Config::Model::models::Dpkg::Control::Source - Configuration class
Dpkg::Control::Source
Configuration classes used by Config::Model
Source package name. Defaults to the name of the current directory or undef if
the directory name does not match Debian requirements for a source package.
Mandatory. Type uniline.
Note: Source is computed with
use Cwd; my $res = getcwd =~ m!/([a-z0-9][a-z0-9+.-]+)$! ? $1 : undef;
and with:
- •
-
Debhelper version. This parameter is hidden because it does not exist in
control. It's used to drive warp mechanism for parameters that depend on
debhelper version.
Optional. Type integer.
- default value :
- 0
The package maintainer's name and email address. The name must come first, then
the email address inside angle brackets <> (in RFC822 format).
If the maintainer's name contains a full stop then the whole field will not work
directly as an email address due to a misfeature in the syntax specified in
RFC822; a program using this field as an address must check for this and
correct the problem if necessary (for example by putting the name in round
brackets and moving it to the end, and bringing the email address forward).
Optional. Type uniline.
Note: Maintainer is computed with
my $name = $ENV{DEBFULLNAME};
my $email = $ENV{DEBEMAIL} ;
my $ret;
$ret = "$name <$email>" if $name and $email;
$ret;
and with:
- •
-
Optional. Type list of uniline.
This field indicates the Debian policy version number this package complies to.
Before updating this field, please read upgrading-checklist
<
https://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy/upgrading-checklist.html> to
know what changes came with a new policy version number and apply the required
changes (if any) to your package.
Mandatory. Type uniline.
The packages in the archive areas main, contrib and non-free are grouped further
into sections to simplify handling.
The archive area and section for each package should be specified in the
package's Section control record (see Section 5.6.5
<
https://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy/#section>). However, the
maintainer of the Debian archive may override this selection to ensure the
consistency of the Debian distribution. The Section field should be of the
form:
- •
- section if the package is in the main archive area,
- •
- area/section if the package is in the contrib or non-free
archive areas.
Optional. Type uniline.
- default value :
- misc
Enable a test suite to be used with this package. For more details see
README.package-tests.rst
<
https://anonscm.debian.org/cgit/autopkgtest/autopkgtest.git/plain/doc/README.package-tests.rst>
Deprecated Optional. Type uniline.
Enable a test suite to be used with this package. For more details see
README.package-tests.rst
<
https://salsa.debian.org/ci-team/autopkgtest/blob/master/doc/README.package-tests.rst>
Optional. Type uniline.
Note: Testsuite is migrated with '$xs_testsuite' and with:
- •
- $xs_testsuite => "- XS-Testsuite"
Read the full description from section 5.10.5
<
https://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/developers-reference/pkgs.html#non-free-buildd>
in Debian developer reference.
Optional. Type boolean.
- default value :
- 0
Optional. Type enum. choice: 'required', 'important', 'standard',
'optional', 'extra'.
- default value :
- optional
Here are some explanations on the possible values:
- 'extra'
- This contains all packages that conflict with others with
required, important, standard or optional priorities, or are only likely
to be useful if you already know what they are or have specialized
requirements (such as packages containing only detached debugging
symbols).
- 'important'
- Important programs, including those which one would expect
to find on any Unix-like system. If the expectation is that an experienced
Unix person who found it missing would say "What on earth is going
on, where is foo?", it must be an important package.[5] Other
packages without which the system will not run well or be usable must also
have priority important. This does not include Emacs, the X Window System,
TeX or any other large applications. The important packages are just a
bare minimum of commonly-expected and necessary tools.
- 'optional'
- (In a sense everything that isn't required is optional, but
that's not what is meant here.) This is all the software that you might
reasonably want to install if you didn't know what it was and don't have
specialized requirements. This is a much larger system and includes the X
Window System, a full TeX distribution, and many applications. Note that
optional packages should not conflict with each other.
- 'required'
- Packages which are necessary for the proper functioning of
the system (usually, this means that dpkg functionality depends on these
packages). Removing a required package may cause your system to become
totally broken and you may not even be able to use dpkg to put things
back, so only do so if you know what you are doing. Systems with only the
required packages are probably unusable, but they do have enough
functionality to allow the sysadmin to boot and install more
software.
- 'standard'
- These packages provide a reasonably small but not too
limited character-mode system. This is what will be installed by default
if the user doesn't select anything else. It doesn't include many large
applications.
List of packages that must be installed:
- •
- during clean
- •
- to build architecture-dependent binaries
("Architecture: any" or specific architectures).
Technically, these packages must be installed for the following build targets:
clean, build-arch, and binary-arch. See build target
<
https://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy/#relationships-between-source-and-binary-packages-build-depends-build-depends-indep-build-depends-arch-build-conflicts-build-conflicts-indep-build-conflicts-arch>.
On the other hand, the list of packages that must be installed to build
architecture-independent binaries ("Architecture: all") should be
listed in "Build-Depends-Indep" field.
Including a dependency in this field does not have the exact same effect as
including it in both Build-Depends-Arch and Build-Depends-Indep, because the
dependency also needs to be satisfied when building the source package.
See also deb-src-control
<
https://manpages.debian.org/unstable/dpkg-dev/deb-src-control.5.en.html>
man page.
This parameter can aslo have restriction formula. For instance:
Build-Depends: foo (>= 1.0) [i386 arm] <!nocheck> <!cross>, bar
See debian wiki
<
https://wiki.debian.org/BuildProfileSpec#Build-Depends_syntax_extension_.28restriction_formulas.29>
for more details.
Optional. Type list of uniline.
Same as Build-Depends, but these packages are only needed when building the
architecture dependent packages. The Build-Depends are also installed in this
case.
See deb-src-control man page
<
https://manpages.debian.org/unstable/dpkg-dev/deb-src-control.5.en.html>
for details.
Optional. Type list of uniline.
List of packages that must be installed to build architecture-independent
binaries ("Architecture: all").
Technically, these packages must be installed for the following build targets:
build, build-indep, binary, and binary-indep. See build target
<
https://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy/#relationships-between-source-and-binary-packages-build-depends-build-depends-indep-build-depends-arch-build-conflicts-build-conflicts-indep-build-conflicts-arch>.
Note that packages required during "clean" phase must be declared in
"Build-Depends" field.
This parameter can aslo have restriction formula. For instance:
Build-Depends: foo (>= 1.0) [i386 arm] <!nocheck> <!cross>, bar
See debian wiki
<
https://wiki.debian.org/BuildProfileSpec#Build-Depends_syntax_extension_.28restriction_formulas.29>
for more details.
Optional. Type list of uniline.
List of packages that must be missing (i.e.
not installed):
- •
- during clean
- •
- to build architecture-dependent binaries
("Architecture: any" or specific architectures).
Technically, these packages must
not be installed for the following build
targets: clean, build-arch, and binary-arch. See build target
<
https://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy/#relationships-between-source-and-binary-packages-build-depends-build-depends-indep-build-depends-arch-build-conflicts-build-conflicts-indep-build-conflicts-arch>.
On the other hand, the list of packages that must
not be installed to
build architecture-independent binaries ("Architecture: all") should
be listed in "Build-Conflicts-Indep" field.
Including a dependency in this list has the same effect as including it in both
Build-Conflicts-Arch and Build-Conflicts-Indep, with the additional effect of
being used for source-only builds.
See deb-src-control man page
<
https://manpages.debian.org/unstable/dpkg-dev/deb-src-control.5.en.html>
for details.
Optional. Type list of uniline.
List of packages that must be missing (i.e.
not installed) to build
archictecture dependent binaries
See deb-src-control man page
<
https://manpages.debian.org/unstable/dpkg-dev/deb-src-control.5.en.html>
for details.
Optional. Type list of uniline.
List of packages that must be missing (i.e.
not installed) to build
binaries with arch set to "all.
Technically, these packages must
not be installed for the following build
targets: build, build-indep, binary, and binary-indep. See build target
<
https://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy/#relationships-between-source-and-binary-packages-build-depends-build-depends-indep-build-depends-arch-build-conflicts-build-conflicts-indep-build-conflicts-arch>.
Note that packages not wanted during "clean" phase must be declared in
"Build-Conflicts" field.
Optional. Type list of uniline.
Some binary packages incorporate parts of other packages when built but do not have to depend on those packages. Examples include linking with static libraries
or incorporating source code from another package during the build. In this case, the source packages of those other packages are a required part of the complete source (the binary package is not reproducible without them).
A Built-Using field must list the corresponding source package for any such
binary package incorporated during the build, including an
exactly
equal ("=") version relation on the version that was used to
build that binary package[57].
A package using the source code from the gcc-4.6-source binary package built
from the gcc-4.6 source package would have this field in its control file:
Built-Using: gcc-4.6 (= 4.6.0-11)
A package including binaries from grub2 and loadlin would have this field in its
control file:
Built-Using: grub2 (= 1.99-9), loadlin (= 1.6e-1)
I< Optional. Type list of uniline. >
Value of this field should be a https:// URL pointing to a web-browsable copy of
the Version Control System repository used to maintain the given package, if
available.
The information is meant to be useful for the final user, willing to browse the
latest work done on the package (e.g. when looking for the patch fixing a bug
tagged as pending in the bug tracking system).
Optional. Type uniline.
Note: Vcs-Browser is computed with
$pkgname =~ /r-cran-/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/r-pkg-team/$pkgname"
: $maintainer =~ /pkg-perl/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/perl-team/modules/packages/$pkgname"
: $maintainer =~ /pkg-ruby-extras/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/ruby-team/$pkgname"
: $maintainer =~ /pkg-javascript/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/js-team/$pkgname"
: $maintainer =~ /debian-med-packaging/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/med-team/$pkgname"
: $maintainer =~ /team\@neuro.debian.net/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/neurodebian-team/$pkgname"
: $maintainer =~ /debian-science-maintainers/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/science-team/$pkgname"
: $maintainer =~ /pkg-phototools-devel/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/debian-phototools-team/$pkgname"
: $maintainer =~ /pkg-java-maintainers/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/java-team/$pkgname"
: $maintainer =~ /r-pkg-team/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/r-pkg-team/$pkgname"
: undef ;
and with:
- •
- $maintainer => "- Maintainer"
- •
- $pkgname => "- Source"
Value of this field should be a string identifying unequivocally the location of
the Version Control System repository used to maintain the given package, if
available. * identify the Version Control System; currently the following
systems are supported by the package tracking system: arch, bzr (Bazaar), cvs,
darcs, git, hg (Mercurial), mtn (Monotone), svn (Subversion). It is allowed to
specify different VCS fields for the same package: they will all be shown in
the PTS web interface.
The information is meant to be useful for a user knowledgeable in the given
Version Control System and willing to build the current version of a package
from the VCS sources. Other uses of this information might include automatic
building of the latest VCS version of the given package. To this end the
location pointed to by the field should better be version agnostic and point
to the main branch (for VCSs supporting such a concept). Also, the location
pointed to should be accessible to the final user; fulfilling this requirement
might imply pointing to an anonymous access of the repository instead of
pointing to an SSH-accessible version of the same.
Optional. Type uniline.
Value of this field should be a string identifying unequivocally the location of
the Version Control System repository used to maintain the given package, if
available. * identify the Version Control System; currently the following
systems are supported by the package tracking system: arch, bzr (Bazaar), cvs,
darcs, git, hg (Mercurial), mtn (Monotone), svn (Subversion). It is allowed to
specify different VCS fields for the same package: they will all be shown in
the PTS web interface.
The information is meant to be useful for a user knowledgeable in the given
Version Control System and willing to build the current version of a package
from the VCS sources. Other uses of this information might include automatic
building of the latest VCS version of the given package. To this end the
location pointed to by the field should better be version agnostic and point
to the main branch (for VCSs supporting such a concept). Also, the location
pointed to should be accessible to the final user; fulfilling this requirement
might imply pointing to an anonymous access of the repository instead of
pointing to an SSH-accessible version of the same.
Optional. Type uniline.
Value of this field should be a string identifying unequivocally the location of
the Version Control System repository used to maintain the given package, if
available. * identify the Version Control System; currently the following
systems are supported by the package tracking system: arch, bzr (Bazaar), cvs,
darcs, git, hg (Mercurial), mtn (Monotone), svn (Subversion). It is allowed to
specify different VCS fields for the same package: they will all be shown in
the PTS web interface.
The information is meant to be useful for a user knowledgeable in the given
Version Control System and willing to build the current version of a package
from the VCS sources. Other uses of this information might include automatic
building of the latest VCS version of the given package. To this end the
location pointed to by the field should better be version agnostic and point
to the main branch (for VCSs supporting such a concept). Also, the location
pointed to should be accessible to the final user; fulfilling this requirement
might imply pointing to an anonymous access of the repository instead of
pointing to an SSH-accessible version of the same.
Optional. Type uniline.
Value of this field should be a string identifying unequivocally the location of
the Version Control System repository used to maintain the given package, if
available. * identify the Version Control System; currently the following
systems are supported by the package tracking system: arch, bzr (Bazaar), cvs,
darcs, git, hg (Mercurial), mtn (Monotone), svn (Subversion). It is allowed to
specify different VCS fields for the same package: they will all be shown in
the PTS web interface.
The information is meant to be useful for a user knowledgeable in the given
Version Control System and willing to build the current version of a package
from the VCS sources. Other uses of this information might include automatic
building of the latest VCS version of the given package. To this end the
location pointed to by the field should better be version agnostic and point
to the main branch (for VCSs supporting such a concept). Also, the location
pointed to should be accessible to the final user; fulfilling this requirement
might imply pointing to an anonymous access of the repository instead of
pointing to an SSH-accessible version of the same.
Optional. Type uniline.
Value of this field should be a string identifying unequivocally the location of
the Version Control System repository used to maintain the given package, if
available. * identify the Version Control System; currently the following
systems are supported by the package tracking system: arch, bzr (Bazaar), cvs,
darcs, git, hg (Mercurial), mtn (Monotone), svn (Subversion). It is allowed to
specify different VCS fields for the same package: they will all be shown in
the PTS web interface.
The information is meant to be useful for a user knowledgeable in the given
Version Control System and willing to build the current version of a package
from the VCS sources. Other uses of this information might include automatic
building of the latest VCS version of the given package. To this end the
location pointed to by the field should better be version agnostic and point
to the main branch (for VCSs supporting such a concept). Also, the location
pointed to should be accessible to the final user; fulfilling this requirement
might imply pointing to an anonymous access of the repository instead of
pointing to an SSH-accessible version of the same.
Optional. Type uniline.
Note: Vcs-Git is computed with
$pkgname =~ /r-cran-/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/r-pkg-team/$pkgname.git"
: $maintainer =~ /pkg-perl/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/perl-team/modules/packages/$pkgname.git"
: $maintainer =~ /pkg-ruby-extras/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/ruby-team/$pkgname.git"
: $maintainer =~ /pkg-javascript/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/js-team/$pkgname.git"
: $maintainer =~ /debian-med-packaging/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/med-team/$pkgname.git"
: $maintainer =~ /team\@neuro.debian.net/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/neurodebian-team/$pkgname.git"
: $maintainer =~ /debian-science-maintainers/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/science-team/$pkgname.git"
: $maintainer =~ /pkg-phototools-devel/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/debian-phototools-team/$pkgname.git"
: $maintainer =~ /pkg-java-maintainers/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/java-team/$pkgname.git"
: $maintainer =~ /r-pkg-team/ ? "https://salsa.debian.org/r-pkg-team/$pkgname.git"
: '' ;
and with:
- •
- $maintainer => "- Maintainer"
- •
- $pkgname => "- Source"
Value of this field should be a string identifying unequivocally the location of
the Version Control System repository used to maintain the given package, if
available. * identify the Version Control System; currently the following
systems are supported by the package tracking system: arch, bzr (Bazaar), cvs,
darcs, git, hg (Mercurial), mtn (Monotone), svn (Subversion). It is allowed to
specify different VCS fields for the same package: they will all be shown in
the PTS web interface.
The information is meant to be useful for a user knowledgeable in the given
Version Control System and willing to build the current version of a package
from the VCS sources. Other uses of this information might include automatic
building of the latest VCS version of the given package. To this end the
location pointed to by the field should better be version agnostic and point
to the main branch (for VCSs supporting such a concept). Also, the location
pointed to should be accessible to the final user; fulfilling this requirement
might imply pointing to an anonymous access of the repository instead of
pointing to an SSH-accessible version of the same.
Optional. Type uniline.
Value of this field should be a string identifying unequivocally the location of
the Version Control System repository used to maintain the given package, if
available. * identify the Version Control System; currently the following
systems are supported by the package tracking system: arch, bzr (Bazaar), cvs,
darcs, git, hg (Mercurial), mtn (Monotone), svn (Subversion). It is allowed to
specify different VCS fields for the same package: they will all be shown in
the PTS web interface.
The information is meant to be useful for a user knowledgeable in the given
Version Control System and willing to build the current version of a package
from the VCS sources. Other uses of this information might include automatic
building of the latest VCS version of the given package. To this end the
location pointed to by the field should better be version agnostic and point
to the main branch (for VCSs supporting such a concept). Also, the location
pointed to should be accessible to the final user; fulfilling this requirement
might imply pointing to an anonymous access of the repository instead of
pointing to an SSH-accessible version of the same.
Optional. Type uniline.
Value of this field should be a string identifying unequivocally the location of
the Version Control System repository used to maintain the given package, if
available. * identify the Version Control System; currently the following
systems are supported by the package tracking system: arch, bzr (Bazaar), cvs,
darcs, git, hg (Mercurial), mtn (Monotone), svn (Subversion). It is allowed to
specify different VCS fields for the same package: they will all be shown in
the PTS web interface.
The information is meant to be useful for a user knowledgeable in the given
Version Control System and willing to build the current version of a package
from the VCS sources. Other uses of this information might include automatic
building of the latest VCS version of the given package. To this end the
location pointed to by the field should better be version agnostic and point
to the main branch (for VCSs supporting such a concept). Also, the location
pointed to should be accessible to the final user; fulfilling this requirement
might imply pointing to an anonymous access of the repository instead of
pointing to an SSH-accessible version of the same.
Optional. Type uniline.
If this field is present, then any Debian Maintainers listed in the Maintainer
or Uploaders fields may upload the package directly to the Debian archive. For
more information see the "Debian Maintainer" page at the Debian Wiki
-
https://wiki.debian.org/DebianMaintainer.
Deprecated Optional.
Type uniline.
Optional. Type uniline.
Depending on the value of the Rules-Requires-Root field, the package builder
(e.g. dpkg-buildpackage) may run the debian/rules target as an unprivileged
user and provide a gain root command. This command allows the debian/rules
target to run particular subcommands under (fake)root. Can be 'no',
'binary-targets' (default)), or a space separated list of keywords containing
a forward slash (e.g. "/").
For details, see section 5.6.31.2 of Debian policy
<
https://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy/ch-controlfields.html#rules-requires-root>
Optional. Type uniline.
Here are some explanations on the possible values:
- '.+/'
- Space separated list of keywords. These keywords must
always contain a forward slash, which sets them apart from the other
possible values of Rules-Requires-Root. When this list is provided, the
builder must provide a gain root command (as defined in debian/rules and
Rules-Requires-Root) or pretend that the value was set to binary-targets,
and both the builder and the packageaXXs debian/rules script must
downgrade accordingly.
- 'binary-targets'
- (Default) Declares that the package will need the root (or
fakeroot) when either of the binary, binary-arch or binary-indep targets
are called. This is how every tool behaved before this field was
defined.
- 'no'
- Declares that neither root nor fakeroot is required.
Package builders (e.g. dpkg-buildpackage) may choose to invoke any target
in debian/rules with an unprivileged user.
Deprecated Optional. Type uniline.
This field specifies the versions of Python (not versions of Python 3) supported
by the source package. When not specified, they default to all currently
supported Python (or Python 3) versions. For more detail, See python policy
<
https://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/python-policy/ch-module_packages.html#s-specifying_versions>
Optional. Type uniline.
- upstream_default value :
- all
Note: X-Python-Version is migrated with
my $old = $xspython ;
my $new ;
if ($old =~ /,/) {
# list of versions
my @list = sort split /\s*,\s*/, $old ;
$new = ">= ". (shift @list) . ", << " . (pop @list) ;
}
elsif ($old =~ /-/) {
my @list = sort grep { $_ ;} split /\s*-\s*/, $old ;
$new = ">= ". shift @list ;
$new .= ", << ". pop @list if @list ;
}
else {
$new = $old ;
}
$new ;
and with:
- •
- $xspython => "- XS-Python-Version"
This field specifies the versions of Python 3 supported by the package. For more
detail, See python policy
<
https://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/python-policy/ch-module_packages.html#s-specifying_versions>
Optional. Type uniline.
indicate the versions of the interpreter supported by the library.
Optional.
Type uniline.
- •
- cme
- Dominique Dumont
- 2010,2011 Dominique Dumont
- LGPL2