1 .TH 0INSTALL 1 "2011" "Thomas Leonard" ""
3 0install \(em a decentralised software installation system
7 .SS Downloading and running:
9 .B 0install select \fBURI\fP
11 .B 0install download \fBURI\fP
13 .B 0install run \fBURI\fP [\fBARG\fP]...
15 .B 0install update \fBURI\fP
19 .B 0install config [NAME [VALUE]]
21 .B 0install import \fBFEED\fP
23 .B 0install list \fBPATTERN\fP
25 .B 0install add-feed \fBFEED\fP
27 .B 0install remove-feed [\fBINTERFACE\fP] \fBFEED\fP
29 .B 0install list-feeds \fBURI\fP
31 .B 0install digest \fBDIRECTORY\fP | \fBARCHIVE\fP [\fBEXTRACT\fP]
35 Zero Install is a decentralised cross-distribution software installation
36 system. Programs and libraries are identified by URIs, and there is no need
37 for a central repository. Zero Install ensures that packages cannot conflict
38 with each other and that programs can be shared between mutually untrusting
39 users. See the web-site for more information:
43 The simplest case is to ask 0install to run a program, given its URI. For
46 .B 0install run http://rox.sourceforge.net/2005/interfaces/Edit
49 The first time you do this, details about available versions of the program are
50 downloaded and cached, along with details about any libraries it depends on.
52 Zero Install will run a solver to select the best version of each component
53 to use. For example, it will select binaries that are compatible with your
54 CPU and operating system, in your preferred language, and marked "stable" (by
57 If $DISPLAY is set, 0install will display a window where you can confirm (or
58 change) the selected versions.
60 It will then download the corresponding archives for those versions and store
61 them in the cache too. Each package unpacks to its own directory.
63 Finally, 0install will launch the program, setting environment variables to
64 let it locate its libraries.
68 The first non-option argument to 0install is the particular sub-command you
69 want to perform; these are described in detail in the next section.
71 However, there are some options that apply to all operations. These are:
74 \fB\-c\fP, \fB\-\-console\fP
75 Never use the GUI. Normally, 0install switches to graphical mode if it needs to
76 download anything from the network (unless DISPLAY is not set).
79 \fB\-h\fP, \fB\-\-help\fP
80 Show the built-in help text.
83 \fB\-o\fP, \fB\-\-offline\fP
84 Run in off-line mode, overriding the default setting. This prevents 0install
85 from checking for updates, and from downloading updates even if it knows about
89 \fB\-v\fP, \fB\-\-verbose\fP
90 More verbose output. Use twice for even more verbose output.
93 \fB\-\-with\-store=DIR\fP
94 Append a directory to the list of implementation caches. Each sub-directory
95 of DIR contains the contents of one version of a program or library.
99 .SS 0install select [OPTIONS] URI
102 Select a version of the program identified by URI, and compatible versions of
103 all of its dependencies. The information about available versions is
104 downloaded if it's not yet in the cache.
107 The URI can be an HTTP URL, such as
108 `http://site/program.xml', a local path name like `file:///path/to/program.xml',
109 or an alias like `alias:prog'.
112 For HTTP URLs, the remote file is a signed XML document. If the key is not
113 known and trusted, you will be prompted to accept it first. Local feed files
114 are not signed (any signature will be ignored). Aliases are created using
118 You can also specify a local selections document, as created previously using
119 the \fB\-\-xml\fP option, rather than a feed. In that case, 0install simply
120 uses those versions without running the solver.
123 After selecting (but not downloading) a set of versions, the selection is
124 displayed in a human-readable format. Use \fB\-\-xml\fP to get
125 machine-readable output.
128 If a set of versions cannot be selected using the cached information, 0install
129 will check for updates first.
132 If a set of versions can be selected based on the currently-cached information,
133 but that information is getting stale, 0install will immediately return the
134 current selection and will also start a background process to check for updates.
135 The `freshness' configuration setting controls when cached information is
136 considered to be stale.
142 \fB\-\-before=VERSION\fP
143 Select a version earlier than VERSION (i.e. force the use of an old version of
144 the program). You can only restrict the version of the program itself using this
145 option, not the version of any dependencies.
148 \fB\-\-command=COMMAND\fP
149 Some programs provide multiple commands. This selects which one you want. Common
150 values are `run' (the default), `test' (used by 0test) and `compile' (used by
151 0compile). You can also use \fB\-\-command=""\fP if you don't want to run any
152 command (for example, if the package contains data rather than a program).
155 \fB\-\-message=MESSAGE\fP
156 If we show a dialog box for the download, display MESSAGE to the user to
157 explain why the download is needed.
160 \fB\-\-not\-before=VERSION\fP
161 The selected version must not be earlier than VERSION.
162 e.g. if you want to run version 2.0 or later, use \fB\-\-not\-before=2.0\fP.
166 Download a fresh copy of all used feeds before selecting. Normally, cached
167 copies will be used if available (checking for updates later, in the
172 Select source code rather than a binary. This is used internally by `0compile'.
176 Print the set of chosen implementations as an XML document to stdout. This can
177 be used later with the `download' and `run' sub-commands.
181 `select' returns an exit status of zero if it selected a set of versions, and
182 a status of 1 if it could not find a consistent set.
185 .SS 0install download [OPTIONS] URI
187 This behaves similarly to `0install select', except that it also downloads the
188 selected versions if they are not already cached. Unlike `select', it does not
189 print the selected versions by default.
191 All options for `select' can also be used for `download'. In addition, these
192 options are available:
196 Print the selected versions in a human-readable format to stdout.
199 `download' returns an exit status of zero if it selected a suitable set of
200 versions and they are now all downloaded and in the cache. It returns a
201 status of 1 otherwise.
204 .SS 0install run [OPTIONS] URI [ARGS]
207 This behaves similarly to `0install download', except that it also runs the
208 program after ensuring it is in the cache.
211 To avoid having to keep typing the full URI, use the 0alias(1) command
212 to create shortcuts to run your programs.
215 All options for `select' and `download' can also be used for `run'. In
216 addition, these options are available:
219 \fB\-m\fP, \fB\-\-main=MAIN\fP
220 Run the specified executable instead of the default. If MAIN starts with '/'
221 then the path is relative to the implementation's top-level directory,
222 whereas otherwise it is relative to the directory containing the default
223 MAIN program. For example, if the default MAIN is \fBbin/svn\fP then
224 using \fB\-\-main=svnadmin\fP will run \fB.../bin/svnadmin\fP instead.
225 This option has been largely superseded by the newer \fB\-\-command\fP option.
228 \fB\-w\fP, \fB\-\-wrapper=WRAPPER\fP
229 Instead of executing the chosen program directly, run \fBWRAPPER PROGRAM ARGS\fP.
230 This is useful for running debuggers and tracing tools on the program (rather
231 than on 0install!). Note that the wrapper is executed in the environment selected
232 by the program; hence, this mechanism cannot be used for sandboxing. See the
233 DEBUGGING section below.
236 `run' returns an exit status of 1 if the download step failed. Otherwise,
237 the exit status will be the exit status of the program being run.
239 .SS 0install update [OPTIONS] URI
242 Check for updates to the program and download them if found. This is similar to
243 \fB0install download \-\-refresh\fP, except that it prints information about
244 whether any changes were found.
247 The options are the same as for `select'.
249 .SS 0install import FEED
252 Import a feed from a local file, as if it had been downloaded from the network.
253 This is useful when testing a feed file, to avoid uploading it to a remote
254 server in order to download it again. The file must have a trusted digital
255 signature, as when fetching from the network.
258 It is also useful when installing a feed from a CD or similar. Note: to create
259 a full bundle, for archiving or distribution on CD, see 0export(1).
261 .SS 0install add-feed FEED
264 Register an additional source of implementations (versions) of a program.
267 For example, when you check out a developer version of a project, it may
268 contain an XML feed file. To add this version to the list of available
269 versions, use `add-feed' on the XML file. The file is not copied, so you don't
270 need to re-add the feed each time it is updated. You will probably also want to
271 set the `help_with_testing' configuration option to ensure that testing
272 versions are selected by default.
275 Note that if you just want to run the program, you can invoke 0install on the
276 feed file directly (without using `add-feed'). This will force the it to
277 use that version, but won't affect what happens when you run it using the URI
278 as normal. Use `add-feed' when you want to use the developer version even when
279 using the URI, or if the program is a library (and thus referenced by URI by
282 .SS 0install remove-feed [INTERFACE] FEED
285 Un-register a feed, reversing the effect of `add-feed'. If INTERFACE is not
286 given, you will be prompted to choose which INTERFACE to remove it from.
288 .SS 0install list-feeds URI
291 List all extra feeds added to URI using `add-feed'.
293 .SS 0install list PATTERN
296 List all known interface (program) URIs. If a search term is given, only
297 URIs containing that string are shown (case insensitive).
299 .SS 0install config [NAME [VALUE]]
302 View or change configuration settings.
305 With no arguments, `0install config' displays all configuration settings.
306 With one argument, it displays the current value of the named setting.
307 With two arguments, it sets the setting to the given value.
309 .SS 0install digest DIRECTORY | ARCHIVE [EXTRACT]
312 Calculate the secure hash of an implementation. This is a unique "fingerprint" of
313 a directory and all the files and subdirectories it contains. When publishing a
314 program using 0install, this value must be placed in the XML file.
317 \fB\-m\fP, \fB\-\-algorithm=HASH\fP
318 Select the secure hash function to be used. Supported values are "sha1new" (the
319 default) or "sha256".
322 If an archive is given then the hash is for the directory that would be created if
323 the archive were unpacked (or the EXTRACT subdirectory of it, if one is specified).
324 See also: 0store(1)'s manifest command.
326 .SS 0install --version
327 This can be used (without any command) the get version of 0install itself:
332 To debug 0install itself, use the \-\-verbose and \-\-console options. For
335 .B $ 0install \-vvc run http://myprog
338 To trace or debug programs run by 0install, use the \-\-wrapper option.
339 For example, to run \fBmyprog \-\-help\fP, displaying all calls to open(2):
341 .B $ 0install run \-\-wrapper="strace \-e open" http://myprog \-\-help
343 If your program is interpreted (e.g. a Python program), and you wish to debug
344 the interpreter running it, you can do it like this:
346 .B $ 0install run \-\-wrapper="gdb \-\-args python" http://myprog \-\-help
350 Configuration files (see freedesktop.org basedir spec):
352 .IP "~/.config/0install.net/injector/global"
353 Global configuration settings.
355 .IP "~/.config/0install.net/injector/trustdb.xml"
356 List of trusted keys.
358 .IP "~/.config/0install.net/injector/feeds"
359 Per-feed information (e.g. time of last check).
361 .IP "~/.config/0install.net/injector/interfaces"
362 Per-interface settings (preferred stability and any extra feeds that have been
366 Cached data (can be re-downloaded if lost):
368 .IP "~/.cache/0install.net/interfaces"
369 Downloaded cached feed files.
371 .IP "~/.cache/0install.net/implementations"
372 Downloaded cached implementations, indexed by manifest digest.
375 See the 0store(1) man page for more information.
379 Copyright (C) 2011 Thomas Leonard.
382 You may redistribute copies of this program under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License.
385 Please report bugs to the developer mailing list:
387 http://0install.net/support.html
391 Zero Install was created by Thomas Leonard, with help from many others. See the Git log for details.
394 0alias(1), 0store(1), 0launch(1)
396 The Zero Install web-site:
398 .B http://0install.net