mk-origtargz (1)
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NAME
mk-origtargz - rename upstream tarball, optionally changing the compression and removing unwanted filesSYNOPSIS
- mk-origtargz [options] foo-1.0.tar.gz
- mk-origtargz --help
DESCRIPTION
mk-origtargz renames the given file to match what is expected by dpkg-buildpackage, based on the source package name and version in debian/changelog. It can convert zip to tar, optionally change the compression scheme and remove files according to Files-Excluded and Files-Excluded-component in debian/copyright. The resulting file is placed in debian/../... (In debian/copyright, the Files-Excluded and Files-Excluded-component stanzas are a part of the first paragraph and there is a blank line before the following paragraphs which contain Files and other stanzas. See uscan(1) ``The archive type for zip is detected by "file --dereference --brief --mime-type" command. So any zip type archives such as jar are treated in the same way. The xpi archive is detected by its extension and is handled properly using the xpi-unpack command.
If the package name is given via the --package option, no information is read from debian/, and the result file is placed in the current directory.
mk-origtargz is commonly called via uscan, which first obtains the upstream tarball.
OPTIONS
Metadata options
The following options extend or replace information taken from debian/.- --package package
-
Use package as the name of the Debian source package, and do not require or
use a debian/ directory. This option can only be used together with
--version.
The default is to use the package name of the first entry in debian/changelog.
- -v, --version version
-
Use version as the version of the package. This needs to be the upstream
version portion of a full Debian version, i.e. no Debian revision, no epoch.
The default is to use the upstream portion of the version of the first entry in debian/changelog.
- --exclude-file glob
- Remove files matching the given glob from the tarball, as if it was listed in Files-Excluded.
- --copyright-file filename
-
Remove files matching the patterns found in filename, which should have the
format of a Debian copyright file
(Format: www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/copyright-format/1.0
to be precise). Errors parsing that file are silently ignored, exactly as is
the case with debian/copyright.
Unmatched patterns will emit a warning so the user can verify whether it is correct. If there are multiple patterns which match a file, only the last one will count as being matched.
Both the --exclude-file and --copyright-file options amend the list of patterns found in debian/copyright. If you do not want to read that file, you will have to use --package.
Action options
These options specify what exactly mk-origtargz should do. The options --copy, --rename and --symlink are mutually exclusive.- --symlink
-
Make the resulting file a symlink to the given original file. (This is the
default behaviour.)
If the file has to be modified (because it is a zip, or xpi file, because of --repack or Files-Excluded), this option behaves like --copy.
- --copy
- Make the resulting file a copy of the original file (unless it has to be modified, of course).
- --rename
-
Rename the original file.
If the file has to be modified (because it is a zip, or xpi file, because of --repack or Files-Excluded), this implies that the original file is deleted afterwards.
- --repack
- If the given file is not compressed using the desired format (see --compression), recompress it.
- -S, --repack-suffix suffix
- If the file has to be modified, because of Files-Excluded, append suffix to the upstream version.
- -c, --component componentname
- Use <componentname> as the component name for the secondary upstream tarball. Set componentname as the component name. This is used only for the secondary upstream tarball of the Debian source package. Then packagename_version.orig-componentname.tar.gz is created.
- --compression [ gzip | bzip2 | lzma | xz ]
- If --repack is used, or if the given file is a zip or xpi file, ensure that the resulting file is compressed using the given scheme. The default is gzip.
- -C, --directory directory
- Put the resulting file in the given directory.
- --unzipopt options
- Add the extra options to use with the unzip command such as -a, -aa, and -b.