NAME
apt-listchanges - Show new changelog entries from Debian package archivesSYNOPSIS
apt-listchanges
[[ options...]] {[--apt] | [package.deb...]}
DESCRIPTION
apt-listchanges is a tool to show what has been changed in a new version of a Debian package, as compared to the version currently installed on the system. It does this by extracting the relevant entries from both the NEWS.Debian and changelog[.Debian] files, usually found in /usr/share/doc/ package, from Debian package archives. Please note that in the default installation if apt-listchanges is run during upgrades as an APT plugin, it displays NEWS.Debian entries only. This can be changed with the --which option. If changelog entries are displayed and the package does not contain changelog[.Debian] file, apt-listchanges calls apt-get changelog command to download the changelog from network. This behavior can be disabled with the --no-network option. Given a set of filenames as arguments (or read from apt when using --apt), apt-listchanges will scan the files (assumed to be Debian package archives) for the relevant changelog entries, and display them all in a summary grouped by source package. The groups are sorted by the urgency of the most urgent change, and than by the package name. Changes within each package group are displayed in the order of their appearance in the changelog files, i.e. starting from the latest to the oldest; the --reverse option can be used to alter this order.OPTIONS
apt-listchanges provides the following options to control its behavior. Most of them have their equivalent entries in the configuration file, see the "CONFIGURATION FILE" below for details. --aptRead filenames from a specially-formatted
pipeline (as provided by apt), rather than from command line arguments, and
honor certain apt-specific options in the config file. This pipeline must be
in "version 2" format, specified in the apt configuration.
-v, --verbose
Display additional (usually unwanted)
information. For instance, print a message when a package of the same or older
version is to be installed, or when a package is to be newly installed.
-f, --frontend
Select which frontend to use to display
information to the user. Current frontends include:
pager
Please note that apt-listchanges will try to switch to an unprivileged user
before spawning commands in "browser", "xterm-browser",
and "xterm-pager" frontends. However this currently does not apply
to the "pager" frontend. See also "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES"
below.
--email-address=address
Uses sensible-pager(1) command to
display output. The command uses PAGER environment variable to choose your
favourite pager. The "pager" option may be specified in the
configuration file to select a specific pager for use with
apt-listchanges.
browser
Displays an HTML-formatted changelog with
hyperlinks for bugs and email addresses using the sensible-browser(1)
command that examines BROWSER environment variable to choose your favourite
browser. The "browser" option may be specified in the configuration
file to select a specific browser for use with apt-listchanges.
xterm-pager
Uses your favorite pager to display output,
but does so in an xterm (using the x-terminal-emulator alternative) in the
background. This allows you to go on with the upgrade if you like, and
continue to browse the changelogs. You can override the terminal emulator to
be used with the "xterm" configuration option.
xterm-browser
The logical combination of xterm-pager and
browser. Only appropriate for text-mode browsers.
text
Dumps output to stdout, with no pauses.
syslog
Dumps output to syslog. Disabling the titled
option is recommended.
log
Appends output to a log file, with an optional
filter process. Disabling the titled option is recommended.
mail
Sends mail to the address specified with
--email-address, and does not display changelogs.
gtk
Spawns a gtk window to display the changelogs.
Needs python3-gi to be installed.
none
Does nothing. Can be used to prevent
apt-listchanges from running when configured to run automatically from
apt.
In addition to displaying it, mail a copy of
the changelog data to the specified address. To only mail changelog entries,
use this option with the special frontend 'mail'.
--email-format={text|html}
If sending mail copies is enabled (see
--email-address above), this option selects whether the mail should be
sent as an old good plain text data (which is the default behavior), or as
html data with clickable links, which might be more convenient for people
using graphical mail clients.
-c, --confirm
Once changelogs have been displayed, ask the
user whether or not to proceed. If the user chooses not to proceed, a nonzero
exit status will be returned, and apt will abort.
-a, --show-all
Rather than trying to display changelog
entries that are newer than the currently installed version of the package,
simply display all changelog entries for all packages. This is useful for
viewing the entire changelog of a .deb before extracting it.
-n, --no-network
In rare cases when a binary package (or to be
more precise: none of the binary packages built from the same source package
that are processed together as a group) does not contain a changelog file,
apt-listchanges by default executes apt-get changelog to
download changelogs from the network servers usually provided by your
operating system distribution. This option will disable this behavior, what
might be useful for example for systems behind a firewall.
--save-seen=file
This option will cause apt-listchanges to keep
track of the last version of a package for which changelogs have been
displayed, to avoid redisplaying the same changelogs in a future invocation.
The database is stored in the named file. Specify 'none' to disable this
feature.
--dump-seen
Display the contents of the seen database to
standard output as a list of lines consisting of source package name and its
latest seen version, separated by space. This option requires the path to the
seen database to be known: please either specify it using --save-seen
option or pass --profile=apt option to have it read from the
configuration file.
--since=version
This option will cause apt-listchanges to show
the entries later than the specified version. With this option, the only other
argument you can pass is the path to a .deb file.
--latest=N
This option will cause apt-listchanges to show
only the latest N entries. With this option, the only other argument
you can pass is the path to a .deb file.
--which={news|changelogs|both}
This option selects whether news (from
NEWS.Debian et al.), changelogs (from changelog.Debian et al.) or both should
be displayed. The default is to display only news.
--help
Displays syntax information.
-h, --headers
These options will cause apt-listchanges to
insert a header before each package's changelog showing the name of the
package, and the names of the binary packages which are being upgraded (if
there is more than one, or it differs from the source package name).
--debug
Display some debugging information.
--profile=name
Select an option profile. name
corresponds to a section in /etc/apt/listchanges.conf. The default when
invoked from apt is "apt", and "cmdline" otherwise.
--log=file
Select the file appended to by the log
frontend. The default is /var/log/apt/listchanges.log. The filter command
option can be used to modify the output before it is appended to the log file.
Please ensure that you setup log rotation for this file.
--filter=command
Select the command used to filter output
before it is appended to the log file by the log frontend. stdin will receive
the apt-listchanges output and stdout will be appended to the log file.
Separate arguments with spaces and quote arguments containing spaces. The
command will not be run using the shell unless the shell is included in the
command: sh -c 'date ; cat'
--reverse
Show the changelog entries in reverse
order.
--ignore-apt-assume, --ignore-debian-frontend
Disable forcing non-interactive frontend in
some of the cases described in the "AUTOMATIC FRONTEND OVERRIDE"
section below.
--titled, --untitled
Enable or disable the title at the beginning
of the output.
--select-frontend
Choose frontend interactively. This option is
mainly for testing purposes, please do not use it.
AUTOMATIC FRONTEND OVERRIDE
For a better integration with existing package management tools, apt-listchanges tries to detect if package upgrades are done in a non-interactive way, and automatically switches its frontend to 'text' when any of the following conditions is satisfied:•the standard output is not connected
to terminal;
•the --quiet ( -q) option
is given to apt-get(8) (or aptitude(8)); note however that when
the option is used more than once, apt-listchanges switches the frontend to
'mail';
•the --assume-yes ( -y)
option is given to apt-get(8);
•the DEBIAN_FRONTEND environment
variable is set to "noninteractive", and
APT_LISTCHANGES_FRONTED is not set.
For backward compatibility purposes the last two of the above checks can be
disabled either with "ignore_apt_assume=true" or
"ignore_debian_frontend=true" configuration file entries (see
"CONFIGURATION FILE" below) or by using the command line options:
--ignore-apt-assume or --ignore-debian-frontend.
Please also note that the "mail" frontend is already non-interactive
one, so it is never switched to the "text" frontend.
Additionally apt-listchanges overrides X11-based frontends
("gtk", "xterm-pager", "xterm-browser") with
"pager" (or "browser" in case of
"xterm-browser") when the environment variable DISPLAY is not
set.
Please note that these silent frontends are not subject to the overrides: syslog
log
CONFIGURATION FILE
apt-listchanges reads its configuration from the /etc/apt/listchanges.conf. The file consists of sections with names enclosed in the square brackets. Each section should contain lines in the key= value format. Lines starting with the "#" sign are treated as comments and ignored. Files named name.conf in the /etc/apt/listchanges.conf.d directory are also read in the same way and override values set in the main configuration file. Section is a name of profile that can be used as parameter of the --profile option. The configuration of the "apt" section can be managed by debconf(7), and most of the settings there can be changed with the help of the dpkg-reconfigure apt-listchanges command. Key is a name of some command-line option (except for --apt, --profile, --help) with the initial hyphens removed, and the remaining hyphens translated to underscores, for example: "email_format" or "save_seen". Value represents the value of the corresponding option. For command-line options that do not take argument, like "confirm" or "headers", the value should be set either to "1", "yes", "true", and "on" in order to enable the option, or to "0", "no", "false", and "off" to disable it. Additionally key can be one of the following keywords: "browser", "pager" or "xterm". The value of such configuration entry should be the name of an appropriate command, eventually followed by its arguments, for example: "pager=less -R". Example 1. Example configuration file[cmdline] frontend=pager [apt] frontend=xterm-pager email_address=root confirm=1 [custom] frontend=browser browser=mozilla
ENVIRONMENT
APT_LISTCHANGES_FRONTENDFrontend to use.
APT_LISTCHANGES_USER, SUDO_USER, USERNAME
The value of the first existing of the above
variables will be used as the name of user to switch to when running commands
spawned by the "browser", "xterm-browser", and
"xterm-pager" frontends if apt-listchanges is started by a
privileged user.
DEBIAN_FRONTEND
If set to "noninteractive", then it
can force apt-listchanges to use non-interactive frontend, see the
"AUTOMATIC FRONTEND OVERRIDE" section for details.
BROWSER
Used by the browser frontend, should be set to
a command expecting a file: URL for an HTML file to display.
PAGER
Used by the pager frontend.
APT_HOOK_INFO_FD
File descriptor to read package names from in
the --apt mode. (Apt is expected to set this variable to a proper file
descriptor number).
FILES
/etc/apt/listchanges.confConfiguration file.
/etc/apt/listchanges.conf.d/*.conf
Configuration file override files.
/etc/apt/apt.conf.d/20listchanges
File used for registering apt-listchanges into
apt system.
/var/lib/apt/listchanges.db
Database used for save-seen.
AUTHOR
apt-listchanges was written by Matt Zimmerman <[email protected]> The current maintainer is Robert Luberda <[email protected]>SEE ALSO
sensible-pager(1), sensible-browser(1), apt-get(8), aptitude(8)2017-07-08 | apt-listchanges |