cvs-buildpackage - build Debian packages from a CVS
repository.
cvs-buildpackage [options]
This manual page explains the Debian cvs-buildpackage
utility, which is used to build Debian packages whose sources are stored in
a CVS repository. This is a CVS -aware wrapper around
dpkg-buildpackage, and it first parses ./debian/changelog; exports
the corresponding version (tagged debian_version_<$version> ),
and runs dpkg-buildpackage in the exported tree. It looks for
uncommitted files in the source tree, and offers to abort before doing
anything so that the user may commit the files in, if they wish.
cvs-buildpackage can also optionally automatically re-tag all files
before exporting the source (this functionality is only relevant in the top
level directory of a checked out Debian package source tree, of course).
Please note that the work directory referred to below is
the scratch directory where the program does its work; it is where it shall
export the sources from CVS, and it assumes full control of that directory
Read: anything in that directory, apart from the orig source files,
can be deleted by cvs-buildpackage Make sure not to have your
checked out sources/working directory in the same location, as you may lose
data.
If this utility is not run from a top level directory of a checked
out Debian package source tree, then to build an old version the cvs module
name or the package name have to be supplied on the command line.
Combined with the companion utilities cvs-inject and
cvs-upgrade, this provides an infrastructure to facilitate the use of
CVS by Debian maintainers. This allows one to keep separate CVS
branches of a package for stable, unstable, and possibly
experimental distributions, along with the other benefits of a
version control system.
-h Print out a usage message.
- -M<module>
- The name of the CVS module.
- -P<package>
- Sets the name of the package. Very useful if this is not running in the
CVS checked out source tree, in which case one also needs the version of
the package, which may optionally be determined by checking out the latest
debian/changelog file.
- -V<version>
- The version number of the package. In conjunction with setting the package
name, this option allows operation outside a CVS source tree (just needs
the repository).
- -T<tag>
- The CVS tag to use for exporting sources, rather than constructing one
from the version. This assumes you know what you are doing.
- -U<tag>
- The CVS tag to use for the upstream tag, rather than constructing one from
the upstream version. This assumes you know what you are doing.
- -C<Build Command>
- Sets the name of the builder program invoked, nominally set to
dpkg-buildpackage. However, the user may choose to use a different
build program, or a wrapper, or even 'chroot /opt/root
dpkg-buildpackage' to build the package in a chroot jail, if
desired. (Obviously, this requires that the Work directory to be a
subdirectory of a previously set up chroot jail). One may also hook in
pbuilder by setting this variable to 'pdebuild --auto-debsign
--buildresult ../'. (Again, this requires that pbuilder has
been set up correctly). This argument overrides the settings in the
environment variable CVSDEB_BUILDPACKAGE, and the configuration
file variable conf_buildpackage.
- -G<get
method>
- This option, if set, should contain a command to execute to get the
original tarball into the current directory. This can then be used to
allow one to get the original file using, for instance, wget or
curl. This overrides the CVSDEB_GET_ORIG environment
variable and the conf_get_orig configuration file option.
- -A
- Use apt-get source to retrive the original tarball. This option has
no effect unless a source package with the correct upstream version has
already been uploaded and is referenced from a Sources file known
to apt. If -A and -G are both given, -G is
tried first, and apt is used only if that did not produce the
tarball. This overrides the CVSDEB_USE_APT environment variable and
the conf_use_apt configuration file option.
- -R<root directory>
- Root of the original sources archive. We expect to find the
<package name>_<version>.orig.tar.gz file under
<root directory>/package name>/ unless the
cvs-buildpackage work directory has been set, or we want to export the
original sources from the vendor branch of the CVS tree. If the
cvs-buildpackage work directory is set anywhere, (command line,
configuration file, environment variable), the root directory value is
ignored, since we only need the root directory to set defaults for the
cvs-buildpackage work directory. This argument overrides the settings in
the environment variable CVSDEB_ROOTDIR, and the configuration file
variable conf_rootdir. Please note that the cvs-buildpackage work
directory referred to here is the scratch directory where this program
works, not the directory that the human uses to work in. This should
probably not be a sub dir of CVSROOT, since cvs shall refuse to
export packages there, and the script shall fail.
- -W<work
directory>
- The full path name for the cvs-buildpackage working directory, into which
the sources will be exported out of CVS and which should contain the
original <package name>_<version>.orig.tar.gz
Please note that it is not strictly essential to have the original
sources, as this script will check out the vendor branch version tagged as
upstream_version_<version> (without the Debian revision).
However, these recreated original sources are likely to be different for
consecutive runs of cvs-buildpackage, and very likely to be different from
the pristine original sources (different enough to cause problems with an
upload). Thus it is strongly advisable to keep the orig.tar.gz file
around. Setting this variable overrides the settings for the root
directory. This argument also overrides the settings in the environment
variable CVSDEB_WORKDIR, and the configuration file variable
conf_workdir. Please note that the cvs-buildpackage work directory
referred to here is the scratch directory where this program works, not
the directory that the human uses to work in. Also, you should specify an
absolute path name for the work directory. This should probably not be a
sub dir of CVSROOT, since cvs shall refuse to export packages
there, and the script shall fail.
- -F
- The Force Tag option. This only has effect if run in the source directory.
If set, it forces a cvs tag -F operation to be performed before
exporting the sources. This argument overrides the settings in the
environment variable CVSDEB_FORCETAG, and the configuration file
variable conf_forcetag. The default action is not to force a tag
before export.
- -E
- The Full Export option. Normally, cvs-buildpackage will export all the
data from CVS using cvs export. If the orig.tar.gz is not available
in the working directory, the full tree will be exported from CVS
regardless of whether this option is set or not. This option overrides the
environment variable CVSDEB_FULLEXPORT, and the configuration file
variable conf_fullexport.
- -op
- The opposite of full export. Using this option resets the value of full
export. Normally, cvs-buildpackage will export all the data from CVS using
cvs export. With this option set, cvs-buildpackage will extract the
orig.tar.gz in the cvs-buildpackage working directory, and then use the
cvs rdiff command to bring that tree up-to-date with the CVS tree
we're building. Please look at the -f<fix_script> option to
see how to massage the source tree after extraction and patching.
- -ctp
- Include package_ at the start of the CVS tag. This overrides
the CVSDEB_PACKAGEINTAG environment variable and the
conf_forcetag configuration file option. The default is not to
include the prefix.
- -n
- The no exec (or dry-run) option, causing cvs-buildpackage to print
out all actions that would be taken without actually executing them.
- -f<fix_script>
- This option, if set, should point to a script that should be run just from
the top level of the source tree to set up permissions of scripts that
have been created by pathching the sources from an recently extracted
original tar file (the behaviour attained by setting the -op
option. This script is called with two arguments, the package name, and
version. This script is only relevant when that option has been used.
There a number of variables that are exported into the environment, for
example package contains the name of the package,
non_epoch_version contains the version of the package without the
epoch, upstream_version contains the upstream version.
debian_version contains the debian revision. cvstag contains
the cvs tag, and cvs_upstream_tag contains the tag for the upstream
version.
- -H<hook_script>
- This option, if set, should point to a script that should be run just
before calling dpkg-buildpackage. Ideally, things like this are
done using the modules file and programs, but is still provided here for
convenience. This script is called with two arguments, the package name,
and version. There a number of variables that are exported into the
environment, for example package contains the name of the package,
non_epoch_version contains the version of the package without the
epoch, upstream_version contains the upstream version.
debian_version contains the debian revision. cvstag contains
the cvs tag, and cvs_upstream_tag contains the tag for the upstream
version. This argument overrides the settings in the environment variable
CVSDEB_HOOK which in turn over rides the configuration file option
conf_hook_script.
- -x<prefix>
- This option provides the CVS default module prefix (should really fix the
CVS modules file). This argument overrides the settings in the environment
variable CVSDEB_PREFIX. Note: The configuration file
variable conf_prefix is not honoured by cvs-buildpackage,
since the prefix is required to calculate the variables that are supposed
to be defined when we load the config file (chicken and egg problem).
The rest of the command line arguments are passed on,
uninterpreted, to dpkg-buildpackage, though we do pay attention to
the -r (root command) option (which gives the command to achieve root
access, usually sudo, fakeroot, or super ). The -r option
overrides the other means of setting the root command, namely, the
environment variable CVSDEB_ROOTCOMMAND, which in turn overrides the
config file option conf_rootcommand. No attempt is made to check any
other option. Please use the -h option to see which of the
dpkg-buildpackage options are supported and passed on.
Apart from the runtime options, cvs-buildpackage also looks
for site-wide defaults in the file /etc/cvsdeb.conf. After that, it
looks for and reads ~/.cvsdeb.conf . The default configuration allows
there to be a site wide override for the root or the cvs-buildpackage
working directories on the site, but the cvsdeb.conf files are
actually Bourne shell snippets, and any legal shell directives may be
included in there. Note: Caution is urged with this file, since you
can totally change the way that the script behaves by suitable editing this
file.
dpkg-buildpackage(1), cvs-inject(1),
cvs-upgrade(1), cvsdeb.conf(5), cvs(1).
This manual page was written Manoj Srivastava
<srivasta@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system.