer"><tt>Maintainer</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2572 <item><qref id="f-Changed-By"><tt>Changed-By</tt></qref></item>
2573 <item><qref id="f-Description"><tt>Description</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2574 <item><qref id="f-Closes"><tt>Closes</tt></qref></item>
2575 <item><qref id="f-Changes"><tt>Changes</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2576 <item><qref id="f-Files"><tt>Files</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
2577 </list>
2578 </p>
2579 </sect>
2581 <sect id="controlfieldslist">
2582 <heading>List of fields</heading>
2584 <sect1 id="f-Source">
2585 <heading><tt>Source</tt></heading>
2588 This field identifies the source package name.
2589 </p>
2592 In <file>debian/control</file> or a <file>.dsc</file> file,
2593 this field must contain only the name of the source package.
2594 </p>
2597 In a binary package control file or a <file>.changes</file>
2598 file, the source package name may be followed by a version
2599 number in parentheses<footnote>
2600 It is customary to leave a space after the package name
2601 if a version number is specified.
2602 </footnote>.
2603 This version number may be omitted (and is, by
2604 <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn>) if it has the same value as
2605 the <tt>Version</tt> field of the binary package in
2606 question. The field itself may be omitted from a binary
2607 package control file when the source package has the same
2608 name and version as the binary package.
2609 </p>
2612 Package names (both source and binary,
2613 see <ref id="f-Package">) must consist only of lower case
2614 letters (<tt>a-z</tt>), digits (<tt>0-9</tt>), plus
2615 (<tt>+</tt>) and minus (<tt>-</tt>) signs, and periods
2616 (<tt>.</tt>). They must be at least two characters long and
2617 must start with an alphanumeric character.
2618 </p>
2619 </sect1>
2621 <sect1 id="f-Maintainer">
2622 <heading><tt>Maintainer</tt></heading>
2625 The package maintainer's name and email address. The name
2626 should come first, then the email address inside angle
2627 brackets <tt>&lt;&gt</tt> (in RFC822 format).
2628 </p>
2631 If the maintainer's name contains a full stop then the
2632 whole field will not work directly as an email address due
2633 to a misfeature in the syntax specified in RFC822; a
2634 program using this field as an address must check for this
2635 and correct the problem if necessary (for example by
2636 putting the name in round brackets and moving it to the
2637 end, and bringing the email address forward).
2638 </p>
2639 </sect1>
2641 <sect1 id="f-Uploaders">
2642 <heading><tt>Uploaders</tt></heading>
2645 List of the names and email addresses of co-maintainers of
2646 the package, if any. If the package has other maintainers
2647 beside the one named in the
2648 <qref id="f-Maintainer">Maintainer field</qref>, their
2649 names and email addresses should be listed here. The
2650 format is the same as that of the Maintainer tag, and
2651 multiple entries should be comma separated. Currently,
2652 this field is restricted to a single line of data. This
2653 is an optional field.
2654 </p>
2656 Any parser that interprets the Uploaders field in
2657 <file>debian/control</file> must permit it to span multiple
2658 lines. Line breaks in an Uploaders field that spans multiple
2659 lines are not significant and the semantics of the field are
2660 the same as if the line breaks had not been present.
2661 </p>
2662 </sect1>
2664 <sect1 id="f-Changed-By">
2665 <heading><tt>Changed-By</tt></heading>
2668 The name and email address of the person who changed the
2669 said package. Usually the name of the maintainer.
2670 All the rules for the Maintainer field apply here, too.
2671 </p>
2672 </sect1>
2674 <sect1 id="f-Section">
2675 <heading><tt>Section</tt></heading>
2678 This field specifies an application area into which the package
2679 has been classified. See <ref id="subsections">.
2680 </p>
2683 When it appears in the <file>debian/control</file> file,
2684 it gives the value for the subfield of the same name in
2685 the <tt>Files</tt> field of the <file>.changes</file> file.
2686 It also gives the default for the same field in the binary
2687 packages.
2688 </p>
2689 </sect1>
2691 <sect1 id="f-Priority">
2692 <heading><tt>Priority</tt></heading>
2695 This field represents how important it is that the user
2696 have the package installed. See <ref id="priorities">.
2697 </p>
2700 When it appears in the <file>debian/control</file> file,
2701 it gives the value for the subfield of the same name in
2702 the <tt>Files</tt> field of the <file>.changes</file> file.
2703 It also gives the default for the same field in the binary
2704 packages.
2705 </p>
2706 </sect1>
2708 <sect1 id="f-Package">
2709 <heading><tt>Package</tt></heading>
2712 The name of the binary package.
2713 </p>
2716 Binary package names must follow the same syntax and
2717 restrictions as source package names. See <ref id="f-Source">
2718 for the details.
2719 </p>
2720 </sect1>
2722 <sect1 id="f-Architecture">
2723 <heading><tt>Architecture</tt></heading>
2726 Depending on context and the control file used, the
2727 <tt>Architecture</tt> field can include the following sets of
2728 values:
2729 <list>
2730 <item>
2731 A unique single word identifying a Debian machine
2732 architecture as described in <ref id="arch-spec">.
2733 </item>
2734 <item>
2735 An architecture wildcard identifying a set of Debian
2736 machine architectures, see <ref id="arch-wildcard-spec">.
2737 </item>
2738 <item>
2739 <tt>all</tt>, which indicates an
2740 architecture-independent package.
2741 </item>
2742 <item>
2743 <tt>source</tt>, which indicates a source package.
2744 </item>
2745 </list>
2746 </p>
2749 In the main <file>debian/control</file> file in the source
2750 package, this field may contain the special value <tt>all</tt>
2751 or a list of specific and wildcard architectures separated by
2752 spaces. If <tt>all</tt> appears, that value must be the
2753 entire contents of the field. Most packages will use
2754 either <tt>any</tt> or <tt>all</tt>. Specifying a specific
2755 list of architectures is for the minority of cases where a
2756 program is not portable or is not useful on some
2757 architectures, and where possible the program should be made
2758 portable instead.
2759 </p>
2762 Specifying a list of architecture wildcards indicates that
2763 the source will build an architecture-dependent package on
2764 the union of the lists of architectures from the expansion
2765 of each specified architecture wildcard, and will only
2766 work correctly on the architectures in the union of the
2767 lists.<footnote>
2768 Use of architecture wildcards other than <tt>all</tt> is for
2769 a minority of cases where the program is not portable and
2770 should not be used for most packages. Wildcards are not
2771 expanded into a list of known architectures before comparing
2772 to the build architecutre. Instead, the build architecture
2773 is matched against any wildcards and this package is built
2774 if any wildcard matches.
2775 </footnote>
2776 </p>
2779 In the source package control file <file>.dsc</file>, this
2780 field may contain either the special value <tt>any</tt> or a
2781 list of architectures separated by spaces. If a list is given,
2782 it may include (or consist solely of) the special value
2783 <tt>all</tt>. In other words, in <file>.dsc</file> files
2784 unlike the <file>debian/control</file>, <tt>all</tt> may occur
2785 in combination with specific architectures. The
2786 <tt>Architecture</tt> field in the source package control file
2787 <file>.dsc</file> is generally constructed from the
2788 <tt>Architecture</tt> fields in the
2789 <file>debian/control</file> in the source package.
2790 </p>
2793 Specifying <tt>any</tt> indicates that the source package
2794 isn't dependent on any particular architecture and should
2795 compile fine on any one. The produced binary package(s)
2796 will either be specific to whatever the current build
2797 architecture is or will be architecture-independent.
2798 </p>
2801 Specifying only <tt>all</tt> indicates that the source package
2802 will only build architecture-independent packages. If this is
2803 the case, <tt>all</tt> must be used rather than <tt>any</tt>;
2804 <tt>any</tt> implies that the source package will build at
2805 least one architecture-dependent package.
2806 </p>
2809 Specifying a list of architectures or architecture wildcards
2810 indicates that the source will build an architecture-dependent
2811 package, and will only work correctly on the listed or
2812 matching architectures. If the source package also builds at
2813 least one architecture-independent package, <tt>all</tt> will
2814 also be included in the list.
2815 </p>
2818 In a <file>.changes</file> file, the <tt>Architecture</tt>
2819 field lists the architecture(s) of the package(s) currently
2820 being uploaded. This will be a list; if the source for the
2821 package is also being uploaded, the special
2822 entry <tt>source</tt> is also present. <tt>all</tt> will be
2823 present if any architecture-independent packages are being
2824 uploaded. Architecture wildcards such as <tt>any</tt> may
2825 never occur in the <tt>Architecture</tt> field in
2826 the <file>.changes</file> file.
2827 </p>
2830 See <ref id="debianrules"> for information on how to get
2831 the architecture for the build process.
2832 </p>
2833 </sect1>
2835 <sect1 id="f-Essential">
2836 <heading><tt>Essential</tt></heading>
2839 This is a boolean field which may occur only in the
2840 control file of a binary package or in a per-package fields
2841 paragraph of a main source control data file.
2842 </p>
2845 If set to <tt>yes</tt> then the package management system
2846 will refuse to remove the package (upgrading and replacing
2847 it is still possible). The other possible value is <tt>no</tt>,
2848 which is the same as not having the field at all.
2849 </p>
2850 </sect1>
2852 <sect1>
2853 <heading>Package interrelationship fields:
2854 <tt>Depends</tt>, <tt>Pre-Depends</tt>,
2855 <tt>Recommends</tt>, <tt>Suggests</tt>,
2856 <tt>Breaks</tt>, <tt>Conflicts</tt>,
2857 <tt>Provides</tt>, <tt>Replaces</tt>, <tt>Enhances</tt>
2858 </heading>
2861 These fields describe the package's relationships with
2862 other packages. Their syntax and semantics are described
2863 in <ref id="relationships">.</p>
2864 </sect1>
2866 <sect1 id="f-Standards-Version">
2867 <heading><tt>Standards-Version</tt></heading>
2870 The most recent version of the standards (the policy
2871 manual and associated texts) with which the package
2872 complies.
2873 </p>
2876 The version number has four components: major and minor
2877 version number and major and minor patch level. When the
2878 standards change in a way that requires every package to
2879 change the major number will be changed. Significant
2880 changes that will require work in many packages will be
2881 signaled by a change to the minor number. The major patch
2882 level will be changed for any change to the meaning of the
2883 standards, however small; the minor patch level will be
2884 changed when only cosmetic, typographical or other edits
2885 are made which neither change the meaning of the document
2886 nor affect the contents of packages.
2887 </p>
2890 Thus only the first three components of the policy version
2891 are significant in the <em>Standards-Version</em> control
2892 field, and so either these three components or all four
2893 components may be specified.<footnote>
2894 In the past, people specified the full version number
2895 in the Standards-Version field, for example "2.3.0.0".
2896 Since minor patch-level changes don't introduce new
2897 policy, it was thought it would be better to relax
2898 policy and only require the first 3 components to be
2899 specified, in this example "2.3.0". All four
2900 components may still be used if someone wishes to do so.
2901 </footnote>
2902 </p>
2904 </sect1>
2906 <sect1 id="f-Version">
2907 <heading><tt>Version</tt></heading>
2910 The version number of a package. The format is:
2911 [<var>epoch</var><tt>:</tt>]<var>upstream_version</var>[<tt>-</tt><var>debian_revision</var>]
2912 </p>
2915 The three components here are:
2916 <taglist>
2917 <tag><var>epoch</var></tag>
2918 <item>
2920 This is a single (generally small) unsigned integer. It
2921 may be omitted, in which case zero is assumed. If it is
2922 omitted then the <var>upstream_version</var> may not
2923 contain any colons.
2924 </p>
2927 It is provided to allow mistakes in the version numbers
2928 of older versions of a package, and also a package's
2929 previous version numbering schemes, to be left behind.
2930 </p>
2931 </item>
2933 <tag><var>upstream_version</var></tag>
2934 <item>
2936 This is the main part of the version number. It is
2937 usually the version number of the original ("upstream")
2938 package from which the <file>.deb</file> file has been made,
2939 if this is applicable. Usually this will be in the same
2940 format as that specified by the upstream author(s);
2941 however, it may need to be reformatted to fit into the
2942 package management system's format and comparison
2943 scheme.
2944 </p>
2947 The comparison behavior of the package management system
2948 with respect to the <var>upstream_version</var> is
2949 described below. The <var>upstream_version</var>
2950 portion of the version number is mandatory.
2951 </p>
2954 The <var>upstream_version</var> may contain only
2955 alphanumerics<footnote>
2956 Alphanumerics are <tt>A-Za-z0-9</tt> only.
2957 </footnote>
2958 and the characters <tt>.</tt> <tt>+</tt> <tt>-</tt>
2959 <tt>:</tt> <tt>~</tt> (full stop, plus, hyphen, colon,
2960 tilde) and should start with a digit. If there is no
2961 <var>debian_revision</var> then hyphens are not allowed;
2962 if there is no <var>epoch</var> then colons are not
2963 allowed.
2964 </p>
2965 </item>
2967 <tag><var>debian_revision</var></tag>
2968 <item>
2970 This part of the version number specifies the version of
2971 the Debian package based on the upstream version. It
2972 may contain only alphanumerics and the characters
2973 <tt>+</tt> <tt>.</tt> <tt>~</tt> (plus, full stop,
2974 tilde) and is compared in the same way as the
2975 <var>upstream_version</var> is.
2976 </p>
2979 It is optional; if it isn't present then the
2980 <var>upstream_version</var> may not contain a hyphen.
2981 This format represents the case where a piece of
2982 software was written specifically to be turned into a
2983 Debian package, and so there is only one "debianisation"
2984 of it and therefore no revision indication is required.
2985 </p>
2988 It is conventional to restart the
2989 <var>debian_revision</var> at <tt>1</tt> each time the
2990 <var>upstream_version</var> is increased.
2991 </p>
2994 The package management system will break the version
2995 number apart at the last hyphen in the string (if there
2996 is one) to determine the <var>upstream_version</var> and
2997 <var>debian_revision</var>. The absence of a
2998 <var>debian_revision</var> is equivalent to a
2999 <var>debian_revision</var> of <tt>0</tt>.
3000 </p>
3001 </item>
3002 </taglist>
3003 </p>
3006 When comparing two version numbers, first the <var>epoch</var>
3007 of each are compared, then the <var>upstream_version</var> if
3008 <var>epoch</var> is equal, and then <var>debian_revision</var>
3009 if <var>upstream_version</var> is also equal.
3010 <var>epoch</var> is compared numerically. The
3011 <var>upstream_version</var> and <var>debian_revision</var>
3012 parts are compared by the package management system using the
3013 following algorithm:
3014 </p>
3017 The strings are compared from left to right.
3018 </p>
3021 First the initial part of each string consisting entirely of
3022 non-digit characters is determined. These two parts (one of
3023 which may be empty) are compared lexically. If a difference
3024 is found it is returned. The lexical comparison is a
3025 comparison of ASCII values modified so that all the letters
3026 sort earlier than all the non-letters and so that a tilde
3027 sorts before anything, even the end of a part. For example,
3028 the following parts are in sorted order from earliest to
3029 latest: <tt>~~</tt>, <tt>~~a</tt>, <tt>~</tt>, the empty part,
3030 <tt>a</tt>.<footnote>
3031 One common use of <tt>~</tt> is for upstream pre-releases.
3032 For example, <tt>1.0~beta1~svn1245</tt> sorts earlier than
3033 <tt>1.0~beta1</tt>, which sorts earlier than <tt>1.0</tt>.
3034 </footnote>
3035 </p>
3038 Then the initial part of the remainder of each string which
3039 consists entirely of digit characters is determined. The
3040 numerical values of these two parts are compared, and any
3041 difference found is returned as the result of the comparison.
3042 For these purposes an empty string (which can only occur at
3043 the end of one or both version strings being compared) counts
3044 as zero.
3045 </p>
3048 These two steps (comparing and removing initial non-digit
3049 strings and initial digit strings) are repeated until a
3050 difference is found or both strings are exhausted.
3051 </p>
3054 Note that the purpose of epochs is to allow us to leave behind
3055 mistakes in version numbering, and to cope with situations
3056 where the version numbering scheme changes. It is
3057 <em>not</em> intended to cope with version numbers containing
3058 strings of letters which the package management system cannot
3059 interpret (such as <tt>ALPHA</tt> or <tt>pre-</tt>), or with
3060 silly orderings (the author of this manual has heard of a
3061 package whose versions went <tt>1.1</tt>, <tt>1.2</tt>,
3062 <tt>1.3</tt>, <tt>1</tt>, <tt>2.1</tt>, <tt>2.2</tt>,
3063 <tt>2</tt> and so forth).
3064 </p>
3065 </sect1>
3067 <sect1 id="f-Description">
3068 <heading><tt>Description</tt></heading>
3071 In a source or binary control file, the <tt>Description</tt>
3072 field contains a description of the binary package, consisting
3073 of two parts, the synopsis or the short description, and the
3074 long description. The field's format is as follows:
3075 </p>
3078 <example>
3079 Description: &lt;single line synopsis&gt;
3080 &lt;extended description over several lines&gt;
3081 </example>
3082 </p>
3085 The lines in the extended description can have these formats:
3086 </p>
3088 <p><list>
3090 <item>
3091 Those starting with a single space are part of a paragraph.
3092 Successive lines of this form will be word-wrapped when
3093 displayed. The leading space will usually be stripped off.
3094 </item>
3096 <item>
3097 Those starting with two or more spaces. These will be
3098 displayed verbatim. If the display cannot be panned
3099 horizontally, the displaying program will line wrap them "hard"
3100 (i.e., without taking account of word breaks). If it can they
3101 will be allowed to trail off to the right. None, one or two
3102 initial spaces may be deleted, but the number of spaces
3103 deleted from each line will be the same (so that you can have
3104 indenting work correctly, for example).
3105 </item>
3107 <item>
3108 Those containing a single space followed by a single full stop
3109 character. These are rendered as blank lines. This is the
3110 <em>only</em> way to get a blank line<footnote>
3111 Completely empty lines will not be rendered as blank lines.
3112 Instead, they will cause the parser to think you're starting
3113 a whole new record in the control file, and will therefore
3114 likely abort with an error.
3115 </footnote>.
3116 </item>
3118 <item>
3119 Those containing a space, a full stop and some more characters.
3120 These are for future expansion. Do not use them.
3121 </item>
3123 </list></p>
3126 Do not use tab characters. Their effect is not predictable.
3127 </p>
3130 See <ref id="descriptions"> for further information on this.
3131 </p>
3134 In a <file>.changes</file> file, the <tt>Description</tt>
3135 field contains a summary of the descriptions for the packages
3136 being uploaded. For this case, the first line of the field
3137 value (the part on the same line as <tt>Description:</tt>) is
3138 always empty. The content of the field is expressed as
3139 continuation lines, one line per package. Each line is
3140 indented by one space and contains the name of a binary
3141 package, a space, a hyphen (<tt>-</tt>), a space, and the
3142 short description line from that package.
3143 </p>
3144 </sect1>
3146 <sect1 id="f-Distribution">
3147 <heading><tt>Distribution</tt></heading>
3150 In a <file>.changes</file> file or parsed changelog output
3151 this contains the (space-separated) name(s) of the
3152 distribution(s) where this version of the package should
3153 be installed. Valid distributions are determined by the
3154 archive maintainers.<footnote>
3155 Example distribution names in the Debian archive used in
3156 <file>.changes</file> files are:
3157 <taglist compact="compact">
3158 <tag><em>unstable</em></tag>
3159 <item>
3160 This distribution value refers to the
3161 <em>developmental</em> part of the Debian distribution
3162 tree. Most new packages, new upstream versions of
3163 packages and bug fixes go into the <em>unstable</em>
3164 directory tree.
3165 </item>
3167 <tag><em>experimental</em></tag>
3168 <item>
3169 The packages with this distribution value are deemed
3170 by their maintainers to be high risk. Oftentimes they
3171 represent early beta or developmental packages from
3172 various sources that the maintainers want people to
3173 try, but are not ready to be a part of the other parts
3174 of the Debian distribution tree.
3175 </item>
3176 </taglist>
3179 Others are used for updating stable releases or for
3180 security uploads. More information is available in the
3181 Debian Developer's Reference, section "The Debian
3182 archive".
3183 </p>
3184 </footnote>
3185 The Debian archive software only supports listing a single
3186 distribution. Migration of packages to other distributions is
3187 handled outside of the upload process.
3188 </p>
3189 </sect1>
3191 <sect1 id="f-Date">
3192 <heading><tt>Date</tt></heading>
3195 This field includes the date the package was built or last edited.
3196 </p>
3199 The value of this field is usually extracted from the
3200 <file>debian/changelog</file> file - see
3201 <ref id="dpkgchangelog">).
3202 </p>
3203 </sect1>
3205 <sect1 id="f-Format">
3206 <heading><tt>Format</tt></heading>
3209 This field specifies a format revision for the file.
3210 The most current format described in the Policy Manual
3211 is version <strong>1.5</strong>. The syntax of the
3212 format value is the same as that of a package version
3213 number except that no epoch or Debian revision is allowed
3214 - see <ref id="f-Version">.
3215 </p>
3216 </sect1>
3218 <sect1 id="f-Urgency">
3219 <heading><tt>Urgency</tt></heading>
3222 This is a description of how important it is to upgrade to
3223 this version from previous ones. It consists of a single
3224 keyword taking one of the values <tt>low</tt>,
3225 <tt>medium</tt>, <tt>high</tt>, <tt>emergency</tt>, or
3226 <tt>critical</tt><footnote>
3227 Other urgency values are supported with configuration
3228 changes in the archive software but are not used in Debian.
3229 The urgency affects how quickly a package will be considered
3230 for inclusion into the <tt>testing</tt> distribution and
3231 gives an indication of the importance of any fixes included
3232 in the upload. <tt>Emergency</tt> and <tt>critical</tt> are
3233 treated as synonymous.
3234 </footnote> (not case-sensitive) followed by an optional
3235 commentary (separated by a space) which is usually in
3236 parentheses. For example:
3238 <example>
3239 Urgency: low (HIGH for users of diversions)
3240 </example>
3242 </p>
3245 The value of this field is usually extracted from the
3246 <file>debian/changelog</file> file - see
3247 <ref id="dpkgchangelog">.
3248 </p>
3249 </sect1>
3251 <sect1 id="f-Changes">
3252 <heading><tt>Changes</tt></heading>
3255 This field contains the human-readable changes data, describing
3256 the differences between the last version and the current one.
3257 </p>
3260 The first line of the field value (the part on the same line
3261 as <tt>Changes:</tt>) is always empty. The content of the
3262 field is expressed as continuation lines, with each line
3263 indented by at least one space. Blank lines must be
3264 represented by a line consisting only of a space and a full
3265 stop (<tt>.</tt>).
3266 </p>
3269 The value of this field is usually extracted from the
3270 <file>debian/changelog</file> file - see
3271 <ref id="dpkgchangelog">).
3272 </p>
3275 Each version's change information should be preceded by a
3276 "title" line giving at least the version, distribution(s)
3277 and urgency, in a human-readable way.
3278 </p>
3281 If data from several versions is being returned the entry
3282 for the most recent version should be returned first, and
3283 entries should be separated by the representation of a
3284 blank line (the "title" line may also be followed by the
3285 representation of a blank line).
3286 </p>
3287 </sect1>
3289 <sect1 id="f-Binary">
3290 <heading><tt>Binary</tt></heading>
3293 This field is a list of binary packages. Its syntax and
3294 meaning varies depending on the control file in which it
3295 appears.
3296 </p>
3299 When it appears in the <file>.dsc</file> file, it lists binary
3300 packages which a source package can produce, separated by
3301 commas<footnote>
3302 A space after each comma is conventional.
3303 </footnote>. It may span multiple lines. The source package
3304 does not necessarily produce all of these binary packages for
3305 every architecture. The source control file doesn't contain
3306 details of which architectures are appropriate for which of
3307 the binary packages.
3308 </p>
3311 When it appears in a <file>.changes</file> file, it lists the
3312 names of the binary packages being uploaded, separated by
3313 whitespace (not commas). It may span multiple lines.
3314 </p>
3315 </sect1>
3317 <sect1 id="f-Installed-Size">
3318 <heading><tt>Installed-Size</tt></heading>
3321 This field appears in the control files of binary packages,
3322 and in the <file>Packages</file> files. It gives an estimate
3323 of the total amount of disk space required to install the
3324 named package. Actual installed size may vary based on block
3325 size, file system properties, or actions taken by package
3326 maintainer scripts.
3327 </p>
3330 The disk space is given as the integer value of the estimated
3331 installed size in bytes, divided by 1024 and rounded up.
3332 </p>
3333 </sect1>
3335 <sect1 id="f-Files">
3336 <heading><tt>Files</tt></heading>
3339 This field contains a list of files with information about
3340 each one. The exact information and syntax varies with
3341 the context.
3342 </p>
3345 In all cases, Files is a multiline field. The first line of
3346 the field value (the part on the same line as <tt>Files:</tt>)
3347 is always empty. The content of the field is expressed as
3348 continuation lines, one line per file. Each line must be
3349 indented by one space and contain a number of sub-fields,
3350 separated by spaces, as described below.
3351 </p>
3354 In the <file>.dsc</file> file, each line contains the MD5
3355 checksum, size and filename of the tar file and (if
3356 applicable) diff file which make up the remainder of the
3357 source package<footnote>
3358 That is, the parts which are not the <tt>.dsc</tt>.
3359 </footnote>. For example:
3360 <example>
3361 Files:
3362 c6f698f19f2a2aa07dbb9bbda90a2754 571925 example_1.2.orig.tar.gz
3363 938512f08422f3509ff36f125f5873ba 6220 example_1.2-1.diff.gz
3364 </example>
3365 The exact forms of the filenames are described
3366 in <ref id="pkg-sourcearchives">.
3367 </p>
3370 In the <file>.changes</file> file this contains one line per
3371 file being uploaded. Each line contains the MD5 checksum,
3372 size, section and priority and the filename. For example:
3373 <example>
3374 Files:
3375 4c31ab7bfc40d3cf49d7811987390357 1428 text extra example_1.2-1.dsc
3376 c6f698f19f2a2aa07dbb9bbda90a2754 571925 text extra example_1.2.orig.tar.gz
3377 938512f08422f3509ff36f125f5873ba 6220 text extra example_1.2-1.diff.gz
3378 7c98fe853b3bbb47a00e5cd129b6cb56 703542 text extra example_1.2-1_i386.deb
3379 </example>
3380 The <qref id="f-Section">section</qref>
3381 and <qref id="f-Priority">priority</qref> are the values of
3382 the corresponding fields in the main source control file. If
3383 no section or priority is specified then <tt>-</tt> should be
3384 used, though section and priority values must be specified for
3385 new packages to be installed properly.
3386 </p>
3389 The special value <tt>byhand</tt> for the section in a
3390 <tt>.changes</tt> file indicates that the file in question
3391 is not an ordinary package file and must by installed by
3392 hand by the distribution maintainers. If the section is
3393 <tt>byhand</tt> the priority should be <tt>-</tt>.
3394 </p>
3397 If a new Debian revision of a package is being shipped and
3398 no new original source archive is being distributed the
3399 <tt>.dsc</tt> must still contain the <tt>Files</tt> field
3400 entry for the original source archive
3401 <file><var>package</var>_<var>upstream-version</var>.orig.tar.gz</file>,
3402 but the <file>.changes</file> file should leave it out. In
3403 this case the original source archive on the distribution
3404 site must match exactly, byte-for-byte, the original
3405 source archive which was used to generate the
3406 <file>.dsc</file> file and diff which are being uploaded.</p>
3407 </sect1>
3409 <sect1 id="f-Closes">
3410 <heading><tt>Closes</tt></heading>
3413 A space-separated list of bug report numbers that the upload
3414 governed by the .changes file closes.
3415 </p>
3416 </sect1>
3418 <sect1 id="f-Homepage">
3419 <heading><tt>Homepage</tt></heading>
3422 The URL of the web site for this package, preferably (when
3423 applicable) the site from which the original source can be
3424 obtained and any additional upstream documentation or
3425 information may be found. The content of this field is a
3426 simple URL without any surrounding characters such as
3427 <tt>&lt;&gt;</tt>.
3428 </p>
3429 </sect1>
3431 </sect>
3433 <sect>
3434 <heading>User-defined fields</heading>
3437 Additional user-defined fields may be added to the
3438 source package control file. Such fields will be
3439 ignored, and not copied to (for example) binary or
3440 source package control files or upload control files.
3441 </p>
3444 If you wish to add additional unsupported fields to
3445 these output files you should use the mechanism
3446 described here.
3447 </p>
3450 Fields in the main source control information file with
3451 names starting <tt>X</tt>, followed by one or more of
3452 the letters <tt>BCS</tt> and a hyphen <tt>-</tt>, will
3453 be copied to the output files. Only the part of the
3454 field name after the hyphen will be used in the output
3455 file. Where the letter <tt>B</tt> is used the field
3456 will appear in binary package control files, where the
3457 letter <tt>S</tt> is used in source package control
3458 files and where <tt>C</tt> is used in upload control
3459 (<tt>.changes</tt>) files.
3460 </p>
3463 For example, if the main source information control file
3464 contains the field
3465 <example>
3466 XBS-Comment: I stand between the candle and the star.
3467 </example>
3468 then the binary and source package control files will contain the
3469 field
3470 <example>
3471 Comment: I stand between the candle and the star.
3472 </example>
3473 </p>
3475 </sect>
3477 </chapt>
3480 <chapt id="maintainerscripts">
3481 <heading>Package maintainer scripts and installation procedure</heading>
3483 <sect>
3484 <heading>Introduction to package maintainer scripts</heading>
3487 It is possible to supply scripts as part of a package which
3488 the package management system will run for you when your
3489 package is installed, upgraded or removed.
3490 </p>
3493 These scripts are the files <prgn>preinst</prgn>,
3494 <prgn>postinst</prgn>, <prgn>prerm</prgn> and
3495 <prgn>postrm</prgn> in the control area of the package.
3496 They must be proper executable files; if they are scripts
3497 (which is recommended), they must start with the usual
3498 <tt>#!</tt> convention. They should be readable and
3499 executable by anyone, and must not be world-writable.
3500 </p>
3503 The package management system looks at the exit status from
3504 these scripts. It is important that they exit with a
3505 non-zero status if there is an error, so that the package
3506 management system can stop its processing. For shell
3507 scripts this means that you <em>almost always</em> need to
3508 use <tt>set -e</tt> (this is usually true when writing shell
3509 scripts, in fact). It is also important, of course, that
3510 they exit with a zero status if everything went well.
3511 </p>
3514 Additionally, packages interacting with users using
3515 <tt>debconf</tt> in the <prgn>postinst</prgn> script should
3516 install a <prgn>config</prgn> script in the control area,
3517 see <ref id="maintscriptprompt"> for details.
3518 </p>
3521 When a package is upgraded a combination of the scripts from
3522 the old and new packages is called during the upgrade
3523 procedure. If your scripts are going to be at all
3524 complicated you need to be aware of this, and may need to
3525 check the arguments to your scripts.
3526 </p>
3529 Broadly speaking the <prgn>preinst</prgn> is called before
3530 (a particular version of) a package is installed, and the
3531 <prgn>postinst</prgn> afterwards; the <prgn>prerm</prgn>
3532 before (a version of) a package is removed and the
3533 <prgn>postrm</prgn> afterwards.
3534 </p>
3537 Programs called from maintainer scripts should not normally
3538 have a path prepended to them. Before installation is
3539 started, the package management system checks to see if the
3540 programs <prgn>ldconfig</prgn>,
3541 <prgn>start-stop-daemon</prgn>, <prgn>install-info</prgn>,
3542 and <prgn>update-rc.d</prgn> can be found via the
3543 <tt>PATH</tt> environment variable. Those programs, and any
3544 other program that one would expect to be in the
3545 <tt>PATH</tt>, should thus be invoked without an absolute
3546 pathname. Maintainer scripts should also not reset the
3547 <tt>PATH</tt>, though they might choose to modify it by
3548 prepending or appending package-specific directories. These
3549 considerations really apply to all shell scripts.</p>
3550 </sect>
3552 <sect id="idempotency">
3553 <heading>Maintainer scripts idempotency</heading>
3556 It is necessary for the error recovery procedures that the
3557 scripts be idempotent. This means that if it is run
3558 successfully, and then it is called again, it doesn't bomb
3559 out or cause any harm, but just ensures that everything is
3560 the way it ought to be. If the first call failed, or
3561 aborted half way through for some reason, the second call
3562 should merely do the things that were left undone the first
3563 time, if any, and exit with a success status if everything
3564 is OK.<footnote>
3565 This is so that if an error occurs, the user interrupts
3566 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> or some other unforeseen circumstance
3567 happens you don't leave the user with a badly-broken
3568 package when <prgn>dpkg</prgn> attempts to repeat the
3569 action.
3570 </footnote>
3571 </p>
3572 </sect>
3574 <sect id="controllingterminal">
3575 <heading>Controlling terminal for maintainer scripts</heading>
3578 The maintainer scripts are guaranteed to run with a
3579 controlling terminal and can interact with the user.
3580 Because these scripts may be executed with standard output
3581 redirected into a pipe for logging purposes, Perl scripts
3582 should set unbuffered output by setting <tt>$|=1</tt> so
3583 that the output is printed immediately rather than being
3584 buffered.
3585 </p>
3586 </sect>
3587 <sect id="exitstatus">
3588 <heading>Exit status</heading>
3591 Each script must return a zero exit status for
3592 success, or a nonzero one for failure, since the package
3593 management system looks for the exit status of these scripts
3594 and determines what action to take next based on that datum.
3595 </p>
3596 </sect>
3598 <sect id="mscriptsinstact"><heading>Summary of ways maintainer
3599 scripts are called
3600 </heading>
3603 <list compact="compact">
3604 <item>
3605 <var>new-preinst</var> <tt>install</tt>
3606 </item>
3607 <item>
3608 <var>new-preinst</var> <tt>install</tt> <var>old-version</var>
3609 </item>
3610 <item>
3611 <var>new-preinst</var> <tt>upgrade</tt> <var>old-version</var>
3612 </item>
3613 <item>
3614 <var>old-preinst</var> <tt>abort-upgrade</tt>
3615 <var>new-version</var>
3616 </item>
3617 </list>
3620 <list compact="compact">
3621 <item>
3622 <var>postinst</var> <tt>configure</tt>
3623 <var>most-recently-configured-version</var>
3624 </item>
3625 <item>
3626 <var>old-postinst</var> <tt>abort-upgrade</tt>
3627 <var>new-version</var>
3628 </item>
3629 <item>
3630 <var>conflictor's-postinst</var> <tt>abort-remove</tt>
3631 <tt>in-favour</tt> <var>package</var>
3632 <var>new-version</var>
3633 </item>
3634 <item>
3635 <var>postinst</var> <tt>abort-remove</tt>
3636 </item>
3637 <item>
3638 <var>deconfigured's-postinst</var>
3639 <tt>abort-deconfigure</tt> <tt>in-favour</tt>
3640 <var>failed-install-package</var> <var>version</var>
3641 [<tt>removing</tt> <var>conflicting-package</var>
3642 <var>version</var>]
3643 </item>
3644 </list>
3647 <list compact="compact">
3648 <item>
3649 <var>prerm</var> <tt>remove</tt>
3650 </item>
3651 <item>
3652 <var>old-prerm</var> <tt>upgrade</tt>
3653 <var>new-version</var>
3654 </item>
3655 <item>
3656 <var>new-prerm</var> <tt>failed-upgrade</tt>
3657 <var>old-version</var>
3658 </item>
3659 <item>
3660 <var>conflictor's-prerm</var> <tt>remove</tt>
3661 <tt>in-favour</tt> <var>package</var>
3662 <var>new-version</var>
3663 </item>
3664 <item>
3665 <var>deconfigured's-prerm</var> <tt>deconfigure</tt>
3666 <tt>in-favour</tt> <var>package-being-installed</var>
3667 <var>version</var> [<tt>removing</tt>
3668 <var>conflicting-package</var>
3669 <var>version</var>]
3670 </item>
3671 </list>
3674 <list compact="compact">
3675 <item>
3676 <var>postrm</var> <tt>remove</tt>
3677 </item>
3678 <item>
3679 <var>postrm</var> <tt>purge</tt>
3680 </item>
3681 <item>
3682 <var>old-postrm</var> <tt>upgrade</tt>
3683 <var>new-version</var>
3684 </item>
3685 <item>
3686 <var>new-postrm</var> <tt>failed-upgrade</tt>
3687 <var>old-version</var>
3688 </item>
3689 <item>
3690 <var>new-postrm</var> <tt>abort-install</tt>
3691 </item>
3692 <item>
3693 <var>new-postrm</var> <tt>abort-install</tt>
3694 <var>old-version</var>
3695 </item>
3696 <item>
3697 <var>new-postrm</var> <tt>abort-upgrade</tt>
3698 <var>old-version</var>
3699 </item>
3700 <item>
3701 <var>disappearer's-postrm</var> <tt>disappear</tt>
3702 <var>overwriter</var>
3703 <var>overwriter-version</var>
3704 </item>
3705 </list>
3706 </p>
3709 <sect id="unpackphase">
3710 <heading>Details of unpack phase of installation or upgrade</heading>
3713 The procedure on installation/upgrade/overwrite/disappear
3714 (i.e., when running <tt>dpkg --unpack</tt>, or the unpack
3715 stage of <tt>dpkg --install</tt>) is as follows. In each
3716 case, if a major error occurs (unless listed below) the
3717 actions are, in general, run backwards - this means that the
3718 maintainer scripts are run with different arguments in
3719 reverse order. These are the "error unwind" calls listed
3720 below.
3722 <enumlist>
3723 <item>
3724 <enumlist>
3725 <item>
3726 If a version of the package is already installed, call
3727 <example compact="compact">
3728 <var>old-prerm</var> upgrade <var>new-version</var>
3729 </example>
3730 </item>
3731 <item>
3732 If the script runs but exits with a non-zero
3733 exit status, <prgn>dpkg</prgn> will attempt:
3734 <example compact="compact">
3735 <var>new-prerm</var> failed-upgrade <var>old-version</var>
3736 </example>
3737 If this works, the upgrade continues. If this
3738 does not work, the error unwind:
3739 <example compact="compact">
3740 <var>old-postinst</var> abort-upgrade <var>new-version</var>
3741 </example>
3742 If this works, then the old-version is
3743 "Installed", if not, the old version is in a
3744 "Half-Configured" state.
3745 </item>
3746 </enumlist>
3747 </item>
3749 <item>
3750 If a "conflicting" package is being removed at the same time,
3751 or if any package will be broken (due to <tt>Breaks</tt>):
3752 <enumlist>
3753 <item>
3754 If <tt>--auto-deconfigure</tt> is
3755 specified, call, for each package to be deconfigured
3756 due to <tt>Breaks</tt>:
3757 <example compact="compact">
3758 <var>deconfigured's-prerm</var> deconfigure \
3759 in-favour <var>package-being-installed</var> <var>version</var>
3760 </example>
3761 Error unwind:
3762 <example compact="compact">
3763 <var>deconfigured's-postinst</var> abort-deconfigure \
3764 in-favour <var>package-being-installed-but-failed</var> <var>version</var>
3765 </example>
3766 The deconfigured packages are marked as
3767 requiring configuration, so that if
3768 <tt>--install</tt> is used they will be
3769 configured again if possible.
3770 </item>
3771 <item>
3772 If any packages depended on a conflicting
3773 package being removed and <tt>--auto-deconfigure</tt> is
3774 specified, call, for each such package:
3775 <example compact="compact">
3776 <var>deconfigured's-prerm</var> deconfigure \
3777 in-favour <var>package-being-installed</var> <var>version</var> \
3778 removing <var>conflicting-package</var> <var>version</var>
3779 </example>
3780 Error unwind:
3781 <example compact="compact">
3782 <var>deconfigured's-postinst</var> abort-deconfigure \
3783 in-favour <var>package-being-installed-but-failed</var> <var>version</var> \
3784 removing <var>conflicting-package</var> <var>version</var>
3785 </example>
3786 The deconfigured packages are marked as
3787 requiring configuration, so that if
3788 <tt>--install</tt> is used they will be
3789 configured again if possible.
3790 </item>
3791 <item>
3792 To prepare for removal of each conflicting package, call:
3793 <example compact="compact">
3794 <var>conflictor's-prerm</var> remove \
3795 in-favour <var>package</var> <var>new-version</var>
3796 </example>
3797 Error unwind:
3798 <example compact="compact">
3799 <var>conflictor's-postinst</var> abort-remove \
3800 in-favour <var>package</var> <var>new-version</var>
3801 </example>
3802 </item>
3803 </enumlist>
3804 </item>
3806 <item>
3807 <enumlist>
3808 <item>
3809 If the package is being upgraded, call:
3810 <example compact="compact">
3811 <var>new-preinst</var> upgrade <var>old-version</var>
3812 </example>
3813 If this fails, we call:
3814 <example>
3815 <var>new-postrm</var> abort-upgrade <var>old-version</var>
3816 </example>
3817 <enumlist>
3818 <item>
3820 If that works, then
3821 <example>
3822 <var>old-postinst</var> abort-upgrade <var>new-version</var>
3823 </example>
3824 is called. If this works, then the old version
3825 is in an "Installed" state, or else it is left
3826 in an "Unpacked" state.
3827 </p>
3828 </item>
3829 <item>
3831 If it fails, then the old version is left
3832 in an "Half-Installed" state.
3833 </p>
3834 </item>
3835 </enumlist>
3837 </item>
3838 <item>
3839 Otherwise, if the package had some configuration
3840 files from a previous version installed (i.e., it
3841 is in the "configuration files only" state):
3842 <example compact="compact">
3843 <var>new-preinst</var> install <var>old-version</var>
3844 </example>
3845 Error unwind:
3846 <example>
3847 <var>new-postrm</var> abort-install <var>old-version</var>
3848 </example>
3849 If this fails, the package is left in a
3850 "Half-Installed" state, which requires a
3851 reinstall. If it works, the packages is left in
3852 a "Config-Files" state.
3853 </item>
3854 <item>
3855 Otherwise (i.e., the package was completely purged):
3856 <example compact="compact">
3857 <var>new-preinst</var> install
3858 </example>
3859 Error unwind:
3860 <example compact="compact">
3861 <var>new-postrm</var> abort-install
3862 </example>
3863 If the error-unwind fails, the package is in a
3864 "Half-Installed" phase, and requires a
3865 reinstall. If the error unwind works, the
3866 package is in a not installed state.
3867 </item>
3868 </enumlist>
3869 </item>
3871 <item>
3873 The new package's files are unpacked, overwriting any
3874 that may be on the system already, for example any
3875 from the old version of the same package or from
3876 another package. Backups of the old files are kept
3877 temporarily, and if anything goes wrong the package
3878 management system will attempt to put them back as
3879 part of the error unwind.
3880 </p>
3883 It is an error for a package to contain files which
3884 are on the system in another package, unless
3885 <tt>Replaces</tt> is used (see <ref id="replaces">).
3886 <!--
3887 The following paragraph is not currently the case:
3888 Currently the <tt>- - force-overwrite</tt> flag is
3889 enabled, downgrading it to a warning, but this may not
3890 always be the case.
3892 </p>
3895 It is a more serious error for a package to contain a
3896 plain file or other kind of non-directory where another
3897 package has a directory (again, unless
3898 <tt>Replaces</tt> is used). This error can be
3899 overridden if desired using
3900 <tt>--force-overwrite-dir</tt>, but this is not
3901 advisable.
3902 </p>
3905 Packages which overwrite each other's files produce
3906 behavior which, though deterministic, is hard for the
3907 system administrator to understand. It can easily
3908 lead to "missing" programs if, for example, a package
3909 is installed which overwrites a file from another
3910 package, and is then removed again.<footnote>
3911 Part of the problem is due to what is arguably a
3912 bug in <prgn>dpkg</prgn>.
3913 </footnote>
3914 </p>
3917 A directory will never be replaced by a symbolic link
3918 to a directory or vice versa; instead, the existing
3919 state (symlink or not) will be left alone and
3920 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> will follow the symlink if there is
3921 one.
3922 </p>
3923 </item>
3925 <item>
3927 <enumlist>
3928 <item>
3929 If the package is being upgraded, call
3930 <example compact="compact">
3931 <var>old-postrm</var> upgrade <var>new-version</var>
3932 </example>
3933 </item>
3934 <item>
3935 If this fails, <prgn>dpkg</prgn> will attempt:
3936 <example compact="compact">
3937 <var>new-postrm</var> failed-upgrade <var>old-version</var>
3938 </example>
3939 If this works, installation continues. If not,
3940 Error unwind:
3941 <example compact="compact">
3942 <var>old-preinst</var> abort-upgrade <var>new-version</var>
3943 </example>
3944 If this fails, the old version is left in a
3945 "Half-Installed" state. If it works, dpkg now
3946 calls:
3947 <example compact="compact">
3948 <var>new-postrm</var> abort-upgrade <var>old-version</var>
3949 </example>
3950 If this fails, the old version is left in a
3951 "Half-Installed" state. If it works, dpkg now
3952 calls:
3953 <example compact="compact">
3954 <var>old-postinst</var> abort-upgrade <var>new-version</var>
3955 </example>
3956 If this fails, the old version is in an
3957 "Unpacked" state.
3958 </item>
3959 </enumlist>
3960 </p>
3963 This is the point of no return - if
3964 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> gets this far, it won't back off
3965 past this point if an error occurs. This will
3966 leave the package in a fairly bad state, which
3967 will require a successful re-installation to clear
3968 up, but it's when <prgn>dpkg</prgn> starts doing
3969 things that are irreversible.
3970 </p>
3971 </item>
3973 <item>
3974 Any files which were in the old version of the package
3975 but not in the new are removed.
3976 </item>
3978 <item>
3979 The new file list replaces the old.
3980 </item>
3982 <item>
3983 The new maintainer scripts replace the old.
3984 </item>
3986 <item>
3987 Any packages all of whose files have been overwritten
3988 during the installation, and which aren't required for
3989 dependencies, are considered to have been removed.
3990 For each such package
3991 <enumlist>
3992 <item>
3993 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> calls:
3994 <example compact="compact">
3995 <var>disappearer's-postrm</var> disappear \
3996 <var>overwriter</var> <var>overwriter-version</var>
3997 </example>
3998 </item>
3999 <item>
4000 The package's maintainer scripts are removed.
4001 </item>
4002 <item>
4003 It is noted in the status database as being in a
4004 sane state, namely not installed (any conffiles
4005 it may have are ignored, rather than being
4006 removed by <prgn>dpkg</prgn>). Note that
4007 disappearing packages do not have their prerm
4008 called, because <prgn>dpkg</prgn> doesn't know
4009 in advance that the package is going to
4010 vanish.
4011 </item>
4012 </enumlist>
4013 </item>
4015 <item>
4016 Any files in the package we're unpacking that are also
4017 listed in the file lists of other packages are removed
4018 from those lists. (This will lobotomize the file list
4019 of the "conflicting" package if there is one.)
4020 </item>
4022 <item>
4023 The backup files made during installation, above, are
4024 deleted.
4025 </item>
4027 <item>
4029 The new package's status is now sane, and recorded as
4030 "unpacked".
4031 </p>
4034 Here is another point of no return - if the
4035 conflicting package's removal fails we do not unwind
4036 the rest of the installation; the conflicting package
4037 is left in a half-removed limbo.
4038 </p>
4039 </item>
4041 <item>
4042 If there was a conflicting package we go and do the
4043 removal actions (described below), starting with the
4044 removal of the conflicting package's files (any that
4045 are also in the package being installed have already
4046 been removed from the conflicting package's file list,
4047 and so do not get removed now).
4048 </item>
4049 </enumlist>
4050 </p>
4051 </sect>
4053 <sect id="configdetails"><heading>Details of configuration</heading>
4056 When we configure a package (this happens with <tt>dpkg
4057 --install</tt> and <tt>dpkg --configure</tt>), we first
4058 update any <tt>conffile</tt>s and then call:
4059 <example compact="compact">
4060 <var>postinst</var> configure <var>most-recently-configured-version</var>
4061 </example>
4062 </p>
4065 No attempt is made to unwind after errors during
4066 configuration. If the configuration fails, the package is in
4067 a "Failed Config" state, and an error message is generated.
4068 </p>
4071 If there is no most recently configured version
4072 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> will pass a null argument.
4073 <footnote>
4075 Historical note: Truly ancient (pre-1997) versions of
4076 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> passed <tt>&lt;unknown&gt;</tt>
4077 (including the angle brackets) in this case. Even older
4078 ones did not pass a second argument at all, under any
4079 circumstance. Note that upgrades using such an old dpkg
4080 version are unlikely to work for other reasons, even if
4081 this old argument behavior is handled by your postinst script.
4082 </p>
4083 </footnote>
4084 </p>
4085 </sect>
4087 <sect id="removedetails"><heading>Details of removal and/or
4088 configuration purging</heading>
4091 <enumlist>
4092 <item>
4094 <example compact="compact">
4095 <var>prerm</var> remove
4096 </example>
4097 </p>
4099 If prerm fails during replacement due to conflict
4100 <example>
4101 <var>conflictor's-postinst</var> abort-remove \
4102 in-favour <var>package</var> <var>new-version</var>
4103 </example>
4104 Or else we call:
4105 <example>
4106 <var>postinst</var> abort-remove
4107 </example>
4108 </p>
4110 If this fails, the package is in a "Half-Configured"
4111 state, or else it remains "Installed".
4112 </p>
4113 </item>
4114 <item>
4115 The package's files are removed (except <tt>conffile</tt>s).
4116 </item>
4117 <item>
4118 <example compact="compact">
4119 <var>postrm</var> remove
4120 </example>
4123 If it fails, there's no error unwind, and the package is in
4124 an "Half-Installed" state.
4125 </p>
4126 </item>
4127 <item>
4129 All the maintainer scripts except the <prgn>postrm</prgn>
4130 are removed.
4131 </p>
4134 If we aren't purging the package we stop here. Note
4135 that packages which have no <prgn>postrm</prgn> and no
4136 <tt>conffile</tt>s are automatically purged when
4137 removed, as there is no difference except for the
4138 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> status.
4139 </p>
4140 </item>
4141 <item>
4142 The <tt>conffile</tt>s and any backup files
4143 (<tt>~</tt>-files, <tt>#*#</tt> files,
4144 <tt>%</tt>-files, <tt>.dpkg-{old,new,tmp}</tt>, etc.)
4145 are removed.
4146 </item>
4147 <item>
4149 <example compact="compact">
4150 <var>postrm</var> purge
4151 </example>
4152 </p>
4154 If this fails, the package remains in a "Config-Files"
4155 state.
4156 </p>
4157 </item>
4158 <item>
4159 The package's file list is removed.
4160 </item>
4161 </enumlist>
4163 </p>
4164 </sect>
4165 </chapt>
4168 <chapt id="relationships">
4169 <heading>Declaring relationships between packages</heading>
4171 <sect id="depsyntax">
4172 <heading>Syntax of relationship fields</heading>
4175 These fields all have a uniform syntax. They are a list of
4176 package names separated by commas.
4177 </p>
4180 In the <tt>Depends</tt>, <tt>Recommends</tt>,
4181 <tt>Suggests</tt>, <tt>Pre-Depends</tt>,
4182 <tt>Build-Depends</tt> and <tt>Build-Depends-Indep</tt>
4183 control file fields of the package, which declare
4184 dependencies on other packages, the package names listed may
4185 also include lists of alternative package names, separated
4186 by vertical bar (pipe) symbols <tt>|</tt>. In such a case,
4187 if any one of the alternative packages is installed, that
4188 part of the dependency is considered to be satisfied.
4189 </p>
4192 All of the fields except for <tt>Provides</tt> may restrict
4193 their applicability to particular versions of each named
4194 package. This is done in parentheses after each individual
4195 package name; the parentheses should contain a relation from
4196 the list below followed by a version number, in the format
4197 described in <ref id="f-Version">.
4198 </p>
4201 The relations allowed are <tt>&lt;&lt;</tt>, <tt>&lt;=</tt>,
4202 <tt>=</tt>, <tt>&gt;=</tt> and <tt>&gt;&gt;</tt> for
4203 strictly earlier, earlier or equal, exactly equal, later or
4204 equal and strictly later, respectively. The deprecated
4205 forms <tt>&lt;</tt> and <tt>&gt;</tt> were used to mean
4206 earlier/later or equal, rather than strictly earlier/later,
4207 so they should not appear in new packages (though
4208 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> still supports them).
4209 </p>
4212 Whitespace may appear at any point in the version
4213 specification subject to the rules in <ref
4214 id="controlsyntax">, and must appear where it's necessary to
4215 disambiguate; it is not otherwise significant. All of the
4216 relationship fields may span multiple lines. For
4217 consistency and in case of future changes to
4218 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> it is recommended that a single space be
4219 used after a version relationship and before a version
4220 number; it is also conventional to put a single space after
4221 each comma, on either side of each vertical bar, and before
4222 each open parenthesis. When wrapping a relationship field, it
4223 is conventional to do so after a comma and before the space
4224 following that comma.
4225 </p>
4228 For example, a list of dependencies might appear as:
4229 <example compact="compact">
4230 Package: mutt
4231 Version: 1.3.17-1
4232 Depends: libc6 (>= 2.2.1), exim | mail-transport-agent
4233 </example>
4234 </p>
4237 All fields that specify build-time relationships
4238 (<tt>Build-Depends</tt>, <tt>Build-Depends-Indep</tt>,
4239 <tt>Build-Conflicts</tt> and <tt>Build-Conflicts-Indep</tt>)
4240 may be restricted to a certain set of architectures. This
4241 is indicated in brackets after each individual package name and
4242 the optional version specification. The brackets enclose a
4243 list of Debian architecture names separated by whitespace.
4244 Exclamation marks may be prepended to each of the names.
4245 (It is not permitted for some names to be prepended with
4246 exclamation marks while others aren't.) If the current Debian
4247 host architecture is not in this list and there are no
4248 exclamation marks in the list, or it is in the list with a
4249 prepended exclamation mark, the package name and the
4250 associated version specification are ignored completely for
4251 the purposes of defining the relationships.
4252 </p>
4255 For example:
4256 <example compact="compact">
4257 Source: glibc
4258 Build-Depends-Indep: texinfo
4259 Build-Depends: kernel-headers-2.2.10 [!hurd-i386],
4260 hurd-dev [hurd-i386], gnumach-dev [hurd-i386]
4261 </example>
4262 requires <tt>kernel-headers-2.2.10</tt> on all architectures
4263 other than hurd-i386 and requires <tt>hurd-dev</tt> and
4264 <tt>gnumach-dev</tt> only on hurd-i386.
4265 </p>
4268 If the architecture-restricted dependency is part of a set of
4269 alternatives using <tt>|</tt>, that alternative is ignored
4270 completely on architectures that do not match the restriction.
4271 For example:
4272 <example compact="compact">
4273 Build-Depends: foo [!i386] | bar [!amd64]
4274 </example>
4275 is equivalent to <tt>bar</tt> on the i386 architecture, to
4276 <tt>foo</tt> on the amd64 architecture, and to <tt>foo |
4277 bar</tt> on all other architectures.
4278 </p>
4281 All fields that specify build-time relationships may also be
4282 restricted to a certain set of architectures using architecture
4283 wildcards. The syntax for declaring such restrictions is the
4284 same as declaring restrictions using a certain set of
4285 architectures without architecture wildcards. For example:
4286 <example compact="compact">
4287 Build-Depends: foo [linux-any], bar [any-i386], baz [!linux-any]
4288 </example>
4289 is equivalent to <tt>foo</tt> on architectures using the Linux
4290 kernel and any cpu, <tt>bar</tt> on architectures using any
4291 kernel and an i386 cpu, and <tt>baz</tt> on any architecture
4292 using a kernel other than Linux.
4293 </p>
4296 Note that the binary package relationship fields such as
4297 <tt>Depends</tt> appear in one of the binary package
4298 sections of the control file, whereas the build-time
4299 relationships such as <tt>Build-Depends</tt> appear in the
4300 source package section of the control file (which is the
4301 first section).
4302 </p>
4303 </sect>
4305 <sect id="binarydeps">
4306 <heading>Binary Dependencies - <tt>Depends</tt>,
4307 <tt>Recommends</tt>, <tt>Suggests</tt>, <tt>Enhances</tt>,
4308 <tt>Pre-Depends</tt>
4309 </heading>
4312 Packages can declare in their control file that they have
4313 certain relationships to other packages - for example, that
4314 they may not be installed at the same time as certain other
4315 packages, and/or that they depend on the presence of others.
4316 </p>
4319 This is done using the <tt>Depends</tt>, <tt>Pre-Depends</tt>,
4320 <tt>Recommends</tt>, <tt>Suggests</tt>, <tt>Enhances</tt>,
4321 <tt>Breaks</tt> and <tt>Conflicts</tt> control file fields.
4322 <tt>Breaks</tt> is described in <ref id="breaks">, and
4323 <tt>Conflicts</tt> is described in <ref id="conflicts">. The
4324 rest are described below.
4325 </p>
4328 These seven fields are used to declare a dependency
4329 relationship by one package on another. Except for
4330 <tt>Enhances</tt> and <tt>Breaks</tt>, they appear in the
4331 depending (binary) package's control file.
4332 (<tt>Enhances</tt> appears in the recommending package's
4333 control file, and <tt>Breaks</tt> appears in the version of
4334 depended-on package which causes the named package to
4335 break).
4336 </p>
4339 A <tt>Depends</tt> field takes effect <em>only</em> when a
4340 package is to be configured. It does not prevent a package
4341 being on the system in an unconfigured state while its
4342 dependencies are unsatisfied, and it is possible to replace
4343 a package whose dependencies are satisfied and which is
4344 properly installed with a different version whose
4345 dependencies are not and cannot be satisfied; when this is
4346 done the depending package will be left unconfigured (since
4347 attempts to configure it will give errors) and will not
4348 function properly. If it is necessary, a
4349 <tt>Pre-Depends</tt> field can be used, which has a partial
4350 effect even when a package is being unpacked, as explained
4351 in detail below. (The other three dependency fields,
4352 <tt>Recommends</tt>, <tt>Suggests</tt> and
4353 <tt>Enhances</tt>, are only used by the various front-ends
4354 to <prgn>dpkg</prgn> such as <prgn>apt-get</prgn>,
4355 <prgn>aptitude</prgn>, and <prgn>dselect</prgn>.)
4356 </p>
4359 For this reason packages in an installation run are usually
4360 all unpacked first and all configured later; this gives
4361 later versions of packages with dependencies on later
4362 versions of other packages the opportunity to have their
4363 dependencies satisfied.
4364 </p>
4367 In case of circular dependencies, since installation or
4368 removal order honoring the dependency order can't be
4369 established, dependency loops are broken at some point
4370 (based on rules below), and some packages may not be able to
4371 rely on their dependencies being present when being
4372 installed or removed, depending on which side of the break
4373 of the circular dependency loop they happen to be on. If one
4374 of the packages in the loop has no postinst script, then the
4375 cycle will be broken at that package, so as to ensure that
4376 all postinst scripts run with the dependencies properly
4377 configured if this is possible. Otherwise the breaking point
4378 is arbitrary.
4379 </p>
4382 The <tt>Depends</tt> field thus allows package maintainers
4383 to impose an order in which packages should be configured.
4384 </p>
4387 The meaning of the five dependency fields is as follows:
4388 <taglist>
4389 <tag><tt>Depends</tt></tag>
4390 <item>
4392 This declares an absolute dependency. A package will
4393 not be configured unless all of the packages listed in
4394 its <tt>Depends</tt> field have been correctly
4395 configured.
4396 </p>
4399 The <tt>Depends</tt> field should be used if the
4400 depended-on package is required for the depending
4401 package to provide a significant amount of
4402 functionality.
4403 </p>
4406 The <tt>Depends</tt> field should also be used if the
4407 <prgn>postinst</prgn>, <prgn>prerm</prgn> or
4408 <prgn>postrm</prgn> scripts require the package to be
4409 present in order to run. Note, however, that the
4410 <prgn>postrm</prgn> cannot rely on any non-essential
4411 packages to be present during the <tt>purge</tt>
4412 phase.
4413 </item>
4415 <tag><tt>Recommends</tt></tag>
4416 <item>
4418 This declares a strong, but not absolute, dependency.
4419 </p>
4422 The <tt>Recommends</tt> field should list packages
4423 that would be found together with this one in all but
4424 unusual installations.
4425 </p>
4426 </item>
4428 <tag><tt>Suggests</tt></tag>
4429 <item>
4430 This is used to declare that one package may be more
4431 useful with one or more others. Using this field
4432 tells the packaging system and the user that the
4433 listed packages are related to this one and can
4434 perhaps enhance its usefulness, but that installing
4435 this one without them is perfectly reasonable.
4436 </item>
4438 <tag><tt>Enhances</tt></tag>
4439 <item>
4440 This field is similar to Suggests but works in the
4441 opposite direction. It is used to declare that a
4442 package can enhance the functionality of another
4443 package.
4444 </item>
4446 <tag><tt>Pre-Depends</tt></tag>
4447 <item>
4449 This field is like <tt>Depends</tt>, except that it
4450 also forces <prgn>dpkg</prgn> to complete installation
4451 of the packages named before even starting the
4452 installation of the package which declares the
4453 pre-dependency, as follows:
4454 </p>
4457 When a package declaring a pre-dependency is about to
4458 be <em>unpacked</em> the pre-dependency can be
4459 satisfied if the depended-on package is either fully
4460 configured, <em>or even if</em> the depended-on
4461 package(s) are only unpacked or in the "Half-Configured"
4462 state, provided that they have been configured
4463 correctly at some point in the past (and not removed
4464 or partially removed since). In this case, both the
4465 previously-configured and currently unpacked or
4466 "Half-Configured" versions must satisfy any version
4467 clause in the <tt>Pre-Depends</tt> field.
4468 </p>
4471 When the package declaring a pre-dependency is about
4472 to be <em>configured</em>, the pre-dependency will be
4473 treated as a normal <tt>Depends</tt>, that is, it will
4474 be considered satisfied only if the depended-on
4475 package has been correctly configured.
4476 </p>
4479 <tt>Pre-Depends</tt> should be used sparingly,
4480 preferably only by packages whose premature upgrade or
4481 installation would hamper the ability of the system to
4482 continue with any upgrade that might be in progress.
4483 </p>
4486 <tt>Pre-Depends</tt> are also required if the
4487 <prgn>preinst</prgn> script depends on the named
4488 package. It is best to avoid this situation if
4489 possible.
4490 </p>
4491 </item>
4492 </taglist>
4493 </p>
4496 When selecting which level of dependency to use you should
4497 consider how important the depended-on package is to the
4498 functionality of the one declaring the dependency. Some
4499 packages are composed of components of varying degrees of
4500 importance. Such a package should list using
4501 <tt>Depends</tt> the package(s) which are required by the
4502 more important components. The other components'
4503 requirements may be mentioned as Suggestions or
4504 Recommendations, as appropriate to the components' relative
4505 importance.
4506 </p>
4507 </sect>
4509 <sect id="breaks">
4510 <heading>Packages which break other packages - <tt>Breaks</tt></heading>
4513 When one binary package declares that it breaks another,
4514 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> will refuse to allow the package which
4515 declares <tt>Breaks</tt> be installed unless the broken
4516 package is deconfigured first, and it will refuse to
4517 allow the broken package to be reconfigured.
4518 </p>
4521 A package will not be regarded as causing breakage merely
4522 because its configuration files are still installed; it must
4523 be at least "Half-Installed".
4524 </p>
4527 A special exception is made for packages which declare that
4528 they break their own package name or a virtual package which
4529 they provide (see below): this does not count as a real
4530 breakage.
4531 </p>
4534 Normally a <tt>Breaks</tt> entry will have an "earlier than"
4535 version clause; such a <tt>Breaks</tt> is introduced in the
4536 version of an (implicit or explicit) dependency which
4537 violates an assumption or reveals a bug in earlier versions
4538 of the broken package. This use of <tt>Breaks</tt> will
4539 inform higher-level package management tools that broken
4540 package must be upgraded before the new one.
4541 </p>
4544 If the breaking package also overwrites some files from the
4545 older package, it should use <tt>Replaces</tt> (not
4546 <tt>Conflicts</tt>) to ensure this goes smoothly.
4547 </p>
4548 </sect>
4550 <sect id="conflicts">
4551 <heading>Conflicting binary packages - <tt>Conflicts</tt></heading>
4554 When one binary package declares a conflict with another
4555 using a <tt>Conflicts</tt> field, <prgn>dpkg</prgn> will
4556 refuse to allow them to be installed on the system at the
4557 same time.
4558 </p>
4561 If one package is to be installed, the other must be removed
4562 first - if the package being installed is marked as
4563 replacing (see <ref id="replaces">) the one on the system,
4564 or the one on the system is marked as deselected, or both
4565 packages are marked <tt>Essential</tt>, then
4566 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> will automatically remove the package
4567 which is causing the conflict, otherwise it will halt the
4568 installation of the new package with an error. This
4569 mechanism is specifically designed to produce an error when
4570 the installed package is <tt>Essential</tt>, but the new
4571 package is not.
4572 </p>
4575 A package will not cause a conflict merely because its
4576 configuration files are still installed; it must be at least
4577 "Half-Installed".
4578 </p>
4581 A special exception is made for packages which declare a
4582 conflict with their own package name, or with a virtual
4583 package which they provide (see below): this does not
4584 prevent their installation, and allows a package to conflict
4585 with others providing a replacement for it. You use this
4586 feature when you want the package in question to be the only
4587 package providing some feature.
4588 </p>
4591 A <tt>Conflicts</tt> entry should almost never have an
4592 "earlier than" version clause. This would prevent
4593 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> from upgrading or installing the package
4594 which declared such a conflict until the upgrade or removal
4595 of the conflicted-with package had been completed. Instead,
4596 <tt>Breaks</tt> may be used.
4597 </p>
4598 </sect>
4600 <sect id="virtual"><heading>Virtual packages - <tt>Provides</tt>
4601 </heading>
4604 As well as the names of actual ("concrete") packages, the
4605 package relationship fields <tt>Depends</tt>,
4606 <tt>Recommends</tt>, <tt>Suggests</tt>, <tt>Enhances</tt>,
4607 <tt>Pre-Depends</tt>, <tt>Breaks</tt>, <tt>Conflicts</tt>,
4608 <tt>Build-Depends</tt>, <tt>Build-Depends-Indep</tt>,
4609 <tt>Build-Conflicts</tt> and <tt>Build-Conflicts-Indep</tt>
4610 may mention "virtual packages".
4611 </p>
4614 A <em>virtual package</em> is one which appears in the
4615 <tt>Provides</tt> control file field of another package.
4616 The effect is as if the package(s) which provide a
4617 particular virtual package name had been listed by name
4618 everywhere the virtual package name appears. (See also <ref
4619 id="virtual_pkg">)
4620 </p>
4623 If there are both concrete and virtual packages of the same
4624 name, then the dependency may be satisfied (or the conflict
4625 caused) by either the concrete package with the name in
4626 question or any other concrete package which provides the
4627 virtual package with the name in question. This is so that,
4628 for example, supposing we have
4629 <example compact="compact">
4630 Package: foo
4631 Depends: bar
4632 </example> and someone else releases an enhanced version of
4633 the <tt>bar</tt> package they can say:
4634 <example compact="compact">
4635 Package: bar-plus
4636 Provides: bar
4637 </example>
4638 and the <tt>bar-plus</tt> package will now also satisfy the
4639 dependency for the <tt>foo</tt> package.
4640 </p>
4643 If a relationship field has a version number attached
4644 then only real packages will be considered to see whether
4645 the relationship is satisfied (or the prohibition violated,
4646 for a conflict or breakage) - it is assumed that a real
4647 package which provides the virtual package is not of the
4648 "right" version. So, a <tt>Provides</tt> field may not
4649 contain version numbers, and the version number of the
4650 concrete package which provides a particular virtual package
4651 will not be looked at when considering a dependency on or
4652 conflict with the virtual package name.
4653 </p>
4656 It is likely that the ability will be added in a future
4657 release of <prgn>dpkg</prgn> to specify a version number for
4658 each virtual package it provides. This feature is not yet
4659 present, however, and is expected to be used only
4660 infrequently.
4661 </p>
4664 If you want to specify which of a set of real packages
4665 should be the default to satisfy a particular dependency on
4666 a virtual package, you should list the real package as an
4667 alternative before the virtual one.
4668 </p>
4669 </sect>
4672 <sect id="replaces"><heading>Overwriting files and replacing
4673 packages - <tt>Replaces</tt></heading>
4676 Packages can declare in their control file that they should
4677 overwrite files in certain other packages, or completely
4678 replace other packages. The <tt>Replaces</tt> control file
4679 field has these two distinct purposes.
4680 </p>
4682 <sect1><heading>Overwriting files in other packages</heading>
4685 Firstly, as mentioned before, it is usually an error for a
4686 package to contain files which are on the system in
4687 another package.
4688 </p>
4691 However, if the overwriting package declares that it
4692 <tt>Replaces</tt> the one containing the file being
4693 overwritten, then <prgn>dpkg</prgn> will replace the file
4694 from the old package with that from the new. The file
4695 will no longer be listed as "owned" by the old package.
4696 </p>
4699 If a package is completely replaced in this way, so that
4700 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> does not know of any files it still
4701 contains, it is considered to have "disappeared". It will
4702 be marked as not wanted on the system (selected for
4703 removal) and not installed. Any <tt>conffile</tt>s
4704 details noted for the package will be ignored, as they
4705 will have been taken over by the overwriting package. The
4706 package's <prgn>postrm</prgn> script will be run with a
4707 special argument to allow the package to do any final
4708 cleanup required. See <ref id="mscriptsinstact">.
4709 <footnote>
4711 Replaces is a one way relationship -- you have to
4712 install the replacing package after the replaced
4713 package.
4714 </p>
4715 </footnote>
4716 </p>
4719 For this usage of <tt>Replaces</tt>, virtual packages (see
4720 <ref id="virtual">) are not considered when looking at a
4721 <tt>Replaces</tt> field - the packages declared as being
4722 replaced must be mentioned by their real names.
4723 </p>
4726 Furthermore, this usage of <tt>Replaces</tt> only takes
4727 effect when both packages are at least partially on the
4728 system at once, so that it can only happen if they do not
4729 conflict or if the conflict has been overridden.
4730 </p>
4732 </sect1>
4734 <sect1><heading>Replacing whole packages, forcing their
4735 removal</heading>
4738 Secondly, <tt>Replaces</tt> allows the packaging system to
4739 resolve which package should be removed when there is a
4740 conflict - see <ref id="conflicts">. This usage only
4741 takes effect when the two packages <em>do</em> conflict,
4742 so that the two usages of this field do not interfere with
4743 each other.
4744 </p>
4747 In this situation, the package declared as being replaced
4748 can be a virtual package, so for example, all mail
4749 transport agents (MTAs) would have the following fields in
4750 their control files:
4751 <example compact="compact">
4752 Provides: mail-transport-agent
4753 Conflicts: mail-transport-agent
4754 Replaces: mail-transport-agent
4755 </example>
4756 ensuring that only one MTA can be installed at any one
4757 time.
4758 </sect1>
4759 </sect>
4761 <sect id="sourcebinarydeps">
4762 <heading>Relationships between source and binary packages -
4763 <tt>Build-Depends</tt>, <tt>Build-Depends-Indep</tt>,
4764 <tt>Build-Conflicts</tt>, <tt>Build-Conflicts-Indep</tt>
4765 </heading>
4768 Source packages that require certain binary packages to be
4769 installed or absent at the time of building the package
4770 can declare relationships to those binary packages.
4771 </p>
4774 This is done using the <tt>Build-Depends</tt>,
4775 <tt>Build-Depends-Indep</tt>, <tt>Build-Conflicts</tt> and
4776 <tt>Build-Conflicts-Indep</tt> control file fields.
4777 </p>
4780 Build-dependencies on "build-essential" binary packages can be
4781 omitted. Please see <ref id="pkg-relations"> for more information.
4782 </p>
4785 The dependencies and conflicts they define must be satisfied
4786 (as defined earlier for binary packages) in order to invoke
4787 the targets in <tt>debian/rules</tt>, as follows:<footnote>
4789 If you make "build-arch" or "binary-arch", you need
4790 Build-Depends. If you make "build-indep" or
4791 "binary-indep", you need Build-Depends and
4792 Build-Depends-Indep. If you make "build" or "binary",
4793 you need both.
4794 </p>
4796 There is no Build-Depends-Arch; this role is essentially
4797 met with Build-Depends. Anyone building the
4798 <tt>build-indep</tt> and binary-indep<tt></tt> targets
4799 is basically assumed to be building the whole package
4800 anyway and so installs all build dependencies. The
4801 autobuilders use <tt>dpkg-buildpackage -B</tt>, which
4802 calls <tt>build</tt> (not <tt>build-arch</tt>, since it
4803 does not yet know how to check for its existence) and
4804 <tt>binary-arch</tt>.
4805 </p>
4807 The purpose of the original split, I recall, was so that
4808 the autobuilders wouldn't need to install extra packages
4809 needed only for the binary-indep targets. But without a
4810 build-arch/build-indep split, this didn't work, since
4811 most of the work is done in the build target, not in the
4812 binary target.
4813 </p>
4814 </footnote>
4816 <taglist>
4817 <tag><tt>Build-Depends</tt>, <tt>Build-Conflicts</tt></tag>
4818 <item>
4819 The <tt>Build-Depends</tt> and
4820 <tt>Build-Conflicts</tt> fields must be satisfied when
4821 any of the following targets is invoked:
4822 <tt>build</tt>, <tt>clean</tt>, <tt>binary</tt>,
4823 <tt>binary-arch</tt>, <tt>build-arch</tt>,
4824 <tt>build-indep</tt> and <tt>binary-indep</tt>.
4825 </item>
4826 <tag><tt>Build-Depends-Indep</tt>,
4827 <tt>Build-Conflicts-Indep</tt></tag>
4828 <item>
4829 The <tt>Build-Depends-Indep</tt> and
4830 <tt>Build-Conflicts-Indep</tt> fields must be
4831 satisfied when any of the following targets is
4832 invoked: <tt>build</tt>, <tt>build-indep</tt>,
4833 <tt>binary</tt> and <tt>binary-indep</tt>.
4834 </item>
4835 </taglist>
4836 </p>
4838 </sect>
4840 </chapt>
4843 <chapt id="sharedlibs"><heading>Shared libraries</heading>
4846 Packages containing shared libraries must be constructed with
4847 a little care to make sure that the shared library is always
4848 available. This is especially important for packages whose
4849 shared libraries are vitally important, such as the C library
4850 (currently <tt>libc6</tt>).
4851 </p>
4854 Packages involving shared libraries should be split up into
4855 several binary packages. This section mostly deals with how
4856 this separation is to be accomplished; rules for files within
4857 the shared library packages are in <ref id="libraries"> instead.
4858 </p>
4860 <sect id="sharedlibs-runtime">
4861 <heading>Run-time shared libraries</heading>
4864 The run-time shared library needs to be placed in a package
4865 whose name changes whenever the shared object version
4866 changes.<footnote>
4868 Since it is common place to install several versions of a
4869 package that just provides shared libraries, it is a
4870 good idea that the library package should not
4871 contain any extraneous non-versioned files, unless they
4872 happen to be in versioned directories.</p>
4873 </footnote>
4874 The most common mechanism is to place it in a package
4875 called
4876 <package><var>libraryname</var><var>soversion</var></package>,
4877 where <file><var>soversion</var></file> is the version number
4878 in the soname of the shared library<footnote>
4879 The soname is the shared object name: it's the thing
4880 that has to match exactly between building an executable
4881 and running it for the dynamic linker to be able run the
4882 program. For example, if the soname of the library is
4883 <file>libfoo.so.6</file>, the library package would be
4884 called <file>libfoo6</file>.
4885 </footnote>.
4886 Alternatively, if it would be confusing to directly append
4887 <var>soversion</var> to <var>libraryname</var> (e.g. because
4888 <var>libraryname</var> itself ends in a number), you may use
4889 <package><var>libraryname</var>-<var>soversion</var></package> and
4890 <package><var>libraryname</var>-<var>soversion</var>-dev</package>
4891 instead.
4892 </p>
4895 If you have several shared libraries built from the same
4896 source tree you may lump them all together into a single
4897 shared library package, provided that you change all of
4898 their sonames at once (so that you don't get filename
4899 clashes if you try to install different versions of the
4900 combined shared libraries package).
4901 </p>
4904 The package should install the shared libraries under
4905 their normal names. For example, the <package>libgdbm3</package>
4906 package should install <file>libgdbm.so.3.0.0</file> as
4907 <file>/usr/lib/libgdbm.so.3.0.0</file>. The files should not be
4908 renamed or re-linked by any <prgn>prerm</prgn> or
4909 <prgn>postrm</prgn> scripts; <prgn>dpkg</prgn> will take care
4910 of renaming things safely without affecting running programs,
4911 and attempts to interfere with this are likely to lead to
4912 problems.
4913 </p>
4916 Shared libraries should not be installed executable, since
4917 the dynamic linker does not require this and trying to
4918 execute a shared library usually results in a core dump.
4919 </p>
4922 The run-time library package should include the symbolic link that
4923 <prgn>ldconfig</prgn> would create for the shared libraries.
4924 For example, the <package>libgdbm3</package> package should include
4925 a symbolic link from <file>/usr/lib/libgdbm.so.3</file> to
4926 <file>libgdbm.so.3.0.0</file>. This is needed so that the dynamic
4927 linker (for example <prgn>ld.so</prgn> or
4928 <prgn>ld-linux.so.*</prgn>) can find the library between the
4929 time that <prgn>dpkg</prgn> installs it and the time that
4930 <prgn>ldconfig</prgn> is run in the <prgn>postinst</prgn>
4931 script.<footnote>
4932 The package management system requires the library to be
4933 placed before the symbolic link pointing to it in the
4934 <file>.deb</file> file. This is so that when
4935 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> comes to install the symlink
4936 (overwriting the previous symlink pointing at an older
4937 version of the library), the new shared library is already
4938 in place. In the past, this was achieved by creating the
4939 library in the temporary packaging directory before
4940 creating the symlink. Unfortunately, this was not always
4941 effective, since the building of the tar file in the
4942 <file>.deb</file> depended on the behavior of the underlying
4943 file system. Some file systems (such as reiserfs) reorder
4944 the files so that the order of creation is forgotten.
4945 Since version 1.7.0, <prgn>dpkg</prgn>
4946 reorders the files itself as necessary when building a
4947 package. Thus it is no longer important to concern
4948 oneself with the order of file creation.
4949 </footnote>
4950 </p>
4952 <sect1 id="ldconfig">
4953 <heading><tt>ldconfig</tt></heading>
4956 Any package installing shared libraries in one of the default
4957 library directories of the dynamic linker (which are currently
4958 <file>/usr/lib</file> and <file>/lib</file>) or a directory that is
4959 listed in <file>/etc/ld.so.conf</file><footnote>
4960 These are currently
4961 <list compact="compact">
4962 <item>/usr/local/lib</item>
4963 <item>/usr/lib/libc5-compat</item>
4964 <item>/lib/libc5-compat</item>
4965 </list>
4966 </footnote>
4967 must use <prgn>ldconfig</prgn> to update the shared library
4968 system.
4969 </p>
4972 The package maintainer scripts must only call
4973 <prgn>ldconfig</prgn> under these circumstances:
4974 <list compact="compact">
4975 <item>When the <prgn>postinst</prgn> script is run with a
4976 first argument of <tt>configure</tt>, the script must call
4977 <prgn>ldconfig</prgn>, and may optionally invoke
4978 <prgn>ldconfig</prgn> at other times.
4979 </item>
4980 <item>When the <prgn>postrm</prgn> script is run with a
4981 first argument of <tt>remove</tt>, the script should call
4982 <prgn>ldconfig</prgn>.
4983 </item>
4984 </list>
4985 <footnote>
4987 During install or upgrade, the preinst is called before
4988 the new files are installed, so calling "ldconfig" is
4989 pointless. The preinst of an existing package can also be
4990 called if an upgrade fails. However, this happens during
4991 the critical time when a shared libs may exist on-disk
4992 under a temporary name. Thus, it is dangerous and
4993 forbidden by current policy to call "ldconfig" at this
4994 time.
4995 </p>
4998 When a package is installed or upgraded, "postinst
4999 configure" runs after the new files are safely on-disk.
5000 Since it is perfectly safe to invoke ldconfig
5001 unconditionally in a postinst, it is OK for a package to
5002 simply put ldconfig in its postinst without checking the
5003 argument. The postinst can also be called to recover from
5004 a failed upgrade. This happens before any new files are
5005 unpacked, so there is no reason to call "ldconfig" at this
5006 point.
5007 </p>
5010 For a package that is being removed, prerm is
5011 called with all the files intact, so calling ldconfig is
5012 useless. The other calls to "prerm" happen in the case of
5013 upgrade at a time when all the files of the old package
5014 are on-disk, so again calling "ldconfig" is pointless.
5015 </p>
5018 postrm, on the other hand, is called with the "remove"
5019 argument just after the files are removed, so this is
5020 the proper time to call "ldconfig" to notify the system
5021 of the fact that the shared libraries from the package
5022 are removed. The postrm can be called at several other
5023 times. At the time of "postrm purge", "postrm
5024 abort-install", or "postrm abort-upgrade", calling
5025 "ldconfig" is useless because the shared lib files are
5026 not on-disk. However, when "postrm" is invoked with
5027 arguments "upgrade", "failed-upgrade", or "disappear", a
5028 shared lib may exist on-disk under a temporary filename.
5029 </p>
5030 </footnote>
5031 </p>
5032 </sect1>
5034 </sect>
5036 <sect id="sharedlibs-support-files">
5037 <heading>Shared library support files</heading>
5040 If your package contains files whose names do not change with
5041 each change in the library shared object version, you must not
5042 put them in the shared library package. Otherwise, several
5043 versions of the shared library cannot be installed at the same
5044 time without filename clashes, making upgrades and transitions
5045 unnecessarily difficult.
5046 </p>
5049 It is recommended that supporting files and run-time support
5050 programs that do not need to be invoked manually by users, but
5051 are nevertheless required for the package to function, be placed
5052 (if they are binary) in a subdirectory of <file>/usr/lib</file>,
5053 preferably under <file>/usr/lib/</file><var>package-name</var>.
5054 If the program or file is architecture independent, the
5055 recommendation is for it to be placed in a subdirectory of
5056 <file>/usr/share</file> instead, preferably under
5057 <file>/usr/share/</file><var>package-name</var>. Following the
5058 <var>package-name</var> naming convention ensures that the file
5059 names change when the shared object version changes.
5060 </p>
5063 Run-time support programs that use the shared library but are
5064 not required for the library to function or files used by the
5065 shared library that can be used by any version of the shared
5066 library package should instead be put in a separate package.
5067 This package might typically be named
5068 <package><var>libraryname</var>-tools</package>; note the
5069 absence of the <var>soversion</var> in the package name.
5070 </p>
5073 Files and support programs only useful when compiling software
5074 against the library should be included in the development
5075 package for the library.<footnote>
5076 For example, a <file><var>package-name</var>-config</file>
5077 script or <package>pkg-config</package> configuration files.
5078 </footnote>
5079 </p>
5080 </sect>
5082 <sect id="sharedlibs-static">
5083 <heading>Static libraries</heading>
5086 The static library (<file><var>libraryname.a</var></file>)
5087 is usually provided in addition to the shared version.
5088 It is placed into the development package (see below).
5089 </p>
5092 In some cases, it is acceptable for a library to be
5093 available in static form only; these cases include:
5094 <list>
5095 <item>libraries for languages whose shared library support
5096 is immature or unstable</item>
5097 <item>libraries whose interfaces are in flux or under
5098 development (commonly the case when the library's
5099 major version number is zero, or where the ABI breaks
5100 across patchlevels)</item>
5101 <item>libraries which are explicitly intended to be
5102 available only in static form by their upstream
5103 author(s)</item>
5104 </list>
5105 </p>
5107 <sect id="sharedlibs-dev">
5108 <heading>Development files</heading>
5111 The development files associated to a shared library need to be
5112 placed in a package called
5113 <package><var>libraryname</var><var>soversion</var>-dev</package>,
5114 or if you prefer only to support one development version at a
5115 time, <package><var>libraryname</var>-dev</package>.
5116 </p>
5119 In case several development versions of a library exist, you may
5120 need to use <prgn>dpkg</prgn>'s Conflicts mechanism (see
5121 <ref id="conflicts">) to ensure that the user only installs one
5122 development version at a time (as different development versions are
5123 likely to have the same header files in them, which would cause a
5124 filename clash if both were installed).
5125 </p>
5128 The development package should contain a symlink for the associated
5129 shared library without a version number. For example, the
5130 <package>libgdbm-dev</package> package should include a symlink
5131 from <file>/usr/lib/libgdbm.so</file> to
5132 <file>libgdbm.so.3.0.0</file>. This symlink is needed by the linker
5133 (<prgn>ld</prgn>) when compiling packages, as it will only look for
5134 <file>libgdbm.so</file> when compiling dynamically.
5135 </p>
5136 </sect>
5138 <sect id="sharedlibs-intradeps">
5139 <heading>Dependencies between the packages of the same library</heading>
5142 Typically the development version should have an exact
5143 version dependency on the runtime library, to make sure that
5144 compilation and linking happens correctly. The
5145 <tt>${binary:Version}</tt> substitution variable can be
5146 useful for this purpose.
5147 <footnote>
5148 Previously, <tt>${Source-Version}</tt> was used, but its name
5149 was confusing and it has been deprecated since dpkg 1.13.19.
5150 </footnote>
5151 </p>
5152 </sect>
5154 <sect id="sharedlibs-shlibdeps">
5155 <heading>Dependencies between the library and other packages -
5156 the <tt>shlibs</tt> system</heading>
5159 If a package contains a binary or library which links to a
5160 shared library, we must ensure that when the package is
5161 installed on the system, all of the libraries needed are
5162 also installed. This requirement led to the creation of the
5163 <tt>shlibs</tt> system, which is very simple in its design:
5164 any package which <em>provides</em> a shared library also
5165 provides information on the package dependencies required to
5166 ensure the presence of this library, and any package which
5167 <em>uses</em> a shared library uses this information to
5168 determine the dependencies it requires. The files which
5169 contain the mapping from shared libraries to the necessary
5170 dependency information are called <file>shlibs</file> files.
5171 </p>
5174 Thus, when a package is built which contains any shared
5175 libraries, it must provide a <file>shlibs</file> file for other
5176 packages to use, and when a package is built which contains
5177 any shared libraries or compiled binaries, it must run
5178 <qref id="pkg-dpkg-shlibdeps"><prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn></qref>
5179 on these to determine the libraries used and hence the
5180 dependencies needed by this package.<footnote>
5182 In the past, the shared libraries linked to were
5183 determined by calling <prgn>ldd</prgn>, but now
5184 <prgn>objdump</prgn> is used to do this. The only
5185 change this makes to package building is that
5186 <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> must also be run on shared
5187 libraries, whereas in the past this was unnecessary.
5188 The rest of this footnote explains the advantage that
5189 this method gives.
5190 </p>
5193 We say that a binary <tt>foo</tt> <em>directly</em> uses
5194 a library <tt>libbar</tt> if it is explicitly linked
5195 with that library (that is, it uses the flag
5196 <tt>-lbar</tt> during the linking stage). Other
5197 libraries that are needed by <tt>libbar</tt> are linked
5198 <em>indirectly</em> to <tt>foo</tt>, and the dynamic
5199 linker will load them automatically when it loads
5200 <tt>libbar</tt>. A package should depend on
5201 the libraries it directly uses, and the dependencies for
5202 those libraries should automatically pull in the other
5203 libraries.
5204 </p>
5207 Unfortunately, the <prgn>ldd</prgn> program shows both
5208 the directly and indirectly used libraries, meaning that
5209 the dependencies determined included both direct and
5210 indirect dependencies. The use of <prgn>objdump</prgn>
5211 avoids this problem by determining only the directly
5212 used libraries.
5213 </p>
5216 A good example of where this helps is the following. We
5217 could update <tt>libimlib</tt> with a new version that
5218 supports a new graphics format called dgf (but retaining
5219 the same major version number). If we used the old
5220 <prgn>ldd</prgn> method, every package that uses
5221 <tt>libimlib</tt> would need to be recompiled so it
5222 would also depend on <tt>libdgf</tt> or it wouldn't run
5223 due to missing symbols. However with the new system,
5224 packages using <tt>libimlib</tt> can rely on
5225 <tt>libimlib</tt> itself having the dependency on
5226 <tt>libdgf</tt> and so they would not need rebuilding.
5227 </p>
5228 </footnote>
5229 </p>
5232 In the following sections, we will first describe where the
5233 various <tt>shlibs</tt> files are to be found, then how to
5234 use <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn>, and finally the <tt>shlibs</tt>
5235 file format and how to create them if your package contains a
5236 shared library.
5237 </p>
5239 <sect1>
5240 <heading>The <tt>shlibs</tt> files present on the system</heading>
5243 There are several places where <tt>shlibs</tt> files are
5244 found. The following list gives them in the order in which
5245 they are read by
5246 <qref id="pkg-dpkg-shlibdeps"><prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn></qref>.
5247 (The first one which gives the required information is used.)
5248 </p>
5251 <list>
5252 <item>
5253 <p><file>debian/shlibs.local</file></p>
5256 This lists overrides for this package. Its use is
5257 described below (see <ref id="shlibslocal">).
5258 </p>
5259 </item>
5261 <item>
5262 <p><file>/etc/dpkg/shlibs.override</file></p>
5265 This lists global overrides. This list is normally
5266 empty. It is maintained by the local system
5267 administrator.
5268 </p>
5269 </item>
5271 <item>
5272 <p><file>DEBIAN/shlibs</file> files in the "build directory"</p>
5275 When packages are being built, any
5276 <file>debian/shlibs</file> files are copied into the
5277 control file area of the temporary build directory and
5278 given the name <file>shlibs</file>. These files give
5279 details of any shared libraries included in the
5280 package.<footnote>
5281 An example may help here. Let us say that the
5282 source package <tt>foo</tt> generates two binary
5283 packages, <tt>libfoo2</tt> and
5284 <tt>foo-runtime</tt>. When building the binary
5285 packages, the two packages are created in the
5286 directories <file>debian/libfoo2</file> and
5287 <file>debian/foo-runtime</file> respectively.
5288 (<file>debian/tmp</file> could be used instead of one
5289 of these.) Since <tt>libfoo2</tt> provides the
5290 <tt>libfoo</tt> shared library, it will require a
5291 <tt>shlibs</tt> file, which will be installed in
5292 <file>debian/libfoo2/DEBIAN/shlibs</file>, eventually
5293 to become
5294 <file>/var/lib/dpkg/info/libfoo2.shlibs</file>. Then
5295 when <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> is run on the
5296 executable
5297 <file>debian/foo-runtime/usr/bin/foo-prog</file>, it
5298 will examine the
5299 <file>debian/libfoo2/DEBIAN/shlibs</file> file to
5300 determine whether <tt>foo-prog</tt>'s library
5301 dependencies are satisfied by any of the libraries
5302 provided by <tt>libfoo2</tt>. For this reason,
5303 <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> must only be run once
5304 all of the individual binary packages'
5305 <tt>shlibs</tt> files have been installed into the
5306 build directory.
5307 </footnote>
5308 </p>
5309 </item>
5311 <item>
5312 <p><file>/var/lib/dpkg/info/*.shlibs</file></p>
5315 These are the <file>shlibs</file> files corresponding to
5316 all of the packages installed on the system, and are
5317 maintained by the relevant package maintainers.
5318 </p>
5319 </item>
5321 <item>
5322 <p><file>/etc/dpkg/shlibs.default</file></p>
5325 This file lists any shared libraries whose packages
5326 have failed to provide correct <file>shlibs</file> files.
5327 It was used when the <file>shlibs</file> setup was first
5328 introduced, but it is now normally empty. It is
5329 maintained by the <tt>dpkg</tt> maintainer.
5330 </p>
5331 </item>
5332 </list>
5333 </p>
5334 </sect1>
5336 <sect1>
5337 <heading>How to use <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> and the
5338 <file>shlibs</file> files</heading>
5341 Put a call to
5342 <qref id="pkg-dpkg-shlibdeps"><prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn></qref>
5343 into your <file>debian/rules</file> file. If your package
5344 contains only compiled binaries and libraries (but no scripts),
5345 you can use a command such as:
5346 <example compact="compact">
5347 dpkg-shlibdeps debian/tmp/usr/bin/* debian/tmp/usr/sbin/* \
5348 debian/tmp/usr/lib/*
5349 </example>
5350 Otherwise, you will need to explicitly list the compiled
5351 binaries and libraries.<footnote>
5352 If you are using <tt>debhelper</tt>, the
5353 <prgn>dh_shlibdeps</prgn> program will do this work for
5354 you. It will also correctly handle multi-binary
5355 packages.
5356 </footnote>
5357 </p>
5360 This command puts the dependency information into the
5361 <file>debian/substvars</file> file, which is then used by
5362 <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn>. You will need to place a
5363 <tt>${shlibs:Depends}</tt> variable in the <tt>Depends</tt>
5364 field in the control file for this to work.
5365 </p>
5368 If <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> doesn't complain, you're
5369 done. If it does complain you might need to create your own
5370 <file>debian/shlibs.local</file> file, as explained below (see
5371 <ref id="shlibslocal">).
5372 </p>
5375 If you have multiple binary packages, you will need to call
5376 <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> on each one which contains
5377 compiled libraries or binaries. In such a case, you will
5378 need to use the <tt>-T</tt> option to the <tt>dpkg</tt>
5379 utilities to specify a different <file>substvars</file> file.
5380 </p>
5383 If you are creating a udeb for use in the Debian Installer,
5384 you will need to specify that <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn>
5385 should use the dependency line of type <tt>udeb</tt> by
5386 adding the <tt>-tudeb</tt> option<footnote>
5387 <prgn>dh_shlibdeps</prgn> from the <tt>debhelper</tt> suite
5388 will automatically add this option if it knows it is
5389 processing a udeb.
5390 </footnote>. If there is no dependency line of type <tt>udeb</tt>
5391 in the <file>shlibs</file> file, <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> will
5392 fall back to the regular dependency line.
5393 </p>
5396 For more details on dpkg-shlibdeps, please see
5397 <ref id="pkg-dpkg-shlibdeps"> and
5398 <manref name="dpkg-shlibdeps" section="1">.
5399 </p>
5400 </sect1>
5402 <sect1 id="shlibs">
5403 <heading>The <file>shlibs</file> File Format</heading>
5406 Each <file>shlibs</file> file has the same format. Lines
5407 beginning with <tt>#</tt> are considered to be comments and
5408 are ignored. Each line is of the form:
5409 <example compact="compact">
5410 [<var>type</var>: ]<var>library-name</var> <var>soname-version</var> <var>dependencies ...</var>
5411 </example>
5412 </p>
5415 We will explain this by reference to the example of the
5416 <tt>zlib1g</tt> package, which (at the time of writing)
5417 installs the shared library <file>/usr/lib/libz.so.1.1.3</file>.
5418 </p>
5421 <var>type</var> is an optional element that indicates the type
5422 of package for which the line is valid. The only type currently
5423 in use is <tt>udeb</tt>. The colon and space after the type are
5424 required.
5425 </p>
5428 <var>library-name</var> is the name of the shared library,
5429 in this case <tt>libz</tt>. (This must match the name part
5430 of the soname, see below.)
5431 </p>
5434 <var>soname-version</var> is the version part of the soname of
5435 the library. The soname is the thing that must exactly match
5436 for the library to be recognized by the dynamic linker, and is
5437 usually of the form
5438 <tt><var>name</var>.so.<var>major-version</var></tt>, in our
5439 example, <tt>libz.so.1</tt>.<footnote>
5440 This can be determined using the command
5441 <example compact="compact">
5442 objdump -p /usr/lib/libz.so.1.1.3 | grep SONAME
5443 </example>
5444 </footnote>
5445 The version part is the part which comes after
5446 <tt>.so.</tt>, so in our case, it is <tt>1</tt>.
5447 </p>
5450 <var>dependencies</var> has the same syntax as a dependency
5451 field in a binary package control file. It should give
5452 details of which packages are required to satisfy a binary
5453 built against the version of the library contained in the
5454 package. See <ref id="depsyntax"> for details.
5455 </p>
5458 In our example, if the first version of the <tt>zlib1g</tt>
5459 package which contained a minor number of at least
5460 <tt>1.3</tt> was <var>1:1.1.3-1</var>, then the
5461 <tt>shlibs</tt> entry for this library could say:
5462 <example compact="compact">
5463 libz 1 zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.3)
5464 </example>
5465 The version-specific dependency is to avoid warnings from
5466 the dynamic linker about using older shared libraries with
5467 newer binaries.
5468 </p>
5471 As zlib1g also provides a udeb containing the shared library,
5472 there would also be a second line:
5473 <example compact="compact">
5474 udeb: libz 1 zlib1g-udeb (>= 1:1.1.3)
5475 </example>
5476 </p>
5477 </sect1>
5479 <sect1>
5480 <heading>Providing a <file>shlibs</file> file</heading>
5483 If your package provides a shared library, you need to create
5484 a <file>shlibs</file> file following the format described above.
5485 It is usual to call this file <file>debian/shlibs</file> (but if
5486 you have multiple binary packages, you might want to call it
5487 <file>debian/shlibs.<var>package</var></file> instead). Then
5488 let <file>debian/rules</file> install it in the control area:
5489 <example compact="compact">
5490 install -m644 debian/shlibs debian/tmp/DEBIAN
5491 </example>
5492 or, in the case of a multi-binary package:
5493 <example compact="compact">
5494 install -m644 debian/shlibs.<var>package</var> debian/<var>package</var>/DEBIAN/shlibs
5495 </example>
5496 An alternative way of doing this is to create the
5497 <file>shlibs</file> file in the control area directly from
5498 <file>debian/rules</file> without using a <file>debian/shlibs</file>
5499 file at all,<footnote>
5500 This is what <prgn>dh_makeshlibs</prgn> in the
5501 <tt>debhelper</tt> suite does. If your package also has a udeb
5502 that provides a shared library, <prgn>dh_makeshlibs</prgn> can
5503 automatically generate the <tt>udeb:</tt> lines if you specify
5504 the name of the udeb with the <tt>--add-udeb</tt> option.
5505 </footnote>
5506 since the <file>debian/shlibs</file> file itself is ignored by
5507 <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn>.
5508 </p>
5511 As <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> reads the
5512 <file>DEBIAN/shlibs</file> files in all of the binary packages
5513 being built from this source package, all of the
5514 <file>DEBIAN/shlibs</file> files should be installed before
5515 <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> is called on any of the binary
5516 packages.
5517 </p>
5518 </sect1>
5520 <sect1 id="shlibslocal">
5521 <heading>Writing the <file>debian/shlibs.local</file> file</heading>
5524 This file is intended only as a <em>temporary</em> fix if
5525 your binaries or libraries depend on a library whose package
5526 does not yet provide a correct <file>shlibs</file> file.
5527 </p>
5530 We will assume that you are trying to package a binary
5531 <tt>foo</tt>. When you try running
5532 <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> you get the following error
5533 message (<tt>-O</tt> displays the dependency information on
5534 <tt>stdout</tt> instead of writing it to
5535 <tt>debian/substvars</tt>, and the lines have been wrapped
5536 for ease of reading):
5537 <example compact="compact">
5538 $ dpkg-shlibdeps -O debian/tmp/usr/bin/foo
5539 dpkg-shlibdeps: warning: unable to find dependency
5540 information for shared library libbar (soname 1,
5541 path /usr/lib/libbar.so.1, dependency field Depends)
5542 shlibs:Depends=libc6 (>= 2.2.2-2)
5543 </example>
5544 You can then run <prgn>ldd</prgn> on the binary to find the
5545 full location of the library concerned:
5546 <example compact="compact">
5547 $ ldd foo
5548 libbar.so.1 => /usr/lib/libbar.so.1 (0x4001e000)
5549 libc.so.6 => /lib/libc.so.6 (0x40032000)
5550 /lib/ld-linux.so.2 => /lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0x40000000)
5551 </example>
5552 So the <prgn>foo</prgn> binary depends on the
5553 <prgn>libbar</prgn> shared library, but no package seems to
5554 provide a <file>*.shlibs</file> file handling
5555 <file>libbar.so.1</file> in <file>/var/lib/dpkg/info/</file>. Let's
5556 determine the package responsible:
5557 <example compact="compact">
5558 $ dpkg -S /usr/lib/libbar.so.1
5559 bar1: /usr/lib/libbar.so.1
5560 $ dpkg -s bar1 | grep Version
5561 Version: 1.0-1
5562 </example>
5563 This tells us that the <tt>bar1</tt> package, version 1.0-1,
5564 is the one we are using. Now we can file a bug against the
5565 <tt>bar1</tt> package and create our own
5566 <file>debian/shlibs.local</file> to locally fix the problem.
5567 Including the following line into your
5568 <file>debian/shlibs.local</file> file:
5569 <example compact="compact">
5570 libbar 1 bar1 (>= 1.0-1)
5571 </example>
5572 should allow the package build to work.
5573 </p>
5576 As soon as the maintainer of <tt>bar1</tt> provides a
5577 correct <file>shlibs</file> file, you should remove this line
5578 from your <file>debian/shlibs.local</file> file. (You should
5579 probably also then have a versioned <tt>Build-Depends</tt>
5580 on <tt>bar1</tt> to help ensure that others do not have the
5581 same problem building your package.)
5582 </p>
5583 </sect1>
5585 </sect>
5587 </chapt>
5590 <chapt id="opersys"><heading>The Operating System</heading>
5592 <sect>
5593 <heading>File system hierarchy</heading>
5596 <sect1 id="fhs">
5597 <heading>File System Structure</heading>
5600 The location of all installed files and directories must
5601 comply with the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard (FHS),
5602 version 2.3, with the exceptions noted below, and except
5603 where doing so would violate other terms of Debian
5604 Policy. The following exceptions to the FHS apply:
5606 <enumlist>
5607 <item>
5609 The optional rules related to user specific
5610 configuration files for applications are stored in
5611 the user's home directory are relaxed. It is
5612 recommended that such files start with the
5613 '<tt>.</tt>' character (a "dot file"), and if an
5614 application needs to create more than one dot file
5615 then the preferred placement is in a subdirectory
5616 with a name starting with a '.' character, (a "dot
5617 directory"). In this case it is recommended the
5618 configuration files not start with the '.'
5619 character.
5620 </p>
5621 </item>
5622 <item>
5624 The requirement for amd64 to use <file>/lib64</file>
5625 for 64 bit binaries is removed.
5626 </p>
5627 </item>
5628 <item>
5630 The requirement for object files, internal binaries, and
5631 libraries, including <file>libc.so.*</file>, to be located
5632 directly under <file>/lib{,32}</file> and
5633 <file>/usr/lib{,32}</file> is amended, permitting files
5634 to instead be installed to
5635 <file>/lib/<var>triplet</var></file> and
5636 <file>/usr/lib/<var>triplet</var></file>, where
5637 <tt><var>triplet</var></tt> is the value returned by
5638 <tt>dpkg-architecture -qDEB_HOST_GNU_TYPE</tt> for the
5639 architecture of the package. Packages may <em>not</em>
5640 install files to any <var>triplet</var> path other
5641 than the one matching the architecture of that package;
5642 for instance, an <tt>Architecture: amd64</tt> package
5643 containing 32-bit x86 libraries may not install these
5644 libraries to <file>/usr/lib/i486-linux-gnu</file>.
5645 <footnote>
5646 This is necessary in order to reserve the directories for
5647 use in cross-installation of library packages from other
5648 architectures, as part of the planned deployment of
5649 <tt>multiarch</tt>.
5650 </footnote>
5651 </p>
5653 Applications may also use a single subdirectory under
5654 <file>/usr/lib/<var>triplet</var></file>.
5655 </p>
5657 The execution time linker/loader, ld*, must still be made
5658 available in the existing location under /lib or /lib64
5659 since this is part of the ELF ABI for the architecture.
5660 </p>
5661 </item>
5662 <item>
5664 The requirement that
5665 <file>/usr/local/share/man</file> be "synonymous"
5666 with <file>/usr/local/man</file> is relaxed to a
5667 recommendation</p>
5668 </item>
5669 <item>
5671 The requirement that windowmanagers with a single
5672 configuration file call it <file>system.*wmrc</file>
5673 is removed, as is the restriction that the window
5674 manager subdirectory be named identically to the
5675 window manager name itself.
5676 </p>
5677 </item>
5678 <item>
5680 The requirement that boot manager configuration
5681 files live in <file>/etc</file>, or at least are
5682 symlinked there, is relaxed to a recommendation.
5683 </p>
5684 </item>
5685 <item>
5687 The following directories in the root filesystem are
5688 additionally allowed: <file>/sys</file> and
5689 <file>/selinux</file>. <footnote>These directories
5690 are used as mount points to mount virtual filesystems
5691 to get access to kernel information.</footnote>
5692 </p>
5693 </item>
5694 </enumlist>
5696 </p>
5698 The version of this document referred here can be
5699 found in the <tt>debian-policy</tt> package or on <url
5700 id="http://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/fhs/"
5701 name="FHS (Debian copy)"> alongside this manual (or, if
5702 you have the <package>debian-policy</package> installed,
5703 you can try <url
5704 id="file:///usr/share/doc/debian-policy/fhs/" name="FHS
5705 (local copy)">). The
5706 latest version, which may be a more recent version, may
5707 be found on
5708 <url id="http://www.pathname.com/fhs/" name="FHS (upstream)">.
5709 Specific questions about following the standard may be
5710 asked on the <tt>debian-devel</tt> mailing list, or
5711 referred to the FHS mailing list (see the
5712 <url id="http://www.pathname.com/fhs/" name="FHS web site"> for
5713 more information).
5714 </p>
5715 </sect1>
5717 <sect1>
5718 <heading>Site-specific programs</heading>
5721 As mandated by the FHS, packages must not place any
5722 files in <file>/usr/local</file>, either by putting them in
5723 the file system archive to be unpacked by <prgn>dpkg</prgn>
5724 or by manipulating them in their maintainer scripts.
5725 </p>
5728 However, the package may create empty directories below
5729 <file>/usr/local</file> so that the system administrator knows
5730 where to place site-specific files. These are not
5731 directories <em>in</em> <file>/usr/local</file>, but are
5732 children of directories in <file>/usr/local</file>. These
5733 directories (<file>/usr/local/*/dir/</file>)
5734 should be removed on package removal if they are
5735 empty.
5736 </p>
5739 Note that this applies only to
5740 directories <em>below</em> <file>/usr/local</file>,
5741 not <em>in</em> <file>/usr/local</file>. Packages must
5742 not create sub-directories in the
5743 directory <file>/usr/local</file> itself, except those
5744 listed in FHS, section 4.5. However, you may create
5745 directories below them as you wish. You must not remove
5746 any of the directories listed in 4.5, even if you created
5747 them.
5748 </p>
5751 Since <file>/usr/local</file> can be mounted read-only from a
5752 remote server, these directories must be created and
5753 removed by the <prgn>postinst</prgn> and <prgn>prerm</prgn>
5754 maintainer scripts and not be included in the
5755 <file>.deb</file> archive. These scripts must not fail if
5756 either of these operations fail.
5757 </p>
5760 For example, the <tt>emacsen-common</tt> package could
5761 contain something like
5762 <example compact="compact">
5763 if [ ! -e /usr/local/share/emacs ]
5764 then
5765 if mkdir /usr/local/share/emacs 2>/dev/null
5766 then
5767 chown root:staff /usr/local/share/emacs
5768 chmod 2775 /usr/local/share/emacs
5771 </example>
5772 in its <prgn>postinst</prgn> script, and
5773 <example compact="compact">
5774 rmdir /usr/local/share/emacs/site-lisp 2>/dev/null || true
5775 rmdir /usr/local/share/emacs 2>/dev/null || true
5776 </example>
5777 in the <prgn>prerm</prgn> script. (Note that this form is
5778 used to ensure that if the script is interrupted, the
5779 directory <file>/usr/local/share/emacs</file> will still be
5780 removed.)
5781 </p>
5784 If you do create a directory in <file>/usr/local</file> for
5785 local additions to a package, you should ensure that
5786 settings in <file>/usr/local</file> take precedence over the
5787 equivalents in <file>/usr</file>.
5788 </p>
5791 However, because <file>/usr/local</file> and its contents are
5792 for exclusive use of the local administrator, a package
5793 must not rely on the presence or absence of files or
5794 directories in <file>/usr/local</file> for normal operation.
5795 </p>
5798 The <file>/usr/local</file> directory itself and all the
5799 subdirectories created by the package should (by default) have
5800 permissions 2775 (group-writable and set-group-id) and be
5801 owned by <tt>root:staff</tt>.
5802 </p>
5803 </sect1>
5805 <sect1>
5806 <heading>The system-wide mail directory</heading>
5808 The system-wide mail directory
5809 is <file>/var/mail</file>. This directory is part of the
5810 base system and should not be owned by any particular mail
5811 agents. The use of the old
5812 location <file>/var/spool/mail</file> is deprecated, even
5813 though the spool may still be physically located there.
5814 </p>
5815 </sect1>
5816 </sect>
5818 <sect>
5819 <heading>Users and groups</heading>
5821 <sect1>
5822 <heading>Introduction</heading>
5824 The Debian system can be configured to use either plain or
5825 shadow passwords.
5826 </p>
5829 Some user ids (UIDs) and group ids (GIDs) are reserved
5830 globally for use by certain packages. Because some
5831 packages need to include files which are owned by these
5832 users or groups, or need the ids compiled into binaries,
5833 these ids must be used on any Debian system only for the
5834 purpose for which they are allocated. This is a serious
5835 restriction, and we should avoid getting in the way of
5836 local administration policies. In particular, many sites
5837 allocate users and/or local system groups starting at 100.
5838 </p>
5841 Apart from this we should have dynamically allocated ids,
5842 which should by default be arranged in some sensible
5843 order, but the behavior should be configurable.
5844 </p>
5847 Packages other than <tt>base-passwd</tt> must not modify
5848 <file>/etc/passwd</file>, <file>/etc/shadow</file>,
5849 <file>/etc/group</file> or <file>/etc/gshadow</file>.
5850 </p>
5851 </sect1>
5853 <sect1>
5854 <heading>UID and GID classes</heading>
5856 The UID and GID numbers are divided into classes as
5857 follows:
5858 <taglist>
5859 <tag>0-99:</tag>
5860 <item>
5862 Globally allocated by the Debian project, the same
5863 on every Debian system. These ids will appear in
5864 the <file>passwd</file> and <file>group</file> files of all
5865 Debian systems, new ids in this range being added
5866 automatically as the <tt>base-passwd</tt> package is
5867 updated.
5868 </p>
5871 Packages which need a single statically allocated
5872 uid or gid should use one of these; their
5873 maintainers should ask the <tt>base-passwd</tt>
5874 maintainer for ids.
5875 </p>
5876 </item>
5878 <tag>100-999:</tag>
5879 <item>
5881 Dynamically allocated system users and groups.
5882 Packages which need a user or group, but can have
5883 this user or group allocated dynamically and
5884 differently on each system, should use <tt>adduser
5885 --system</tt> to create the group and/or user.
5886 <prgn>adduser</prgn> will check for the existence of
5887 the user or group, and if necessary choose an unused
5888 id based on the ranges specified in
5889 <file>adduser.conf</file>.
5890 </p>
5891 </item>
5893 <tag>1000-59999:</tag>
5894 <item>
5896 Dynamically allocated user accounts. By default
5897 <prgn>adduser</prgn> will choose UIDs and GIDs for
5898 user accounts in this range, though
5899 <file>adduser.conf</file> may be used to modify this
5900 behavior.
5901 </p>
5902 </item>
5904 <tag>60000-64999:</tag>
5905 <item>
5907 Globally allocated by the Debian project, but only
5908 created on demand. The ids are allocated centrally
5909 and statically, but the actual accounts are only
5910 created on users' systems on demand.
5911 </p>
5914 These ids are for packages which are obscure or
5915 which require many statically-allocated ids. These
5916 packages should check for and create the accounts in
5917 <file>/etc/passwd</file> or <file>/etc/group</file> (using
5918 <prgn>adduser</prgn> if it has this facility) if
5919 necessary. Packages which are likely to require
5920 further allocations should have a "hole" left after
5921 them in the allocation, to give them room to
5922 grow.
5923 </p>
5924 </item>
5926 <tag>65000-65533:</tag>
5927 <item>
5928 <p>Reserved.</p>
5929 </item>
5931 <tag>65534:</tag>
5932 <item>
5934 User <tt>nobody</tt>. The corresponding gid refers
5935 to the group <tt>nogroup</tt>.
5936 </p>
5937 </item>
5939 <tag>65535:</tag>
5940 <item>
5942 <tt>(uid_t)(-1) == (gid_t)(-1)</tt> <em>must
5943 not</em> be used, because it is the error return
5944 sentinel value.
5945 </p>
5946 </item>
5947 </taglist>
5948 </p>
5949 </sect1>
5950 </sect>
5952 <sect id="sysvinit">
5953 <heading>System run levels and <file>init.d</file> scripts</heading>
5955 <sect1 id="/etc/init.d">
5956 <heading>Introduction</heading>
5959 The <file>/etc/init.d</file> directory contains the scripts
5960 executed by <prgn>init</prgn> at boot time and when the
5961 init state (or "runlevel") is changed (see <manref
5962 name="init" section="8">).
5963 </p>
5966 There are at least two different, yet functionally
5967 equivalent, ways of handling these scripts. For the sake
5968 of simplicity, this document describes only the symbolic
5969 link method. However, it must not be assumed by maintainer
5970 scripts that this method is being used, and any automated
5971 manipulation of the various runlevel behaviors by
5972 maintainer scripts must be performed using
5973 <prgn>update-rc.d</prgn> as described below and not by
5974 manually installing or removing symlinks. For information
5975 on the implementation details of the other method,
5976 implemented in the <tt>file-rc</tt> package, please refer
5977 to the documentation of that package.
5978 </p>
5981 These scripts are referenced by symbolic links in the
5982 <file>/etc/rc<var>n</var>.d</file> directories. When changing
5983 runlevels, <prgn>init</prgn> looks in the directory
5984 <file>/etc/rc<var>n</var>.d</file> for the scripts it should
5985 execute, where <tt><var>n</var></tt> is the runlevel that
5986 is being changed to, or <tt>S</tt> for the boot-up
5987 scripts.
5988 </p>
5991 The names of the links all have the form
5992 <file>S<var>mm</var><var>script</var></file> or
5993 <file>K<var>mm</var><var>script</var></file> where
5994 <var>mm</var> is a two-digit number and <var>script</var>
5995 is the name of the script (this should be the same as the
5996 name of the actual script in <file>/etc/init.d</file>).
5997 </p>
6000 When <prgn>init</prgn> changes runlevel first the targets
6001 of the links whose names start with a <tt>K</tt> are
6002 executed, each with the single argument <tt>stop</tt>,
6003 followed by the scripts prefixed with an <tt>S</tt>, each
6004 with the single argument <tt>start</tt>. (The links are
6005 those in the <file>/etc/rc<var>n</var>.d</file> directory
6006 corresponding to the new runlevel.) The <tt>K</tt> links
6007 are responsible for killing services and the <tt>S</tt>
6008 link for starting services upon entering the runlevel.
6009 </p>
6012 For example, if we are changing from runlevel 2 to
6013 runlevel 3, init will first execute all of the <tt>K</tt>
6014 prefixed scripts it finds in <file>/etc/rc3.d</file>, and then
6015 all of the <tt>S</tt> prefixed scripts in that directory.
6016 The links starting with <tt>K</tt> will cause the
6017 referred-to file to be executed with an argument of
6018 <tt>stop</tt>, and the <tt>S</tt> links with an argument
6019 of <tt>start</tt>.
6020 </p>
6023 The two-digit number <var>mm</var> is used to determine
6024 the order in which to run the scripts: low-numbered links
6025 have their scripts run first. For example, the
6026 <tt>K20</tt> scripts will be executed before the
6027 <tt>K30</tt> scripts. This is used when a certain service
6028 must be started before another. For example, the name
6029 server <prgn>bind</prgn> might need to be started before
6030 the news server <prgn>inn</prgn> so that <prgn>inn</prgn>
6031 can set up its access lists. In this case, the script
6032 that starts <prgn>bind</prgn> would have a lower number
6033 than the script that starts <prgn>inn</prgn> so that it
6034 runs first:
6035 <example compact="compact">
6036 /etc/rc2.d/S17bind
6037 /etc/rc2.d/S70inn
6038 </example>
6039 </p>
6042 The two runlevels 0 (halt) and 6 (reboot) are slightly
6043 different. In these runlevels, the links with an
6044 <tt>S</tt> prefix are still called after those with a
6045 <tt>K</tt> prefix, but they too are called with the single
6046 argument <tt>stop</tt>.
6047 </p>
6048 </sect1>
6050 <sect1>
6051 <heading>Writing the scripts</heading>
6054 Packages that include daemons for system services should
6055 place scripts in <file>/etc/init.d</file> to start or stop
6056 services at boot time or during a change of runlevel.
6057 These scripts should be named
6058 <file>/etc/init.d/<var>package</var></file>, and they should
6059 accept one argument, saying what to do:
6061 <taglist>
6062 <tag><tt>start</tt></tag>
6063 <item>start the service,</item>
6065 <tag><tt>stop</tt></tag>
6066 <item>stop the service,</item>
6068 <tag><tt>restart</tt></tag>
6069 <item>stop and restart the service if it's already running,
6070 otherwise start the service</item>
6072 <tag><tt>reload</tt></tag>
6073 <item><p>cause the configuration of the service to be
6074 reloaded without actually stopping and restarting
6075 the service,</item>
6077 <tag><tt>force-reload</tt></tag>
6078 <item>cause the configuration to be reloaded if the
6079 service supports this, otherwise restart the
6080 service.</item>
6081 </taglist>
6083 The <tt>start</tt>, <tt>stop</tt>, <tt>restart</tt>, and
6084 <tt>force-reload</tt> options should be supported by all
6085 scripts in <file>/etc/init.d</file>, the <tt>reload</tt>
6086 option is optional.
6087 </p>
6090 The <file>init.d</file> scripts must ensure that they will
6091 behave sensibly (i.e., returning success and not starting
6092 multiple copies of a service) if invoked with <tt>start</tt>
6093 when the service is already running, or with <tt>stop</tt>
6094 when it isn't, and that they don't kill unfortunately-named
6095 user processes. The best way to achieve this is usually to
6096 use <prgn>start-stop-daemon</prgn> with the <tt>--oknodo</tt>
6097 option.
6098 </p>
6101 If a service reloads its configuration automatically (as
6102 in the case of <prgn>cron</prgn>, for example), the
6103 <tt>reload</tt> option of the <file>init.d</file> script
6104 should behave as if the configuration has been reloaded
6105 successfully.
6106 </p>
6109 The <file>/etc/init.d</file> scripts must be treated as
6110 configuration files, either (if they are present in the
6111 package, that is, in the .deb file) by marking them as
6112 <tt>conffile</tt>s, or, (if they do not exist in the .deb)
6113 by managing them correctly in the maintainer scripts (see
6114 <ref id="config-files">). This is important since we want
6115 to give the local system administrator the chance to adapt
6116 the scripts to the local system, e.g., to disable a
6117 service without de-installing the package, or to specify
6118 some special command line options when starting a service,
6119 while making sure their changes aren't lost during the next
6120 package upgrade.
6121 </p>
6124 These scripts should not fail obscurely when the
6125 configuration files remain but the package has been
6126 removed, as configuration files remain on the system after
6127 the package has been removed. Only when <prgn>dpkg</prgn>
6128 is executed with the <tt>--purge</tt> option will
6129 configuration files be removed. In particular, as the
6130 <file>/etc/init.d/<var>package</var></file> script itself is
6131 usually a <tt>conffile</tt>, it will remain on the system
6132 if the package is removed but not purged. Therefore, you
6133 should include a <tt>test</tt> statement at the top of the
6134 script, like this:
6135 <example compact="compact">
6136 test -f <var>program-executed-later-in-script</var> || exit 0
6137 </example>
6138 </p>
6141 Often there are some variables in the <file>init.d</file>
6142 scripts whose values control the behavior of the scripts,
6143 and which a system administrator is likely to want to
6144 change. As the scripts themselves are frequently
6145 <tt>conffile</tt>s, modifying them requires that the
6146 administrator merge in their changes each time the package
6147 is upgraded and the <tt>conffile</tt> changes. To ease
6148 the burden on the system administrator, such configurable
6149 values should not be placed directly in the script.
6150 Instead, they should be placed in a file in
6151 <file>/etc/default</file>, which typically will have the same
6152 base name as the <file>init.d</file> script. This extra file
6153 should be sourced by the script when the script runs. It
6154 must contain only variable settings and comments in SUSv3
6155 <prgn>sh</prgn> format. It may either be a
6156 <tt>conffile</tt> or a configuration file maintained by
6157 the package maintainer scripts. See <ref id="config-files">
6158 for more details.
6159 </p>
6162 To ensure that vital configurable values are always
6163 available, the <file>init.d</file> script should set default
6164 values for each of the shell variables it uses, either
6165 before sourcing the <file>/etc/default/</file> file or
6166 afterwards using something like the <tt>:
6167 ${VAR:=default}</tt> syntax. Also, the <file>init.d</file>
6168 script must behave sensibly and not fail if the
6169 <file>/etc/default</file> file is deleted.
6170 </p>
6173 <file>/var/run</file> and <file>/var/lock</file> may be mounted
6174 as temporary filesystems<footnote>
6175 For example, using the <tt>RAMRUN</tt> and <tt>RAMLOCK</tt>
6176 options in <file>/etc/default/rcS</file>.
6177 </footnote>, so the <file>init.d</file> scripts must handle this
6178 correctly. This will typically amount to creating any required
6179 subdirectories dynamically when the <file>init.d</file> script
6180 is run, rather than including them in the package and relying on
6181 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> to create them.
6182 </p>
6183 </sect1>
6185 <sect1>
6186 <heading>Interfacing with the initscript system</heading>
6189 Maintainers should use the abstraction layer provided by
6190 the <prgn>update-rc.d</prgn> and <prgn>invoke-rc.d</prgn>
6191 programs to deal with initscripts in their packages'
6192 scripts such as <prgn>postinst</prgn>, <prgn>prerm</prgn>
6193 and <prgn>postrm</prgn>.
6194 </p>
6197 Directly managing the /etc/rc?.d links and directly
6198 invoking the <file>/etc/init.d/</file> initscripts should
6199 be done only by packages providing the initscript
6200 subsystem (such as <prgn>sysv-rc</prgn> and
6201 <prgn>file-rc</prgn>).
6202 </p>
6204 <sect2>
6205 <heading>Managing the links</heading>
6208 The program <prgn>update-rc.d</prgn> is provided for
6209 package maintainers to arrange for the proper creation and
6210 removal of <file>/etc/rc<var>n</var>.d</file> symbolic links,
6211 or their functional equivalent if another method is being
6212 used. This may be used by maintainers in their packages'
6213 <prgn>postinst</prgn> and <prgn>postrm</prgn> scripts.
6214 </p>
6217 You must not include any <file>/etc/rc<var>n</var>.d</file>
6218 symbolic links in the actual archive or manually create or
6219 remove the symbolic links in maintainer scripts; you must
6220 use the <prgn>update-rc.d</prgn> program instead. (The
6221 former will fail if an alternative method of maintaining
6222 runlevel information is being used.) You must not include
6223 the <file>/etc/rc<var>n</var>.d</file> directories themselves
6224 in the archive either. (Only the <tt>sysvinit</tt>
6225 package may do so.)
6226 </p>
6229 By default <prgn>update-rc.d</prgn> will start services in
6230 each of the multi-user state runlevels (2, 3, 4, and 5)
6231 and stop them in the halt runlevel (0), the single-user
6232 runlevel (1) and the reboot runlevel (6). The system
6233 administrator will have the opportunity to customize
6234 runlevels by simply adding, moving, or removing the
6235 symbolic links in <file>/etc/rc<var>n</var>.d</file> if
6236 symbolic links are being used, or by modifying
6237 <file>/etc/runlevel.conf</file> if the <tt>file-rc</tt> method
6238 is being used.
6239 </p>
6242 To get the default behavior for your package, put in your
6243 <prgn>postinst</prgn> script
6244 <example compact="compact">
6245 update-rc.d <var>package</var> defaults
6246 </example>
6247 and in your <prgn>postrm</prgn>
6248 <example compact="compact">
6249 if [ "$1" = purge ]; then
6250 update-rc.d <var>package</var> remove
6252 </example>. Note that if your package changes runlevels
6253 or priority, you may have to remove and recreate the links,
6254 since otherwise the old links may persist. Refer to the
6255 documentation of <prgn>update-rc.d</prgn>.
6256 </p>
6259 This will use a default sequence number of 20. If it does
6260 not matter when or in which order the <file>init.d</file>
6261 script is run, use this default. If it does, then you
6262 should talk to the maintainer of the <prgn>sysvinit</prgn>
6263 package or post to <tt>debian-devel</tt>, and they will
6264 help you choose a number.
6265 </p>
6268 For more information about using <tt>update-rc.d</tt>,
6269 please consult its man page <manref name="update-rc.d"
6270 section="8">.
6271 </p>
6272 </sect2>
6274 <sect2>
6275 <heading>Running initscripts</heading>
6277 The program <prgn>invoke-rc.d</prgn> is provided to make
6278 it easier for package maintainers to properly invoke an
6279 initscript, obeying runlevel and other locally-defined
6280 constraints that might limit a package's right to start,
6281 stop and otherwise manage services. This program may be
6282 used by maintainers in their packages' scripts.
6283 </p>
6286 The package maintainer scripts must use
6287 <prgn>invoke-rc.d</prgn> to invoke the
6288 <file>/etc/init.d/*</file> initscripts, instead of
6289 calling them directly.
6290 </p>
6293 By default, <prgn>invoke-rc.d</prgn> will pass any
6294 action requests (start, stop, reload, restart...) to the
6295 <file>/etc/init.d</file> script, filtering out requests
6296 to start or restart a service out of its intended
6297 runlevels.
6298 </p>
6301 Most packages will simply need to change:
6302 <example compact="compact">/etc/init.d/&lt;package&gt;
6303 &lt;action&gt;</example> in their <prgn>postinst</prgn>
6304 and <prgn>prerm</prgn> scripts to:
6305 <example compact="compact">
6306 if which invoke-rc.d >/dev/null 2>&1; then
6307 invoke-rc.d <var>package</var> &lt;action&gt;
6308 else
6309 /etc/init.d/<var>package</var> &lt;action&gt;
6311 </example>
6312 </p>
6315 A package should register its initscript services using
6316 <prgn>update-rc.d</prgn> before it tries to invoke them
6317 using <prgn>invoke-rc.d</prgn>. Invocation of
6318 unregistered services may fail.
6319 </p>
6322 For more information about using
6323 <prgn>invoke-rc.d</prgn>, please consult its man page
6324 <manref name="invoke-rc.d" section="8">.
6325 </p>
6326 </sect2>
6327 </sect1>
6329 <sect1>
6330 <heading>Boot-time initialization</heading>
6333 There used to be another directory, <file>/etc/rc.boot</file>,
6334 which contained scripts which were run once per machine
6335 boot. This has been deprecated in favour of links from
6336 <file>/etc/rcS.d</file> to files in <file>/etc/init.d</file> as
6337 described in <ref id="/etc/init.d">. Packages must not
6338 place files in <file>/etc/rc.boot</file>.
6339 </p>
6340 </sect1>
6342 <sect1>
6343 <heading>Example</heading>
6346 An example on which you can base your
6347 <file>/etc/init.d</file> scripts is found in
6348 <file>/etc/init.d/skeleton</file>.
6349 </p>
6351 </sect1>
6352 </sect>
6354 <sect>
6355 <heading>Console messages from <file>init.d</file> scripts</heading>
6358 This section describes the formats to be used for messages
6359 written to standard output by the <file>/etc/init.d</file>
6360 scripts. The intent is to improve the consistency of
6361 Debian's startup and shutdown look and feel. For this
6362 reason, please look very carefully at the details. We want
6363 the messages to have the same format in terms of wording,
6364 spaces, punctuation and case of letters.
6365 </p>
6368 Here is a list of overall rules that should be used for
6369 messages generated by <file>/etc/init.d</file> scripts.
6370 </p>
6373 <list>
6374 <item>
6375 The message should fit in one line (fewer than 80
6376 characters), start with a capital letter and end with
6377 a period (<tt>.</tt>) and line feed (<tt>"\n"</tt>).
6378 </item>
6380 <item>
6381 If the script is performing some time consuming task in
6382 the background (not merely starting or stopping a
6383 program, for instance), an ellipsis (three dots:
6384 <tt>...</tt>) should be output to the screen, with no
6385 leading or tailing whitespace or line feeds.
6386 </item>
6388 <item>
6389 The messages should appear as if the computer is telling
6390 the user what it is doing (politely :-), but should not
6391 mention "it" directly. For example, instead of:
6392 <example compact="compact">
6393 I'm starting network daemons: nfsd mountd.
6394 </example>
6395 the message should say
6396 <example compact="compact">
6397 Starting network daemons: nfsd mountd.
6398 </example>
6399 </item>
6400 </list>
6401 </p>
6404 <tt>init.d</tt> script should use the following standard
6405 message formats for the situations enumerated below.
6406 </p>
6409 <list>
6410 <item>
6411 <p>When daemons are started</p>
6414 If the script starts one or more daemons, the output
6415 should look like this (a single line, no leading
6416 spaces):
6417 <example compact="compact">
6418 Starting <var>description</var>: <var>daemon-1</var> ... <var>daemon-n</var>.
6419 </example>
6420 The <var>description</var> should describe the
6421 subsystem the daemon or set of daemons are part of,
6422 while <var>daemon-1</var> up to <var>daemon-n</var>
6423 denote each daemon's name (typically the file name of
6424 the program).
6425 </p>
6428 For example, the output of <file>/etc/init.d/lpd</file>
6429 would look like:
6430 <example compact="compact">
6431 Starting printer spooler: lpd.
6432 </example>
6433 </p>
6436 This can be achieved by saying
6437 <example compact="compact">
6438 echo -n "Starting printer spooler: lpd"
6439 start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --exec /usr/sbin/lpd
6440 echo "."
6441 </example>
6442 in the script. If there are more than one daemon to
6443 start, the output should look like this:
6444 <example compact="compact">
6445 echo -n "Starting remote file system services:"
6446 echo -n " nfsd"; start-stop-daemon --start --quiet nfsd
6447 echo -n " mountd"; start-stop-daemon --start --quiet mountd
6448 echo -n " ugidd"; start-stop-daemon --start --quiet ugidd
6449 echo "."
6450 </example>
6451 This makes it possible for the user to see what is
6452 happening and when the final daemon has been started.
6453 Care should be taken in the placement of white spaces:
6454 in the example above the system administrators can
6455 easily comment out a line if they don't want to start
6456 a specific daemon, while the displayed message still
6457 looks good.
6458 </p>
6459 </item>
6461 <item>
6462 <p>When a system parameter is being set</p>
6465 If you have to set up different system parameters
6466 during the system boot, you should use this format:
6467 <example compact="compact">
6468 Setting <var>parameter</var> to "<var>value</var>".
6469 </example>
6470 </p>
6473 You can use a statement such as the following to get
6474 the quotes right:
6475 <example compact="compact">
6476 echo "Setting DNS domainname to \"$domainname\"."
6477 </example>
6478 </p>
6481 Note that the same symbol (<tt>"</tt>) <!-- " --> is used
6482 for the left and right quotation marks. A grave accent
6483 (<tt>`</tt>) is not a quote character; neither is an
6484 apostrophe (<tt>'</tt>).
6485 </p>
6486 </item>
6488 <item>
6489 <p>When a daemon is stopped or restarted</p>
6492 When you stop or restart a daemon, you should issue a
6493 message identical to the startup message, except that
6494 <tt>Starting</tt> is replaced with <tt>Stopping</tt>
6495 or <tt>Restarting</tt> respectively.
6496 </p>
6499 For example, stopping the printer daemon will look like
6500 this:
6501 <example compact="compact">
6502 Stopping printer spooler: lpd.
6503 </example>
6504 </p>
6505 </item>
6507 <item>
6508 <p>When something is executed</p>
6511 There are several examples where you have to run a
6512 program at system startup or shutdown to perform a
6513 specific task, for example, setting the system's clock
6514 using <prgn>netdate</prgn> or killing all processes
6515 when the system shuts down. Your message should look
6516 like this:
6517 <example compact="compact">
6518 Doing something very useful...done.
6519 </example>
6520 You should print the <tt>done.</tt> immediately after
6521 the job has been completed, so that the user is
6522 informed why they have to wait. You can get this
6523 behavior by saying
6524 <example compact="compact">
6525 echo -n "Doing something very useful..."
6526 do_something
6527 echo "done."
6528 </example>
6529 in your script.
6530 </p>
6531 </item>
6533 <item>
6534 <p>When the configuration is reloaded</p>
6537 When a daemon is forced to reload its configuration
6538 files you should use the following format:
6539 <example compact="compact">
6540 Reloading <var>description</var> configuration...done.
6541 </example>
6542 where <var>description</var> is the same as in the
6543 daemon starting message.
6544 </p>
6545 </item>
6546 </list>
6547 </p>
6548 </sect>
6550 <sect>
6551 <heading>Cron jobs</heading>
6554 Packages must not modify the configuration file
6555 <file>/etc/crontab</file>, and they must not modify the files in
6556 <file>/var/spool/cron/crontabs</file>.</p>
6559 If a package wants to install a job that has to be executed
6560 via cron, it should place a file with the name of the
6561 package in one or more of the following directories:
6562 <example compact="compact">
6563 /etc/cron.hourly
6564 /etc/cron.daily
6565 /etc/cron.weekly
6566 /etc/cron.monthly
6567 </example>
6568 As these directory names imply, the files within them are
6569 executed on an hourly, daily, weekly, or monthly basis,
6570 respectively. The exact times are listed in
6571 <file>/etc/crontab</file>.</p>
6574 All files installed in any of these directories must be
6575 scripts (e.g., shell scripts or Perl scripts) so that they
6576 can easily be modified by the local system administrator.
6577 In addition, they must be treated as configuration files.
6578 </p>
6581 If a certain job has to be executed at some other frequency or
6582 at a specific time, the package should install a file
6583 <file>/etc/cron.d/<var>package</var></file>. This file uses the
6584 same syntax as <file>/etc/crontab</file> and is processed by
6585 <prgn>cron</prgn> automatically. The file must also be
6586 treated as a configuration file. (Note that entries in the
6587 <file>/etc/cron.d</file> directory are not handled by
6588 <prgn>anacron</prgn>. Thus, you should only use this
6589 directory for jobs which may be skipped if the system is not
6590 running.)</p>
6592 Unlike <file>crontab</file> files described in the IEEE Std
6593 1003.1-2008 (POSIX.1) available from
6594 <url id="http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/"
6595 name="The Open Group">, the files in
6596 <file>/etc/cron.d</file> and the file
6597 <file>/etc/crontab</file> have seven fields; namely:
6598 <enumlist>
6599 <item>Minute [0,59]</item>
6600 <item>Hour [0,23]</item>
6601 <item>Day of the month [1,31]</item>
6602 <item>Month of the year [1,12]</item>
6603 <item>Day of the week ([0,6] with 0=Sunday)</item>
6604 <item>Username</item>
6605 <item>Command to be run</item>
6606 </enumlist>
6607 Ranges of numbers are allowed. Ranges are two numbers
6608 separated with a hyphen. The specified range is inclusive.
6609 Lists are allowed. A list is a set of numbers (or ranges)
6610 separated by commas. Step values can be used in conjunction
6611 with ranges.
6612 </p>
6615 The scripts or <tt>crontab</tt> entries in these directories should
6616 check if all necessary programs are installed before they
6617 try to execute them. Otherwise, problems will arise when a
6618 package was removed but not purged since configuration files
6619 are kept on the system in this situation.
6620 </p>
6623 Any <tt>cron</tt> daemon must provide
6624 <file>/usr/bin/crontab</file> and support normal
6625 <tt>crontab</tt> entries as specified in POSIX. The daemon
6626 must also support names for days and months, ranges, and
6627 step values. It has to support <file>/etc/crontab</file>,
6628 and correctly execute the scripts in
6629 <file>/etc/cron.d</file>. The daemon must also correctly
6630 execute scripts in
6631 <file>/etc/cron.{hourly,daily,weekly,monthly}</file>.
6632 </p>
6633 </sect>
6635 <sect id="menus">
6636 <heading>Menus</heading>
6639 The Debian <tt>menu</tt> package provides a standard
6640 interface between packages providing applications and
6641 <em>menu programs</em> (either X window managers or
6642 text-based menu programs such as <prgn>pdmenu</prgn>).
6643 </p>
6646 All packages that provide applications that need not be
6647 passed any special command line arguments for normal
6648 operation should register a menu entry for those
6649 applications, so that users of the <tt>menu</tt> package
6650 will automatically get menu entries in their window
6651 managers, as well in shells like <tt>pdmenu</tt>.
6652 </p>
6655 Menu entries should follow the current menu policy.
6656 </p>
6659 The menu policy can be found in the <tt>menu-policy</tt>
6660 files in the <tt>debian-policy</tt> package.
6661 It is also available from the Debian web mirrors at
6662 <tt><url name="/doc/packaging-manuals/menu-policy/"
6663 id="http://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/menu-policy/"></tt>.
6664 </p>
6667 Please also refer to the <em>Debian Menu System</em>
6668 documentation that comes with the <package>menu</package>
6669 package for information about how to register your
6670 applications.
6671 </p>
6672 </sect>
6674 <sect id="mime">
6675 <heading>Multimedia handlers</heading>
6678 MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions, RFCs 2045-2049)
6679 is a mechanism for encoding files and data streams and
6680 providing meta-information about them, in particular their
6681 type (e.g. audio or video) and format (e.g. PNG, HTML,
6682 MP3).
6683 </p>
6686 Registration of MIME type handlers allows programs like mail
6687 user agents and web browsers to invoke these handlers to
6688 view, edit or display MIME types they don't support directly.
6689 </p>
6692 Packages which provide the ability to view/show/play,
6693 compose, edit or print MIME types should register themselves
6694 as such following the current MIME support policy.
6695 </p>
6698 The MIME support policy can be found in the <tt>mime-policy</tt>
6699 files in the <tt>debian-policy</tt> package.
6700 It is also available from the Debian web mirrors at
6701 <tt><url name="/doc/packaging-manuals/mime-policy/"
6702 id="http://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/mime-policy/"></tt>.
6703 </p>
6705 </sect>
6707 <sect>
6708 <heading>Keyboard configuration</heading>
6711 To achieve a consistent keyboard configuration so that all
6712 applications interpret a keyboard event the same way, all
6713 programs in the Debian distribution must be configured to
6714 comply with the following guidelines.
6715 </p>
6718 The following keys must have the specified interpretations:
6720 <taglist>
6721 <tag><tt>&lt;--</tt></tag>
6722 <item>delete the character to the left of the cursor</item>
6724 <tag><tt>Delete</tt></tag>
6725 <item>delete the character to the right of the cursor</item>
6727 <tag><tt>Control+H</tt></tag>
6728 <item>emacs: the help prefix</item>
6729 </taglist>
6731 The interpretation of any keyboard events should be
6732 independent of the terminal that is used, be it a virtual
6733 console, an X terminal emulator, an rlogin/telnet session,
6734 etc.
6735 </p>
6738 The following list explains how the different programs
6739 should be set up to achieve this:
6740 </p>
6743 <list>
6744 <item>
6745 <tt>&lt;--</tt> generates <tt>KB_BackSpace</tt> in X.
6746 </item>
6748 <item>
6749 <tt>Delete</tt> generates <tt>KB_Delete</tt> in X.
6750 </item>
6752 <item>
6753 X translations are set up to make
6754 <tt>KB_Backspace</tt> generate ASCII DEL, and to make
6755 <tt>KB_Delete</tt> generate <tt>ESC [ 3 ~</tt> (this
6756 is the vt220 escape code for the "delete character"
6757 key). This must be done by loading the X resources
6758 using <prgn>xrdb</prgn> on all local X displays, not
6759 using the application defaults, so that the
6760 translation resources used correspond to the
6761 <prgn>xmodmap</prgn> settings.
6762 </item>
6764 <item>
6765 The Linux console is configured to make
6766 <tt>&lt;--</tt> generate DEL, and <tt>Delete</tt>
6767 generate <tt>ESC [ 3 ~</tt>.
6768 </item>
6770 <item>
6771 X applications are configured so that <tt>&lt;</tt>
6772 deletes left, and <tt>Delete</tt> deletes right. Motif
6773 applications already work like this.
6774 </item>
6776 <item>
6777 Terminals should have <tt>stty erase ^?</tt> .
6778 </item>
6780 <item>
6781 The <tt>xterm</tt> terminfo entry should have <tt>ESC
6782 [ 3 ~</tt> for <tt>kdch1</tt>, just as for
6783 <tt>TERM=linux</tt> and <tt>TERM=vt220</tt>.
6784 </item>
6786 <item>
6787 Emacs is programmed to map <tt>KB_Backspace</tt> or
6788 the <tt>stty erase</tt> character to
6789 <tt>delete-backward-char</tt>, and <tt>KB_Delete</tt>
6790 or <tt>kdch1</tt> to <tt>delete-forward-char</tt>, and
6791 <tt>^H</tt> to <tt>help</tt> as always.
6792 </item>
6794 <item>
6795 Other applications use the <tt>stty erase</tt>
6796 character and <tt>kdch1</tt> for the two delete keys,
6797 with ASCII DEL being "delete previous character" and
6798 <tt>kdch1</tt> being "delete character under
6799 cursor".
6800 </item>
6802 </list>
6803 </p>
6806 This will solve the problem except for the following
6807 cases:
6808 </p>
6811 <list>
6812 <item>
6813 Some terminals have a <tt>&lt;--</tt> key that cannot
6814 be made to produce anything except <tt>^H</tt>. On
6815 these terminals Emacs help will be unavailable on
6816 <tt>^H</tt> (assuming that the <tt>stty erase</tt>
6817 character takes precedence in Emacs, and has been set
6818 correctly). <tt>M-x help</tt> or <tt>F1</tt> (if
6819 available) can be used instead.
6820 </item>
6822 <item>
6823 Some operating systems use <tt>^H</tt> for <tt>stty
6824 erase</tt>. However, modern telnet versions and all
6825 rlogin versions propagate <tt>stty</tt> settings, and
6826 almost all UNIX versions honour <tt>stty erase</tt>.
6827 Where the <tt>stty</tt> settings are not propagated
6828 correctly, things can be made to work by using
6829 <tt>stty</tt> manually.
6830 </item>
6832 <item>
6833 Some systems (including previous Debian versions) use
6834 <prgn>xmodmap</prgn> to arrange for both
6835 <tt>&lt;--</tt> and <tt>Delete</tt> to generate
6836 <tt>KB_Delete</tt>. We can change the behavior of
6837 their X clients using the same X resources that we use
6838 to do it for our own clients, or configure our clients
6839 using their resources when things are the other way
6840 around. On displays configured like this
6841 <tt>Delete</tt> will not work, but <tt>&lt;--</tt>
6842 will.
6843 </item>
6845 <item>
6846 Some operating systems have different <tt>kdch1</tt>
6847 settings in their <tt>terminfo</tt> database for
6848 <tt>xterm</tt> and others. On these systems the
6849 <tt>Delete</tt> key will not work correctly when you
6850 log in from a system conforming to our policy, but
6851 <tt>&lt;--</tt> will.
6852 </item>
6853 </list>
6854 </p>
6855 </sect>
6857 <sect>
6858 <heading>Environment variables</heading>
6861 A program must not depend on environment variables to get
6862 reasonable defaults. (That's because these environment
6863 variables would have to be set in a system-wide
6864 configuration file like <file>/etc/profile</file>, which is not
6865 supported by all shells.)
6866 </p>
6869 If a program usually depends on environment variables for its
6870 configuration, the program should be changed to fall back to
6871 a reasonable default configuration if these environment
6872 variables are not present. If this cannot be done easily
6873 (e.g., if the source code of a non-free program is not
6874 available), the program must be replaced by a small
6875 "wrapper" shell script which sets the environment variables
6876 if they are not already defined, and calls the original program.
6877 </p>
6880 Here is an example of a wrapper script for this purpose:
6882 <example compact="compact">
6883 #!/bin/sh
6884 BAR=${BAR:-/var/lib/fubar}
6885 export BAR
6886 exec /usr/lib/foo/foo "$@"
6887 </example>
6888 </p>
6891 Furthermore, as <file>/etc/profile</file> is a configuration
6892 file of the <prgn>base-files</prgn> package, other packages must
6893 not put any environment variables or other commands into that
6894 file.
6895 </p>
6896 </sect>
6898 <sect id="doc-base">
6899 <heading>Registering Documents using doc-base</heading>
6902 The <package>doc-base</package> package implements a
6903 flexible mechanism for handling and presenting
6904 documentation. The recommended practice is for every Debian
6905 package that provides online documentation (other than just
6906 manual pages) to register these documents with
6907 <package>doc-base</package> by installing a
6908 <package>doc-base</package> control file via the
6909 <prgn/install-docs/ script at installation time and
6910 de-register the manuals again when the package is removed.
6911 </p>
6913 Please refer to the documentation that comes with the
6914 <package>doc-base</package> package for information and
6915 details.
6916 </p>
6917 </sect>
6919 </chapt>
6922 <chapt id="files">
6923 <heading>Files</heading>
6925 <sect>
6926 <heading>Binaries</heading>
6929 Two different packages must not install programs with
6930 different functionality but with the same filenames. (The
6931 case of two programs having the same functionality but
6932 different implementations is handled via "alternatives" or
6933 the "Conflicts" mechanism. See <ref id="maintscripts"> and
6934 <ref id="conflicts"> respectively.) If this case happens,
6935 one of the programs must be renamed. The maintainers should
6936 report this to the <tt>debian-devel</tt> mailing list and
6937 try to find a consensus about which program will have to be
6938 renamed. If a consensus cannot be reached, <em>both</em>
6939 programs must be renamed.
6940 </p>
6943 By default, when a package is being built, any binaries
6944 created should include debugging information, as well as
6945 being compiled with optimization. You should also turn on
6946 as many reasonable compilation warnings as possible; this
6947 makes life easier for porters, who can then look at build
6948 logs for possible problems. For the C programming language,
6949 this means the following compilation parameters should be
6950 used:
6951 <example compact="compact">
6952 CC = gcc
6953 CFLAGS = -O2 -g -Wall # sane warning options vary between programs
6954 LDFLAGS = # none
6955 INSTALL = install -s # (or use strip on the files in debian/tmp)
6956 </example>
6957 </p>
6960 Note that by default all installed binaries should be stripped,
6961 either by using the <tt>-s</tt> flag to
6962 <prgn>install</prgn>, or by calling <prgn>strip</prgn> on
6963 the binaries after they have been copied into
6964 <file>debian/tmp</file> but before the tree is made into a
6965 package.
6966 </p>
6969 Although binaries in the build tree should be compiled with
6970 debugging information by default, it can often be difficult to
6971 debug programs if they are also subjected to compiler
6972 optimization. For this reason, it is recommended to support the
6973 standardized environment variable <tt>DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS</tt>
6974 (see <ref id="debianrules-options">). This variable can contain
6975 several flags to change how a package is compiled and built.
6976 </p>
6979 It is up to the package maintainer to decide what
6980 compilation options are best for the package. Certain
6981 binaries (such as computationally-intensive programs) will
6982 function better with certain flags (<tt>-O3</tt>, for
6983 example); feel free to use them. Please use good judgment
6984 here. Don't use flags for the sake of it; only use them
6985 if there is good reason to do so. Feel free to override
6986 the upstream author's ideas about which compilation
6987 options are best: they are often inappropriate for our
6988 environment.
6989 </p>
6990 </sect>
6993 <sect id="libraries">
6994 <heading>Libraries</heading>
6997 If the package is <strong>architecture: any</strong>, then
6998 the shared library compilation and linking flags must have
6999 <tt>-fPIC</tt>, or the package shall not build on some of
7000 the supported architectures<footnote>
7002 If you are using GCC, <tt>-fPIC</tt> produces code with
7003 relocatable position independent code, which is required for
7004 most architectures to create a shared library, with i386 and
7005 perhaps some others where non position independent code is
7006 permitted in a shared library.
7007 </p>
7009 Position independent code may have a performance penalty,
7010 especially on <tt>i386</tt>. However, in most cases the
7011 speed penalty must be measured against the memory wasted on
7012 the few architectures where non position independent code is
7013 even possible.
7014 </p>
7015 </footnote>. Any exception to this rule must be discussed on
7016 the mailing list <em>debian-devel@lists.debian.org</em>, and
7017 a rough consensus obtained. The reasons for not compiling
7018 with <tt>-fPIC</tt> flag must be recorded in the file
7019 <tt>README.Debian</tt>, and care must be taken to either
7020 restrict the architecture or arrange for <tt>-fPIC</tt> to
7021 be used on architectures where it is required.<footnote>
7023 Some of the reasons why this might be required is if the
7024 library contains hand crafted assembly code that is not
7025 relocatable, the speed penalty is excessive for compute
7026 intensive libs, and similar reasons.
7027 </p>
7028 </footnote>
7029 </p>
7031 As to the static libraries, the common case is not to have
7032 relocatable code, since there is no benefit, unless in specific
7033 cases; therefore the static version must not be compiled
7034 with the <tt>-fPIC</tt> flag. Any exception to this rule
7035 should be discussed on the mailing list
7036 <em>debian-devel@lists.debian.org</em>, and the reasons for
7037 compiling with the <tt>-fPIC</tt> flag must be recorded in
7038 the file <tt>README.Debian</tt>. <footnote>
7040 Some of the reasons for linking static libraries with
7041 the <tt>-fPIC</tt> flag are if, for example, one needs a
7042 Perl API for a library that is under rapid development,
7043 and has an unstable API, so shared libraries are
7044 pointless at this phase of the library's development. In
7045 that case, since Perl needs a library with relocatable
7046 code, it may make sense to create a static library with
7047 relocatable code. Another reason cited is if you are
7048 distilling various libraries into a common shared
7049 library, like <tt>mklibs</tt> does in the Debian
7050 installer project.
7051 </p>
7052 </footnote>
7053 </p>
7055 In other words, if both a shared and a static library is
7056 being built, each source unit (<tt>*.c</tt>, for example,
7057 for C files) will need to be compiled twice, for the normal
7058 case.
7059 </p>
7061 You must specify the gcc option <tt>-D_REENTRANT</tt>
7062 when building a library (either static or shared) to make
7063 the library compatible with LinuxThreads.
7064 </p>
7067 Although not enforced by the build tools, shared libraries
7068 must be linked against all libraries that they use symbols from
7069 in the same way that binaries are. This ensures the correct
7070 functioning of the <qref id="sharedlibs-shlibdeps">shlibs</qref>
7071 system and guarantees that all libraries can be safely opened
7072 with <tt>dlopen()</tt>. Packagers may wish to use the gcc
7073 option <tt>-Wl,-z,defs</tt> when building a shared library.
7074 Since this option enforces symbol resolution at build time,
7075 a missing library reference will be caught early as a fatal
7076 build error.
7077 </p>
7080 All installed shared libraries should be stripped with
7081 <example compact="compact">
7082 strip --strip-unneeded <var>your-lib</var>
7083 </example>
7084 (The option <tt>--strip-unneeded</tt> makes
7085 <prgn>strip</prgn> remove only the symbols which aren't
7086 needed for relocation processing.) Shared libraries can
7087 function perfectly well when stripped, since the symbols for
7088 dynamic linking are in a separate part of the ELF object
7089 file.<footnote>
7090 You might also want to use the options
7091 <tt>--remove-section=.comment</tt> and
7092 <tt>--remove-section=.note</tt> on both shared libraries
7093 and executables, and <tt>--strip-debug</tt> on static
7094 libraries.
7095 </footnote>
7096 </p>
7099 Note that under some circumstances it may be useful to
7100 install a shared library unstripped, for example when
7101 building a separate package to support debugging.
7102 </p>
7105 Shared object files (often <file>.so</file> files) that are not
7106 public libraries, that is, they are not meant to be linked
7107 to by third party executables (binaries of other packages),
7108 should be installed in subdirectories of the
7109 <file>/usr/lib</file> directory. Such files are exempt from the
7110 rules that govern ordinary shared libraries, except that
7111 they must not be installed executable and should be
7112 stripped.<footnote>
7113 A common example are the so-called "plug-ins",
7114 internal shared objects that are dynamically loaded by
7115 programs using <manref name="dlopen" section="3">.
7116 </footnote>
7117 </p>
7120 An ever increasing number of packages are using
7121 <prgn>libtool</prgn> to do their linking. The latest GNU
7122 libtools (>= 1.3a) can take advantage of the metadata in the
7123 installed <prgn>libtool</prgn> archive files (<file>*.la</file>
7124 files). The main advantage of <prgn>libtool</prgn>'s
7125 <file>.la</file> files is that it allows <prgn>libtool</prgn> to
7126 store and subsequently access metadata with respect to the
7127 libraries it builds. <prgn>libtool</prgn> will search for
7128 those files, which contain a lot of useful information about
7129 a library (such as library dependency information for static
7130 linking). Also, they're <em>essential</em> for programs
7131 using <tt>libltdl</tt>.<footnote>
7132 Although <prgn>libtool</prgn> is fully capable of
7133 linking against shared libraries which don't have
7134 <tt>.la</tt> files, as it is a mere shell script it can
7135 add considerably to the build time of a
7136 <prgn>libtool</prgn>-using package if that shell script
7137 has to derive all this information from first principles
7138 for each library every time it is linked. With the
7139 advent of <prgn>libtool</prgn> version 1.4 (and to a
7140 lesser extent <prgn>libtool</prgn> version 1.3), the
7141 <file>.la</file> files also store information about
7142 inter-library dependencies which cannot necessarily be
7143 derived after the <file>.la</file> file is deleted.
7144 </footnote>
7145 </p>
7148 Packages that use <prgn>libtool</prgn> to create shared
7149 libraries should include the <file>.la</file> files in the
7150 <tt>-dev</tt> package, unless the package relies on
7151 <tt>libtool</tt>'s <tt>libltdl</tt> library, in which case
7152 the <tt>.la</tt> files must go in the run-time library
7153 package.
7154 </p>
7157 You must make sure that you use only released versions of
7158 shared libraries to build your packages; otherwise other
7159 users will not be able to run your binaries
7160 properly. Producing source packages that depend on
7161 unreleased compilers is also usually a bad
7162 idea.
7163 </p>
7164 </sect>
7167 <sect>
7168 <heading>Shared libraries</heading>
7170 This section has moved to <ref id="sharedlibs">.
7171 </p>
7172 </sect>
7175 <sect id="scripts">
7176 <heading>Scripts</heading>
7179 All command scripts, including the package maintainer
7180 scripts inside the package and used by <prgn>dpkg</prgn>,
7181 should have a <tt>#!</tt> line naming the shell to be used
7182 to interpret them.
7183 </p>
7186 In the case of Perl scripts this should be
7187 <tt>#!/usr/bin/perl</tt>.
7188 </p>
7191 When scripts are installed into a directory in the system
7192 PATH, the script name should not include an extension such
7193 as <tt>.sh</tt> or <tt>.pl</tt> that denotes the scripting
7194 language currently used to implement it.
7195 </p>
7197 Shell scripts (<prgn>sh</prgn> and <prgn>bash</prgn>)
7198 should almost certainly start with <tt>set -e</tt> so that
7199 errors are detected. Every script should use
7200 <tt>set -e</tt> or check the exit status of <em>every</em>
7201 command.
7202 </p>
7205 Scripts may assume that <file>/bin/sh</file> implements the
7206 SUSv3 Shell Command Language<footnote>
7207 Single UNIX Specification, version 3, which is also IEEE
7208 1003.1-2004 (POSIX), and is available on the World Wide Web
7209 from <url id="http://www.unix.org/version3/online.html"
7210 name="The Open Group"> after free
7211 registration.</footnote>
7212 plus the following additional features not mandated by
7213 SUSv3:<footnote>
7214 These features are in widespread use in the Linux community
7215 and are implemented in all of bash, dash, and ksh, the most
7216 common shells users may wish to use as <file>/bin/sh</file>.
7217 </footnote>
7218 <list>
7219 <item><tt>echo -n</tt>, if implemented as a shell built-in,
7220 must not generate a newline.</item>
7221 <item><tt>test</tt>, if implemented as a shell built-in, must
7222 support <tt>-a</tt> and <tt>-o</tt> as binary logical
7223 operators.</item>
7224 <item><tt>local</tt> to create a scoped variable must be
7225 supported, including listing multiple variables in a single
7226 local command and assigning a value to a variable at the
7227 same time as localizing it. <tt>local</tt> may or
7228 may not preserve the variable value from an outer scope if
7229 no assignment is present. Uses such as:
7230 <example compact>
7231 fname () {
7232 local a b c=delta d
7233 # ... use a, b, c, d ...
7235 </example>
7236 must be supported and must set the value of <tt>c</tt> to
7237 <tt>delta</tt>.
7238 </item>
7239 </list>
7240 If a shell script requires non-SUSv3 features from the shell
7241 interpreter other than those listed above, the appropriate shell
7242 must be specified in the first line of the script (e.g.,
7243 <tt>#!/bin/bash</tt>) and the package must depend on the package
7244 providing the shell (unless the shell package is marked
7245 "Essential", as in the case of <prgn>bash</prgn>).
7246 </p>
7249 You may wish to restrict your script to SUSv3 features plus the
7250 above set when possible so that it may use <file>/bin/sh</file>
7251 as its interpreter. If your script works with <prgn>dash</prgn>
7252 (originally called <prgn>ash</prgn>), it probably complies with
7253 the above requirements, but if you are in doubt, use
7254 <file>/bin/bash</file>.
7255 </p>
7258 Perl scripts should check for errors when making any
7259 system calls, including <tt>open</tt>, <tt>print</tt>,
7260 <tt>close</tt>, <tt>rename</tt> and <tt>system</tt>.
7261 </p>
7264 <prgn>csh</prgn> and <prgn>tcsh</prgn> should be avoided as
7265 scripting languages. See <em>Csh Programming Considered
7266 Harmful</em>, one of the <tt>comp.unix.*</tt> FAQs, which
7267 can be found at <url id="http://www.faqs.org/faqs/unix-faq/shell/csh-whynot/">.
7268 If an upstream package comes with <prgn>csh</prgn> scripts
7269 then you must make sure that they start with
7270 <tt>#!/bin/csh</tt> and make your package depend on the
7271 <prgn>c-shell</prgn> virtual package.
7272 </p>
7275 Any scripts which create files in world-writeable
7276 directories (e.g., in <file>/tmp</file>) must use a
7277 mechanism which will fail atomically if a file with the same
7278 name already exists.
7279 </p>
7282 The Debian base system provides the <prgn>tempfile</prgn>
7283 and <prgn>mktemp</prgn> utilities for use by scripts for
7284 this purpose.
7285 </p>
7286 </sect>
7289 <sect>
7290 <heading>Symbolic links</heading>
7293 In general, symbolic links within a top-level directory
7294 should be relative, and symbolic links pointing from one
7295 top-level directory into another should be absolute. (A
7296 top-level directory is a sub-directory of the root
7297 directory <file>/</file>.)
7298 </p>
7301 In addition, symbolic links should be specified as short as
7302 possible, i.e., link targets like <file>foo/../bar</file> are
7303 deprecated.
7304 </p>
7307 Note that when creating a relative link using
7308 <prgn>ln</prgn> it is not necessary for the target of the
7309 link to exist relative to the working directory you're
7310 running <prgn>ln</prgn> from, nor is it necessary to change
7311 directory to the directory where the link is to be made.
7312 Simply include the string that should appear as the target
7313 of the link (this will be a pathname relative to the
7314 directory in which the link resides) as the first argument
7315 to <prgn>ln</prgn>.
7316 </p>
7319 For example, in your <prgn>Makefile</prgn> or
7320 <file>debian/rules</file>, you can do things like:
7321 <example compact="compact">
7322 ln -fs gcc $(prefix)/bin/cc
7323 ln -fs gcc debian/tmp/usr/bin/cc
7324 ln -fs ../sbin/sendmail $(prefix)/bin/runq
7325 ln -fs ../sbin/sendmail debian/tmp/usr/bin/runq
7326 </example>
7327 </p>
7330 A symbolic link pointing to a compressed file should always
7331 have the same file extension as the referenced file. (For
7332 example, if a file <file>foo.gz</file> is referenced by a
7333 symbolic link, the filename of the link has to end with
7334 "<file>.gz</file>" too, as in <file>bar.gz</file>.)
7335 </p>
7336 </sect>
7338 <sect>
7339 <heading>Device files</heading>
7342 Packages must not include device files or named pipes in the
7343 package file tree.
7344 </p>
7347 If a package needs any special device files that are not
7348 included in the base system, it must call
7349 <prgn>MAKEDEV</prgn> in the <prgn>postinst</prgn> script,
7350 after notifying the user<footnote>
7351 This notification could be done via a (low-priority)
7352 debconf message, or an echo (printf) statement.
7353 </footnote>.
7354 </p>
7357 Packages must not remove any device files in the
7358 <prgn>postrm</prgn> or any other script. This is left to the
7359 system administrator.
7360 </p>
7363 Debian uses the serial devices
7364 <file>/dev/ttyS*</file>. Programs using the old
7365 <file>/dev/cu*</file> devices should be changed to use
7366 <file>/dev/ttyS*</file>.
7367 </p>
7370 Named pipes needed by the package must be created in
7371 the <prgn>postinst</prgn> script<footnote>
7372 It's better to use <prgn>mkfifo</prgn> rather
7373 than <prgn>mknod</prgn> to create named pipes so that
7374 automated checks for packages incorrectly creating device
7375 files with <prgn>mknod</prgn> won't have false positives.
7376 </footnote> and removed in
7377 the <prgn>prerm</prgn> or <prgn>postrm</prgn> script as
7378 appropriate.
7379 </p>
7380 </sect>
7382 <sect id="config-files">
7383 <heading>Configuration files</heading>
7385 <sect1>
7386 <heading>Definitions</heading>
7389 <taglist>
7390 <tag>configuration file</tag>
7391 <item>
7392 A file that affects the operation of a program, or
7393 provides site- or host-specific information, or
7394 otherwise customizes the behavior of a program.
7395 Typically, configuration files are intended to be
7396 modified by the system administrator (if needed or
7397 desired) to conform to local policy or to provide
7398 more useful site-specific behavior.
7399 </item>
7401 <tag><tt>conffile</tt></tag>
7402 <item>
7403 A file listed in a package's <tt>conffiles</tt>
7404 file, and is treated specially by <prgn>dpkg</prgn>
7405 (see <ref id="configdetails">).
7406 </item>
7407 </taglist>
7408 </p>
7411 The distinction between these two is important; they are
7412 not interchangeable concepts. Almost all
7413 <tt>conffile</tt>s are configuration files, but many
7414 configuration files are not <tt>conffiles</tt>.
7415 </p>
7418 As noted elsewhere, <file>/etc/init.d</file> scripts,
7419 <file>/etc/default</file> files, scripts installed in
7420 <file>/etc/cron.{hourly,daily,weekly,monthly}</file>, and cron
7421 configuration installed in <file>/etc/cron.d</file> must be
7422 treated as configuration files. In general, any script that
7423 embeds configuration information is de-facto a configuration
7424 file and should be treated as such.
7425 </p>
7426 </sect1>
7428 <sect1>
7429 <heading>Location</heading>
7432 Any configuration files created or used by your package
7433 must reside in <file>/etc</file>. If there are several,
7434 consider creating a subdirectory of <file>/etc</file>
7435 named after your package.
7436 </p>
7439 If your package creates or uses configuration files
7440 outside of <file>/etc</file>, and it is not feasible to modify
7441 the package to use <file>/etc</file> directly, put the files
7442 in <file>/etc</file> and create symbolic links to those files
7443 from the location that the package requires.
7444 </p>
7445 </sect1>
7447 <sect1>
7448 <heading>Behavior</heading>
7451 Configuration file handling must conform to the following
7452 behavior:
7453 <list compact="compact">
7454 <item>
7455 local changes must be preserved during a package
7456 upgrade, and
7457 </item>
7458 <item>
7459 configuration files must be preserved when the
7460 package is removed, and only deleted when the
7461 package is purged.
7462 </item>
7463 </list>
7464 </p>
7467 The easy way to achieve this behavior is to make the
7468 configuration file a <tt>conffile</tt>. This is
7469 appropriate only if it is possible to distribute a default
7470 version that will work for most installations, although
7471 some system administrators may choose to modify it. This
7472 implies that the default version will be part of the
7473 package distribution, and must not be modified by the
7474 maintainer scripts during installation (or at any other
7475 time).
7476 </p>
7479 In order to ensure that local changes are preserved
7480 correctly, no package may contain or make hard links to
7481 conffiles.<footnote>
7482 Rationale: There are two problems with hard links.
7483 The first is that some editors break the link while
7484 editing one of the files, so that the two files may
7485 unwittingly become unlinked and different. The second
7486 is that <prgn>dpkg</prgn> might break the hard link
7487 while upgrading <tt>conffile</tt>s.
7488 </footnote>
7489 </p>
7492 The other way to do it is via the maintainer scripts. In
7493 this case, the configuration file must not be listed as a
7494 <tt>conffile</tt> and must not be part of the package
7495 distribution. If the existence of a file is required for
7496 the package to be sensibly configured it is the
7497 responsibility of the package maintainer to provide
7498 maintainer scripts which correctly create, update and
7499 maintain the file and remove it on purge. (See <ref
7500 id="maintainerscripts"> for more information.) These
7501 scripts must be idempotent (i.e., must work correctly if
7502 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> needs to re-run them due to errors
7503 during installation or removal), must cope with all the
7504 variety of ways <prgn>dpkg</prgn> can call maintainer
7505 scripts, must not overwrite or otherwise mangle the user's
7506 configuration without asking, must not ask unnecessary
7507 questions (particularly during upgrades), and must
7508 otherwise be good citizens.
7509 </p>
7512 The scripts are not required to configure every possible
7513 option for the package, but only those necessary to get
7514 the package running on a given system. Ideally the
7515 sysadmin should not have to do any configuration other
7516 than that done (semi-)automatically by the
7517 <prgn>postinst</prgn> script.
7518 </p>
7521 A common practice is to create a script called
7522 <file><var>package</var>-configure</file> and have the
7523 package's <prgn>postinst</prgn> call it if and only if the
7524 configuration file does not already exist. In certain
7525 cases it is useful for there to be an example or template
7526 file which the maintainer scripts use. Such files should
7527 be in <file>/usr/share/<var>package</var></file> or
7528 <file>/usr/lib/<var>package</var></file> (depending on whether
7529 they are architecture-independent or not). There should
7530 be symbolic links to them from
7531 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var>/examples</file> if
7532 they are examples, and should be perfectly ordinary
7533 <prgn>dpkg</prgn>-handled files (<em>not</em>
7534 configuration files).
7535 </p>
7538 These two styles of configuration file handling must
7539 not be mixed, for that way lies madness:
7540 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> will ask about overwriting the file
7541 every time the package is upgraded.
7542 </p>
7543 </sect1>
7545 <sect1>
7546 <heading>Sharing configuration files</heading>
7549 Packages which specify the same file as a
7550 <tt>conffile</tt> must be tagged as <em>conflicting</em>
7551 with each other. (This is an instance of the general rule
7552 about not sharing files. Note that neither alternatives
7553 nor diversions are likely to be appropriate in this case;
7554 in particular, <prgn>dpkg</prgn> does not handle diverted
7555 <tt>conffile</tt>s well.)
7556 </p>
7559 The maintainer scripts must not alter a <tt>conffile</tt>
7560 of <em>any</em> package, including the one the scripts
7561 belong to.
7562 </p>
7565 If two or more packages use the same configuration file
7566 and it is reasonable for both to be installed at the same
7567 time, one of these packages must be defined as
7568 <em>owner</em> of the configuration file, i.e., it will be
7569 the package which handles that file as a configuration
7570 file. Other packages that use the configuration file must
7571 depend on the owning package if they require the
7572 configuration file to operate. If the other package will
7573 use the configuration file if present, but is capable of
7574 operating without it, no dependency need be declared.
7575 </p>
7578 If it is desirable for two or more related packages to
7579 share a configuration file <em>and</em> for all of the
7580 related packages to be able to modify that configuration
7581 file, then the following should be done:
7582 <enumlist compact="compact">
7583 <item>
7584 One of the related packages (the "owning" package)
7585 will manage the configuration file with maintainer
7586 scripts as described in the previous section.
7587 </item>
7588 <item>
7589 The owning package should also provide a program
7590 that the other packages may use to modify the
7591 configuration file.
7592 </item>
7593 <item>
7594 The related packages must use the provided program
7595 to make any desired modifications to the
7596 configuration file. They should either depend on
7597 the core package to guarantee that the configuration
7598 modifier program is available or accept gracefully
7599 that they cannot modify the configuration file if it
7600 is not. (This is in addition to the fact that the
7601 configuration file may not even be present in the
7602 latter scenario.)
7603 </item>
7604 </enumlist>
7605 </p>
7608 Sometimes it's appropriate to create a new package which
7609 provides the basic infrastructure for the other packages
7610 and which manages the shared configuration files. (The
7611 <tt>sgml-base</tt> package is a good example.)
7612 </p>
7613 </sect1>
7615 <sect1>
7616 <heading>User configuration files ("dotfiles")</heading>
7619 The files in <file>/etc/skel</file> will automatically be
7620 copied into new user accounts by <prgn>adduser</prgn>.
7621 No other program should reference the files in
7622 <file>/etc/skel</file>.
7623 </p>
7626 Therefore, if a program needs a dotfile to exist in
7627 advance in <file>$HOME</file> to work sensibly, that dotfile
7628 should be installed in <file>/etc/skel</file> and treated as a
7629 configuration file.
7630 </p>
7633 However, programs that require dotfiles in order to
7634 operate sensibly are a bad thing, unless they do create
7635 the dotfiles themselves automatically.
7636 </p>
7639 Furthermore, programs should be configured by the Debian
7640 default installation to behave as closely to the upstream
7641 default behavior as possible.
7642 </p>
7645 Therefore, if a program in a Debian package needs to be
7646 configured in some way in order to operate sensibly, that
7647 should be done using a site-wide configuration file placed
7648 in <file>/etc</file>. Only if the program doesn't support a
7649 site-wide default configuration and the package maintainer
7650 doesn't have time to add it may a default per-user file be
7651 placed in <file>/etc/skel</file>.
7652 </p>
7655 <file>/etc/skel</file> should be as empty as we can make it.
7656 This is particularly true because there is no easy (or
7657 necessarily desirable) mechanism for ensuring that the
7658 appropriate dotfiles are copied into the accounts of
7659 existing users when a package is installed.
7660 </p>
7661 </sect1>
7662 </sect>
7664 <sect>
7665 <heading>Log files</heading>
7667 Log files should usually be named
7668 <file>/var/log/<var>package</var>.log</file>. If you have many
7669 log files, or need a separate directory for permission
7670 reasons (<file>/var/log</file> is writable only by
7671 <file>root</file>), you should usually create a directory named
7672 <file>/var/log/<var>package</var></file> and place your log
7673 files there.
7674 </p>
7677 Log files must be rotated occasionally so that they don't
7678 grow indefinitely; the best way to do this is to drop a log
7679 rotation configuration file into the directory
7680 <file>/etc/logrotate.d</file> and use the facilities provided by
7681 logrotate.<footnote>
7683 The traditional approach to log files has been to set up
7684 <em>ad hoc</em> log rotation schemes using simple shell
7685 scripts and cron. While this approach is highly
7686 customizable, it requires quite a lot of sysadmin work.
7687 Even though the original Debian system helped a little
7688 by automatically installing a system which can be used
7689 as a template, this was deemed not enough.
7690 </p>
7693 The use of <prgn>logrotate</prgn>, a program developed
7694 by Red Hat, is better, as it centralizes log management.
7695 It has both a configuration file
7696 (<file>/etc/logrotate.conf</file>) and a directory where
7697 packages can drop their individual log rotation
7698 configurations (<file>/etc/logrotate.d</file>).
7699 </p>
7700 </footnote>
7701 Here is a good example for a logrotate config
7702 file (for more information see <manref name="logrotate"
7703 section="8">):
7704 <example compact="compact">
7705 /var/log/foo/*.log {
7706 rotate 12
7707 weekly
7708 compress
7709 postrotate
7710 /etc/init.d/foo force-reload
7711 endscript
7713 </example>
7714 This rotates all files under <file>/var/log/foo</file>, saves 12
7715 compressed generations, and forces the daemon to reload its
7716 configuration information after the log rotation.
7717 </p>
7720 Log files should be removed when the package is
7721 purged (but not when it is only removed). This should be
7722 done by the <prgn>postrm</prgn> script when it is called
7723 with the argument <tt>purge</tt> (see <ref
7724 id="removedetails">).
7725 </p>
7726 </sect>
7728 <sect>
7729 <heading>Permissions and owners</heading>
7732 The rules in this section are guidelines for general use.
7733 If necessary you may deviate from the details below.
7734 However, if you do so you must make sure that what is done
7735 is secure and you should try to be as consistent as possible
7736 with the rest of the system. You should probably also
7737 discuss it on <prgn>debian-devel</prgn> first.
7738 </p>
7741 Files should be owned by <tt>root:root</tt>, and made
7742 writable only by the owner and universally readable (and
7743 executable, if appropriate), that is mode 644 or 755.
7744 </p>
7747 Directories should be mode 755 or (for group-writability)
7748 mode 2775. The ownership of the directory should be
7749 consistent with its mode: if a directory is mode 2775, it
7750 should be owned by the group that needs write access to
7751 it.<footnote>
7753 When a package is upgraded, and the owner or permissions
7754 of a file included in the package has changed, dpkg
7755 arranges for the ownership and permissions to be
7756 correctly set upon installation. However, this does not
7757 extend to directories; the permissions and ownership of
7758 directories already on the system does not change on
7759 install or upgrade of packages. This makes sense, since
7760 otherwise common directories like <tt>/usr</tt> would
7761 always be in flux. To correctly change permissions of a
7762 directory the package owns, explicit action is required,
7763 usually in the <tt>postinst</tt> script. Care must be
7764 taken to handle downgrades as well, in that case.
7765 </p>
7766 </footnote>
7767 </p>
7771 Setuid and setgid executables should be mode 4755 or 2755
7772 respectively, and owned by the appropriate user or group.
7773 They should not be made unreadable (modes like 4711 or
7774 2711 or even 4111); doing so achieves no extra security,
7775 because anyone can find the binary in the freely available
7776 Debian package; it is merely inconvenient. For the same
7777 reason you should not restrict read or execute permissions
7778 on non-set-id executables.
7779 </p>
7782 Some setuid programs need to be restricted to particular
7783 sets of users, using file permissions. In this case they
7784 should be owned by the uid to which they are set-id, and by
7785 the group which should be allowed to execute them. They
7786 should have mode 4754; again there is no point in making
7787 them unreadable to those users who must not be allowed to
7788 execute them.
7789 </p>
7792 It is possible to arrange that the system administrator can
7793 reconfigure the package to correspond to their local
7794 security policy by changing the permissions on a binary:
7795 they can do this by using <prgn>dpkg-statoverride</prgn>, as
7796 described below.<footnote>
7797 Ordinary files installed by <prgn>dpkg</prgn> (as
7798 opposed to <tt>conffile</tt>s and other similar objects)
7799 normally have their permissions reset to the distributed
7800 permissions when the package is reinstalled. However,
7801 the use of <prgn>dpkg-statoverride</prgn> overrides this
7802 default behavior. If you use this method, you should
7803 remember to describe <prgn>dpkg-statoverride</prgn> in
7804 the package documentation; being a relatively new
7805 addition to Debian, it is probably not yet well-known.
7806 </footnote>
7807 Another method you should consider is to create a group for
7808 people allowed to use the program(s) and make any setuid
7809 executables executable only by that group.
7810 </p>
7813 If you need to create a new user or group for your package
7814 there are two possibilities. Firstly, you may need to
7815 make some files in the binary package be owned by this
7816 user or group, or you may need to compile the user or
7817 group id (rather than just the name) into the binary
7818 (though this latter should be avoided if possible, as in
7819 this case you need a statically allocated id).</p>
7822 If you need a statically allocated id, you must ask for a
7823 user or group id from the <tt>base-passwd</tt> maintainer,
7824 and must not release the package until you have been
7825 allocated one. Once you have been allocated one you must
7826 either make the package depend on a version of the
7827 <tt>base-passwd</tt> package with the id present in
7828 <file>/etc/passwd</file> or <file>/etc/group</file>, or arrange for
7829 your package to create the user or group itself with the
7830 correct id (using <tt>adduser</tt>) in its
7831 <prgn>preinst</prgn> or <prgn>postinst</prgn>. (Doing it in
7832 the <prgn>postinst</prgn> is to be preferred if it is
7833 possible, otherwise a pre-dependency will be needed on the
7834 <tt>adduser</tt> package.)
7835 </p>
7838 On the other hand, the program might be able to determine
7839 the uid or gid from the user or group name at runtime, so
7840 that a dynamically allocated id can be used. In this case
7841 you should choose an appropriate user or group name,
7842 discussing this on <prgn>debian-devel</prgn> and checking
7843 with the <package/base-passwd/ maintainer that it is unique and that
7844 they do not wish you to use a statically allocated id
7845 instead. When this has been checked you must arrange for
7846 your package to create the user or group if necessary using
7847 <prgn>adduser</prgn> in the <prgn>preinst</prgn> or
7848 <prgn>postinst</prgn> script (again, the latter is to be
7849 preferred if it is possible).
7850 </p>
7853 Note that changing the numeric value of an id associated
7854 with a name is very difficult, and involves searching the
7855 file system for all appropriate files. You need to think
7856 carefully whether a static or dynamic id is required, since
7857 changing your mind later will cause problems.
7858 </p>
7860 <sect1><heading>The use of <prgn>dpkg-statoverride</prgn></heading>
7862 This section is not intended as policy, but as a
7863 description of the use of <prgn>dpkg-statoverride</prgn>.
7864 </p>
7867 If a system administrator wishes to have a file (or
7868 directory or other such thing) installed with owner and
7869 permissions different from those in the distributed Debian
7870 package, they can use the <prgn>dpkg-statoverride</prgn>
7871 program to instruct <prgn>dpkg</prgn> to use the different
7872 settings every time the file is installed. Thus the
7873 package maintainer should distribute the files with their
7874 normal permissions, and leave it for the system
7875 administrator to make any desired changes. For example, a
7876 daemon which is normally required to be setuid root, but
7877 in certain situations could be used without being setuid,
7878 should be installed setuid in the <tt>.deb</tt>. Then the
7879 local system administrator can change this if they wish.
7880 If there are two standard ways of doing it, the package
7881 maintainer can use <tt>debconf</tt> to find out the
7882 preference, and call <prgn>dpkg-statoverride</prgn> in the
7883 maintainer script if necessary to accommodate the system
7884 administrator's choice. Care must be taken during
7885 upgrades to not override an existing setting.
7886 </p>
7889 Given the above, <prgn>dpkg-statoverride</prgn> is
7890 essentially a tool for system administrators and would not
7891 normally be needed in the maintainer scripts. There is
7892 one type of situation, though, where calls to
7893 <prgn>dpkg-statoverride</prgn> would be needed in the
7894 maintainer scripts, and that involves packages which use
7895 dynamically allocated user or group ids. In such a
7896 situation, something like the following idiom can be very
7897 helpful in the package's <prgn>postinst</prgn>, where
7898 <tt>sysuser</tt> is a dynamically allocated id:
7899 <example>
7900 for i in /usr/bin/foo /usr/sbin/bar
7902 # only do something when no setting exists
7903 if ! dpkg-statoverride --list $i >/dev/null 2>&1
7904 then
7905 #include: debconf processing, question about foo and bar
7906 if [ "$RET" = "true" ] ; then
7907 dpkg-statoverride --update --add sysuser root 4755 $i
7910 done
7911 </example>
7912 The corresponding code to remove the override when the package
7913 is purged would be:
7914 <example>
7915 for i in /usr/bin/foo /usr/sbin/bar
7917 if dpkg-statoverride --list $i >/dev/null 2>&1
7918 then
7919 dpkg-statoverride --remove $i
7921 done
7922 </example>
7923 </p>
7924 </sect1>
7925 </sect>
7926 </chapt>
7929 <chapt id="customized-programs">
7930 <heading>Customized programs</heading>
7932 <sect id="arch-spec">
7933 <heading>Architecture specification strings</heading>
7936 If a program needs to specify an <em>architecture specification
7937 string</em> in some place, it should select one of the
7938 strings provided by <tt>dpkg-architecture -L</tt>. The
7939 strings are in the format
7940 <tt><var>os</var>-<var>arch</var></tt>, though the OS part
7941 is sometimes elided, as when the OS is Linux.<footnote>
7942 <p>Currently, the strings are:
7943 i386 ia64 alpha amd64 armeb arm hppa m32r m68k mips
7944 mipsel powerpc ppc64 s390 s390x sh3 sh3eb sh4 sh4eb
7945 sparc darwin-i386 darwin-ia64 darwin-alpha darwin-amd64
7946 darwin-armeb darwin-arm darwin-hppa darwin-m32r
7947 darwin-m68k darwin-mips darwin-mipsel darwin-powerpc
7948 darwin-ppc64 darwin-s390 darwin-s390x darwin-sh3
7949 darwin-sh3eb darwin-sh4 darwin-sh4eb darwin-sparc
7950 freebsd-i386 freebsd-ia64 freebsd-alpha freebsd-amd64
7951 freebsd-armeb freebsd-arm freebsd-hppa freebsd-m32r
7952 freebsd-m68k freebsd-mips freebsd-mipsel freebsd-powerpc
7953 freebsd-ppc64 freebsd-s390 freebsd-s390x freebsd-sh3
7954 freebsd-sh3eb freebsd-sh4 freebsd-sh4eb freebsd-sparc
7955 kfreebsd-i386 kfreebsd-ia64 kfreebsd-alpha
7956 kfreebsd-amd64 kfreebsd-armeb kfreebsd-arm kfreebsd-hppa
7957 kfreebsd-m32r kfreebsd-m68k kfreebsd-mips
7958 kfreebsd-mipsel kfreebsd-powerpc kfreebsd-ppc64
7959 kfreebsd-s390 kfreebsd-s390x kfreebsd-sh3 kfreebsd-sh3eb
7960 kfreebsd-sh4 kfreebsd-sh4eb kfreebsd-sparc knetbsd-i386
7961 knetbsd-ia64 knetbsd-alpha knetbsd-amd64 knetbsd-armeb
7962 knetbsd-arm knetbsd-hppa knetbsd-m32r knetbsd-m68k
7963 knetbsd-mips knetbsd-mipsel knetbsd-powerpc
7964 knetbsd-ppc64 knetbsd-s390 knetbsd-s390x knetbsd-sh3
7965 knetbsd-sh3eb knetbsd-sh4 knetbsd-sh4eb knetbsd-sparc
7966 netbsd-i386 netbsd-ia64 netbsd-alpha netbsd-amd64
7967 netbsd-armeb netbsd-arm netbsd-hppa netbsd-m32r
7968 netbsd-m68k netbsd-mips netbsd-mipsel netbsd-powerpc
7969 netbsd-ppc64 netbsd-s390 netbsd-s390x netbsd-sh3
7970 netbsd-sh3eb netbsd-sh4 netbsd-sh4eb netbsd-sparc
7971 openbsd-i386 openbsd-ia64 openbsd-alpha openbsd-amd64
7972 openbsd-armeb openbsd-arm openbsd-hppa openbsd-m32r
7973 openbsd-m68k openbsd-mips openbsd-mipsel openbsd-powerpc
7974 openbsd-ppc64 openbsd-s390 openbsd-s390x openbsd-sh3
7975 openbsd-sh3eb openbsd-sh4 openbsd-sh4eb openbsd-sparc
7976 hurd-i386 hurd-ia64 hurd-alpha hurd-amd64 hurd-armeb
7977 hurd-arm hurd-hppa hurd-m32r hurd-m68k hurd-mips
7978 hurd-mipsel hurd-powerpc hurd-ppc64 hurd-s390 hurd-s390x
7979 hurd-sh3 hurd-sh3eb hurd-sh4 hurd-sh4eb hurd-sparc
7980 </p>
7981 </footnote>
7982 </p>
7985 Note that we don't want to use
7986 <tt><var>arch</var>-debian-linux</tt> to apply to the rule
7987 <tt><var>architecture</var>-<var>vendor</var>-<var>os</var></tt>
7988 since this would make our programs incompatible with other
7989 Linux distributions. We also don't use something like
7990 <tt><var>arch</var>-unknown-linux</tt>, since the
7991 <tt>unknown</tt> does not look very good.
7992 </p>
7993 </sect>
7995 <sect id="arch-wildcard-spec">
7996 <heading>Architecture Wildcards</heading>
7999 A package may specify an architecture wildcard. Architecture
8000 wildcards are in the format <tt>any</tt> (which matches every
8001 architecture), <tt><var>os</var></tt>-any, or
8002 any-<tt><var>cpu</var></tt>. <footnote>
8003 Internally, the package system normalizes the GNU triplets and
8004 the Debian arches into Debian arch triplets (which are kind of
8005 inverted GNU triplets), with the first component of the
8006 triplet representing the libc and ABI in use. When matching
8007 two Debian arch triplets, whenever an <var>any</var> is found
8008 it matches with anything on the other side, like in:
8009 <example>
8010 gnu-linux-i386 is matched by gnu-linux-any
8011 gnu-kfreebsd-amd64 is matched by any-any-amd64
8012 </example>
8013 And, for example, <var>any</var> is normalized to
8014 <var>any-any-any</var>.
8015 </footnote>
8016 </p>
8017 </sect>
8019 <sect>
8020 <heading>Daemons</heading>
8023 The configuration files <file>/etc/services</file>,
8024 <file>/etc/protocols</file>, and <file>/etc/rpc</file> are managed
8025 by the <prgn>netbase</prgn> package and must not be modified
8026 by other packages.
8027 </p>
8030 If a package requires a new entry in one of these files, the
8031 maintainer should get in contact with the
8032 <prgn>netbase</prgn> maintainer, who will add the entries
8033 and release a new version of the <prgn>netbase</prgn>
8034 package.
8035 </p>
8038 The configuration file <file>/etc/inetd.conf</file> must not be
8039 modified by the package's scripts except via the
8040 <prgn>update-inetd</prgn> script or the
8041 <file>DebianNet.pm</file> Perl module. See their documentation
8042 for details on how to add entries.
8043 </p>
8046 If a package wants to install an example entry into
8047 <file>/etc/inetd.conf</file>, the entry must be preceded with
8048 exactly one hash character (<tt>#</tt>). Such lines are
8049 treated as "commented out by user" by the
8050 <prgn>update-inetd</prgn> script and are not changed or
8051 activated during package updates.
8052 </p>
8053 </sect>
8055 <sect>
8056 <heading>Using pseudo-ttys and modifying wtmp, utmp and
8057 lastlog</heading>
8060 Some programs need to create pseudo-ttys. This should be done
8061 using Unix98 ptys if the C library supports it. The resulting
8062 program must not be installed setuid root, unless that
8063 is required for other functionality.
8064 </p>
8067 The files <file>/var/run/utmp</file>, <file>/var/log/wtmp</file> and
8068 <file>/var/log/lastlog</file> must be installed writable by
8069 group <tt>utmp</tt>. Programs which need to modify those
8070 files must be installed setgid <tt>utmp</tt>.
8071 </p>
8072 </sect>
8074 <sect>
8075 <heading>Editors and pagers</heading>
8078 Some programs have the ability to launch an editor or pager
8079 program to edit or display a text document. Since there are
8080 lots of different editors and pagers available in the Debian
8081 distribution, the system administrator and each user should
8082 have the possibility to choose their preferred editor and
8083 pager.
8084 </p>
8087 In addition, every program should choose a good default
8088 editor/pager if none is selected by the user or system
8089 administrator.
8090 </p>
8093 Thus, every program that launches an editor or pager must
8094 use the EDITOR or PAGER environment variable to determine
8095 the editor or pager the user wishes to use. If these
8096 variables are not set, the programs <file>/usr/bin/editor</file>
8097 and <file>/usr/bin/pager</file> should be used, respectively.
8098 </p>
8101 These two files are managed through the <prgn>dpkg</prgn>
8102 "alternatives" mechanism. Thus every package providing an
8103 editor or pager must call the
8104 <prgn>update-alternatives</prgn> script to register these
8105 programs.
8106 </p>
8109 If it is very hard to adapt a program to make use of the
8110 EDITOR or PAGER variables, that program may be configured to
8111 use <file>/usr/bin/sensible-editor</file> and
8112 <file>/usr/bin/sensible-pager</file> as the editor or pager
8113 program respectively. These are two scripts provided in the
8114 <package>sensible-utils</package> package that check the EDITOR
8115 and PAGER variables and launch the appropriate program, and fall
8116 back to <file>/usr/bin/editor</file>
8117 and <file>/usr/bin/pager</file> if the variable is not set.
8118 </p>
8121 A program may also use the VISUAL environment variable to
8122 determine the user's choice of editor. If it exists, it
8123 should take precedence over EDITOR. This is in fact what
8124 <file>/usr/bin/sensible-editor</file> does.
8125 </p>
8128 It is not required for a package to depend on
8129 <tt>editor</tt> and <tt>pager</tt>, nor is it required for a
8130 package to provide such virtual packages.<footnote>
8131 The Debian base system already provides an editor and a
8132 pager program.
8133 </footnote>
8134 </p>
8135 </sect>
8137 <sect id="web-appl">
8138 <heading>Web servers and applications</heading>
8141 This section describes the locations and URLs that should
8142 be used by all web servers and web applications in the
8143 Debian system.
8144 </p>
8147 <enumlist>
8148 <item>
8149 Cgi-bin executable files are installed in the
8150 directory
8151 <example compact="compact">
8152 /usr/lib/cgi-bin/<var>cgi-bin-name</var>
8153 </example>
8154 and should be referred to as
8155 <example compact="compact">
8156 http://localhost/cgi-bin/<var>cgi-bin-name</var>
8157 </example>
8159 </item>
8161 <item>
8162 <p>Access to HTML documents</p>
8165 HTML documents for a package are stored in
8166 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var></file>
8167 and can be referred to as
8168 <example compact="compact">
8169 http://localhost/doc/<var>package</var>/<var>filename</var>
8170 </example>
8171 </p>
8174 The web server should restrict access to the document
8175 tree so that only clients on the same host can read
8176 the documents. If the web server does not support such
8177 access controls, then it should not provide access at
8178 all, or ask about providing access during installation.
8179 </p>
8180 </item>
8182 <item>
8183 <p>Access to images</p>
8185 It is recommended that images for a package be stored
8186 in <tt>/usr/share/images/<var>package</var></tt> and
8187 may be referred to through an alias <tt>/images/</tt>
8189 <example>
8190 http://localhost/images/&lt;package&gt;/&lt;filename&gt;
8191 </example>
8193 </p>
8194 </item>
8196 <item>
8197 <p>Web Document Root</p>
8200 Web Applications should try to avoid storing files in
8201 the Web Document Root. Instead they should use the
8202 /usr/share/doc/<var>package</var> directory for
8203 documents and register the Web Application via the
8204 <package>doc-base</package> package. If access to the
8205 web document root is unavoidable then use
8206 <example compact="compact">
8207 /var/www
8208 </example>
8209 as the Document Root. This might be just a symbolic
8210 link to the location where the system administrator
8211 has put the real document root.
8212 </p>
8213 </item>
8214 <item><p>Providing httpd and/or httpd-cgi</p>
8216 All web servers should provide the virtual package
8217 <tt>httpd</tt>. If a web server has CGI support it should
8218 provide <tt>httpd-cgi</tt> additionally.
8219 </p>
8221 All web applications which do not contain CGI scripts should
8222 depend on <tt>httpd</tt>, all those web applications which
8223 <tt>do</tt> contain CGI scripts, should depend on
8224 <tt>httpd-cgi</tt>.
8225 </p>
8226 </item>
8227 </enumlist>
8228 </p>
8229 </sect>
8231 <sect id="mail-transport-agents">
8232 <heading>Mail transport, delivery and user agents</heading>
8235 Debian packages which process electronic mail, whether mail
8236 user agents (MUAs) or mail transport agents (MTAs), must
8237 ensure that they are compatible with the configuration
8238 decisions below. Failure to do this may result in lost
8239 mail, broken <tt>From:</tt> lines, and other serious brain
8240 damage!
8241 </p>
8244 The mail spool is <file>/var/mail</file> and the interface to
8245 send a mail message is <file>/usr/sbin/sendmail</file> (as per
8246 the FHS). On older systems, the mail spool may be
8247 physically located in <file>/var/spool/mail</file>, but all
8248 access to the mail spool should be via the
8249 <file>/var/mail</file> symlink. The mail spool is part of the
8250 base system and not part of the MTA package.
8251 </p>
8254 All Debian MUAs, MTAs, MDAs and other mailbox accessing
8255 programs (such as IMAP daemons) must lock the mailbox in an
8256 NFS-safe way. This means that <tt>fcntl()</tt> locking must
8257 be combined with dot locking. To avoid deadlocks, a program
8258 should use <tt>fcntl()</tt> first and dot locking after
8259 this, or alternatively implement the two locking methods in
8260 a non blocking way<footnote>
8261 If it is not possible to establish both locks, the
8262 system shouldn't wait for the second lock to be
8263 established, but remove the first lock, wait a (random)
8264 time, and start over locking again.
8265 </footnote>. Using the functions <tt>maillock</tt> and
8266 <tt>mailunlock</tt> provided by the
8267 <tt>liblockfile*</tt><footnote>
8268 You will need to depend on <tt>liblockfile1 (&gt;&gt;1.01)</tt>
8269 to use these functions.
8270 </footnote> packages is the recommended way to realize this.
8271 </p>
8274 Mailboxes are generally either mode 600 and owned by
8275 <var>user</var> or mode 660 and owned by
8276 <tt><var>user</var>:mail</tt><footnote>
8277 There are two traditional permission schemes for mail spools:
8278 mode 600 with all mail delivery done by processes running as
8279 the destination user, or mode 660 and owned by group mail with
8280 mail delivery done by a process running as a system user in
8281 group mail. Historically, Debian required mode 660 mail
8282 spools to enable the latter model, but that model has become
8283 increasingly uncommon and the principle of least privilege
8284 indicates that mail systems that use the first model should
8285 use permissions of 600. If delivery to programs is permitted,
8286 it's easier to keep the mail system secure if the delivery
8287 agent runs as the destination user. Debian Policy therefore
8288 permits either scheme.
8289 </footnote>. The local system administrator may choose a
8290 different permission scheme; packages should not make
8291 assumptions about the permission and ownership of mailboxes
8292 unless required (such as when creating a new mailbox). A MUA
8293 may remove a mailbox (unless it has nonstandard permissions) in
8294 which case the MTA or another MUA must recreate it if needed.
8295 </p>
8298 The mail spool is 2775 <tt>root:mail</tt>, and MUAs should
8299 be setgid mail to do the locking mentioned above (and
8300 must obviously avoid accessing other users' mailboxes
8301 using this privilege).</p>
8304 <file>/etc/aliases</file> is the source file for the system mail
8305 aliases (e.g., postmaster, usenet, etc.), it is the one
8306 which the sysadmin and <prgn>postinst</prgn> scripts may
8307 edit. After <file>/etc/aliases</file> is edited the program or
8308 human editing it must call <prgn>newaliases</prgn>. All MTA
8309 packages must come with a <prgn>newaliases</prgn> program,
8310 even if it does nothing, but older MTA packages did not do
8311 this so programs should not fail if <prgn>newaliases</prgn>
8312 cannot be found. Note that because of this, all MTA
8313 packages must have <tt>Provides</tt>, <tt>Conflicts</tt> and
8314 <tt>Replaces: mail-transport-agent</tt> control file
8315 fields.
8316 </p>
8319 The convention of writing <tt>forward to
8320 <var>address</var></tt> in the mailbox itself is not
8321 supported. Use a <tt>.forward</tt> file instead.</p>
8324 The <prgn>rmail</prgn> program used by UUCP
8325 for incoming mail should be <file>/usr/sbin/rmail</file>.
8326 Likewise, <prgn>rsmtp</prgn>, for receiving
8327 batch-SMTP-over-UUCP, should be <file>/usr/sbin/rsmtp</file> if it
8328 is supported.</p>
8331 If your package needs to know what hostname to use on (for
8332 example) outgoing news and mail messages which are generated
8333 locally, you should use the file <file>/etc/mailname</file>. It
8334 will contain the portion after the username and <tt>@</tt>
8335 (at) sign for email addresses of users on the machine
8336 (followed by a newline).
8337 </p>
8340 Such a package should check for the existence of this file
8341 when it is being configured. If it exists, it should be
8342 used without comment, although an MTA's configuration script
8343 may wish to prompt the user even if it finds that this file
8344 exists. If the file does not exist, the package should
8345 prompt the user for the value (preferably using
8346 <prgn>debconf</prgn>) and store it in <file>/etc/mailname</file>
8347 as well as using it in the package's configuration. The
8348 prompt should make it clear that the name will not just be
8349 used by that package. For example, in this situation the
8350 <tt>inn</tt> package could say something like:
8351 <example compact="compact">
8352 Please enter the "mail name" of your system. This is the
8353 hostname portion of the address to be shown on outgoing
8354 news and mail messages. The default is
8355 <var>syshostname</var>, your system's host name. Mail
8356 name ["<var>syshostname</var>"]:
8357 </example>
8358 where <var>syshostname</var> is the output of <tt>hostname
8359 --fqdn</tt>.
8360 </p>
8361 </sect>
8363 <sect>
8364 <heading>News system configuration</heading>
8367 All the configuration files related to the NNTP (news)
8368 servers and clients should be located under
8369 <file>/etc/news</file>.</p>
8372 There are some configuration issues that apply to a number
8373 of news clients and server packages on the machine. These
8374 are:
8376 <taglist>
8377 <tag><file>/etc/news/organization</file></tag>
8378 <item>
8379 A string which should appear as the
8380 organization header for all messages posted
8381 by NNTP clients on the machine
8382 </item>
8384 <tag><file>/etc/news/server</file></tag>
8385 <item>
8386 Contains the FQDN of the upstream NNTP
8387 server, or localhost if the local machine is
8388 an NNTP server.
8389 </item>
8390 </taglist>
8392 Other global files may be added as required for cross-package news
8393 configuration.
8394 </p>
8395 </sect>
8398 <sect>
8399 <heading>Programs for the X Window System</heading>
8401 <sect1>
8402 <heading>Providing X support and package priorities</heading>
8405 Programs that can be configured with support for the X
8406 Window System must be configured to do so and must declare
8407 any package dependencies necessary to satisfy their
8408 runtime requirements when using the X Window System. If
8409 such a package is of higher priority than the X packages
8410 on which it depends, it is required that either the
8411 X-specific components be split into a separate package, or
8412 that an alternative version of the package, which includes
8413 X support, be provided, or that the package's priority be
8414 lowered.
8415 </p>
8416 </sect1>
8418 <sect1>
8419 <heading>Packages providing an X server</heading>
8422 Packages that provide an X server that, directly or
8423 indirectly, communicates with real input and display
8424 hardware should declare in their control data that they
8425 provide the virtual package <tt>xserver</tt>.<footnote>
8426 This implements current practice, and provides an
8427 actual policy for usage of the <tt>xserver</tt>
8428 virtual package which appears in the virtual packages
8429 list. In a nutshell, X servers that interface
8430 directly with the display and input hardware or via
8431 another subsystem (e.g., GGI) should provide
8432 <tt>xserver</tt>. Things like <tt>Xvfb</tt>,
8433 <tt>Xnest</tt>, and <tt>Xprt</tt> should not.
8434 </footnote>
8435 </p>
8436 </sect1>
8438 <sect1>
8439 <heading>Packages providing a terminal emulator</heading>
8442 Packages that provide a terminal emulator for the X Window
8443 System which meet the criteria listed below should declare
8444 in their control data that they provide the virtual
8445 package <tt>x-terminal-emulator</tt>. They should also
8446 register themselves as an alternative for
8447 <file>/usr/bin/x-terminal-emulator</file>, with a priority of
8449 </p>
8452 To be an <tt>x-terminal-emulator</tt>, a program must:
8453 <list compact="compact">
8454 <item>
8455 Be able to emulate a DEC VT100 terminal, or a
8456 compatible terminal.
8457 </item>
8459 <item>
8460 Support the command-line option <tt>-e
8461 <var>command</var></tt>, which creates a new
8462 terminal window<footnote>
8463 "New terminal window" does not necessarily mean
8464 a new top-level X window directly parented by
8465 the window manager; it could, if the terminal
8466 emulator application were so coded, be a new
8467 "view" in a multiple-document interface (MDI).
8468 </footnote>
8469 and runs the specified <var>command</var>,
8470 interpreting the entirety of the rest of the command
8471 line as a command to pass straight to exec, in the
8472 manner that <tt>xterm</tt> does.
8473 </item>
8475 <item>
8476 Support the command-line option <tt>-T
8477 <var>title</var></tt>, which creates a new terminal
8478 window with the window title <var>title</var>.
8479 </item>
8480 </list>
8481 </p>
8482 </sect1>
8484 <sect1>
8485 <heading>Packages providing a window manager</heading>
8488 Packages that provide a window manager should declare in
8489 their control data that they provide the virtual package
8490 <tt>x-window-manager</tt>. They should also register
8491 themselves as an alternative for
8492 <file>/usr/bin/x-window-manager</file>, with a priority
8493 calculated as follows:
8494 <list compact="compact">
8495 <item>
8496 Start with a priority of 20.
8497 </item>
8499 <item>
8500 If the window manager supports the Debian menu
8501 system, add 20 points if this support is available
8502 in the package's default configuration (i.e., no
8503 configuration files belonging to the system or user
8504 have to be edited to activate the feature); if
8505 configuration files must be modified, add only 10
8506 points.
8507 </p>
8508 </item>
8510 <item>
8511 If the window manager complies with <url
8512 id="http://www.freedesktop.org/Standards/wm-spec"
8513 name="The Window Manager Specification Project">,
8514 written by the <url id="http://www.freedesktop.org/"
8515 name="Free Desktop Group">, add 40 points.
8516 </item>
8518 <item>
8519 If the window manager permits the X session to be
8520 restarted using a <em>different</em> window manager
8521 (without killing the X server) in its default
8522 configuration, add 10 points; otherwise add none.
8523 </item>
8524 </list>
8525 </p>
8526 </sect1>
8528 <sect1>
8529 <heading>Packages providing fonts</heading>
8532 Packages that provide fonts for the X Window
8533 System<footnote>
8534 For the purposes of Debian Policy, a "font for the X
8535 Window System" is one which is accessed via X protocol
8536 requests. Fonts for the Linux console, for PostScript
8537 renderer, or any other purpose, do not fit this
8538 definition. Any tool which makes such fonts available
8539 to the X Window System, however, must abide by this
8540 font policy.
8541 </footnote>
8542 must do a number of things to ensure that they are both
8543 available without modification of the X or font server
8544 configuration, and that they do not corrupt files used by
8545 other font packages to register information about
8546 themselves.
8547 <enumlist>
8548 <item>
8549 Fonts of any type supported by the X Window System
8550 must be in a separate binary package from any
8551 executables, libraries, or documentation (except
8552 that specific to the fonts shipped, such as their
8553 license information). If one or more of the fonts
8554 so packaged are necessary for proper operation of
8555 the package with which they are associated the font
8556 package may be Recommended; if the fonts merely
8557 provide an enhancement, a Suggests relationship may
8558 be used. Packages must not Depend on font
8559 packages.<footnote>
8560 This is because the X server may retrieve fonts
8561 from the local file system or over the network
8562 from an X font server; the Debian package system
8563 is empowered to deal only with the local
8564 file system.
8565 </footnote>
8566 </item>
8568 <item>
8569 BDF fonts must be converted to PCF fonts with the
8570 <prgn>bdftopcf</prgn> utility (available in the
8571 <tt>xfonts-utils</tt> package, <prgn>gzip</prgn>ped, and
8572 placed in a directory that corresponds to their
8573 resolution:
8574 <list compact="compact">
8575 <item>
8576 100 dpi fonts must be placed in
8577 <file>/usr/share/fonts/X11/100dpi/</file>.
8578 </item>
8580 <item>
8581 75 dpi fonts must be placed in
8582 <file>/usr/share/fonts/X11/75dpi/</file>.
8583 </item>
8585 <item>
8586 Character-cell fonts, cursor fonts, and other
8587 low-resolution fonts must be placed in
8588 <file>/usr/share/fonts/X11/misc/</file>.
8589 </item>
8590 </list>
8591 </item>
8593 <item>
8594 Type 1 fonts must be placed in
8595 <file>/usr/share/fonts/X11/Type1/</file>. If font
8596 metric files are available, they must be placed here
8597 as well.
8598 </item>
8600 <item>
8601 Subdirectories of <file>/usr/share/fonts/X11/</file>
8602 other than those listed above must be neither
8603 created nor used. (The <file>PEX</file>, <file>CID</file>,
8604 <file>Speedo</file>, and <file>cyrillic</file> directories
8605 are excepted for historical reasons, but installation of
8606 files into these directories remains discouraged.)
8607 </item>
8609 <item>
8610 Font packages may, instead of placing files directly
8611 in the X font directories listed above, provide
8612 symbolic links in that font directory pointing to
8613 the files' actual location in the filesystem. Such
8614 a location must comply with the FHS.
8615 </item>
8617 <item>
8618 Font packages should not contain both 75dpi and
8619 100dpi versions of a font. If both are available,
8620 they should be provided in separate binary packages
8621 with <tt>-75dpi</tt> or <tt>-100dpi</tt> appended to
8622 the names of the packages containing the
8623 corresponding fonts.
8624 </item>
8626 <item>
8627 Fonts destined for the <file>misc</file> subdirectory
8628 should not be included in the same package as 75dpi
8629 or 100dpi fonts; instead, they should be provided in
8630 a separate package with <tt>-misc</tt> appended to
8631 its name.
8632 </item>
8634 <item>
8635 Font packages must not provide the files
8636 <file>fonts.dir</file>, <file>fonts.alias</file>, or
8637 <file>fonts.scale</file> in a font directory:
8638 <list>
8639 <item>
8640 <file>fonts.dir</file> files must not be provided at all.
8641 </item>
8643 <item>
8644 <file>fonts.alias</file> and <file>fonts.scale</file>
8645 files, if needed, should be provided in the
8646 directory
8647 <file>/etc/X11/fonts/<var>fontdir</var>/<var>package</var>.<var>extension</var></file>,
8648 where <var>fontdir</var> is the name of the
8649 subdirectory of
8650 <file>/usr/share/fonts/X11/</file> where the
8651 package's corresponding fonts are stored
8652 (e.g., <tt>75dpi</tt> or <tt>misc</tt>),
8653 <var>package</var> is the name of the package
8654 that provides these fonts, and
8655 <var>extension</var> is either <tt>scale</tt>
8656 or <tt>alias</tt>, whichever corresponds to
8657 the file contents.
8658 </item>
8659 </list>
8660 </item>
8662 <item>
8663 Font packages must declare a dependency on
8664 <tt>xfonts-utils</tt> in their control
8665 data.
8666 </item>
8668 <item>
8669 Font packages that provide one or more
8670 <file>fonts.scale</file> files as described above must
8671 invoke <prgn>update-fonts-scale</prgn> on each
8672 directory into which they installed fonts
8673 <em>before</em> invoking
8674 <prgn>update-fonts-dir</prgn> on that directory.
8675 This invocation must occur in both the
8676 <prgn>postinst</prgn> (for all arguments) and
8677 <prgn>postrm</prgn> (for all arguments except
8678 <tt>upgrade</tt>) scripts.
8679 </item>
8681 <item>
8682 Font packages that provide one or more
8683 <file>fonts.alias</file> files as described above must
8684 invoke <prgn>update-fonts-alias</prgn> on each
8685 directory into which they installed fonts. This
8686 invocation must occur in both the
8687 <prgn>postinst</prgn> (for all arguments) and
8688 <prgn>postrm</prgn> (for all arguments except
8689 <tt>upgrade</tt>) scripts.
8690 </item>
8692 <item>
8693 Font packages must invoke
8694 <prgn>update-fonts-dir</prgn> on each directory into
8695 which they installed fonts. This invocation must
8696 occur in both the <prgn>postinst</prgn> (for all
8697 arguments) and <prgn>postrm</prgn> (for all
8698 arguments except <tt>upgrade</tt>) scripts.
8699 </item>
8701 <item>
8702 Font packages must not provide alias names for the
8703 fonts they include which collide with alias names
8704 already in use by fonts already packaged.
8705 </item>
8707 <item>
8708 Font packages must not provide fonts with the same
8709 XLFD registry name as another font already packaged.
8710 </item>
8711 </enumlist>
8712 </p>
8713 </sect1>
8715 <sect1 id="appdefaults">
8716 <heading>Application defaults files</heading>
8719 Application defaults files must be installed in the
8720 directory <file>/etc/X11/app-defaults/</file> (use of a
8721 localized subdirectory of <file>/etc/X11/</file> as described
8722 in the <em>X Toolkit Intrinsics - C Language
8723 Interface</em> manual is also permitted). They must be
8724 registered as <tt>conffile</tt>s or handled as
8725 configuration files.
8726 </p>
8729 Customization of programs' X resources may also be
8730 supported with the provision of a file with the same name
8731 as that of the package placed in
8732 the <file>/etc/X11/Xresources/</file> directory, which
8733 must be registered as a <tt>conffile</tt> or handled as a
8734 configuration file.<footnote>
8735 Note that this mechanism is not the same as using
8736 app-defaults; app-defaults are tied to the client
8737 binary on the local file system, whereas X resources
8738 are stored in the X server and affect all connecting
8739 clients.
8740 </footnote>
8741 </p>
8742 </sect1>
8744 <sect1>
8745 <heading>Installation directory issues</heading>
8748 Historically, packages using the X Window System used a
8749 separate set of installation directories from other packages.
8750 This practice has been discontinued and packages using the X
8751 Window System should now generally be installed in the same
8752 directories as any other package. Specifically, packages must
8753 not install files under the <file>/usr/X11R6/</file> directory
8754 and the <file>/usr/X11R6/</file> directory hierarchy should be
8755 regarded as obsolete.
8756 </p>
8759 Include files previously installed under
8760 <file>/usr/X11R6/include/X11/</file> should be installed into
8761 <file>/usr/include/X11/</file>. For files previously
8762 installed into subdirectories of
8763 <file>/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/</file>, package maintainers should
8764 determine if subdirectories of <file>/usr/lib/</file> and
8765 <file>/usr/share/</file> can be used. If not, a subdirectory
8766 of <file>/usr/lib/X11/</file> should be used.
8767 </p>
8770 Configuration files for window, display, or session managers
8771 or other applications that are tightly integrated with the X
8772 Window System may be placed in a subdirectory
8773 of <file>/etc/X11/</file> corresponding to the package name.
8774 Other X Window System applications should use
8775 the <file>/etc/</file> directory unless otherwise mandated by
8776 policy (such as for <ref id="appdefaults">).
8777 </p>
8778 </sect1>
8780 <sect1>
8781 <heading>The OSF/Motif and OpenMotif libraries</heading>
8784 <em>Programs that require the non-DFSG-compliant OSF/Motif or
8785 OpenMotif libraries</em><footnote>
8786 OSF/Motif and OpenMotif are collectively referred to as
8787 "Motif" in this policy document.
8788 </footnote>
8789 should be compiled against and tested with LessTif (a free
8790 re-implementation of Motif) instead. If the maintainer
8791 judges that the program or programs do not work
8792 sufficiently well with LessTif to be distributed and
8793 supported, but do so when compiled against Motif, then two
8794 versions of the package should be created; one linked
8795 statically against Motif and with <tt>-smotif</tt>
8796 appended to the package name, and one linked dynamically
8797 against Motif and with <tt>-dmotif</tt> appended to the
8798 package name.
8799 </p>
8802 Both Motif-linked versions are dependent
8803 upon non-DFSG-compliant software and thus cannot be
8804 uploaded to the <em>main</em> distribution; if the
8805 software is itself DFSG-compliant it may be uploaded to
8806 the <em>contrib</em> distribution. While known existing
8807 versions of Motif permit unlimited redistribution of
8808 binaries linked against the library (whether statically or
8809 dynamically), it is the package maintainer's
8810 responsibility to determine whether this is permitted by
8811 the license of the copy of Motif in their possession.
8812 </p>
8813 </sect1>
8814 </sect>
8816 <sect id="perl">
8817 <heading>Perl programs and modules</heading>
8820 Perl programs and modules should follow the current Perl policy.
8821 </p>
8824 The Perl policy can be found in the <tt>perl-policy</tt>
8825 files in the <tt>debian-policy</tt> package.
8826 It is also available from the Debian web mirrors at
8827 <tt><url name="/doc/packaging-manuals/perl-policy/"
8828 id="http://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/perl-policy/"></tt>.
8829 </p>
8830 </sect>
8832 <sect id="emacs">
8833 <heading>Emacs lisp programs</heading>
8836 Please refer to the "Debian Emacs Policy" for details of how to
8837 package emacs lisp programs.
8838 </p>
8841 The Emacs policy is available in
8842 <file>debian-emacs-policy.gz</file> of the
8843 <package>emacsen-common</package> package.
8844 It is also available from the Debian web mirrors at
8845 <tt><url name="/doc/packaging-manuals/debian-emacs-policy"
8846 id="http://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/debian-emacs-policy"></tt>.
8847 </p>
8848 </sect>
8850 <sect>
8851 <heading>Games</heading>
8854 The permissions on <file>/var/games</file> are mode 755, owner
8855 <tt>root</tt> and group <tt>root</tt>.
8856 </p>
8859 Each game decides on its own security policy.</p>
8862 Games which require protected, privileged access to
8863 high-score files, saved games, etc., may be made
8864 set-<em>group</em>-id (mode 2755) and owned by
8865 <tt>root:games</tt>, and use files and directories with
8866 appropriate permissions (770 <tt>root:games</tt>, for
8867 example). They must not be made
8868 set-<em>user</em>-id, as this causes security problems. (If
8869 an attacker can subvert any set-user-id game they can
8870 overwrite the executable of any other, causing other players
8871 of these games to run a Trojan horse program. With a
8872 set-group-id game the attacker only gets access to less
8873 important game data, and if they can get at the other
8874 players' accounts at all it will take considerably more
8875 effort.)</p>
8878 Some packages, for example some fortune cookie programs, are
8879 configured by the upstream authors to install with their
8880 data files or other static information made unreadable so
8881 that they can only be accessed through set-id programs
8882 provided. You should not do this in a Debian package: anyone can
8883 download the <file>.deb</file> file and read the data from it,
8884 so there is no point making the files unreadable. Not
8885 making the files unreadable also means that you don't have
8886 to make so many programs set-id, which reduces the risk of a
8887 security hole.</p>
8890 As described in the FHS, binaries of games should be
8891 installed in the directory <file>/usr/games</file>. This also
8892 applies to games that use the X Window System. Manual pages
8893 for games (X and non-X games) should be installed in
8894 <file>/usr/share/man/man6</file>.</p>
8895 </sect>
8896 </chapt>
8899 <chapt id="docs">
8900 <heading>Documentation</heading>
8902 <sect>
8903 <heading>Manual pages</heading>
8906 You should install manual pages in <prgn>nroff</prgn> source
8907 form, in appropriate places under <file>/usr/share/man</file>.
8908 You should only use sections 1 to 9 (see the FHS for more
8909 details). You must not install a pre-formatted "cat page".
8910 </p>
8913 Each program, utility, and function should have an
8914 associated manual page included in the same package. It is
8915 suggested that all configuration files also have a manual
8916 page included as well. Manual pages for protocols and other
8917 auxiliary things are optional.
8918 </p>
8921 If no manual page is available, this is considered as a bug
8922 and should be reported to the Debian Bug Tracking System (the
8923 maintainer of the package is allowed to write this bug report
8924 themselves, if they so desire). Do not close the bug report
8925 until a proper man page is available.<footnote>
8926 It is not very hard to write a man page. See the
8927 <url id="http://www.schweikhardt.net/man_page_howto.html"
8928 name="Man-Page-HOWTO">,
8929 <manref name="man" section="7">, the examples
8930 created by <prgn>debmake</prgn> or <prgn>dh_make</prgn>,
8931 the helper programs <prgn>help2man</prgn>, or the
8932 directory <file>/usr/share/doc/man-db/examples</file>.
8933 </footnote>
8934 </p>
8937 You may forward a complaint about a missing man page to the
8938 upstream authors, and mark the bug as forwarded in the
8939 Debian bug tracking system. Even though the GNU Project do
8940 not in general consider the lack of a man page to be a bug,
8941 we do; if they tell you that they don't consider it a bug
8942 you should leave the bug in our bug tracking system open
8943 anyway.
8944 </p>
8947 Manual pages should be installed compressed using <tt>gzip -9</tt>.
8948 </p>
8951 If one man page needs to be accessible via several names it
8952 is better to use a symbolic link than the <file>.so</file>
8953 feature, but there is no need to fiddle with the relevant
8954 parts of the upstream source to change from <file>.so</file> to
8955 symlinks: don't do it unless it's easy. You should not
8956 create hard links in the manual page directories, nor put
8957 absolute filenames in <file>.so</file> directives. The filename
8958 in a <file>.so</file> in a man page should be relative to the
8959 base of the man page tree (usually
8960 <file>/usr/share/man</file>). If you do not create any links
8961 (whether symlinks, hard links, or <tt>.so</tt> directives)
8962 in the file system to the alternate names of the man page,
8963 then you should not rely on <prgn>man</prgn> finding your
8964 man page under those names based solely on the information in
8965 the man page's header.<footnote>
8966 Supporting this in <prgn>man</prgn> often requires
8967 unreasonable processing time to find a manual page or to
8968 report that none exists, and moves knowledge into man's
8969 database that would be better left in the file system.
8970 This support is therefore deprecated and will cease to
8971 be present in the future.
8972 </footnote>
8973 </p>
8976 Manual pages in locale-specific subdirectories of
8977 <file>/usr/share/man</file> should use either UTF-8 or the usual
8978 legacy encoding for that language (normally the one corresponding
8979 to the shortest relevant locale name in
8980 <file>/usr/share/i18n/SUPPORTED</file>). For example, pages under
8981 <file>/usr/share/man/fr</file> should use either UTF-8 or
8982 ISO-8859-1.<footnote>
8983 <prgn>man</prgn> will automatically detect whether UTF-8 is in
8984 use. In future, all manual pages will be required to use
8985 UTF-8.
8986 </footnote>
8987 </p>
8990 A country name (the <tt>DE</tt> in <tt>de_DE</tt>) should not be
8991 included in the subdirectory name unless it indicates a
8992 significant difference in the language, as this excludes
8993 speakers of the language in other countries.<footnote>
8994 At the time of writing, Chinese and Portuguese are the main
8995 languages with such differences, so <file>pt_BR</file>,
8996 <file>zh_CN</file>, and <file>zh_TW</file> are all allowed.
8997 </footnote>
8998 </p>
9001 If a localized version of a manual page is provided, it should
9002 either be up-to-date or it should be obvious to the reader that
9003 it is outdated and the original manual page should be used
9004 instead. This can be done either by a note at the beginning of
9005 the manual page or by showing the missing or changed portions in
9006 the original language instead of the target language.
9007 </p>
9008 </sect>
9010 <sect>
9011 <heading>Info documents</heading>
9014 Info documents should be installed in <file>/usr/share/info</file>.
9015 They should be compressed with <tt>gzip -9</tt>.
9016 </p>
9019 The <prgn>install-info</prgn> program maintains a directory of
9020 installed info documents in <file>/usr/share/info/dir</file> for
9021 the use of info readers.<footnote>
9022 It was previously necessary for packages installing info
9023 documents to run <prgn>install-info</prgn> from maintainer
9024 scripts. This is no longer necessary. The installation
9025 system now uses dpkg triggers.
9026 </footnote>
9027 This file must not be included in packages. Packages containing
9028 info documents should depend on <tt>dpkg (>= 1.15.4) |
9029 install-info</tt> to ensure that the directory file is properly
9030 rebuilt during partial upgrades from Debian 5.0 (lenny) and
9031 earlier.
9032 </p>
9035 Info documents should contain section and directory entry
9036 information in the document for the use
9037 of <prgn>install-info</prgn>. The section should be specified
9038 via a line starting with <tt>INFO-DIR-SECTION</tt> followed by a
9039 space and the section of this info page. The directory entry or
9040 entries should be included between
9041 a <tt>START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY</tt> line and
9042 an <tt>END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY</tt> line. For example:
9043 <example>
9044 INFO-DIR-SECTION Individual utilities
9045 START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
9046 * example: (example). An example info directory entry.
9047 END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
9048 </example>
9049 To determine which section to use, you should look
9050 at <file>/usr/share/info/dir</file> on your system and choose
9051 the most relevant (or create a new section if none of the
9052 current sections are relevant).<footnote>
9053 Normally, info documents are generated from Texinfo source.
9054 To include this information in the generated info document, if
9055 it is absent, add commands like:
9056 <example>
9057 @dircategory Individual utilities
9058 @direntry
9059 * example: (example). An example info directory entry.
9060 @end direntry
9061 </example>
9062 to the Texinfo source of the document and ensure that the info
9063 documents are rebuilt from source during the package build.
9064 </footnote>
9065 </p>
9066 </sect>
9068 <sect>
9069 <heading>Additional documentation</heading>
9072 Any additional documentation that comes with the package may
9073 be installed at the discretion of the package maintainer.
9074 Plain text documentation should be installed in the directory
9075 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var></file>, where
9076 <var>package</var> is the name of the package, and
9077 compressed with <tt>gzip -9</tt> unless it is small.
9078 </p>
9081 If a package comes with large amounts of documentation which
9082 many users of the package will not require you should create
9083 a separate binary package to contain it, so that it does not
9084 take up disk space on the machines of users who do not need
9085 or want it installed.</p>
9088 It is often a good idea to put text information files
9089 (<file>README</file>s, changelogs, and so forth) that come with
9090 the source package in <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var></file>
9091 in the binary package. However, you don't need to install
9092 the instructions for building and installing the package, of
9093 course!</p>
9096 Packages must not require the existence of any files in
9097 <file>/usr/share/doc/</file> in order to function
9098 <footnote>
9099 The system administrator should be able to
9100 delete files in <file>/usr/share/doc/</file> without causing
9101 any programs to break.
9102 </footnote>.
9103 Any files that are referenced by programs but are also
9104 useful as stand alone documentation should be installed under
9105 <file>/usr/share/<var>package</var>/</file> with symbolic links from
9106 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var></file>.
9107 </p>
9110 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var></file> may be a symbolic
9111 link to another directory in <file>/usr/share/doc</file> only if
9112 the two packages both come from the same source and the
9113 first package Depends on the second.<footnote>
9115 Please note that this does not override the section on
9116 changelog files below, so the file
9117 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var>/changelog.Debian.gz</file>
9118 must refer to the changelog for the current version of
9119 <var>package</var> in question. In practice, this means
9120 that the sources of the target and the destination of the
9121 symlink must be the same (same source package and
9122 version).
9123 </p>
9124 </footnote>
9125 </p>
9128 Former Debian releases placed all additional documentation
9129 in <file>/usr/doc/<var>package</var></file>. This has been
9130 changed to <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var></file>,
9131 and packages must not put documentation in the directory
9132 <file>/usr/doc/<var>package</var></file>. <footnote>
9133 At this phase of the transition, we no longer require a
9134 symbolic link in <file>/usr/doc/</file>. At a later point,
9135 policy shall change to make the symbolic links a bug.
9136 </footnote>
9137 </p>
9138 </sect>
9140 <sect>
9141 <heading>Preferred documentation formats</heading>
9144 The unification of Debian documentation is being carried out
9145 via HTML.</p>
9148 If your package comes with extensive documentation in a
9149 markup format that can be converted to various other formats
9150 you should if possible ship HTML versions in a binary
9151 package, in the directory
9152 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>appropriate-package</var></file> or
9153 its subdirectories.<footnote>
9154 The rationale: The important thing here is that HTML
9155 docs should be available in <em>some</em> package, not
9156 necessarily in the main binary package.
9157 </footnote>
9158 </p>
9161 Other formats such as PostScript may be provided at the
9162 package maintainer's discretion.
9163 </p>
9164 </sect>
9166 <sect id="copyrightfile">
9167 <heading>Copyright information</heading>
9170 Every package must be accompanied by a verbatim copy of its
9171 copyright information and distribution license in the file
9172 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var>/copyright</file>. This
9173 file must neither be compressed nor be a symbolic link.
9174 </p>
9177 In addition, the copyright file must say where the upstream
9178 sources (if any) were obtained. It should name the original
9179 authors of the package and the Debian maintainer(s) who were
9180 involved with its creation.
9181 </p>
9184 Packages in the <em>contrib</em> or <em>non-free</em> archive
9185 areas should state in the copyright file that the package is not
9186 part of the Debian GNU/Linux distribution and briefly explain
9187 why.
9188 </p>
9191 A copy of the file which will be installed in
9192 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var>/copyright</file> should
9193 be in <file>debian/copyright</file> in the source package.
9194 </p>
9197 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var></file> may be a symbolic
9198 link to another directory in <file>/usr/share/doc</file> only if
9199 the two packages both come from the same source and the
9200 first package Depends on the second. These rules are
9201 important because copyrights must be extractable by
9202 mechanical means.
9203 </p>
9206 Packages distributed under the UCB BSD license, the Apache
9207 license (version 2.0), the Artistic license, the GNU GPL
9208 (version 2 or 3), the GNU LGPL (versions 2, 2.1, or 3), and the
9209 GNU FDL (versions 1.2 or 1.3) should refer to the corresponding
9210 files under <file>/usr/share/common-licenses</file>,<footnote>
9212 In particular,
9213 <file>/usr/share/common-licenses/BSD</file>,
9214 <file>/usr/share/common-licenses/Apache-2.0</file>,
9215 <file>/usr/share/common-licenses/Artistic</file>,
9216 <file>/usr/share/common-licenses/GPL-2</file>,
9217 <file>/usr/share/common-licenses/GPL-3</file>,
9218 <file>/usr/share/common-licenses/LGPL-2</file>,
9219 <file>/usr/share/common-licenses/LGPL-2.1</file>,
9220 <file>/usr/share/common-licenses/LGPL-3</file>,
9221 <file>/usr/share/common-licenses/GFDL-1.2</file>, and
9222 <file>/usr/share/common-licenses/GFDL-1.3</file>
9223 respectively.
9224 </p>
9225 </footnote> rather than quoting them in the copyright
9226 file.
9227 </p>
9230 You should not use the copyright file as a general <file>README</file>
9231 file. If your package has such a file it should be
9232 installed in <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var>/README</file> or
9233 <file>README.Debian</file> or some other appropriate place.</p>
9234 </sect>
9236 <sect>
9237 <heading>Examples</heading>
9240 Any examples (configurations, source files, whatever),
9241 should be installed in a directory
9242 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var>/examples</file>. These
9243 files should not be referenced by any program: they're there
9244 for the benefit of the system administrator and users as
9245 documentation only. Architecture-specific example files
9246 should be installed in a directory
9247 <file>/usr/lib/<var>package</var>/examples</file> with symbolic
9248 links to them from
9249 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var>/examples</file>, or the
9250 latter directory itself may be a symbolic link to the
9251 former.
9252 </p>
9255 If the purpose of a package is to provide examples, then the
9256 example files may be installed into
9257 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var></file>.
9258 </p>
9259 </sect>
9261 <sect id="changelogs">
9262 <heading>Changelog files</heading>
9265 Packages that are not Debian-native must contain a
9266 compressed copy of the <file>debian/changelog</file> file from
9267 the Debian source tree in
9268 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var></file> with the name
9269 <file>changelog.Debian.gz</file>.
9270 </p>
9273 If an upstream changelog is available, it should be accessible as
9274 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var>/changelog.gz</file> in
9275 plain text. If the upstream changelog is distributed in
9276 HTML, it should be made available in that form as
9277 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var>/changelog.html.gz</file>
9278 and a plain text <file>changelog.gz</file> should be generated
9279 from it using, for example, <tt>lynx -dump -nolist</tt>. If
9280 the upstream changelog files do not already conform to this
9281 naming convention, then this may be achieved either by
9282 renaming the files, or by adding a symbolic link, at the
9283 maintainer's discretion.<footnote>
9284 Rationale: People should not have to look in places for
9285 upstream changelogs merely because they are given
9286 different names or are distributed in HTML format.
9287 </footnote>
9288 </p>
9291 All of these files should be installed compressed using
9292 <tt>gzip -9</tt>, as they will become large with time even
9293 if they start out small.
9294 </p>
9297 If the package has only one changelog which is used both as
9298 the Debian changelog and the upstream one because there is
9299 no separate upstream maintainer then that changelog should
9300 usually be installed as
9301 <file>/usr/share/doc/<var>package</var>/changelog.gz</file>; if
9302 there is a separate upstream maintainer, but no upstream
9303 changelog, then the Debian changelog should still be called
9304 <file>changelog.Debian.gz</file>.
9305 </p>
9308 For details about the format and contents of the Debian
9309 changelog file, please see <ref id="dpkgchangelog">.
9310 </p>
9311 </sect>
9312 </chapt>
9314 <appendix id="pkg-scope">
9315 <heading>Introduction and scope of these appendices</heading>
9318 These appendices are taken essentially verbatim from the
9319 now-deprecated Packaging Manual, version 3.2.1.0. They are
9320 the chapters which are likely to be of use to package
9321 maintainers and which have not already been included in the
9322 policy document itself. Most of these sections are very likely
9323 not relevant to policy; they should be treated as
9324 documentation for the packaging system. Please note that these
9325 appendices are included for convenience, and for historical
9326 reasons: they used to be part of policy package, and they have
9327 not yet been incorporated into dpkg documentation. However,
9328 they still have value, and hence they are presented here.
9329 </p>
9332 They have not yet been checked to ensure that they are
9333 compatible with the contents of policy, and if there are any
9334 contradictions, the version in the main policy document takes
9335 precedence. The remaining chapters of the old Packaging
9336 Manual have also not been read in detail to ensure that there
9337 are not parts which have been left out. Both of these will be
9338 done in due course.
9339 </p>
9342 Certain parts of the Packaging manual were integrated into the
9343 Policy Manual proper, and removed from the appendices. Links
9344 have been placed from the old locations to the new ones.
9345 </p>
9348 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> is a suite of programs for creating binary
9349 package files and installing and removing them on Unix
9350 systems.<footnote>
9351 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> is targeted primarily at Debian
9352 GNU/Linux, but may work on or be ported to other
9353 systems.
9354 </footnote>
9355 </p>
9358 The binary packages are designed for the management of
9359 installed executable programs (usually compiled binaries) and
9360 their associated data, though source code examples and
9361 documentation are provided as part of some packages.</p>
9364 This manual describes the technical aspects of creating Debian
9365 binary packages (<file>.deb</file> files). It documents the
9366 behavior of the package management programs
9367 <prgn>dpkg</prgn>, <prgn>dselect</prgn> et al. and the way
9368 they interact with packages.</p>
9371 It also documents the interaction between
9372 <prgn>dselect</prgn>'s core and the access method scripts it
9373 uses to actually install the selected packages, and describes
9374 how to create a new access method.</p>
9377 This manual does not go into detail about the options and
9378 usage of the package building and installation tools. It
9379 should therefore be read in conjunction with those programs'
9380 man pages.
9381 </p>
9384 The utility programs which are provided with <prgn>dpkg</prgn>
9385 for managing various system configuration and similar issues,
9386 such as <prgn>update-rc.d</prgn> and
9387 <prgn>install-info</prgn>, are not described in detail here -
9388 please see their man pages.
9389 </p>
9392 It is assumed that the reader is reasonably familiar with the
9393 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> System Administrators' manual.
9394 Unfortunately this manual does not yet exist.
9395 </p>
9398 The Debian version of the FSF's GNU hello program is provided
9399 as an example for people wishing to create Debian
9400 packages. The Debian <prgn>debmake</prgn> package is
9401 recommended as a very helpful tool in creating and maintaining
9402 Debian packages. However, while the tools and examples are
9403 helpful, they do not replace the need to read and follow the
9404 Policy and Programmer's Manual.</p>
9405 </appendix>
9407 <appendix id="pkg-binarypkg">
9408 <heading>Binary packages (from old Packaging Manual)</heading>
9411 The binary package has two main sections. The first part
9412 consists of various control information files and scripts used
9413 by <prgn>dpkg</prgn> when installing and removing. See <ref
9414 id="pkg-controlarea">.
9415 </p>
9418 The second part is an archive containing the files and
9419 directories to be installed.
9420 </p>
9423 In the future binary packages may also contain other
9424 components, such as checksums and digital signatures. The
9425 format for the archive is described in full in the
9426 <file>deb(5)</file> man page.
9427 </p>
9430 <sect id="pkg-bincreating"><heading>Creating package files -
9431 <prgn>dpkg-deb</prgn>
9432 </heading>
9435 All manipulation of binary package files is done by
9436 <prgn>dpkg-deb</prgn>; it's the only program that has
9437 knowledge of the format. (<prgn>dpkg-deb</prgn> may be
9438 invoked by calling <prgn>dpkg</prgn>, as <prgn>dpkg</prgn>
9439 will spot that the options requested are appropriate to
9440 <prgn>dpkg-deb</prgn> and invoke that instead with the same
9441 arguments.)
9442 </p>
9445 In order to create a binary package you must make a
9446 directory tree which contains all the files and directories
9447 you want to have in the file system data part of the package.
9448 In Debian-format source packages this directory is usually
9449 <file>debian/tmp</file>, relative to the top of the package's
9450 source tree.
9451 </p>
9454 They should have the locations (relative to the root of the
9455 directory tree you're constructing) ownerships and
9456 permissions which you want them to have on the system when
9457 they are installed.
9458 </p>
9461 With current versions of <prgn>dpkg</prgn> the uid/username
9462 and gid/groupname mappings for the users and groups being
9463 used should be the same on the system where the package is
9464 built and the one where it is installed.
9465 </p>
9468 You need to add one special directory to the root of the
9469 miniature file system tree you're creating:
9470 <prgn>DEBIAN</prgn>. It should contain the control
9471 information files, notably the binary package control file
9472 (see <ref id="pkg-controlfile">).
9473 </p>
9476 The <prgn>DEBIAN</prgn> directory will not appear in the
9477 file system archive of the package, and so won't be installed
9478 by <prgn>dpkg</prgn> when the package is installed.
9479 </p>
9482 When you've prepared the package, you should invoke:
9483 <example>
9484 dpkg --build <var>directory</var>
9485 </example>
9486 </p>
9489 This will build the package in
9490 <file><var>directory</var>.deb</file>. (<prgn>dpkg</prgn> knows
9491 that <tt>--build</tt> is a <prgn>dpkg-deb</prgn> option, so
9492 it invokes <prgn>dpkg-deb</prgn> with the same arguments to
9493 build the package.)
9494 </p>
9497 See the man page <manref name="dpkg-deb" section="8"> for details of how
9498 to examine the contents of this newly-created file. You may find the
9499 output of following commands enlightening:
9500 <example>
9501 dpkg-deb --info <var>filename</var>.deb
9502 dpkg-deb --contents <var>filename</var>.deb
9503 dpkg --contents <var>filename</var>.deb
9504 </example>
9505 To view the copyright file for a package you could use this command:
9506 <example>
9507 dpkg --fsys-tarfile <var>filename</var>.deb | tar xOf - --wildcards \*/copyright | pager
9508 </example>
9509 </p>
9510 </sect>
9512 <sect id="pkg-controlarea">
9513 <heading>Package control information files</heading>
9516 The control information portion of a binary package is a
9517 collection of files with names known to <prgn>dpkg</prgn>.
9518 It will treat the contents of these files specially - some
9519 of them contain information used by <prgn>dpkg</prgn> when
9520 installing or removing the package; others are scripts which
9521 the package maintainer wants <prgn>dpkg</prgn> to run.
9522 </p>
9525 It is possible to put other files in the package control
9526 area, but this is not generally a good idea (though they
9527 will largely be ignored).
9528 </p>
9531 Here is a brief list of the control info files supported by
9532 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> and a summary of what they're used for.
9533 </p>
9536 <taglist>
9537 <tag><tt>control</tt>
9538 <item>
9540 This is the key description file used by
9541 <prgn>dpkg</prgn>. It specifies the package's name
9542 and version, gives its description for the user,
9543 states its relationships with other packages, and so
9544 forth. See <ref id="sourcecontrolfiles"> and
9545 <ref id="binarycontrolfiles">.
9546 </p>
9549 It is usually generated automatically from information
9550 in the source package by the
9551 <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn> program, and with
9552 assistance from <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn>.
9553 See <ref id="pkg-sourcetools">.
9554 </p>
9555 </item>
9557 <tag><tt>postinst</tt>, <tt>preinst</tt>, <tt>postrm</tt>,
9558 <tt>prerm</tt>
9559 </tag>
9560 <item>
9562 These are executable files (usually scripts) which
9563 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> runs during installation, upgrade
9564 and removal of packages. They allow the package to
9565 deal with matters which are particular to that package
9566 or require more complicated processing than that
9567 provided by <prgn>dpkg</prgn>. Details of when and
9568 how they are called are in <ref id="maintainerscripts">.
9569 </p>
9572 It is very important to make these scripts idempotent.
9573 See <ref id="idempotency">.
9574 </p>
9577 The maintainer scripts are guaranteed to run with a
9578 controlling terminal and can interact with the user.
9579 See <ref id="controllingterminal">.
9580 </p>
9581 </item>
9583 <tag><tt>conffiles</tt>
9584 </tag>
9585 <item>
9586 This file contains a list of configuration files which
9587 are to be handled automatically by <prgn>dpkg</prgn>
9588 (see <ref id="pkg-conffiles">). Note that not necessarily
9589 every configuration file should be listed here.
9590 </item>
9592 <tag><tt>shlibs</tt>
9593 </tag>
9594 <item>
9595 This file contains a list of the shared libraries
9596 supplied by the package, with dependency details for
9597 each. This is used by <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn>
9598 when it determines what dependencies are required in a
9599 package control file. The <tt>shlibs</tt> file format
9600 is described on <ref id="shlibs">.
9601 </item>
9602 </taglist>
9603 </p>
9605 <sect id="pkg-controlfile">
9606 <heading>The main control information file: <tt>control</tt></heading>
9609 The most important control information file used by
9610 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> when it installs a package is
9611 <tt>control</tt>. It contains all the package's "vital
9612 statistics".
9613 </p>
9616 The binary package control files of packages built from
9617 Debian sources are made by a special tool,
9618 <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn>, which reads
9619 <file>debian/control</file> and <file>debian/changelog</file> to
9620 find the information it needs. See <ref id="pkg-sourcepkg"> for
9621 more details.
9622 </p>
9625 The fields in binary package control files are listed in
9626 <ref id="binarycontrolfiles">.
9627 </p>
9630 A description of the syntax of control files and the purpose
9631 of the fields is available in <ref id="controlfields">.
9632 </p>
9633 </sect>
9635 <sect>
9636 <heading>Time Stamps</heading>
9639 See <ref id="timestamps">.
9640 </p>
9641 </sect>
9642 </appendix>
9644 <appendix id="pkg-sourcepkg">
9645 <heading>Source packages (from old Packaging Manual) </heading>
9648 The Debian binary packages in the distribution are generated
9649 from Debian sources, which are in a special format to assist
9650 the easy and automatic building of binaries.
9651 </p>
9653 <sect id="pkg-sourcetools">
9654 <heading>Tools for processing source packages</heading>
9657 Various tools are provided for manipulating source packages;
9658 they pack and unpack sources and help build of binary
9659 packages and help manage the distribution of new versions.
9660 </p>
9663 They are introduced and typical uses described here; see
9664 <manref name="dpkg-source" section="1"> for full
9665 documentation about their arguments and operation.
9666 </p>
9669 For examples of how to construct a Debian source package,
9670 and how to use those utilities that are used by Debian
9671 source packages, please see the <prgn>hello</prgn> example
9672 package.
9673 </p>
9675 <sect1 id="pkg-dpkg-source">
9676 <heading>
9677 <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn> - packs and unpacks Debian source
9678 packages
9679 </heading>
9682 This program is frequently used by hand, and is also
9683 called from package-independent automated building scripts
9684 such as <prgn>dpkg-buildpackage</prgn>.
9685 </p>
9688 To unpack a package it is typically invoked with
9689 <example>
9690 dpkg-source -x <var>.../path/to/filename</var>.dsc
9691 </example>
9692 </p>
9695 with the <file><var>filename</var>.tar.gz</file> and
9696 <file><var>filename</var>.diff.gz</file> (if applicable) in
9697 the same directory. It unpacks into
9698 <file><var>package</var>-<var>version</var></file>, and if
9699 applicable
9700 <file><var>package</var>-<var>version</var>.orig</file>, in
9701 the current directory.
9702 </p>
9705 To create a packed source archive it is typically invoked:
9706 <example>
9707 dpkg-source -b <var>package</var>-<var>version</var>
9708 </example>
9709 </p>
9712 This will create the <file>.dsc</file>, <file>.tar.gz</file> and
9713 <file>.diff.gz</file> (if appropriate) in the current
9714 directory. <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn> does not clean the
9715 source tree first - this must be done separately if it is
9716 required.
9717 </p>
9720 See also <ref id="pkg-sourcearchives">.</p>
9721 </sect1>
9724 <sect1 id="pkg-dpkg-buildpackage">
9725 <heading>
9726 <prgn>dpkg-buildpackage</prgn> - overall package-building
9727 control script
9728 </heading>
9731 <prgn>dpkg-buildpackage</prgn> is a script which invokes
9732 <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn>, the <file>debian/rules</file>
9733 targets <tt>clean</tt>, <tt>build</tt> and
9734 <tt>binary</tt>, <prgn>dpkg-genchanges</prgn> and
9735 <prgn>gpg</prgn> (or <prgn>pgp</prgn>) to build a signed
9736 source and binary package upload.
9737 </p>
9740 It is usually invoked by hand from the top level of the
9741 built or unbuilt source directory. It may be invoked with
9742 no arguments; useful arguments include:
9743 <taglist compact="compact">
9744 <tag><tt>-uc</tt>, <tt>-us</tt></tag>
9745 <item>
9747 Do not sign the <tt>.changes</tt> file or the
9748 source package <tt>.dsc</tt> file, respectively.</p>
9749 </item>
9750 <tag><tt>-p<var>sign-command</var></tt></tag>
9751 <item>
9753 Invoke <var>sign-command</var> instead of finding
9754 <tt>gpg</tt> or <tt>pgp</tt> on the <prgn>PATH</prgn>.
9755 <var>sign-command</var> must behave just like
9756 <prgn>gpg</prgn> or <tt>pgp</tt>.</p>
9757 </item>
9758 <tag><tt>-r<var>root-command</var></tt></tag>
9759 <item>
9761 When root privilege is required, invoke the command
9762 <var>root-command</var>. <var>root-command</var>
9763 should invoke its first argument as a command, from
9764 the <prgn>PATH</prgn> if necessary, and pass its
9765 second and subsequent arguments to the command it
9766 calls. If no <var>root-command</var> is supplied
9767 then <var>dpkg-buildpackage</var> will take no
9768 special action to gain root privilege, so that for
9769 most packages it will have to be invoked as root to
9770 start with.</p>
9771 </item>
9772 <tag><tt>-b</tt>, <tt>-B</tt></tag>
9773 <item>
9775 Two types of binary-only build and upload - see
9776 <manref name="dpkg-source" section="1">.
9777 </p>
9778 </item>
9779 </taglist>
9780 </p>
9781 </sect1>
9783 <sect1 id="pkg-dpkg-gencontrol">
9784 <heading>
9785 <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn> - generates binary package
9786 control files
9787 </heading>
9790 This program is usually called from <file>debian/rules</file>
9791 (see <ref id="pkg-sourcetree">) in the top level of the source
9792 tree.
9793 </p>
9796 This is usually done just before the files and directories in the
9797 temporary directory tree where the package is being built have their
9798 permissions and ownerships set and the package is constructed using
9799 <prgn>dpkg-deb/</prgn>
9800 <footnote>
9801 This is so that the control file which is produced has
9802 the right permissions
9803 </footnote>.
9804 </p>
9807 <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn> must be called after all the
9808 files which are to go into the package have been placed in
9809 the temporary build directory, so that its calculation of
9810 the installed size of a package is correct.
9811 </p>
9814 It is also necessary for <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn> to
9815 be run after <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> so that the
9816 variable substitutions created by
9817 <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> in <file>debian/substvars</file>
9818 are available.
9819 </p>
9822 For a package which generates only one binary package, and
9823 which builds it in <file>debian/tmp</file> relative to the top
9824 of the source package, it is usually sufficient to call
9825 <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn>.
9826 </p>
9829 Sources which build several binaries will typically need
9830 something like:
9831 <example>
9832 dpkg-gencontrol -Pdebian/tmp-<var>pkg</var> -p<var>package</var>
9833 </example> The <tt>-P</tt> tells
9834 <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn> that the package is being
9835 built in a non-default directory, and the <tt>-p</tt>
9836 tells it which package's control file should be generated.
9837 </p>
9840 <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn> also adds information to the
9841 list of files in <file>debian/files</file>, for the benefit of
9842 (for example) a future invocation of
9843 <prgn>dpkg-genchanges</prgn>.</p>
9844 </sect1>
9846 <sect1 id="pkg-dpkg-shlibdeps">
9847 <heading>
9848 <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> - calculates shared library
9849 dependencies
9850 </heading>
9853 This program is usually called from <file>debian/rules</file>
9854 just before <prgn>dpkg-gencontrol</prgn> (see <ref
9855 id="pkg-sourcetree">), in the top level of the source tree.
9856 </p>
9859 Its arguments are executables and shared libraries
9860 <footnote>
9862 They may be specified either in the locations in the
9863 source tree where they are created or in the locations
9864 in the temporary build tree where they are installed
9865 prior to binary package creation.
9866 </p>
9867 </footnote> for which shared library dependencies should
9868 be included in the binary package's control file.
9869 </p>
9872 If some of the found shared libraries should only
9873 warrant a <tt>Recommends</tt> or <tt>Suggests</tt>, or if
9874 some warrant a <tt>Pre-Depends</tt>, this can be achieved
9875 by using the <tt>-d<var>dependency-field</var></tt> option
9876 before those executable(s). (Each <tt>-d</tt> option
9877 takes effect until the next <tt>-d</tt>.)
9878 </p>
9881 <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> does not directly cause the
9882 output control file to be modified. Instead by default it
9883 adds to the <file>debian/substvars</file> file variable
9884 settings like <tt>shlibs:Depends</tt>. These variable
9885 settings must be referenced in dependency fields in the
9886 appropriate per-binary-package sections of the source
9887 control file.
9888 </p>
9891 For example, a package that generates an essential part
9892 which requires dependencies, and optional parts that
9893 which only require a recommendation, would separate those
9894 two sets of dependencies into two different fields.<footnote>
9895 At the time of writing, an example for this was the
9896 <package/xmms/ package, with Depends used for the xmms
9897 executable, Recommends for the plug-ins and Suggests for
9898 even more optional features provided by unzip.
9899 </footnote>
9900 It can say in its <file>debian/rules</file>:
9901 <example>
9902 dpkg-shlibdeps -dDepends <var>program anotherprogram ...</var> \
9903 -dRecommends <var>optionalpart anotheroptionalpart</var>
9904 </example>
9905 and then in its main control file <file>debian/control</file>:
9906 <example>
9907 <var>...</var>
9908 Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}
9909 Recommends: ${shlibs:Recommends}
9910 <var>...</var>
9911 </example>
9912 </p>
9915 Sources which produce several binary packages with
9916 different shared library dependency requirements can use
9917 the <tt>-p<var>varnameprefix</var></tt> option to override
9918 the default <tt>shlibs:</tt> prefix (one invocation of
9919 <prgn>dpkg-shlibdeps</prgn> per setting of this option).
9920 They can thus produce several sets of dependency
9921 variables, each of the form
9922 <tt><var>varnameprefix</var>:<var>dependencyfield</var></tt>,
9923 which can be referred to in the appropriate parts of the
9924 binary package control files.
9925 </p>
9926 </sect1>
9929 <sect1 id="pkg-dpkg-distaddfile">
9930 <heading>
9931 <prgn>dpkg-distaddfile</prgn> - adds a file to
9932 <file>debian/files</file>
9933 </heading>
9936 Some packages' uploads need to include files other than
9937 the source and binary package files.
9938 </p>
9941 <prgn>dpkg-distaddfile</prgn> adds a file to the
9942 <file>debian/files</file> file so that it will be included in
9943 the <file>.changes</file> file when
9944 <prgn>dpkg-genchanges</prgn> is run.
9945 </p>
9948 It is usually invoked from the <tt>binary</tt> target of
9949 <file>debian/rules</file>:
9950 <example>
9951 dpkg-distaddfile <var>filename</var> <var>section</var> <var>priority</var>
9952 </example>
9953 The <var>filename</var> is relative to the directory where
9954 <prgn>dpkg-genchanges</prgn> will expect to find it - this
9955 is usually the directory above the top level of the source
9956 tree. The <file>debian/rules</file> target should put the
9957 file there just before or just after calling
9958 <prgn>dpkg-distaddfile</prgn>.
9959 </p>
9962 The <var>section</var> and <var>priority</var> are passed
9963 unchanged into the resulting <file>.changes</file> file.
9964 </p>
9965 </sect1>
9968 <sect1 id="pkg-dpkg-genchanges">
9969 <heading>
9970 <prgn>dpkg-genchanges</prgn> - generates a <file>.changes</file>
9971 upload control file
9972 </heading>
9975 This program is usually called by package-independent
9976 automatic building scripts such as
9977 <prgn>dpkg-buildpackage</prgn>, but it may also be called
9978 by hand.
9979 </p>
9982 It is usually called in the top level of a built source
9983 tree, and when invoked with no arguments will print out a
9984 straightforward <file>.changes</file> file based on the
9985 information in the source package's changelog and control
9986 file and the binary and source packages which should have
9987 been built.
9988 </p>
9989 </sect1>
9992 <sect1 id="pkg-dpkg-parsechangelog">
9993 <heading>
9994 <prgn>dpkg-parsechangelog</prgn> - produces parsed
9995 representation of a changelog
9996 </heading>
9999 This program is used internally by
10000 <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn> et al. It may also occasionally
10001 be useful in <file>debian/rules</file> and elsewhere. It
10002 parses a changelog, <file>debian/changelog</file> by default,
10003 and prints a control-file format representation of the
10004 information in it to standard output.
10005 </p>
10006 </sect1>
10008 <sect1 id="pkg-dpkg-architecture">
10009 <heading>
10010 <prgn>dpkg-architecture</prgn> - information about the build and
10011 host system
10012 </heading>
10015 This program can be used manually, but is also invoked by
10016 <tt>dpkg-buildpackage</tt> or <file>debian/rules</file> to set
10017 environment or make variables which specify the build and host
10018 architecture for the package building process.
10019 </p>
10020 </sect1>
10021 </sect>
10023 <sect id="pkg-sourcetree">
10024 <heading>The Debianised source tree</heading>
10027 The source archive scheme described later is intended to
10028 allow a Debianised source tree with some associated control
10029 information to be reproduced and transported easily. The
10030 Debianised source tree is a version of the original program
10031 with certain files added for the benefit of the
10032 Debianisation process, and with any other changes required
10033 made to the rest of the source code and installation
10034 scripts.
10035 </p>
10038 The extra files created for Debian are in the subdirectory
10039 <file>debian</file> of the top level of the Debianised source
10040 tree. They are described below.
10041 </p>
10043 <sect1 id="pkg-debianrules">
10044 <heading><file>debian/rules</file> - the main building script</heading>
10047 See <ref id="debianrules">.
10048 </p>
10049 </sect1>
10052 <sect1 id="pkg-dpkgchangelog">
10053 <heading><file>debian/changelog</file></heading>
10056 See <ref id="dpkgchangelog">.
10057 </p>
10059 <sect2><heading>Defining alternative changelog formats
10060 </heading>
10063 It is possible to use a different format to the standard
10064 one, by providing a parser for the format you wish to
10065 use.
10066 </p>
10069 In order to have <tt>dpkg-parsechangelog</tt> run your
10070 parser, you must include a line within the last 40 lines
10071 of your file matching the Perl regular expression:
10072 <tt>\schangelog-format:\s+([0-9a-z]+)\W</tt> The part in
10073 parentheses should be the name of the format. For
10074 example, you might say:
10075 <example>
10076 @@@ changelog-format: joebloggs @@@
10077 </example>
10078 Changelog format names are non-empty strings of alphanumerics.
10079 </p>
10082 If such a line exists then <tt>dpkg-parsechangelog</tt>
10083 will look for the parser as
10084 <file>/usr/lib/dpkg/parsechangelog/<var>format-name</var></file>
10086 <file>/usr/local/lib/dpkg/parsechangelog/<var>format-name</var></file>;
10087 it is an error for it not to find it, or for it not to
10088 be an executable program. The default changelog format
10089 is <tt>dpkg</tt>, and a parser for it is provided with
10090 the <tt>dpkg</tt> package.
10091 </p>
10094 The parser will be invoked with the changelog open on
10095 standard input at the start of the file. It should read
10096 the file (it may seek if it wishes) to determine the
10097 information required and return the parsed information
10098 to standard output in the form of a series of control
10099 fields in the standard format. By default it should
10100 return information about only the most recent version in
10101 the changelog; it should accept a
10102 <tt>-v<var>version</var></tt> option to return changes
10103 information from all versions present <em>strictly
10104 after</em> <var>version</var>, and it should then be an
10105 error for <var>version</var> not to be present in the
10106 changelog.
10107 </p>
10110 The fields are:
10111 <list compact="compact">
10112 <item><qref id="f-Source"><tt>Source</tt></qref></item>
10113 <item><qref id="f-Version"><tt>Version</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
10114 <item><qref id="f-Distribution"><tt>Distribution</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
10115 <item><qref id="f-Urgency"><tt>Urgency</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
10116 <item><qref id="f-Maintainer"><tt>Maintainer</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
10117 <item><qref id="f-Date"><tt>Date</tt></qref></item>
10118 <item><qref id="f-Changes"><tt>Changes</tt></qref> (mandatory)</item>
10119 </list>
10120 </p>
10123 If several versions are being returned (due to the use
10124 of <tt>-v</tt>), the urgency value should be of the
10125 highest urgency code listed at the start of any of the
10126 versions requested followed by the concatenated
10127 (space-separated) comments from all the versions
10128 requested; the maintainer, version, distribution and
10129 date should always be from the most recent version.
10130 </p>
10133 For the format of the <tt>Changes</tt> field see
10134 <ref id="f-Changes">.
10135 </p>
10138 If the changelog format which is being parsed always or
10139 almost always leaves a blank line between individual
10140 change notes these blank lines should be stripped out,
10141 so as to make the resulting output compact.
10142 </p>
10145 If the changelog format does not contain date or package
10146 name information this information should be omitted from
10147 the output. The parser should not attempt to synthesize
10148 it or find it from other sources.
10149 </p>
10152 If the changelog does not have the expected format the
10153 parser should exit with a nonzero exit status, rather
10154 than trying to muddle through and possibly generating
10155 incorrect output.
10156 </p>
10159 A changelog parser may not interact with the user at
10160 all.
10161 </p>
10162 </sect2>
10163 </sect1>
10165 <sect1 id="pkg-srcsubstvars">
10166 <heading><file>debian/substvars</file> and variable substitutions</heading>
10169 See <ref id="substvars">.
10170 </p>
10172 </sect1>
10174 <sect1>
10175 <heading><file>debian/files</file></heading>
10178 See <ref id="debianfiles">.
10179 </p>
10180 </sect1>
10182 <sect1><heading><file>debian/tmp</file>
10183 </heading>
10186 This is the canonical temporary location for the
10187 construction of binary packages by the <tt>binary</tt>
10188 target. The directory <file>tmp</file> serves as the root of
10189 the file system tree as it is being constructed (for
10190 example, by using the package's upstream makefiles install
10191 targets and redirecting the output there), and it also
10192 contains the <tt>DEBIAN</tt> subdirectory. See <ref
10193 id="pkg-bincreating">.
10194 </p>
10197 If several binary packages are generated from the same
10198 source tree it is usual to use several
10199 <file>debian/tmp<var>something</var></file> directories, for
10200 example <file>tmp-a</file> or <file>tmp-doc</file>.
10201 </p>
10204 Whatever <file>tmp</file> directories are created and used by
10205 <tt>binary</tt> must of course be removed by the
10206 <tt>clean</tt> target.</p></sect1>
10207 </sect>
10210 <sect id="pkg-sourcearchives"><heading>Source packages as archives
10211 </heading>
10214 As it exists on the FTP site, a Debian source package
10215 consists of three related files. You must have the right
10216 versions of all three to be able to use them.
10217 </p>
10220 <taglist>
10221 <tag>Debian source control file - <tt>.dsc</tt></tag>
10222 <item>
10223 This file is a control file used by <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn>
10224 to extract a source package.
10225 See <ref id="debiansourcecontrolfiles">.
10226 </item>
10228 <tag>
10229 Original source archive -
10230 <file>
10231 <var>package</var>_<var>upstream-version</var>.orig.tar.gz
10232 </file>
10233 </tag>
10235 <item>
10237 This is a compressed (with <tt>gzip -9</tt>)
10238 <prgn>tar</prgn> file containing the source code from
10239 the upstream authors of the program.
10240 </p>
10241 </item>
10243 <tag>
10244 Debianisation diff -
10245 <file>
10246 <var>package</var>_<var>upstream_version-revision</var>.diff.gz
10247 </file>
10248 </tag>
10249 <item>
10252 This is a unified context diff (<tt>diff -u</tt>)
10253 giving the changes which are required to turn the
10254 original source into the Debian source. These changes
10255 may only include editing and creating plain files.
10256 The permissions of files, the targets of symbolic
10257 links and the characteristics of special files or
10258 pipes may not be changed and no files may be removed
10259 or renamed.
10260 </p>
10263 All the directories in the diff must exist, except the
10264 <file>debian</file> subdirectory of the top of the source
10265 tree, which will be created by
10266 <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn> if necessary when unpacking.
10267 </p>
10270 The <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn> program will
10271 automatically make the <file>debian/rules</file> file
10272 executable (see below).</p></item>
10273 </taglist>
10274 </p>
10277 If there is no original source code - for example, if the
10278 package is specially prepared for Debian or the Debian
10279 maintainer is the same as the upstream maintainer - the
10280 format is slightly different: then there is no diff, and the
10281 tarfile is named
10282 <file><var>package</var>_<var>version</var>.tar.gz</file>,
10283 and preferably contains a directory named
10284 <file><var>package</var>-<var>version</var></file>.
10285 </p>
10286 </sect>
10288 <sect>
10289 <heading>Unpacking a Debian source package without <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn></heading>
10292 <tt>dpkg-source -x</tt> is the recommended way to unpack a
10293 Debian source package. However, if it is not available it
10294 is possible to unpack a Debian source archive as follows:
10295 <enumlist compact="compact">
10296 <item>
10298 Untar the tarfile, which will create a <file>.orig</file>
10299 directory.</p>
10300 </item>
10301 <item>
10302 <p>Rename the <file>.orig</file> directory to
10303 <file><var>package</var>-<var>version</var></file>.</p>
10304 </item>
10305 <item>
10307 Create the subdirectory <file>debian</file> at the top of
10308 the source tree.</p>
10309 </item>
10310 <item><p>Apply the diff using <tt>patch -p0</tt>.</p>
10311 </item>
10312 <item><p>Untar the tarfile again if you want a copy of the original
10313 source code alongside the Debianised version.</p>
10314 </item>
10315 </enumlist>
10318 It is not possible to generate a valid Debian source archive
10319 without using <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn>. In particular,
10320 attempting to use <prgn>diff</prgn> directly to generate the
10321 <file>.diff.gz</file> file will not work.
10322 </p>
10324 <sect1>
10325 <heading>Restrictions on objects in source packages</heading>
10328 The source package may not contain any hard links
10329 <footnote>
10330 This is not currently detected when building source
10331 packages, but only when extracting
10332 them.
10333 </footnote>
10334 <footnote>
10335 Hard links may be permitted at some point in the
10336 future, but would require a fair amount of
10337 work.
10338 </footnote>, device special files, sockets or setuid or
10339 setgid files.
10340 <footnote>
10341 Setgid directories are allowed.
10342 </footnote>
10343 </p>
10346 The source packaging tools manage the changes between the
10347 original and Debianised source using <prgn>diff</prgn> and
10348 <prgn>patch</prgn>. Turning the original source tree as
10349 included in the <file>.orig.tar.gz</file> into the debianised
10350 source must not involve any changes which cannot be
10351 handled by these tools. Problematic changes which cause
10352 <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn> to halt with an error when
10353 building the source package are:
10354 <list compact="compact">
10355 <item><p>Adding or removing symbolic links, sockets or pipes.</p>
10356 </item>
10357 <item><p>Changing the targets of symbolic links.</p>
10358 </item>
10359 <item><p>Creating directories, other than <file>debian</file>.</p>
10360 </item>
10361 <item><p>Changes to the contents of binary files.</p></item>
10362 </list> Changes which cause <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn> to
10363 print a warning but continue anyway are:
10364 <list compact="compact">
10365 <item>
10367 Removing files, directories or symlinks.
10368 <footnote>
10369 Renaming a file is not treated specially - it is
10370 seen as the removal of the old file (which
10371 generates a warning, but is otherwise ignored),
10372 and the creation of the new one.
10373 </footnote>
10374 </p>
10375 </item>
10376 <item>
10378 Changed text files which are missing the usual final
10379 newline (either in the original or the modified
10380 source tree).
10381 </p>
10382 </item>
10383 </list>
10384 Changes which are not represented, but which are not detected by
10385 <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn>, are:
10386 <list compact="compact">
10387 <item><p>Changing the permissions of files (other than
10388 <file>debian/rules</file>) and directories.</p></item>
10389 </list>
10390 </p>
10393 The <file>debian</file> directory and <file>debian/rules</file>
10394 are handled specially by <prgn>dpkg-source</prgn> - before
10395 applying the changes it will create the <file>debian</file>
10396 directory, and afterwards it will make
10397 <file>debian/rules</file> world-executable.
10398 </p>
10399 </sect1>
10400 </sect>
10401 </appendix>
10403 <appendix id="pkg-controlfields">
10404 <heading>Control files and their fields (from old Packaging Manual)</heading>
10407 Many of the tools in the <prgn>dpkg</prgn> suite manipulate
10408 data in a common format, known as control files. Binary and
10409 source packages have control data as do the <file>.changes</file>
10410 files which control the installation of uploaded files, and
10411 <prgn>dpkg</prgn>'s internal databases are in a similar
10412 format.
10413 </p>
10415 <sect>
10416 <heading>Syntax of control files</heading>
10419 See <ref id="controlsyntax">.
10420 </p>
10423 It is important to note that there are several fields which
10424 are optional as far as <prgn>dpkg</prgn> and the related
10425 tools are concerned, but which must appear in every Debian
10426 package, or whose omission may cause problems.
10427 </p>
10428 </sect>
10430 <sect>
10431 <heading>List of fields</heading>
10434 See <ref id="controlfieldslist">.
10435 </p>
10438 This section now contains only the fields that didn't belong
10439 to the Policy manual.
10440 </p>
10442 <sect1 id="pkg-f-Filename">
10443 <heading><tt>Filename</tt> and <tt>MSDOS-Filename</tt></heading>
10446 These fields in <tt>Packages</tt> files give the
10447 filename(s) of (the parts of) a package in the
10448 distribution directories, relative to the root of the
10449 Debian hierarchy. If the package has been split into
10450 several parts the parts are all listed in order, separated
10451 by spaces.
10452 </p>
10453 </sect1>
10455 <sect1 id="pkg-f-Size">
10456 <heading><tt>Size</tt> and <tt>MD5sum</tt></heading>
10459 These fields in <file>Packages</file> files give the size (in
10460 bytes, expressed in decimal) and MD5 checksum of the
10461 file(s) which make(s) up a binary package in the
10462 distribution. If the package is split into several parts
10463 the values for the parts are listed in order, separated by
10464 spaces.
10465 </p>
10466 </sect1>
10468 <sect1 id="pkg-f-Status">
10469 <heading><tt>Status</tt></heading>
10472 This field in <prgn>dpkg</prgn>'s status file records
10473 whether the user wants a package installed, removed or
10474 left alone, whether it is broken (requiring
10475 re-installation) or not and what its current state on the
10476 system is. Each of these pieces of information is a
10477 single word.
10478 </p>
10479 </sect1>
10481 <sect1 id="pkg-f-Config-Version">
10482 <heading><tt>Config-Version</tt></heading>
10485 If a package is not installed or not configured, this
10486 field in <prgn>dpkg</prgn>'s status file records the last
10487 version of the package which was successfully
10488 configured.
10489 </p>
10490 </sect1>
10492 <sect1 id="pkg-f-Conffiles">
10493 <heading><tt>Conffiles</tt></heading>
10496 This field in <prgn>dpkg</prgn>'s status file contains
10497 information about the automatically-managed configuration
10498 files held by a package. This field should <em>not</em>
10499 appear anywhere in a package!
10500 </p>
10501 </sect1>
10503 <sect1>
10504 <heading>Obsolete fields</heading>
10507 These are still recognized by <prgn>dpkg</prgn> but should
10508 not appear anywhere any more.
10510 <taglist compact="compact">
10512 <tag><tt>Revision</tt></tag>
10513 <tag><tt>Package-Revision</tt></tag>
10514 <tag><tt>Package_Revision</tt></tag>
10515 <item>
10516 The Debian revision part of the package version was
10517 at one point in a separate control file field. This
10518 field went through several names.
10519 </item>
10521 <tag><tt>Recommended</tt></tag>
10522 <item>Old name for <tt>Recommends</tt>.</item>
10524 <tag><tt>Optional</tt></tag>
10525 <item>Old name for <tt>Suggests</tt>.</item>
10527 <tag><tt>Class</tt></tag>
10528 <item>Old name for <tt>Priority</tt>.</item>
10530 </taglist>
10531 </p>
10532 </sect1>
10533 </sect>
10535 </appendix>
10537 <appendix id="pkg-conffiles">
10538 <heading>Configuration file handling (from old Packaging Manual)</heading>
10541 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> can do a certain amount of automatic
10542 handling of package configuration files.
10543 </p>
10546 Whether this mechanism is appropriate depends on a number of
10547 factors, but basically there are two approaches to any
10548 particular configuration file.
10549 </p>
10552 The easy method is to ship a best-effort configuration in the
10553 package, and use <prgn>dpkg</prgn>'s conffile mechanism to
10554 handle updates. If the user is unlikely to want to edit the
10555 file, but you need them to be able to without losing their
10556 changes, and a new package with a changed version of the file
10557 is only released infrequently, this is a good approach.
10558 </p>
10561 The hard method is to build the configuration file from
10562 scratch in the <prgn>postinst</prgn> script, and to take the
10563 responsibility for fixing any mistakes made in earlier
10564 versions of the package automatically. This will be
10565 appropriate if the file is likely to need to be different on
10566 each system.
10567 </p>
10569 <sect><heading>Automatic handling of configuration files by
10570 <prgn>dpkg</prgn>
10571 </heading>
10574 A package may contain a control area file called
10575 <tt>conffiles</tt>. This file should be a list of filenames
10576 of configuration files needing automatic handling, separated
10577 by newlines. The filenames should be absolute pathnames,
10578 and the files referred to should actually exist in the
10579 package.
10580 </p>
10583 When a package is upgraded <prgn>dpkg</prgn> will process
10584 the configuration files during the configuration stage,
10585 shortly before it runs the package's <prgn>postinst</prgn>
10586 script,
10587 </p>
10590 For each file it checks to see whether the version of the
10591 file included in the package is the same as the one that was
10592 included in the last version of the package (the one that is
10593 being upgraded from); it also compares the version currently
10594 installed on the system with the one shipped with the last
10595 version.
10596 </p>
10599 If neither the user nor the package maintainer has changed
10600 the file, it is left alone. If one or the other has changed
10601 their version, then the changed version is preferred - i.e.,
10602 if the user edits their file, but the package maintainer
10603 doesn't ship a different version, the user's changes will
10604 stay, silently, but if the maintainer ships a new version
10605 and the user hasn't edited it the new version will be
10606 installed (with an informative message). If both have
10607 changed their version the user is prompted about the problem
10608 and must resolve the differences themselves.
10609 </p>
10612 The comparisons are done by calculating the MD5 message
10613 digests of the files, and storing the MD5 of the file as it
10614 was included in the most recent version of the package.
10615 </p>
10618 When a package is installed for the first time
10619 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> will install the file that comes with it,
10620 unless that would mean overwriting a file already on the
10621 file system.
10622 </p>
10625 However, note that <prgn>dpkg</prgn> will <em>not</em>
10626 replace a conffile that was removed by the user (or by a
10627 script). This is necessary because with some programs a
10628 missing file produces an effect hard or impossible to
10629 achieve in another way, so that a missing file needs to be
10630 kept that way if the user did it.
10631 </p>
10634 Note that a package should <em>not</em> modify a
10635 <prgn>dpkg</prgn>-handled conffile in its maintainer
10636 scripts. Doing this will lead to <prgn>dpkg</prgn> giving
10637 the user confusing and possibly dangerous options for
10638 conffile update when the package is upgraded.</p>
10639 </sect>
10641 <sect><heading>Fully-featured maintainer script configuration
10642 handling
10643 </heading>
10646 For files which contain site-specific information such as
10647 the hostname and networking details and so forth, it is
10648 better to create the file in the package's
10649 <prgn>postinst</prgn> script.
10650 </p>
10653 This will typically involve examining the state of the rest
10654 of the system to determine values and other information, and
10655 may involve prompting the user for some information which
10656 can't be obtained some other way.
10657 </p>
10660 When using this method there are a couple of important
10661 issues which should be considered:
10662 </p>
10665 If you discover a bug in the program which generates the
10666 configuration file, or if the format of the file changes
10667 from one version to the next, you will have to arrange for
10668 the postinst script to do something sensible - usually this
10669 will mean editing the installed configuration file to remove
10670 the problem or change the syntax. You will have to do this
10671 very carefully, since the user may have changed the file,
10672 perhaps to fix the very problem that your script is trying
10673 to deal with - you will have to detect these situations and
10674 deal with them correctly.
10675 </p>
10678 If you do go down this route it's probably a good idea to
10679 make the program that generates the configuration file(s) a
10680 separate program in <file>/usr/sbin</file>, by convention called
10681 <file><var>package</var>config</file> and then run that if
10682 appropriate from the post-installation script. The
10683 <tt><var>package</var>config</tt> program should not
10684 unquestioningly overwrite an existing configuration - if its
10685 mode of operation is geared towards setting up a package for
10686 the first time (rather than any arbitrary reconfiguration
10687 later) you should have it check whether the configuration
10688 already exists, and require a <tt>--force</tt> flag to
10689 overwrite it.</p></sect>
10690 </appendix>
10692 <appendix id="pkg-alternatives"><heading>Alternative versions of
10693 an interface - <prgn>update-alternatives</prgn> (from old
10694 Packaging Manual)
10695 </heading>
10698 When several packages all provide different versions of the
10699 same program or file it is useful to have the system select a
10700 default, but to allow the system administrator to change it
10701 and have their decisions respected.
10702 </p>
10705 For example, there are several versions of the <prgn>vi</prgn>
10706 editor, and there is no reason to prevent all of them from
10707 being installed at once, each under their own name
10708 (<prgn>nvi</prgn>, <prgn>vim</prgn> or whatever).
10709 Nevertheless it is desirable to have the name <tt>vi</tt>
10710 refer to something, at least by default.
10711 </p>
10714 If all the packages involved cooperate, this can be done with
10715 <prgn>update-alternatives</prgn>.
10716 </p>
10719 Each package provides its own version under its own name, and
10720 calls <prgn>update-alternatives</prgn> in its postinst to
10721 register its version (and again in its prerm to deregister
10722 it).
10723 </p>
10726 See the man page <manref name="update-alternatives"
10727 section="8"> for details.
10728 </p>
10731 If <prgn>update-alternatives</prgn> does not seem appropriate
10732 you may wish to consider using diversions instead.</p>
10733 </appendix>
10735 <appendix id="pkg-diversions"><heading>Diversions - overriding a
10736 package's version of a file (from old Packaging Manual)
10737 </heading>
10740 It is possible to have <prgn>dpkg</prgn> not overwrite a file
10741 when it reinstalls the package it belongs to, and to have it
10742 put the file from the package somewhere else instead.
10743 </p>
10746 This can be used locally to override a package's version of a
10747 file, or by one package to override another's version (or
10748 provide a wrapper for it).
10749 </p>
10752 Before deciding to use a diversion, read <ref
10753 id="pkg-alternatives"> to see if you really want a diversion
10754 rather than several alternative versions of a program.
10755 </p>
10758 There is a diversion list, which is read by <prgn>dpkg</prgn>,
10759 and updated by a special program <prgn>dpkg-divert</prgn>.
10760 Please see <manref name="dpkg-divert" section="8"> for full
10761 details of its operation.
10762 </p>
10765 When a package wishes to divert a file from another, it should
10766 call <prgn>dpkg-divert</prgn> in its preinst to add the
10767 diversion and rename the existing file. For example,
10768 supposing that a <prgn>smailwrapper</prgn> package wishes to
10769 install a wrapper around <file>/usr/sbin/smail</file>:
10770 <example>
10771 dpkg-divert --package smailwrapper --add --rename \
10772 --divert /usr/sbin/smail.real /usr/sbin/smail
10773 </example> The <tt>--package smailwrapper</tt> ensures that
10774 <prgn>smailwrapper</prgn>'s copy of <file>/usr/sbin/smail</file>
10775 can bypass the diversion and get installed as the true version.
10776 It's safe to add the diversion unconditionally on upgrades since
10777 it will be left unchanged if it already exists, but
10778 <prgn>dpkg-divert</prgn> will display a message. To suppress that
10779 message, make the command conditional on the version from which
10780 the package is being upgraded:
10781 <example>
10782 if [ upgrade != "$1" ] || dpkg --compare-versions "$2" lt 1.0-2; then
10783 dpkg-divert --package smailwrapper --add --rename \
10784 --divert /usr/sbin/smail.real /usr/sbin/smail
10786 </example> where <tt>1.0-2</tt> is the version at which the
10787 diversion was first added to the package. Running the command
10788 during abort-upgrade is pointless but harmless.
10789 </p>
10792 The postrm has to do the reverse:
10793 <example>
10794 if [ remove = "$1" -o abort-install = "$1" -o disappear = "$1" ]; then
10795 dpkg-divert --package smailwrapper --remove --rename \
10796 --divert /usr/sbin/smail.real /usr/sbin/smail
10798 </example> If the diversion was added at a particular version, the
10799 postrm should also handle the failure case of upgrading from an
10800 older version (unless the older version is so old that direct
10801 upgrades are no longer supported):
10802 <example>
10803 if [ abort-upgrade = "$1" ] && dpkg --compare-versions "$2" lt 1.0-2; then
10804 dpkg-divert --package smailwrapper --remove --rename \
10805 --divert /usr/sbin/smail.real /usr/sbin/smail
10807 </example> where <tt>1.02-2</tt> is the version at which the
10808 diversion was first added to the package. The postrm should not
10809 remove the diversion on upgrades both because there's no reason to
10810 remove the diversion only to immediately re-add it and since the
10811 postrm of the old package is run after unpacking so the removal of
10812 the diversion will fail.
10813 </p>
10816 Do not attempt to divert a file which is vitally important for
10817 the system's operation - when using <prgn>dpkg-divert</prgn>
10818 there is a time, after it has been diverted but before
10819 <prgn>dpkg</prgn> has installed the new version, when the file
10820 does not exist.</p>
10821 </appendix>
10823 </book>
10824 </debiandoc>
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