15.2. Building your First Package
15.2.1. Meta-Packages or Fake Packages
Fake packages and meta-packages are similar, in that they are empty shells that only exist for the effects their meta-data have on the package handling stack.
The purpose of a fake package is to trick dpkg
and apt
into believing that some package is installed even though it is only an empty shell. This allows satisfying dependencies on a package when the corresponding software was installed outside the scope of the packaging system. Such a method works, but it should still be avoided whenever possible, since there is no guarantee that the manually installed software behaves exactly like the corresponding package would and other packages depending on it would not work properly.
On the other hand, a meta-package exists mostly as a collection of dependencies, so that installing the meta-package will actually bring in a set of other packages in a single step.
Both these kinds of packages can be created by the equivs-control
and equivs-build
commands (in the equivs package). The equivs-control *file*
command creates a Debian package header file that should be edited to contain the name of the expected package, its version number, the name of the maintainer, its dependencies, and its description. Other fields without a default value are optional and can be deleted. The Copyright
, Changelog
, Readme
and Extra-Files
fields are not standard fields in Debian packages; they only make sense within the scope of equivs-build
, and they will not be kept in the headers of the generated package.
例 15.2. libxml-libxml-perl的头文件 虚拟安装包
- Section: perl
- Priority: optional
- Standards-Version: 4.4.1
- Package: libxml-libxml-perl
- Version: 2.0134-1
- Maintainer: Raphael Hertzog <hertzog@debian.org>
- Depends: libxml2 (>= 2.7.4)
- Architecture: all
- Description: Fake package - module manually installed in site_perl
- This is a fake package to let the packaging system
- believe that this Debian package is installed.
- .
- In fact, the package is not installed since a newer version
- of the module has been manually compiled & installed in the
- site_perl directory.
The next step is to generate the Debian package with the equivs-build *file*
command. Voilà: the package is created in the current directory and it can be handled like any other Debian package would.
15.2.2. Simple File Archive
The Falcot Corp administrators need to create a Debian package in order to ease deployment of a set of documents on a large number of machines. The administrator in charge of this task first reads the “New Maintainer’s Guide”, then starts working on their first package.
→ https://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/maint-guide/
The first step is creating a falcot-data-1.0
directory to contain the target source package. The package will logically, be named falcot-data
and bear the 1.0
version number. The administrator then places the document files in a data
subdirectory. Then they invoke the dh_make
command (from the dh-make package) to add files required by the package generation process, which will all be stored in a debian
subdirectory:
$
The selected type of package (indep) indicates that this source package will generate a single binary package that can be shared across all architectures (Architecture: all
). single acts as a counterpart, and leads to a single binary package that is dependent on the target architecture (Architecture: any
). In this case, the former choice is more relevant since the package only contains documents and no binary programs, so it can be used similarly on computers of all architectures.
The library type corresponds to a source package leading to several binary packages. It is useful for shared libraries, since they need to follow strict packaging rules.
TIP Maintainer’s name and email address
Most of the programs involved in package maintenance will look for your name and email address in the DEBFULLNAME
and DEBEMAIL
or EMAIL
environment variables. Defining them once and for all will avoid you having to type them multiple times. If your usual shell is bash
, it is a simple matter of adding the following two lines in your ~/.bashrc
file (you will obviously replace the values with more relevant ones!):
- export EMAIL="hertzog@debian.org"
- export DEBFULLNAME="Raphael Hertzog"
The dh_make
command created a debian
subdirectory with many files. Some are required, in particular rules
, control
, changelog
and copyright
. Files with the .ex
extension are example files that can be used by modifying them (and removing the extension) when appropriate. When they are not needed, removing them is recommended. The compat
file should be kept, since it is required for the correct functioning of the debhelper suite of programs (all beginning with the dh_
prefix) used at various stages of the package build process.
The copyright
file must contain information about the authors of the documents included in the package, and the related license. In our case, these are internal documents and their use is restricted to within the Falcot Corp company. The default changelog
file is generally appropriate; replacing the “Initial release” with a more verbose explanation and changing the distribution from unstable
to internal
is enough. The control
file was also updated: the Section
field has been changed to misc and the Homepage
, Vcs-Git
and Vcs-Browser
fields were removed. The Depends
fields was completed with firefox-esr | www-browser
so as to ensure the availability of a web browser able to display the documents in the package.
例 15.3. The control
file
- Source: falcot-data
- Section: misc
- Priority: optional
- Maintainer: Raphael Hertzog <hertzog@debian.org>
- Build-Depends: debhelper (>= 10)
- Standards-Version: 4.4.1
- Package: falcot-data
- Architecture: all
- Depends: firefox-esr | www-browser, ${misc:Depends}
- Description: Internal Falcot Corp Documentation
- This package provides several documents describing the internal
- structure at Falcot Corp. This includes:
- - organization diagram
- - contacts for each department.
- .
- These documents MUST NOT leave the company.
- Their use is INTERNAL ONLY.
例 15.4. The changelog
file
- falcot-data (1.0) internal; urgency=low
- * Initial Release.
- * Let's start with few documents:
- - internal company structure;
- - contacts for each department.
- -- Raphael Hertzog <hertzog@debian.org> Fri, 04 Sep 2015 12:09:39 -0400
例 15.5. The copyright
file
- Format: https://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/copyright-format/1.0/
- Upstream-Name: falcot-data
- Files: *
- Copyright: 2004-2019 Falcot Corp
- License:
- All rights reserved.
基本知识 Makefile
文件
A Makefile
file is a script used by the make
program; it describes rules for how to build a set of files from each other in a tree of dependencies (for instance, a program can be built from a set of source files). The Makefile
file describes these rules in the following format:
- target: source1 source2 ...
- command1
- command2
The interpretation of such a rule is as follows: if one of the source*
files is more recent than the target
file, then the target needs to be generated, using command1
and command2
.
Note that the command lines must start with a tab character; also note that when a command line starts with a dash character (-
), failure of the command does not interrupt the whole process.
The rules
file usually contains a set of rules used to configure, build and install the software in a dedicated subdirectory (named after the generated binary package). The contents of this subdirectory is then archived within the Debian package as if it were the root of the filesystem. In our case, files will be installed in the debian/falcot-data/usr/share/falcot-data/
subdirectory, so that installing the generated package will deploy the files under /usr/share/falcot-data/
. The rules
file is used as a Makefile
, with a few standard targets (including clean
and binary
, used respectively to clean the source directory and generate the binary package).
Although this file is the heart of the process, it increasingly contains only the bare minimum for running a standard set of commands provided by the debhelper
tool. Such is the case for files generated by dh_make
. To install our files, we simply configure the behavior of the dh_install
command by creating the following debian/falcot-data.install
file:
- data/* usr/share/falcot-data/
At this point, the package can be created. We will, however, add a lick of paint. Since the administrators want the documents to be easily accessed from the menus of graphical desktop environments, we add a falcot-data.desktop
file and get it installed in /usr/share/applications
by adding a second line to debian/falcot-data.install
.
例 15.6. falcot-data.desktop
文件
- [Desktop Entry]
- Name=Internal Falcot Corp Documentation
- Comment=Starts a browser to read the documentation
- Exec=x-www-browser /usr/share/falcot-data/index.html
- Terminal=false
- Type=Application
- Categories=Documentation;
The updated debian/falcot-data.install
looks like this:
- data/* usr/share/falcot-data/
- falcot-data.desktop usr/share/applications/
Our source package is now ready. All that is left to do is to generate the binary package, with the same method we used previously for rebuilding packages: we run the dpkg-buildpackage -us -uc
command from within the falcot-data-1.0
directory.