SYNOPSIS
- svn-buildpackage [[ OPTIONS... ] [ OPTIONS for dpkg-buildpackage ]]
DESCRIPTION
By default, the working directory is used as the main source directory (assuming the whole upstream source is being stored in the repository). The alternative is so called "merge mode". With this method, only the debian directory (and maybe some other modified files) are stored in the repository. At build time, the contents of the svn trunk are copied to the extracted tarball contents (and can overwrite parts of it). To choose this working model, set the svn property mergeWithUpstream on the debian directory
-
$ svn propset mergeWithUpstream 1 debian
mergeWithUpstream requires that the build system can prepare a tarball, typically using make dist and autotools. All upstream packages will have some form of tarball creation support and native packages that use autotools or which have internal tarball support can use mergeWithUpstream to handle generated files that are needed to build the package but are not present in SVN. See the HOWTO guide for examples of how this can be done. Native packages that do not use autotools and do not have internal tarball support can still add generated files to the source package tarball using the useNativeDist make target in the top level Makefile. This custom target must be idempotent and only modify / generate the desired files using only the exported SVN source and build dependencies. To allow svn-buildpackage to use an make native-dist target in your top level Makefile, set the useNativeDist property on the ./debian/ directory:
-
$ svn propset useNativeDist 1 debian
The default behaviour of svn-buildpackage is as follows:
Check the working directory, complain on uncommited files (also see --svn-ignore-new)
Copy the orig tarball to the build area if necessary (also see --svn-no-links)
Extract the tarball (in merge mode) or export the svn work directory to the build directory (also see below and --svn-no-links)
Build with dpkg-buildpackage (also see --svn-builder, --svn-lintian, etc.)
Create a changelog entry for the future version
OPTIONS
svn-buildpackage accepts the following options on the command-line:
--svn-builder=COMMAND
-
Specifies alternative build command instead of
dpkg-buildpackage, eg.
debuild,
pdebuild, etc. Every parameter that
svn-buildpackage
doesn't know (--svn-*) is passed to
COMMAND. There is no difference between the command line and config file parameters . They are used at the same time.
WARNING: shell quotation rules do not completely apply here, better use wrappers for complex constructs. Using this option may break --svn-lintian and --svn-move functionality. Some functions may be disabled when a custom build command is used because the output file location is not predictable.
Default: use dpkg-buildpackage.
--svn-ignore-new | --svn-ignore
-
Don't stop on svn conflicts or new/changed files. To set this behaviour for single files set the
deb:ignoreM
property to 1 on them. Also see documentation of the svn:ignore property in the SVN book.
Default: Stop on conflicts or new/changed files.
--svn-dont-clean
-
Don't run debian/rules clean.
Default: clean first
--svn-no-links
-
Don't use file links but try to export or do hard copies of the working directory. This is useful if your package fails to build because some files, empty directories, broken links, ... cannot not be transported with in the default link-copy mode.
Default: use links where possible.
--svn-dont-purge
-
Don't remove the build directory when the build is done.
Default: remove after successful build.
--svn-reuse
-
If possible, reuse an existing build directory in subsequent builds. The build directory is not purged after the build, it is not renamed when a build starts and the files are just copied over into it. Useful in
mergeWithUpstream
mode with large packages.
Default: build directory is removed.
--svn-rm-prev-dir
-
If a previous build directory is found, remove it before building instead of renaming it. if
--svn-reuse
is also given in the same line, the reuse behaviour occurs.
Default: rename old directories with a 'obsolete' suffix.
--svn-export
-
Just export the working directory and do necessary code merge operations, then exit.
Default: Off.
--svn-tag
-
Final build: Tag, export, build cleanly & make new changelog entry.
Default: Off.
--svn-tag-only | --svn-only-tag
-
Don't build the package, do only the tag copy.
Default: Off.
--svn-retag
-
If an existing target directory has been found while trying to create the tag copy, remove the target directory first.
Default: Off.
--svn-noautodch
-
No new Debian changelog entry is added automatically.
Default: A new UNRELEASED changelog entry is set via dch.
--svn-lintian
-
Run lintian on the resulting changes file when done.
Default: Off.
--svn-move
-
When done, move the created files (as listed in
.changes) to the parent directory, relative to the one where
svn-buildpackage
was started.
Default: Off.
--svn-move-to=...
-
Specifies the target directory to which to move the generated files.
Default: Off. (Files are left where the build command puts them.)
--svn-pkg=packagename
-
Overrides the detected package name. Use with caution since it could be set too late during the processing (eg. still have the old value when expanding shell variables).
Default: Off.
--svn-arch=ARCH
-
Allows specifying the build architecture (e.g. i386 build on an amd64 machine).
Default: Off.
--svn-override=var=value,anothervar=value
-
Overrides any config variable that has been autodetected or found in
.svn/deb-layout.
Default: Off.
--svn-prebuild | --svn-postbuild | --svn-pretag | --svn-posttag
-
Commands (hooks) to be executed before/after the build/tag command invocations, e.g. to download the orig tarballs from the archive. Shell code can be emdded here though it is not recommended. Various helping variables are available in the environment, see ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES below for detailed explanation.
Please note that the prebuild and postbuild hooks replace the normal prebuild and postbuild actions of svn-buildpackage. For prebuild, this means that the build dependencies will not be checked. For postbuild, this means that the resulting files won't be moved, and lintian will not be run.
Defaults: Off.
--svn-noninteractive
-
With this parameter
svn-buildpackage
will not interact with the user.
Default: Off.
--svn-savecfg
-
By default,
svn-buildpackage
used to create
.svn/deb-layout
on every invocation. Since version 0.6.22 this behaviour is deprecated.
With this parameter svn-buildpackage will (partly) replicate the old behaviour. In contrast to the deprecated behaviour, the .svn/deb-layout is regarded as a local override; the old behaviour simply ignored any versioned layout information if it found .svn/deb-layout.
This option was provided since it can be useful when creating a local override file.
Default: Off.
--svn-download-orig
-
This option makes
svn-buildpackage
try to download the upstream tarball using
apt
and
uscan.
Default: Off.
--svn-verbose
-
More verbose program output.
Default: Off.
-h | --help
- Show the help message.
EXAMPLES
For more detailed information on how to use svn-buildpackage, see the HOWTO. m[blue]http://svn-bp.alioth.debian.org/m[][1].
To start working with existing native Debian package from a *.dsc file, import it into the repository with command:
-
svn-inject package_0.1.dsc svn://host/debian/devel/packages
To start working with existing upstream package in Debian from a *.dsc file, import it into the repository with command:
-
svn-inject -o package_0.1-2.dsc svn://host/debian/devel/packages
Before building an upstream package, ensure the original source is available, e.g. if uscan is working:
-
svn mkdir ../tarballs svn propset svn:ignore "*" ../tarballs uscan --force-download --destdir ../tarballs
To test building the package from Subversion repository, use command below. Refer to dpkg-buildpackage(1) manual page for the -us etc. options:
-
svn-buildpackage --svn-lintian -us -uc -rfakeroot
To check that package build in a clean state, test it with pbuilder(1):
-
svn mkdir ../build-area # To store results svn propset svn:ignore "*" ../build-area svn-buildpackage --svn-ignore-new --svn-builder=pdebuild
When a new upstream release becomes available, commit all changes and have the working tree in clean state. Then use svn-upgrade(1) to import the new release:
-
svn status # Check that there are no uncommited changes svn-upgrade --verbose ../package-2.0.tar.gz
CONFIGURATION FILE
svn-buildpackage's behaviour can be modified using the file ~/.svn-buildpackage.conf. Additional parts can be added in each package working directory using the file .svn/svn-buildpackage.conf. It is essentially a list of the long command line options (without leading minus signs), one argument per line (without quotes surrounding multi-word arguments). The variables are expanded with the system shell if shell variables are found there. Avoid ~ sign because of unreliable expansion: it is better to use $HOME instead. Example:
-
svn-builder=debuild -EPATH svn-no-links svn-override=origDir=$HOME/debian/upstream/$PACKAGE # svn-ignore-new #svn-lintian
DIRECTORY LAYOUT HANDLING
By default, svn-buildpackage expects a configuration file with path/url declaration, .svn/deb-layout. The values there can be overridden with the --svn-override option, see above. If a config file could not be found, the settings are autodetected following the usual assumptions about local directories and repository layout. In addition, the contents of a custom file debian/svn-deblayout will be imported during the initial configuration. Package maintainers can store this file in the repository to pass correct defaults to new svn-buildpackage users. The format is the same as in the file .svn/deb-layout. As an alternative to the debian/svn-deblayout file, maintainers can set Subversion properties for the debian/ directory; any properties of debian/ which have a name of the form svn-bp:PROP will be the source of a PROP setting which has the value indicated by the first line of the property value. If a full svn URL is not given, the repository root will be prepended to this value.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The following environment variables are exported by svn-buildpackage and can be used in hook commands or the package build system.
PACKAGE, package
- The source package name.
SVN_BUILDPACKAGE
- Version of svn-buildpackage.
TAG_VERSION, debian_version
- The complete Debian version string, also used for the tag copy.
non_epoch_version
- Same as debian_version but without any epoch strings.
upstream_version
- Same as debian_version but without Debian extensions
guess_loc
- Guessed upstream source package name in the pool, something like libm/libmeta-html-perl_3.2.1.0.orig.tar.gz
DIFFSRC
- (experimental) shows the location of generated diff file
All the layout properties are exported to the environment, too. The following ones have meaning to svn-buildpackage.
buildArea
- the location of build area directory
trunkUrl
- the URL of the trunk directory for the current package.
tagsUrl
- the URL of the tags base directory for the current package.
origDir
- the local directory where the orig tarball should be located.
origUrl
- the URL from where the orig tarball for the current package can be pulled from.
The following variables are understood by svn-buildpackage:
FORCETAG
- Ignore the signs of an incomplete changelog and tag the repository anyway.
FORCEEXPORT
- Export upstream source from the repository even if mergeWithUpstream property is set.
DEBIAN_FRONTEND
- If DEBIAN_FRONTEND is set to 'noninteractive' --svn-noninteractive is called silently.
RECOMMENDATIONS
Use shell aliases. Here are some examples for Bash:
-
alias svn-b="svn-buildpackage -us -uc -rfakeroot --svn-ignore" alias svn-br="svn-b --svn-dont-purge --svn-reuse" alias svn-bt="svn-buildpackage --svn-tag -rfakeroot"
Those commands have respective meanings: build regardless of new or changed files; build regardless of new or changed files and reuse the build directory; build (for upload) and tag.
SSH is the easiest way to access remote repositories, although it usually requires entering a password more frequently with svn-buildpackage. Workarounds include using an ssh key without a passphrase (although this is insecure and still relatively slow), or the SSH connection caching feature present in recent versions of SSH. For details, see the svn-buildpackage manual.
Another way to get a remote link is using the Subversion DAV module (with SSL and Apache user authentication), see the svn-buildpackage HOWTO manual for details.
AUTHORS
Eduard Bloch
- This manual page was written by Eduard Bloch in roff.
Goneri Le Bouder
- Converted manpages to SGML.
Neil Williams
- Converted manpages to DocBook XML and current Debian maintainer
COPYRIGHT
Copyright © 2009 Eduard Bloch