4. Source packages
A Debian source package contains the source material used to construct one
or more binary packages. A source package consists of
a .dsc
file (see Debian source package control files – .dsc), one or more
compressed tar files, and possibly other files depending on the type and
format of source package. Binary packages are contructed from the source
package via a build process defined by debian/rules
and other files in
the debian
directory of the unpacked source package.
Debian source packages are classified as native or non-native.
A native source package is one that does not distinguish between Debian packaging releases and upstream releases. A native source package contains a single tar file of source material, and the versioning does not have a Debian-specific component. Native packages are normally (but not exclusively) used for software that has no independent existence outside of Debian, such as software written specifically to be a Debian package.
A non-native source package separates the upstream release from the Debian packaging and any Debian-specific changes. The source in a non-native source package is divided into one or more upstream tar files plus a collection of Debian-specific files. (Depending on the format of the source package, those Debian-specific files may come in the form of another tar file or in the form of a compressed diff.) The version of a non-native package has an upstream component and a Debian component, and there may be multiple Debian package versions associated with a single upstream release version and sharing the same upstream source tar files.
Most source packages in Debian are non-native.
4.1. Standards conformance
Source packages should specify the most recent version number of this policy document with which your package complied when it was last updated.
The version is specified in the Standards-Version
control field. The
format of the Standards-Version
field is described in
Standards-Version.
For a package to have an old Standards-Version value is not itself a bug, however. It just means that no-one has yet reviewed the package with changes to the standards in mind.
When updating existing packaging, the Standards-Version must not be updated except after reviewing the changes between the old and the new versions of the standards and updating your package if necessary (the Upgrading checklist can help with this task).
A very old Standards-Version can mean that infelicities in the package are likely. It is recommended that each package be reviewed at least once per Debian release, so a Standards-Version older than the previous Debian release is indicative of work (if only review work) that needs doing.
4.2. Package relationships
Source packages should specify which binary packages they require to be installed or not to be installed in order to build correctly. For example, if building a package requires a certain compiler, then the compiler should be specified as a build-time dependency.
It is not necessary to explicitly specify build-time relationships on a
minimal set of packages that are always needed to compile, link and put
in a Debian package a standard “Hello World!” program written in C or
C++. The required packages are called build-essential, and an
informational list can be found in
/usr/share/doc/build-essential/list
(which is contained in the
build-essential
package). [1]
When specifying the set of build-time dependencies, one should list only those packages explicitly required by the build. It is not necessary to list packages which are required merely because some other package in the list of build-time dependencies depends on them. [2]
If build-time dependencies are specified, it must be possible to build the package and produce working binaries on a system with only essential and build-essential packages installed and also those required to satisfy the build-time relationships (including any implied relationships). In particular, this means that version clauses should be used rigorously in build-time relationships so that one cannot produce bad or inconsistently configured packages when the relationships are properly satisfied.
Declaring relationships between packages explains the technical details.
4.3. Changes to the upstream sources
If changes to the source code are made that are not specific to the needs of the Debian system, they should be sent to the upstream authors in whatever form they prefer so as to be included in the upstream version of the package.
If you need to configure the package differently for Debian or for
Linux, and the upstream source doesn’t provide a way to do so, you
should add such configuration facilities (for example, a new
autoconf
test or #define
) and send the patch to the upstream
authors, with the default set to the way they originally had it. You can
then easily override the default in your debian/rules
or wherever is
appropriate.
You should make sure that the configure
utility detects the correct
architecture specification string (refer to
Architecture specification strings for details).
If your package includes the scripts config.sub
and
config.guess
, you should arrange for the versions provided by the
package autotools-dev be used instead (see autotools-dev documentation
for details how to achieve that). This ensures that these files can be
updated distribution-wide at build time when introducing new
architectures.
If you need to edit a Makefile
where GNU-style configure
scripts
are used, you should edit the .in
files rather than editing the
Makefile
directly. This allows the user to reconfigure the package
if necessary. You should not configure the package and edit the
generated Makefile
! This makes it impossible for someone else to
later reconfigure the package without losing the changes you made.
4.4. Debian changelog: debian/changelog
Every source package must include the Debian changelog file,
debian/changelog
. Changes in the Debian version of the package
should be briefly explained in this file. [3] This includes
modifications made in the Debian package compared to the upstream one
as well as other changes and updates to the package. [4]
The format of the debian/changelog
allows the package building tools
to discover which version of the package is being built and find out
other release-specific information.
That format is a series of entries like this:
package (version) distribution(s); urgency=urgency
[optional blank line(s), stripped]
* change details
more change details
[blank line(s), included in output of dpkg-parsechangelog]
* even more change details
[optional blank line(s), stripped]
-- maintainer name <email address>[two spaces] date
package
and version
are the source package name and version
number.
distribution(s)
lists the distributions where this version should
be installed when it is uploaded - it is copied to the
Distribution
field in the .changes
file. See
Distribution.
urgency
is the value for the Urgency
field in the .changes
file for the upload (see Urgency). It is not possible to
specify an urgency containing commas; commas are used to separate
keyword=value
settings in the dpkg
changelog format (though
there is currently only one useful keyword, urgency
).
The change details may in fact be any series of lines starting with at least two spaces, but conventionally each change starts with an asterisk and a separating space and continuation lines are indented so as to bring them in line with the start of the text above. Blank lines may be used here to separate groups of changes, if desired.
If this upload resolves bugs recorded in the Bug Tracking System (BTS),
they may be automatically closed on the inclusion of this package into
the Debian archive by including the string: closes: Bug#nnnnn
in
the change details, where #nnnnn
is the bug number. [5] This
information is conveyed via the Closes
field in the .changes
file (see Closes).
The maintainer name and email address used in the changelog should be
the details of the person who prepared this release of the package. They
are not necessarily those of the uploader or usual package maintainer.
[6] The information here will be copied to the Changed-By
field
in the .changes
file (see Changed-By), and
then later used to send an acknowledgement when the upload has been
installed.
The date has the following format [7] (compatible and with the same semantics of RFC 2822 and RFC 5322):
day-of-week, dd month yyyy hh:mm:ss +zzzz
where:
day-of-week
is one of: Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat, Sundd
is a one- or two-digit day of the month (01-31)month
is one of: Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Decyyyy
is the four-digit year (e.g. 2010)hh
is the two-digit hour (00-23)mm
is the two-digit minutes (00-59)ss
is the two-digit seconds (00-60)+zzzz
or-zzzz
is the time zone offset from CoordinatedUniversal Time (UTC). “+” indicates that the time is ahead of (i.e., east of) UTC and “-” indicates that the time is behind (i.e., west of) UTC. The first two digits indicate the hour difference from UTC and the last two digits indicate the number of additional minutes difference from UTC. The last two digits must be in the range 00-59.
The first “title” line with the package name must start at the left hand margin. The “trailer” line with the maintainer and date details must be preceded by exactly one space. The maintainer details and the date must be separated by exactly two spaces.
The entire changelog must be encoded in UTF-8.
For more information on placement of the changelog files within binary packages, please see Changelog files and release notes.
4.5. Copyright: debian/copyright
Every package must be accompanied by a verbatim copy of its
distribution license(s) in the file /usr/share/doc/PACKAGE/copyright
.
This file is often required to contain a verbatim copy of the package’s copyright information, too; see Copyright information and Copyright considerations for details, and for further considerations related to copyrights for packages.
4.6. Error trapping in makefiles
When make
invokes a command in a makefile (including your package’s
upstream makefiles and debian/rules
), it does so using sh
. This
means that sh
’s usual bad error handling properties apply: if you
include a miniature script as one of the commands in your makefile
you’ll find that if you don’t do anything about it then errors are not
detected and make
will blithely continue after problems.
Every time you put more than one shell command (this includes using a
loop) in a makefile command you must make sure that errors are trapped.
For simple compound commands, such as changing directory and then
running a program, using &&
rather than semicolon as a command
separator is sufficient. For more complex commands including most loops
and conditionals you should include a separate set -e
command at the start of every makefile command that’s
actually one of these miniature shell scripts.
4.7. Time Stamps
Maintainers should preserve the modification times of the upstream source files in a package, as far as is reasonably possible. [8]
4.8. Restrictions on objects in source packages
The source package must not contain device special files, sockets, or setuid or setgid files. [9]
4.9. Main building script: debian/rules
This file must be an executable makefile. It contains the package-specific recipes for compiling the source (if required) and constructing one or more binary packages.
debian/rules
must start with the line #!/usr/bin/make -f
, so that
it can be invoked by saying its name rather than invoking make
explicitly. That is, invoking either of make -f debian/rules args...
or ./debian/rules args...
must result in identical behavior.
The recommended way to implement the build process of a Debian package, in
the absence of a good reason to use a different approach, is the dh
tool. This includes the contents of the debian/rules
building script.
dh
is the most common packaging helper tool in Debian. Using it will
usually save effort in complying with the rules in this document, because
dh
will automatically implement many of them without requiring
explicit instructions.
There are sometimes good reasons to use a different approach. For
example, the standard tools for packaging software written in some
languages may use another tool; some rarer packaging patterns, such as
multiple builds of the same software with different options, are easier to
express with other tools; and a packager working on a different packaging
helper might want to use their tool. The recommendation to use dh
does not always apply, and use of dh
is not required.
For more information about how to use dh
, see the documentation in the
debhelper package, most notably the dh(1) manual page.
The following targets are required and must be implemented by
debian/rules
: clean
, binary
, binary-arch
,
binary-indep
, build
, build-arch
and build-indep
. These
are the targets called by dpkg-buildpackage
.
Since an interactive debian/rules
script makes it impossible to
auto-compile that package and also makes it hard for other people to
reproduce the same binary package, all required targets must be
non-interactive. It also follows that any target that these targets
depend on must also be non-interactive.
The package build should be as verbose as reasonably possible, except
where the terse
tag is included in DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS
(see
debian/rules and DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS). This makes life easier for porters and
bug squashers more generally, who can look at build logs for possible
problems. To accomplish this, debian/rules
should pass to the
commands it invokes options that cause them to produce verbose output.
For example, the build target should pass --disable-silent-rules
to any configure scripts. See also Binaries.
Except for packages in the non-free archive with the Autobuild
control field unset or set to no
, required targets must not attempt
network access, except, via the loopback interface, to services on the
build host that have been started by the build.
Required targets must not attempt to write outside of the unpacked
source package tree. There are two exceptions. Firstly, the binary
targets may write the binary packages to the parent directory of the
unpacked source package tree. Secondly, required targets may write to
/tmp
, /var/tmp
and to the directory specified by the
TMPDIR
environment variable, but must not depend on the contents
of any of these.
This restriction is intended to prevent source package builds creating
and depending on state outside of themselves, thus affecting multiple
independent rebuilds. In particular, the required targets must not
attempt to write into HOME
.
The targets are as follows:
build
(required)The
build
target should perform all the configuration and compilation of the package. If a package has an interactive pre-build configuration routine, the Debian source package must either be built after this has taken place (so that the binary package can be built without rerunning the configuration) or the configuration routine modified to become non-interactive. (The latter is preferable if there are architecture-specific features detected by the configuration routine.)For some packages, notably ones where the same source tree is compiled in different ways to produce two binary packages, the
build
target does not make much sense. For these packages it is good enough to provide two (or more) targets (build-a
andbuild-b
or whatever) for each of the ways of building the package, and abuild
target that does nothing. Thebinary
target will have to build the package in each of the possible ways and make the binary package out of each.The
build
target must not do anything that might require root privilege.The
build
target may need to run theclean
target first - see below.When a package has a configuration and build routine which takes a long time, or when the makefiles are poorly designed, or when
build
needs to runclean
first, it is a good idea totouch build
when the build process is complete. This will ensure that ifdebian/rules build
is run again it will not rebuild the whole program. [10]build-arch
(required),build-indep
(required)The
build-arch
target must perform all the configuration and compilation required for producing all architecture-dependent binary packages (those packages for which the body of theArchitecture
field indebian/control
is notall
). Similarly, thebuild-indep
target must perform all the configuration and compilation required for producing all architecture-independent binary packages (those packages for which the body of theArchitecture
field indebian/control
isall
). Thebuild
target should either depend on those targets or take the same actions as invoking those targets would perform. [11]The
build-arch
andbuild-indep
targets must not do anything that might require root privilege.binary
(required),binary-arch
(required),binary-indep
(required)The
binary
target must be all that is necessary for the user to build the binary package(s) produced from this source package. It is split into two parts:binary-arch
builds the binary packages which are specific to a particular architecture, andbinary-indep
builds those which are not.binary
may be (and commonly is) a target with no commands which simply depends onbinary-arch
andbinary-indep
.Both
binary-*
targets should depend on thebuild
target, or on the appropriatebuild-arch
orbuild-indep
target, so that the package is built if it has not been already. It should then create the relevant binary package(s), usingdpkg-gencontrol
to make their control files anddpkg-deb
to build them and place them in the parent of the top level directory.Both the
binary-arch
andbinary-indep
targets must exist. If one of them has nothing to do (which will always be the case if the source generates only a single binary package, whether architecture-dependent or not), it must still exist and must always succeed.The
binary
targets may need to be invoked as root depending on the value of the Rules-Requires-Root field. [12]clean
(required)This must undo any effects that the
build
andbinary
targets may have had, except that it should leave alone any output files created in the parent directory by a run of abinary
target.If a
build
file is touched at the end of thebuild
target, as suggested above, it should be removed as the first action thatclean
performs, so that runningbuild
again after an interruptedclean
doesn’t think that everything is already done.The
clean
target may need to be invoked as root ifbinary
has been invoked since the lastclean
, or ifbuild
has been invoked as root (sincebuild
may create directories, for example).The
clean
target cannot be used to remove files in the source tree that are not compatible with the DFSG. This is because the files would remain in the upstream tarball, and thus in the source package, so the source package would continue to violate DFSG. Instead, the upstream source should be repacked to remove those files.patch
(optional)This target performs whatever additional actions are required to make the source ready for editing (unpacking additional upstream archives, applying patches, etc.). It is recommended to be implemented for any package where
dpkg-source -x
does not result in source ready for additional modification. See Source package handling: debian/README.source.
The build
, binary
and clean
targets must be invoked with the
current directory being the package’s top-level directory.
Additional targets may exist in debian/rules
, either as published or
undocumented interfaces or for the package’s internal use.
The architectures we build on and build for are determined by make
variables using the utility dpkg-architecture
. You can determine the
Debian architecture and the GNU style architecture specification string
for the build architecture as well as for the host architecture. The
build architecture is the architecture on which debian/rules
is run
and the package build is performed. The host architecture is the
architecture on which the resulting package will be installed and run.
The target architecture is the architecture of the packages that the
compiler currently being built will generate. These are normally the
same, but may be different in the case of cross-compilation (building
packages for one architecture on machines of a different architecture),
building a cross-compiler (a compiler package that will generate objects
for one architecture, built on a machine of a different architecture) or
a Canadian cross-compiler (a compiler that will generate objects for one
architecture, built on a machine of a different architecture, that will
run on yet a different architecture).
Here is a list of supported make
variables:
DEB_*_ARCH
(the Debian architecture)DEB_*_ARCH_CPU
(the Debian CPU name)DEB_*_ARCH_BITS
(the Debian CPU pointer size in bits)DEB_*_ARCH_ENDIAN
(the Debian CPU endianness)DEB_*_ARCH_OS
(the Debian System name)DEB_*_GNU_TYPE
(the GNU style architecture specification string)DEB_*_GNU_CPU
(the CPU part ofDEB_*_GNU_TYPE
)DEB_*_GNU_SYSTEM
(the System part ofDEB_*_GNU_TYPE
)
where *
is either BUILD
for specification of the build
architecture, HOST
for specification of the host architecture or
TARGET
for specification of the target architecture.
Backward compatibility can be provided in the rules file by setting the
needed variables to suitable default values; please refer to the
documentation of dpkg-architecture
for details.
It is important to understand that the DEB_*_ARCH
string only
determines which Debian architecture we are building on or for. It
should not be used to get the CPU or system information; the
DEB_*_ARCH_CPU
and DEB_*_ARCH_OS
variables should be used for
that. GNU style variables should generally only be used with upstream
build systems.
The builder may set DEB_RULES_REQUIRES_ROOT
environment variable
when calling any of the mandatory targets as defined in
Rules-Requires-Root. If the variable
is not set, the package must behave as if it was set to
binary-targets
.
4.9.1. debian/rules
and DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS
Supporting the standardized environment variable DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS
is recommended. This variable can contain several flags to change how a
package is compiled and built. Each flag must be in the form flag or
flag=options. If multiple flags are given, they must be separated by
whitespace. [13] flag must start with a lowercase letter (a-z
) and
consist only of lowercase letters, numbers (0-9
), and the characters
-
and _
(hyphen and underscore). options must not contain
whitespace. The same tag should not be given multiple times with
conflicting values. Package maintainers may assume that
DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS
will not contain conflicting tags.
The meaning of the following tags has been standardized:
nocheck
This tag says to not run any build-time test suite provided by the package.
nodoc
This tag says to skip any build steps that only generate package documentation. Files required by other sections of Debian Policy, such as copyright and changelog files, must still be generated and put in the package, but other generated documentation such as help2man-generated pages, Doxygen-generated API documentation, or info pages generated from Texinfo sources should be skipped if possible. This option does not change the set of binary packages generated by the source package, but documentation-only binary packages may be nearly empty when built with this option.
noopt
The presence of this tag means that the package should be compiled with a minimum of optimization. For C programs, it is best to add
-O0
toCFLAGS
(although this is usually the default). Some programs might fail to build or run at this level of optimization; it may be necessary to use-O1
, for example.nostrip
This tag means that the debugging symbols should not be stripped from the binary during installation, so that debugging information may be included in the package.
parallel=n
This tag means that the package should be built using up to
n
parallel processes if the package build system supports this. [14] If the package build system does not support parallel builds, this string must be ignored. If the package build system only supports a lower level of concurrency than n, the package should be built using as many parallel processes as the package build system supports. It is up to the package maintainer to decide whether the package build times are long enough and the package build system is robust enough to make supporting parallel builds worthwhile.terse
This tag means that the package build will be less verbose than default. For example,
debian/rules
might pass options to the package’s configure script that cause the compiler to produce less output.
Unknown flags must be ignored by debian/rules
.
The following makefile snippet is an example of how one may implement the build options; you will probably have to massage this example in order to make it work for your package.
CFLAGS = -Wall -g
INSTALL = install
INSTALL_FILE = $(INSTALL) -p -o root -g root -m 644
INSTALL_PROGRAM = $(INSTALL) -p -o root -g root -m 755
INSTALL_SCRIPT = $(INSTALL) -p -o root -g root -m 755
INSTALL_DIR = $(INSTALL) -p -d -o root -g root -m 755
ifneq (,$(filter noopt,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
CFLAGS += -O0
else
CFLAGS += -O2
endif
ifeq (,$(filter nostrip,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
INSTALL_PROGRAM += -s
endif
ifneq (,$(filter parallel=%,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
NUMJOBS = $(patsubst parallel=%,%,$(filter parallel=%,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
MAKEFLAGS += -j$(NUMJOBS)
endif
build:
# ...
ifeq (,$(filter nocheck,$(DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS)))
# Code to run the package test suite.
endif
4.9.2. debian/rules
and Rules-Requires-Root
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.
The gain root command is passed to the build script via the
DEB_GAIN_ROOT_CMD
environment variable. The contents of this
variable is a space separated list, the first entry of which is the
command, and the proceeding entries of which are arguments to the
command. The gain root command must be available via PATH. The
gain root command must not rely on shell features because it will
not necessarily be invoked via a shell.
The gain root command must not run interactively, including prompting for any user input. It must be possible to prepend the gain root command to an existing command and its arguments, without needing to alter or quote the existing command and its arguments. Furthermore, the gain root command must preserve all environment variables without the caller having to explicitly request any preservation.
The following are examples of valid gain root commands (in syntax of sh), assuming the tools used are available and properly configured:
# Command "sudo", with arguments "-nE" and "--"
export DEB_GAIN_ROOT_CMD='sudo -nE --'
# Command "fakeroot" with the single argument "--"
export DEB_GAIN_ROOT_CMD='fakeroot --'
Examples of valid use of the gain root command:
# sh-syntax (assumes set -e semantics for error handling)
$DEB_GAIN_ROOT_CMD some-cmd --which-requires-root
# perl
my @cmd = ('some-cmd', '--which-requires-root');
unshift(@cmd, split(' ', $ENV{DEB_GAIN_ROOT_CMD})) if $ENV{DEB_GAIN_ROOT_CMD};
system(@cmd) == 0 or die("@cmd failed");
4.10. Variable substitutions: debian/substvars
When dpkg-gencontrol
generates binary package control files (DEBIAN/control
), it performs variable
substitutions on its output just before writing it. Variable
substitutions have the form ${variable}
. The optional file
debian/substvars
contains variable substitutions to be used;
variables can also be set directly from debian/rules
using the
-V
option to the source packaging commands, and certain predefined
variables are also available.
The debian/substvars
file is usually generated and modified
dynamically by debian/rules
targets, in which case it must be
removed by the clean
target.
See deb-substvars(5) for full details about source variable
substitutions, including the format of debian/substvars
.
4.11. Upstream source location: debian/watch
This is a configuration file for the uscan
utility which defines how
to automatically scan ftp or http sites for newly available updates of the
package. This is also used by some Debian QA tools to help with quality
control and maintenance of the distribution as a whole. If the upstream
source of the package is available via a mechaism that uscan
understands, including this configuration file is recommended.
If the upstream maintainer of the software provides OpenPGP signatures
for new releases, including the information required for uscan
to
verify signatures for new upstream releases is also recommended. To do
this, use the pgpsigurlmangle
option in debian/watch
to specify
the location of the upstream signature, and include the key or keys used
to sign upstream releases in the Debian source package as
debian/upstream/signing-key.asc
.
For more information about uscan
and these options, including how to
generate the file containing upstream signing keys, see
uscan(1).
4.12. Generated files list: debian/files
This file is not a permanent part of the source tree; it is used while
building packages to record which files are being generated.
dpkg-genchanges
uses it when it generates a .changes
file.
It should not exist in a shipped source package, and so it (and any
backup files or temporary files such as files.new
) [15] should be
removed by the clean
target. It may also be wise to ensure a fresh
start by emptying or removing it at the start of the binary
target.
When dpkg-gencontrol
is run for a binary package, it adds an entry
to debian/files
for the .deb
file that will be created when
dpkg-deb --build
is run for that binary package. So for most
packages all that needs to be done with this file is to delete it in the
clean
target.
If a package upload includes files besides the source package and any
binary packages whose control files were made with dpkg-gencontrol
then they should be placed in the parent of the package’s top-level
directory and dpkg-distaddfile
should be called to add the file to
the list in debian/files
.
4.13. Embedded code copies
Some software packages include in their distribution convenience copies of code from other software packages, generally so that users compiling from source don’t have to download multiple packages. Debian packages should not make use of these convenience copies unless the included package is explicitly intended to be used in this way. [16] If the included code is already in the Debian archive in the form of a library, the Debian packaging should ensure that binary packages reference the libraries already in Debian and the convenience copy is not used. If the included code is not already in Debian, it should be packaged separately as a prerequisite if possible. [17]
4.14. Source package handling: debian/README.source
If running dpkg-source -x
on a source package doesn’t produce the
source of the package, ready for editing, and allow one to make changes
and run dpkg-buildpackage
to produce a modified package without
taking any additional steps, creating a debian/README.source
documentation file is recommended. This file should explain how to do
all of the following:
Generate the fully patched source, in a form ready for editing, that would be built to create Debian packages. Doing this with a
patch
target indebian/rules
is recommended; see Main building script: debian/rules.Modify the source and save those modifications so that they will be applied when building the package.
Remove source modifications that are currently being applied when building the package.
Optionally, document what steps are necessary to upgrade the Debian source package to a new upstream version, if applicable.
This explanation should include specific commands and mention any additional required Debian packages. It should not assume familiarity with any specific Debian packaging system or patch management tools.
This explanation may refer to a documentation file installed by one of the package’s build dependencies provided that the referenced documentation clearly explains these tasks and is not a general reference manual.
debian/README.source
may also include any other information that
would be helpful to someone modifying the source package. Even if the
package doesn’t fit the above description, maintainers are encouraged to
document in a debian/README.source
file any source package with a
particularly complex or unintuitive source layout or build system (for
example, a package that builds the same source multiple times to
generate different binary packages).
4.15. Reproducibility
Packages should build reproducibly, which for the purposes of this document [18] means that given
a version of a source package unpacked at a given path;
a set of versions of installed build dependencies;
a set of environment variable values;
a build architecture; and
a host architecture,
repeatedly building the source package for the build architecture on any machine of the host architecture with those versions of the build dependencies installed and exactly those environment variable values set will produce bit-for-bit identical binary packages.
It is recommended that packages produce bit-for-bit identical binaries even if most environment variables and build paths are varied. It is intended for this stricter standard to replace the above when it is easier for packages to meet it.
4.16. Missing sources: debian/missing-sources
Sometimes upstream does not include the source code for some files in
the upstream tarball. In order to satisfy the DFSG for packages in
main
or contrib
, you should either:
repack the upstream tarball to include those sources; or
include a copy of the sources in the
debian/missing-sources
directory.
Package maintainers may optionally use the following convention to
organize the contents of debian/missing-sources
: for a sourceless file
foo
in the subdirectory bar
of the upstream tarball, where the
source of foo
has extension baz
, place the source at
debian/missing-sources/bar/foo.baz
. For example, according to this
convention, the C source code of an executable checksum/util
would be
located at debian/missing-sources/checksum/util.c
.
4.17. Vendor-specific patch series
Packages in the Debian archive using the 3.0 (quilt) source package
format must not contain a non-default series file. That is, there
must not exist a file debian/patches/foo.series
for any foo
.