dpkg-buildpackage
Section: dpkg suite (1)
Updated: 1970-01-01
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NAME
dpkg-buildpackage - build binary or source packages from sources
SYNOPSIS
dpkg-buildpackage
[
option...]
DESCRIPTION
dpkg-buildpackage
is a program that automates the process of building a Debian package. It
consists of the following steps:
- 1.
-
It prepares the build environment by setting various environment
variables (see ENVIRONMENT), runs the init hook, and calls
dpkg-source --before-build (unless -T or --target
has been used).
- 2.
-
It checks that the build-dependencies and build-conflicts
are satisfied (unless -d or --no-check-builddeps is specified).
- 3.
-
If one or more specific targets have been selected with the -T or
--target option, it calls those targets and stops here. Otherwise it
runs the preclean hook and calls fakeroot debian/rules clean to
clean the build-tree (unless -nc or --no-pre-clean
is specified).
- 4.
-
It runs the source hook and calls dpkg-source -b to generate
the source package (if a source build has been requested with
--build or equivalent options).
- 5.
-
It runs the build hook and calls debian/rules build-target,
then runs the binary hook followed by fakeroot debian/rules
binary-target (unless a source-only build has been requested with
--build=source or equivalent options).
Note that build-target and binary-target are either build
and binary (default case, or if an any and all build
has been requested with --build or equivalent options), or
build-arch and binary-arch (if an any and not all
build has been requested with --build or equivalent options), or
build-indep and binary-indep (if an all and not any
build has been requested with --build or equivalent options).
- 6.
-
It runs the buildinfo
hook and calls dpkg-genbuildinfo to generate a .buildinfo file.
Several dpkg-buildpackage options are forwarded to
dpkg-genbuildinfo.
- 7.
-
It runs the changes hook and calls dpkg-genchanges to
generate a .changes file.
The name of the .changes file will depend on the type of build and
will be as specific as necessary but not more;
for a build that includes any the name will be
source-name_binary-version_arch.changes,
or otherwise for a build that includes all the name will be
source-name_binary-version_all.changes,
or otherwise for a build that includes source the name will be
source-name_source-version_source.changes.
Many dpkg-buildpackage options are forwarded to
dpkg-genchanges.
- 8.
-
It runs the postclean hook and if -tc or --post-clean
is specified, it will call fakeroot debian/rules clean again.
- 9.
-
It calls dpkg-source --after-build.
- 10.
-
It runs the check hook and calls a package checker for the
.changes file (if a command is specified in DEB_CHECK_COMMAND or
with --check-command).
- 11.
-
It runs the sign hook and calls gpg (as long as it
is not an UNRELEASED build, or --no-sign is specified) to sign the
.dsc file (if any, unless
-us or --unsigned-source is specified), the .buildinfo
file (unless -ui, --unsigned-buildinfo,
-uc or --unsigned-changes is specified) and
the .changes file (unless -uc or --unsigned-changes
is specified).
- 12.
-
It runs the done hook.
OPTIONS
All long options can be specified both on the command line and in the
dpkg-buildpackage system and user configuration files.
Each line in the configuration file is either an option (exactly the same
as the command line option but without leading hyphens) or a comment (if
it starts with a '
#').
- --build=type
-
Specifies the build type from a comma-separated list of components
(since dpkg 1.18.5).
Passed to dpkg-genchanges.
The allowed values are:
-
- source
-
Builds the source package.
Note: When using this value standalone and if what you want is simply to
(re-)build the source package from a clean source tree, using
dpkg-source directly is always a better option as it does not
require any build dependencies to be installed which are otherwise
needed to be able to call the clean target.
- any
-
Builds the architecture specific binary packages.
- all
-
Builds the architecture independent binary packages.
- binary
-
Builds the architecture specific and independent binary packages.
This is an alias for any,all.
- full
-
Builds everything.
This is an alias for source,any,all, and the same as the default
case when no build option is specified.
-
- -g
-
Equivalent to --build=source,all (since dpkg 1.17.11).
- -G
-
Equivalent to --build=source,any (since dpkg 1.17.11).
- -b
-
Equivalent to --build=binary or --build=any,all.
- -B
-
Equivalent to --build=any.
- -A
-
Equivalent to --build=all.
- -S
-
Equivalent to --build=source.
- -F
-
Equivalent to --build=full, --build=source,binary or
--build=source,any,all (since dpkg 1.15.8).
- --target=target[,...]
-
- --target target[,...]
-
- -T, --rules-target=target[,...]
-
Calls debian/rules target once per target specified, after
having setup the build environment (except for calling
dpkg-source --before-build), and stops the package build process
here (since dpkg 1.15.0, long option since dpkg 1.18.8, multi-target
support since dpkg 1.18.16).
If --as-root is also given, then the command is executed
as root (see --root-command).
Note that known targets that are required to
be run as root do not need this option (i.e. the clean, binary,
binary-arch and binary-indep targets).
- --as-root
-
Only meaningful together with --target (since dpkg 1.15.0).
Requires that the target be run with root rights.
- -si
-
- -sa
-
- -sd
-
- -vversion
-
- -Cchanges-description
-
- -m, --release-by=maintainer-address
-
- -e, --build-by=maintainer-address
-
Passed unchanged to dpkg-genchanges. See its manual page.
- -a, --host-arch architecture
-
Specify the Debian architecture we build for (long option since dpkg 1.17.17).
The architecture of the
machine we build on is determined automatically, and is also the default
for the host machine.
- -t, --host-type gnu-system-type
-
Specify the GNU system type we build for (long option since dpkg 1.17.17).
It can be used in place
of --host-arch or as a complement to override the default GNU system type
of the host Debian architecture.
- --target-arch architecture
-
Specify the Debian architecture the binaries built will build for
(since dpkg 1.17.17).
The default value is the host machine.
- --target-type gnu-system-type
-
Specify the GNU system type the binaries built will build for
(since dpkg 1.17.17).
It can be
used in place of --target-arch or as a complement to override the
default GNU system type of the target Debian architecture.
- -P, --build-profiles=profile[,...]
-
Specify the profile(s) we build, as a comma-separated list (since dpkg 1.17.2,
long option since dpkg 1.18.8).
The default
behavior is to build for no specific profile. Also sets them (as a space
separated list) as the DEB_BUILD_PROFILES environment variable which
allows, for example, debian/rules files to use this information for
conditional builds.
- -j, --jobs[=jobs|auto]
-
Number of jobs allowed to be run simultaneously, number of jobs matching
the number of online processors if auto is specified
(since dpkg 1.17.10), or unlimited number if jobs is not specified,
equivalent to the
make(1)
option of the same name (since dpkg 1.14.7, long option since dpkg 1.18.8).
Will add itself to the MAKEFLAGS
environment variable, which should cause all subsequent make
invocations to inherit the option, thus forcing the parallel setting on
the packaging (and possibly the upstream build system if that uses make)
regardless of their support for parallel builds, which might cause build
failures.
Also adds parallel=jobs or
parallel to the DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS environment variable which
allows debian/rules files to use this information for their own purposes.
The -j value will override the parallel=jobs or
parallel option in the DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS environment variable.
Note that the auto value will get replaced by the actual number of
currently active processors, and as such will not get propagated to any
child process. If the number of online processors cannot be inferred then
the code will fallback to using serial execution (since dpkg 1.18.15),
although this should only happen on exotic and unsupported systems.
- -J, --jobs-try[=jobs|auto]
-
This option (since dpkg 1.18.2, long option since dpkg 1.18.8) is equivalent
to the -j option except that it does not set the MAKEFLAGS
environment variable, and as such it is safer to use with any package
including those that are not parallel-build safe.
auto is the default behavior (since dpkg 1.18.11). Setting the number
of jobs to 1 will restore a serial behavior.
- -D, --check-builddeps
-
Check build dependencies and conflicts; abort if unsatisfied (long option
since dpkg 1.18.8).
This is the default behavior.
- -d, --no-check-builddeps
-
Do not check build dependencies and conflicts (long option since dpkg 1.18.8).
- --ignore-builtin-builddeps
-
Do not check built-in build dependencies and conflicts (since dpkg 1.18.2).
These are the distribution specific implicit build dependencies usually
required in a build environment, the so called Build-Essential package set.
- --rules-requires-root
-
Do not honor the Rules-Requires-Root field, falling back to its
legacy default value (since dpkg 1.19.1).
- -nc, --no-pre-clean
-
Do not clean the source tree before building (long option since dpkg 1.18.8).
Implies -b if nothing else has been selected among -F,
-g, -G, -B, -A or -S.
Implies -d with -S (since dpkg 1.18.0).
- --pre-clean
-
Clean the source tree before building (since dpkg 1.18.8).
This is the default behavior.
- -tc, --post-clean
-
Clean the source tree (using
gain-root-command
debian/rules clean)
after the package has been built (long option since dpkg 1.18.8).
- --no-post-clean
-
Do not clean the source tree after the package has been built
(since dpkg 1.19.1).
This is the default behavior.
- --sanitize-env
-
Sanitize the build environment (since dpkg 1.20.0).
This will reset or remove environment variables, umask, and any other process
attributes that might otherwise adversely affect the build of packages.
Because the official entry point to build packages is debian/rules,
packages cannot rely on these settings being in place, and thus should work
even when they are not.
What to sanitize is vendor specific.
- -r, --root-command=gain-root-command
-
When
dpkg-buildpackage
needs to execute part of the build process as root, it prefixes the
command it executes with
gain-root-command
if one has been specified (long option since dpkg 1.18.8).
Otherwise, if none has been specified,
fakeroot will be used by default, if the command is present.
gain-root-command
should start with the name of a program on the
PATH
and will get as arguments the name of the real command to run and the
arguments it should take.
gain-root-command
can include parameters (they must be space-separated) but no shell
metacharacters.
gain-root-command
might typically be
fakeroot, sudo, super or really.
su
is not suitable, since it can only invoke the user's shell with
-c
instead of passing arguments individually to the command to be run.
- -R, --rules-file=rules-file
-
Building a Debian package usually involves invoking
debian/rules
as a command with several standard parameters (since dpkg 1.14.17,
long option since dpkg 1.18.8).
With this option it's
possible to use another program invocation to build the package (it can
include space separated parameters).
Alternatively it can be used to execute the standard rules file with
another make program (for example by using
/usr/local/bin/make -f debian/rules
as rules-file).
- --check-command=check-command
-
Command used to check the .changes file itself and any artifact built
referenced in the file (since dpkg 1.17.6).
The command should take the .changes pathname
as an argument. This command will usually be lintian.
- --check-option=opt
-
Pass option opt to the check-command specified with
DEB_CHECK_COMMAND or --check-command (since dpkg 1.17.6).
Can be used multiple times.
- --hook-hook-name=hook-command
-
Set the specified shell code hook-command as the hook hook-name,
which will run at the times specified in the run steps (since dpkg 1.17.6).
The hooks will
always be executed even if the following action is not performed (except
for the binary hook).
All the hooks will run in the unpacked source directory.
Note: Hooks can affect the build process, and cause build failures if
their commands fail, so watch out for unintended consequences.
The current hook-name supported are:
init preclean source build binary buildinfo changes postclean check sign done
The hook-command supports the following substitution format string,
which will get applied to it before execution:
-
- %%
-
A single % character.
- %a
-
A boolean value (0 or 1), representing whether the following action is
being performed.
- %p
-
The source package name.
- %v
-
The source package version.
- %s
-
The source package version (without the epoch).
- %u
-
The upstream version.
-
- --buildinfo-option=opt
-
Pass option opt to dpkg-genbuildinfo (since dpkg 1.18.11).
Can be used multiple times.
- -p, --sign-command=sign-command
-
When dpkg-buildpackage needs to execute GPG to sign a source
control (.dsc) file or a .changes file it will run
sign-command (searching the PATH if necessary) instead of
gpg (long option since dpkg 1.18.8).
sign-command will get all the arguments
that gpg would have gotten. sign-command
should not contain spaces or any other shell metacharacters.
- -k, --sign-key=key-id
-
Specify a key-ID to use when signing packages (long option since dpkg 1.18.8).
- -us, --unsigned-source
-
Do not sign the source package (long option since dpkg 1.18.8).
- -ui, --unsigned-buildinfo
-
Do not sign the .buildinfo file (since dpkg 1.18.19).
- -uc, --unsigned-changes
-
Do not sign the .buildinfo and .changes files
(long option since dpkg 1.18.8).
- --no-sign
-
Do not sign any file, this includes the source package, the .buildinfo
file and the .changes file (since dpkg 1.18.20).
- --force-sign
-
Force the signing of the resulting files (since dpkg 1.17.0), regardless of
-us, --unsigned-source,
-ui, --unsigned-buildinfo,
-uc, --unsigned-changes
or other internal heuristics.
- -sn
-
- -ss
-
- -sA
-
- -sk
-
- -su
-
- -sr
-
- -sK
-
- -sU
-
- -sR
-
- -i, --diff-ignore[=regex]
-
- -I, --tar-ignore[=pattern]
-
- -z, --compression-level=level
-
- -Z, --compression=compressor
-
Passed unchanged to dpkg-source. See its manual page.
- --source-option=opt
-
Pass option opt to dpkg-source (since dpkg 1.15.6).
Can be used multiple times.
- --changes-option=opt
-
Pass option opt to dpkg-genchanges (since dpkg 1.15.6).
Can be used multiple times.
- --admindir=dir
-
- --admindir dir
-
Change the location of the dpkg database (since dpkg 1.14.0).
The default location is /var/lib/dpkg.
- -?, --help
-
Show the usage message and exit.
- --version
-
Show the version and exit.
ENVIRONMENT
External environment
- DEB_CHECK_COMMAND
-
If set, it will be used as the command to check the .changes file
(since dpkg 1.17.6).
Overridden by the --check-command option.
- DEB_SIGN_KEYID
-
If set, it will be used to sign the .changes and .dsc files
(since dpkg 1.17.2).
Overridden by the --sign-key option.
- DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS
-
If set, it will contain a space-separated list of options that might
affect the build process in debian/rules, and the behavior of some
dpkg commands.
With nocheck the DEB_CHECK_COMMAND variable will be ignored.
With parallel=N the parallel jobs will be set to N,
overridden by the --jobs-try option.
- DEB_BUILD_PROFILES
-
If set, it will be used as the active build profile(s) for the package
being built (since dpkg 1.17.2).
It is a space separated list of profile names.
Overridden by the -P option.
- DPKG_COLORS
-
Sets the color mode (since dpkg 1.18.5).
The currently accepted values are: auto (default), always and
never.
- DPKG_NLS
-
If set, it will be used to decide whether to activate Native Language Support,
also known as internationalization (or i18n) support (since dpkg 1.19.0).
The accepted values are: 0 and 1 (default).
Internal environment
Even if
dpkg-buildpackage exports some variables,
debian/rules
should not rely on their presence and should instead use the
respective interface to retrieve the needed values, because that
file is the main entry point to build packages and running it
standalone should be supported.
- DEB_BUILD_*
-
- DEB_HOST_*
-
- DEB_TARGET_*
-
dpkg-architecture is called with the -a and -t
parameters forwarded. Any variable that is output by its -s
option is integrated in the build environment.
- DEB_RULES_REQUIRES_ROOT
-
This variable is set to the value obtained from the Rules-Requires-Root
field or from the command-line.
When set, it will be a valid value for the Rules-Requires-Root field.
It is used to notify debian/rules whether the rootless-builds.txt
specification is supported.
- DEB_GAIN_ROOT_CMD
-
This variable is set to gain-root-command when the field
Rules-Requires-Root is set to a value different to no and
binary-targets.
- SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH
-
This variable is set to the Unix timestamp since the epoch of the
latest entry in debian/changelog, if it is not already defined.
FILES
- /etc/dpkg/buildpackage.conf
-
System wide configuration file
- $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/dpkg/buildpackage.conf or
-
- $HOME/.config/dpkg/buildpackage.conf
-
User configuration file.
NOTES
Compiler flags are no longer exported
Between dpkg 1.14.17 and 1.16.1,
dpkg-buildpackage
exported compiler flags (
CFLAGS,
CXXFLAGS,
FFLAGS,
CPPFLAGS and
LDFLAGS) with values as returned
by
dpkg-buildflags. This is no longer the case.
Default build targets
dpkg-buildpackage is using the
build-arch and
build-indep targets since dpkg 1.16.2. Those targets are thus
mandatory. But to avoid breakages of existing packages, and ease
the transition, if the source package does not build both architecture
independent and dependent binary packages (since dpkg 1.18.8) it will
fallback to use the
build target if
make -f debian/rules -qn
build-target returns 2 as exit code.
BUGS
It should be possible to specify spaces and shell metacharacters
and initial arguments for
gain-root-command and
sign-command.
SEE ALSO
dpkg-source(1),
dpkg-architecture(1),
dpkg-buildflags(1),
dpkg-genbuildinfo(1),
dpkg-genchanges(1),
fakeroot(1),
lintian(1),
gpg(1).