debhelper - the debhelper tool suite
dh_* [-v] [-a] [-i] [--no-act] [-ppackage] [-Npackage] [-Ptmpdir]
Debhelper is used to help you build a Debian package. The philosophy behind debhelper is to provide a collection of small, simple, and easily understood tools that are used in debian/rules to automate various common aspects of building a package. This means less work for you, the packager. It also, to some degree means that these tools can be changed if Debian policy changes, and packages that use them will require only a rebuild to comply with the new policy.
A typical debian/rules file that uses debhelper will call several debhelper commands in sequence, or use dh(1) to automate this process. Examples of rules files that use debhelper are in /usr/share/doc/debhelper/examples/
To create a new Debian package using debhelper, you can just copy one of the sample rules files and edit it by hand. Or you can try the dh-make package, which contains a dh_make command that partially automates the process. For a more gentle introduction, the maint-guide Debian package contains a tutorial about making your first package using debhelper.
Except where the tool explicitly denotes otherwise, all of the debhelper tools assume that they run from the root directory of an unpacked source package. This is so they can locate find files like debian/control when needed.
Here is the list of debhelper commands you can use. See their man pages for additional documentation.
#LIST#
A few debhelper commands are deprecated and should not be used.
#LIST_DEPRECATED#
If a program's name starts with dh_, and the program is not on the above lists, then it is not part of the debhelper package, but it should still work like the other programs described on this page.
Many debhelper commands make use of files in debian/ to control what they do. Besides the common debian/changelog and debian/control, which are in all packages, not just those using debhelper, some additional files can be used to configure the behavior of specific debhelper commands. These files are typically named debian/package.foo (where package of course, is replaced with the package that is being acted on).
For example, dh_installdocs uses files named debian/package.docs to list the documentation files it will install. See the man pages of individual commands for details about the names and formats of the files they use. Generally, these files will list files to act on, one file per line. Some programs in debhelper use pairs of files and destinations or slightly more complicated formats.
Note for the first (or only) binary package listed in debian/control, debhelper will use debian/foo when there's no debian/package.foo file. However, it is often a good idea to keep the package. prefix as it is more explicit. The primary exception to this are files that debhelper by default installs in every binary package when it does not have a package prefix (such as debian/copyright or debian/changelog).
In some rare cases, you may want to have different versions of these files for different architectures or OSes. If files named debian/package.foo.ARCH or debian/package.foo.OS exist, where ARCH and OS are the same as the output of "dpkg-architecture -qDEB_HOST_ARCH" / "dpkg-architecture -qDEB_HOST_ARCH_OS", then they will be used in preference to other, more general files.
Mostly, these config files are used to specify lists of various types of files. Documentation or example files to install, files to move, and so on. When appropriate, in cases like these, you can use standard shell wildcard characters (? and * and [..] character classes) in the files. You can also put comments in these files; lines beginning with # are ignored.
The syntax of these files is intentionally kept very simple to make them easy to read, understand, and modify.
In compatibility level 13 and later, it is possible to use simple substitutions in some debhelper config files (particularly, the configuration files for dh_install(1)).
All substitution variables are of the form ${foo} and the braces are mandatory. Variable names are case-sensitive and consist of alphanumerics (a-zA-Z0-9), hyphens (-), underscores (_), and colons (:). The first character must be an alphanumeric.
If you need a literal dollar sign that cannot trigger a substitution, you can either use the ${Dollar} substitution or the sequence ${}.
The following expansions are available:
- DEB_HOST_*, DEB_BUILD_*, DEB_TARGET_*
-
Expands to the relevant dpkg-architecture(1) value (similar to dpkg-architecture -qVARIABLE_HERE).
When in doubt, the DEB_HOST_* variant is the one that will work both for native and cross builds.
For performance reasons, debhelper will attempt to resolve these names from the environment first before consulting dpkg-architecture(1). This is mostly mentioned for completeness as it will not matter for most cases.
- Dollar
-
Expands to a single literal $-symbol. This symbol will never be considered part of a substitution variable. That is:
# Triggers an error ${NO_SUCH_TOKEN} # Expands to the literal value "${NO_SUCH_TOKEN}" ${Dollar}{NO_SUCH_TOKEN}
This variable equivalent to the sequence ${} and the two can be used interchangeably.
- Newline, Space, Tab
-
Expands to a single ASCII newline, space and tab respectively.
This can be useful if you need to include a literal whitespace character (e.g. space) where it would otherwise be stripped or used as a separator.
- env:NAME
-
Expands to the environment variable NAME. The environment variable must be set (but can be set to the empty string).
Note that all variables must expand to a defined value. As an example, if debhelper sees ${env:FOO}, then it will insist that the environment variable FOO is set (it can be set to the empty string).
To avoid infinite loops and resource exhaustion, debhelper will stop with an error if the text contains many substitution variables (50) or they expand beyond a certain size (4096 characters or 3x length of the original input - whichever is bigger).
If you need additional flexibility, many of the debhelper tools (e.g. dh_install(1)) support executing a config file as a script.
To use this feature, simply mark the config file as executable (e.g. chmod +x debian/package.install) and the tool will attempt to execute it and use the output of the script. In many cases, you can use dh-exec(1) as interpreter of the config file to retain most of the original syntax while getting the additional flexibility you need.
When using executable debhelper config files, please be aware of the following:
The executable config file must exit with success (i.e. its return code should indicate success).
In compatibility level 13+, the output will be subject to substitutions (see "Substitutions in debhelper config files") where the tool support these. Remember to be careful if your generator also provides substitutions as this can cause unnecessary confusion.
Otherwise, the output will be used exactly as-is. Notably, debhelper will not expand wildcards or strip comments or strip whitespace in the output.
If you need the package to build on a file system where you cannot disable the executable bit, then you can use dh-exec(1) and its strip-output script.
The following command line options are supported by all debhelper programs.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode: show all commands that modify the package build directory.
- --no-act
-
Do not really do anything. If used with -v, the result is that the command will output what it would have done.
- -a, --arch
-
Act on architecture dependent packages that should be built for the DEB_HOST_ARCH architecture.
- -i, --indep
-
Act on all architecture independent packages.
- -ppackage, --package=package
-
Act on the package named package. This option may be specified multiple times to make debhelper operate on a given set of packages.
- -s, --same-arch
-
Deprecated alias of -a.
This option is removed in compat 12.
- -Npackage, --no-package=package
-
Do not act on the specified package even if an -a, -i, or -p option lists the package as one that should be acted on.
- --remaining-packages
-
Do not act on the packages which have already been acted on by this debhelper command earlier (i.e. if the command is present in the package debhelper log). For example, if you need to call the command with special options only for a couple of binary packages, pass this option to the last call of the command to process the rest of packages with default settings.
- -Ptmpdir, --tmpdir=tmpdir
-
Use tmpdir for package build directory. The default is debian/package
- --mainpackage=package
-
This little-used option changes the package which debhelper considers the "main package", that is, the first one listed in debian/control, and the one for which debian/foo files can be used instead of the usual debian/package.foo files.
- -O=option|bundle
-
This is used by dh(1) when passing user-specified options to all the commands it runs. If the command supports the specified option or option bundle, it will take effect. If the command does not support the option (or any part of an option bundle), it will be ignored.
The following command line options are supported by some debhelper programs. See the man page of each program for a complete explanation of what each option does.
- -n
-
Do not modify postinst, postrm, etc. scripts.
- -Xitem, --exclude=item
-
Exclude an item from processing. This option may be used multiple times, to exclude more than one thing. The item is typically part of a filename, and any file containing the specified text will be excluded.
- -A, --all
-
Makes files or other items that are specified on the command line take effect in ALL packages acted on, not just the first.
The following command line options are supported by all of the dh_auto_* debhelper programs. These programs support a variety of build systems, and normally heuristically determine which to use, and how to use them. You can use these command line options to override the default behavior. Typically these are passed to dh(1), which then passes them to all the dh_auto_* programs.
- -Sbuildsystem, --buildsystem=buildsystem
-
Force use of the specified buildsystem, instead of trying to auto-select one which might be applicable for the package.
Pass none as buildsystem to disable auto-selection.
- -Ddirectory, --sourcedir=directory, --sourcedirectory=directory
-
Assume that the original package source tree is at the specified directory rather than the top level directory of the Debian source package tree.
- -B[directory], --builddir[=directory], --builddirectory[=directory]
-
Enable out of source building and use the specified directory as the build directory. If directory parameter is omitted, a default build directory will be chosen.
If this option is not specified, building will be done in source by default unless the build system requires or prefers out of source tree building. In such a case, the default build directory will be used even if --builddirectory is not specified.
If the build system prefers out of source tree building but still allows in source building, the latter can be re-enabled by passing a build directory path that is the same as the source directory path.
- --parallel, --no-parallel
-
Control whether parallel builds should be used if underlying build system supports them. The number of parallel jobs is controlled by the DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS environment variable ("Debian Policy, section 4.9.1") at build time. It might also be subject to a build system specific limit.
If neither option is specified, debhelper currently defaults to --parallel in compat 10 (or later) and --no-parallel otherwise.
As an optimization, dh will try to avoid passing these options to subprocesses, if they are unnecessary and the only options passed. Notably this happens when DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS does not have a parallel parameter (or its value is 1).
- --max-parallel=maximum
-
This option implies --parallel and allows further limiting the number of jobs that can be used in a parallel build. If the package build is known to only work with certain levels of concurrency, you can set this to the maximum level that is known to work, or that you wish to support.
Notably, setting the maximum to 1 is effectively the same as using --no-parallel.
- --reload-all-buildenv-variables
-
By default, dh(1) will compute several environment (e.g. by using dpkg-buildflags(1)) and cache them to avoid having all dh_auto_* tool recompute them.
When passing this option, the concrete dh_auto_* tool will ignore the cache from dh(1) and retrigger a rebuild of these variables. This is useful in the very rare case where the package need to do multiple builds but with different ...FLAGS options. A concrete example would be needing to change the -O parameter in CFLAGS in the second build:
export DEB_CFLAGS_MAINT_APPEND=-O3 %: dh $@ override_dh_auto_configure: dh_auto_configure -Bbuild-deb ... DEB_CFLAGS_MAINT_APPEND=-Os dh_auto_configure \ --reload-all-buildenv-variables -Bbuild-udeb ...
Without --reload-all-buildenv-variables in the second call to dh_auto_configure(1), the change in DEB_CFLAGS_MAINT_APPEND would be ignored as dh_auto_configure(1) would use the cached value of CFLAGS set by dh(1).
This option is only available with debhelper (>= 12.7~) when the package uses compatibility level 9 or later.
- --list, -l
-
List all build systems supported by debhelper on this system. The list includes both default and third party build systems (marked as such). Also shows which build system would be automatically selected, or which one is manually specified with the --buildsystem option.
From time to time, major non-backwards-compatible changes need to be made to debhelper, to keep it clean and well-designed as needs change and its author gains more experience. To prevent such major changes from breaking existing packages, the concept of debhelper compatibility levels was introduced. You must tell debhelper which compatibility level it should use, and it modifies its behavior in various ways.
In current debhelper, you can specify the compatibility level in debian/control by adding a Build-Depends on the debhelper-compat package. For example, to use v#RECOMMENDED_COMPAT# mode, ensure debian/control has:
Build-Depends: debhelper-compat (= #RECOMMENDED_COMPAT#)
This also serves as an appropriate versioned build dependency on a sufficient version of the debhelper package, so you do not need to specify a separate versioned build dependency on the debhelper package unless you need a specific point release of debhelper (such as for the introduction of a new feature or bugfix within a compatibility level).
Note that debhelper does not provide debhelper-compat for experimental or beta compatibility levels; packages experimenting with those compatibility levels should use debian/compat or DH_COMPAT.
Prior versions of debhelper required specifying the compatibility level in the file debian/compat, and current debhelper still supports this for backward compatibility, though a package may not specify a compatibility level via multiple methods at once. To use this method, debian/compat should contain the compatibility level as a single number, and no other content. If you specify the compatibility level by this method, your package will also need a versioned build dependency on a version of the debhelper package equal to (or greater than) the compatibility level your package uses. So, if you specify compatibility level #RECOMMENDED_COMPAT# in debian/compat, ensure debian/control has:
Build-Depends: debhelper (>= #RECOMMENDED_COMPAT#~)
Unless otherwise indicated, all debhelper documentation assumes that you are using the most recent compatibility level, and in most cases does not indicate if the behavior is different in an earlier compatibility level, so if you are not using the most recent compatibility level, you're advised to read below for notes about what is different in earlier compatibility levels.
These are the available compatibility levels:
- v5
-
This is the lowest supported compatibility level.
If you are upgrading from an earlier compatibility level, please review debhelper-obsolete-compat(7).
This mode is deprecated.
- v6
-
Changes from v5 are:
- -
-
Commands that generate maintainer script fragments will order the fragments in reverse order for the prerm and postrm scripts.
- -
-
dh_installwm will install a slave manpage link for x-window-manager.1.gz, if it sees the man page in usr/share/man/man1 in the package build directory.
- -
-
dh_builddeb did not previously delete everything matching DH_ALWAYS_EXCLUDE, if it was set to a list of things to exclude, such as CVS:.svn:.git. Now it does.
- -
-
dh_installman allows overwriting existing man pages in the package build directory. In previous compatibility levels it silently refuses to do this.
This mode is deprecated.
- v7
-
Changes from v6 are:
- -
-
dh_install, will fall back to looking for files in debian/tmp if it doesn't find them in the current directory (or wherever you tell it look using --sourcedir). This allows dh_install to interoperate with dh_auto_install, which installs to debian/tmp, without needing any special parameters.
- -
-
dh_clean will read debian/clean and delete files listed there.
- -
-
dh_clean will delete toplevel *-stamp files.
- -
-
dh_installchangelogs will guess at what file is the upstream changelog if none is specified.
This mode is deprecated.
- v8
-
Changes from v7 are:
- -
-
Commands will fail rather than warning when they are passed unknown options.
- -
-
dh_makeshlibs will run dpkg-gensymbols on all shared libraries that it generates shlibs files for. So -X can be used to exclude libraries. Also, libraries in unusual locations that dpkg-gensymbols would not have processed before will be passed to it, a behavior change that can cause some packages to fail to build.
- -
-
dh requires the sequence to run be specified as the first parameter, and any switches come after it. Ie, use "dh $@ --foo", not "dh --foo $@".
- -
-
dh_auto_* prefer to use Perl's Module::Build in preference to Makefile.PL.
This mode is deprecated.
- v9
-
Changes from v8 are:
- -
-
Multiarch support. In particular, dh_auto_configure passes multiarch directories to autoconf in --libdir and --libexecdir.
- -
-
dh is aware of the usual dependencies between targets in debian/rules. So, "dh binary" will run any build, build-arch, build-indep, install, etc targets that exist in the rules file. There's no need to define an explicit binary target with explicit dependencies on the other targets.
- -
-
dh_strip compresses debugging symbol files to reduce the installed size of -dbg packages.
- -
-
dh_auto_configure does not include the source package name in --libexecdir when using autoconf.
- -
-
dh does not default to enabling --with=python-support
(Obsolete: As the dh_pysupport tool was removed from Debian stretch. Since debhelper/10.3, dh no longer enables this sequence add-on regardless of compat level)
- -
-
All of the dh_auto_* debhelper programs and dh set environment variables listed by dpkg-buildflags, unless they are already set.
- -
-
dh_auto_configure passes dpkg-buildflags CFLAGS, CPPFLAGS, and LDFLAGS to perl Makefile.PL and Build.PL
- -
-
dh_strip puts separated debug symbols in a location based on their build-id.
- -
-
Executable debhelper config files are run and their output used as the configuration.
This mode is deprecated.
- v10
-
Changes from v9 are:
- -
-
dh_installinit will no longer install a file named debian/package as an init script.
- -
-
dh_installdocs will error out if it detects links created with --link-doc between packages of architecture "all" and non-"all" as it breaks binNMUs.
- -
-
dh_installdeb no longer installs a maintainer-provided debian/package.shlibs file. This is now done by dh_makeshlibs instead.
- -
-
dh_installwm refuses to create a broken package if no man page can be found (required to register for the x-window-manager alternative).
- -
-
Debhelper will default to --parallel for all buildsystems that support parallel building. This can be disabled by using either --no-parallel or passing --max-parallel with a value of 1.
- -
-
The dh command will not accept any of the deprecated "manual sequence control" parameters (--before, --after, etc.). Please use override targets instead.
Retroactively applied to earlier compat levels: dh no longer accepts any of these since debhelper/12.4.
- -
-
The dh command will no longer use log files to track which commands have been run. The dh command still keeps track of whether it already ran the "build" sequence and skip it if it did.
The main effects of this are:
- -
-
With this, it is now easier to debug the install or/and binary sequences because they can now trivially be re-run (without having to do a full "clean and rebuild" cycle)
- -
-
The main caveat is that dh_* now only keeps track of what happened in a single override target. When all the calls to a given dh_cmd command happens in the same override target everything will work as before.
Example of where it can go wrong:
override_dh_foo: dh_foo -pmy-pkg override_dh_bar: dh_bar dh_foo --remaining
In this case, the call to dh_foo --remaining will also include my-pkg, since dh_foo -pmy-pkg was run in a separate override target. This issue is not limited to --remaining, but also includes -a, -i, etc.
- -
-
The dh_installdeb command now shell-escapes the lines in the maintscript config file. This was the original intent but it did not work properly and packages have begun to rely on the incomplete shell escaping (e.g. quoting file names).
- -
-
The dh_installinit command now defaults to --restart-after-upgrade. For packages needing the previous behaviour, please use --no-restart-after-upgrade.
- -
-
The autoreconf sequence is now enabled by default. Please pass --without autoreconf to dh if this is not desirable for a given package
- -
-
The systemd sequence is now enabled by default. Please pass --without systemd to dh if this is not desirable for a given package.
- -
-
Retroactively removed: dh no longer creates the package build directory when skipping running debhelper commands. This will not affect packages that only build with debhelper commands, but it may expose bugs in commands not included in debhelper.
This compatibility feature had a bug since its inception in debhelper/9.20130516 that made it fail to apply in compat 9 and earlier. As there has been no reports of issues caused by this bug in those ~5 years, this item have been removed rather than fixed.
- v11
-
This mode is discouraged.
The compat 11 is discouraged for new packages as it suffers from feature interaction between dh_installinit and dh_installsystemd causing services to not run correctly in some cases. Please consider using compatibility mode 10 or 12 instead. More details about the issue are available in Debian#887904 and https://lists.debian.org/debian-release/2019/04/msg01442.html.
Changes from v10 are:
- -
-
dh_installinit no longer installs service or tmpfile files, nor generates maintainer scripts for those files. Please use the new dh_installsystemd helper.
- -
-
The dh_systemd_enable and dh_systemd_start helpers have been replaced by the new dh_installsystemd helper. For the same reason, the systemd sequence for dh has also been removed. If you need to disable the dh_installsystemd helper tool, please use an empty override target.
Please note that the dh_installsystemd tool has a slightly different behaviour in some cases (e.g. when using the --name parameter).
- -
-
dh_installdirs no longer creates debian/package directories unless explicitly requested (or it has to create a subdirectory in it).
The vast majority of all packages will be unaffected by this change.
- -
-
The makefile buildsystem now passes INSTALL="install --strip-program=true" to make(1). Derivative buildsystems (e.g. configure or cmake) are unaffected by this change.
- -
-
The autoconf buildsystem now passes --runstatedir=/run to ./configure.
- -
-
The cmake buildsystem now passes -DCMAKE_INSTALL_RUNSTATEDIR=/run to cmake(1).
- -
-
dh_installman will now prefer detecting the language from the path name rather than the extension.
- -
-
dh_auto_install will now only create the destination directory it needs. Previously, it would create the package build directory for all packages. This will not affect packages that only build with debhelper commands, but it may expose bugs in commands not included in debhelper.
- -
-
The helpers dh_installdocs, dh_installexamples, dh_installinfo, and dh_installman now error out if their config has a pattern that does not match anything or reference a path that does not exist.
Known exceptions include building with the nodoc profile, where the above tools will silently permit failed matches where the patterns are used to specify documentation.
- -
-
The helpers dh_installdocs, dh_installexamples, dh_installinfo, and dh_installman now accept the parameter --sourcedir with same meaning as dh_install. Furthermore, they now also fall back to debian/tmp like dh_install.
Migration note: A bug in debhelper 11 up to 11.1.5 made dh_installinfo incorrectly ignore --sourcedir.
- -
-
The perl-makemaker and perl-build build systems no longer pass -I. to perl. Packages that still need this behaviour can emulate it by using the PERL5LIB environment variable. E.g. by adding export PERL5LIB=. in their debian/rules file (or similar).
- -
-
The PERL_USE_UNSAFE_INC environment variable is no longer set by dh or any of the dh_auto_* tools. It was added as a temporary work around to avoid a lot of packages failing to build at the same time.
Note this item will eventually become obsolete as upstream intends to drop support for the PERL_USE_UNSAFE_INC environment variable. When perl drops support for it, then this variable will be removed retroactively from existing compat levels as well.
- -
-
The dh_makeshlibs helper will now exit with an error if objdump returns a non-zero exit from analysing a given file.
- -
-
The dh_installdocs and dh_installexamples tools may now install most of the documentation in a different path to comply with the recommendation from Debian policy §12.3 (since version 3.9.7).
Note that if a given source package only contains a single binary package in debian/control or none of the packages are -doc packages, then this change is not relevant for that source package and you can skip to the next change.
By default, these tools will now attempt to determine a "main package for the documentation" (called a doc-main-package from here on) for every -doc package. If they find such a doc-main-package, they will now install the documentation into the path /usr/share/doc/doc-main-package in the given doc package. I.e. the path can change but the documentation is still shipped in the -doc package.
The --doc-main-package option can be used when the auto-detection is insufficient or to reset the path to its previous value if there is a reason to diverge from Debian policy recommendation.
Some documentation will not be affected by this change. These exceptions include the copyright file, changelog files, README.Debian, etc. These files will still be installed in the path /usr/share/doc/package.
- -
-
The dh_strip and dh_shlibdeps tools no longer uses filename patterns to determine which files to process. Instead, they open the file and look for an ELF header to determine if a given file is an shared object or an ELF executable.
This change may cause the tools to process more files than previously.
- v12
-
Changes from v11 are:
- -
-
The dh_makeshlibs tool now generates shlibs files with versioned dependency by default. This means that -VUpstream-Version (a.k.a. -V) is now the default.
If an unversioned dependency in the shlibs file is wanted, this can be obtained by passing -VNone instead. However, please see dh_makeshlibs(1) for the caveat of unversioned dependencies.
- -
-
The -s (--same-arch) option is removed. Please use -a (--arch) instead.
- -
-
Invoking dh_clean -k now causes an error instead of a deprecation warning.
- -
-
The --no-restart-on-upgrade option in dh_installinit has been removed. Please use the new name --no-stop-on-upgrade
- -
-
There was a bug in the doit (and similar) functions from Debian::Debhelper::Dh_Lib that made them spawn a shell in one particular circumstance. This bug is now removed and will cause helpers that rely on the bug to fail with a "command not found"-error.
- -
-
The --list-missing and --fail-missing in dh_install has been removed. Please use dh_missing and its corresponding options, which can also see the files installed by other helpers.
- -
-
The dh_installinit helper no longer installs configuration for the upstart init system. Instead, it will abort the build if it finds an old upstart configuration file. The error is there to remind the package maintainer to ensure the proper removal of the conffiles shipped in previous versions of the package (if any).
- -
-
The dh_installdeb tool will do basic validation of some dpkg-maintscript-helper(1) commands and will error out if the commands appear to be invalid.
- -
-
The dh_missing tool will now default to --list-missing.
- -
-
The dh_makeshlibs tool will now only pass libraries to dpkg-gensymbols(1) if the ELF binary has a SONAME (containing ".so").
- -
-
The dh_compress tool no longer compresses examples (i.e. anything installed in </usr/share/doc/package/examples>.)
- -
-
The standard sequence in dh now includes dh_dwz and dh_installinitramfs by default. This makes the dwz and installinitramfs sequences obsolete and they will now fail with an error. If you want to skip these commands, then please insert an empty override target for them in debian/rules (e.g. override_dh_dwz:)
- -
-
The build systems meson and autoconf no longer explicitly set the --libexecdir variable and thus relies on the build system default - which should be /usr/libexec (per FHS 3.0, adopted in Debian Policy 4.1.5).
If a particular upstream package does not use the correct default, the parameter can often be passed manually via dh_auto_configure(1). E.g. via the following example:
override_dh_auto_configure: dh_auto_configure -- --libexecdir=/usr/libexec
Note the -- before the --libexecdir parameter.
- -
-
The dh_installdeb tool no longer installs the maintainer provided conffiles file. The file has mostly been obsolete since compatibility level 3, where dh_installdeb began to automatically compute the resulting conffiles control file.
- -
-
The dh_installsystemd tool no longer relies on dh_installinit for handling systemd services that have a sysvinit alternative. Both tools must now be used in such a case to ensure the service is properly started under both sysvinit and systemd.
If you have an override for dh_installinit (e.g. to call it with --no-start) then you will probably need one for dh_installsystemd as well now.
This change makes dh_installinit inject a misc:Pre-Depends for init-system-helpers (>= 1.54~). Please ensure that the package lists ${misc:Pre-Depends} in its Pre-Depends field before upgrading to compat 12.
- -
-
The third-party dh_golang tool (from dh-golang package) now defaults on honoring DH_GOLANG_EXCLUDES variable for source installation in -dev packages and not only during the building process. Please set DH_GOLANG_EXCLUDES_ALL to false to revert to the previous behaviour. See Debian::Debhelper::Buildsystem::golang(3pm) for details and examples.
- -
-
dh_installsystemduser is now included in the dh standard sequence by default.
- -
-
The python-distutils buildsystem is now removed. Please use the third-party build system pybuild instead.
- v13
-
This is the recommended mode of operation.
Changes from v12 are:
- -
-
The meson+ninja build system now uses meson test instead of ninja test when running the test suite. Any override of dh_auto_test that passes extra parameters to upstream test runner should be reviewed as meson test is not command line compatible with ninja test.
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All debhelper like tools based on the official debhelper library (including dh and the official dh_* tools) no longer accepts abbreviated command parameters. At the same time, dh now optimizes out calls to redundant dh_* helpers even when passed long command line options.
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The ELF related debhelper tools (dh_dwz, dh_strip, dh_makeshlibs, dh_shlibdeps) are now only run for arch dependent packages by default (i.e. they are excluded from *-indep targets and are passed -a by default). If you need them for *-indep targets, you can add an explicit Build-Depends on dh-sequence-elf-tools.
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The third-party gradle build system (from gradle-debian-helper package) now runs the upstream-provided test suite automatically. To suppress such behavior, override dh_auto_test.
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The dh_installman tool now aborts if it sees conflicting definitions of a manpage. This typically happens if the upstream build system is installing a compressed version and the package lists an uncompressed version of the manpage in debian/package.manpages. Often the easiest fix is to remove the manpage from debian/package.manpages (assuming both versions are identical).
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The dh_auto_* helpers now resets the environment variables HOME and common XDG_* variable. HOME and XDG_RUNTIME_DIR are each set to a distinct writable directory. The rest of the environment variables are cleared.
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The dh command will now error if an override or hook target for an obsolete command are present in debian/rules (e.g. override_dh_systemd_enable:).
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The dh_missing command will now default to --fail-missing. This can be reverted to a non-fatal warning by explicitly passing --list-missing like it was in compat 12.
If you do not want the warning either, please omit the call to dh_missing. If you use the dh command sequencer, then you can do this by inserting an empty override target in the debian/rules file of the relevant package. As an example:
# Disable dh_missing override_dh_missing:
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The dh command sequencer now runs dh_installtmpfiles in the default sequence. The dh_installtmpfiles takes over handling of tmpfiles.d configuration files. Related functionality in dh_installsystemd is now disabled.
Note that dh_installtmpfiles responds to debian/package.tmpfiles where dh_installsystemd used a name without the trailing "s".
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Many dh_* tools now support limited variable expansion via the ${foo} syntax. In many cases, this can be used to reference paths that contain either spaces or dpkg-architecture(1) values. While this can reduce the need for dh-exec(1) in some cases, it is not a replacement dh-exec(1) in general. If you need filtering, renaming, etc., the package will still need dh-exec(1).
Please see "Substitutions in debhelper config files" for syntax and available substitution variables. To dh_* tool writers, substitution expansion occurs as a part of the filearray and filedoublearray functions.
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The dh command sequencer will now skip all hook and override targets for dh_auto_test, dh_dwz and dh_strip when DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS lists the relevant nocheck / nostrip options.
Any package relying on these targets to always be run should instead move relevant logic out of those targets. E.g. non-test related packaging code from override_dh_auto_test would have to be moved to execute_after_dh_auto_build or execute_before_dh_auto_install.
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The cmake buildsystem now passes -DCMAKE_SKIP_INSTALL_ALL_DEPENDENCY=ON to cmake(1) to speed up automatic installation process. If for some reason you need previous behavior, override the flag:
dh_auto_configure -- -DCMAKE_SKIP_INSTALL_ALL_DEPENDENCY=OFF ...
- v14
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This compatibility level is still open for development; use with caution.
If your source package generates more than one binary package, debhelper programs will default to acting on all binary packages when run. If your source package happens to generate one architecture dependent package, and another architecture independent package, this is not the correct behavior, because you need to generate the architecture dependent packages in the binary-arch debian/rules target, and the architecture independent packages in the binary-indep debian/rules target.
To facilitate this, as well as give you more control over which packages are acted on by debhelper programs, all debhelper programs accept the -a, -i, -p, and -s parameters. These parameters are cumulative. If none are given, debhelper programs default to acting on all packages listed in the control file, with the exceptions below.
First, any package whose Architecture field in debian/control does not match the DEB_HOST_ARCH architecture will be excluded ("Debian Policy, section 5.6.8").
Also, some additional packages may be excluded based on the contents of the DEB_BUILD_PROFILES environment variable and Build-Profiles fields in binary package stanzas in debian/control, according to the draft policy at https://wiki.debian.org/BuildProfileSpec.
Build-Profiles affect which packages are included in the package selections mechanisms in debhelper. Generally, the package selections are described from the assumption that all packages are enabled. This section describes how the selections react when a package is disabled due to the active Build-Profiles (or lack of active Build-Profiles).
- -a/--arch, -i/--indep OR no selection options (a raw "dh_X" call)
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The package disabled by Build-Profiles is silently excluded from the selection.
Note you will receive a warning if all packages related to these selections are disabled. In that case, it generally does not make sense to do the build in the first place.
- -N package / --no-package package
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The option is accepted and effectively does nothing.
- -p package / --package package
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The option is accepted, but debhelper will not act on the package.
Note that it does not matter whether a package is enabled or disabled by default.
Some debhelper commands will automatically generate parts of Debian maintainer scripts. If you want these automatically generated things included in your existing Debian maintainer scripts, then you need to add #DEBHELPER# to your scripts, in the place the code should be added. #DEBHELPER# will be replaced by any auto-generated code when you run dh_installdeb.
If a script does not exist at all and debhelper needs to add something to it, then debhelper will create the complete script.
All debhelper commands that automatically generate code in this way let it be disabled by the -n parameter (see above).
Note that the inserted code will be shell code, so you cannot directly use it in a Perl script. If you would like to embed it into a Perl script, here is one way to do that (note that I made sure that $1, $2, etc are set with the set command):
my $temp="set -e\nset -- @ARGV\n" . << 'EOF';
#DEBHELPER#
EOF
if (system($temp)) {
my $exit_code = ($? >> 8) & 0xff;
my $signal = $? & 0x7f;
if ($exit_code) {
die("The debhelper script failed with error code: ${exit_code}");
} else {
die("The debhelper script was killed by signal: ${signal}");
}
}
Some debhelper commands may make the generated package need to depend on some other packages. For example, if you use dh_installdebconf(1), your package will generally need to depend on debconf. Or if you use dh_installxfonts(1), your package will generally need to depend on a particular version of xutils. Keeping track of these miscellaneous dependencies can be annoying since they are dependent on how debhelper does things, so debhelper offers a way to automate it.
All commands of this type, besides documenting what dependencies may be needed on their man pages, will automatically generate a substvar called ${misc:Depends}. If you put that token into your debian/control file, it will be expanded to the dependencies debhelper figures you need.
This is entirely independent of the standard ${shlibs:Depends} generated by dh_makeshlibs(1), and the ${perl:Depends} generated by dh_perl(1). You can choose not to use any of these, if debhelper's guesses don't match reality.
By default, all debhelper programs assume that the temporary directory used for assembling the tree of files in a package is debian/package.
Sometimes, you might want to use some other temporary directory. This is supported by the -P flag. For example, "dh_installdocs -Pdebian/tmp", will use debian/tmp as the temporary directory. Note that if you use -P, the debhelper programs can only be acting on a single package at a time. So if you have a package that builds many binary packages, you will need to also use the -p flag to specify which binary package the debhelper program will act on.
Debhelper includes support for udebs. To create a udeb with debhelper, add "Package-Type: udeb" to the package's stanza in debian/control. Debhelper will try to create udebs that comply with debian-installer policy, by making the generated package files end in .udeb, not installing any documentation into a udeb, skipping over preinst, postrm, prerm, and config scripts, etc.
The following environment variables can influence the behavior of debhelper. It is important to note that these must be actual environment variables in order to function properly (not simply Makefile variables). To specify them properly in debian/rules, be sure to "export" them. For example, "export DH_VERBOSE".
- DH_VERBOSE
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Set to 1 to enable verbose mode. Debhelper will output every command it runs. Also enables verbose build logs for some build systems like autoconf.
- DH_QUIET
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Set to 1 to enable quiet mode. Debhelper will not output commands calling the upstream build system nor will dh print which subcommands are called and depending on the upstream build system might make that more quiet, too. This makes it easier to spot important messages but makes the output quite useless as buildd log. Ignored if DH_VERBOSE is also set.
- DH_COMPAT
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Temporarily specifies what compatibility level debhelper should run at, overriding any value specified via Build-Depends on debhelper-compat or via the debian/compat file.
- DH_NO_ACT
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Set to 1 to enable no-act mode.
- DH_OPTIONS
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All debhelper tools will parse command line arguments listed in this variable before any command option (as if they had been prepended to the command line arguments). Unfortunately, some third-party provided tools may not support this variable and will ignore these command line arguments.
When using dh(1), it can be passed options that will be passed on to each debhelper command, which is generally better than using DH_OPTIONS.
- DH_ALWAYS_EXCLUDE
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If set, this adds the value the variable is set to to the -X options of all commands that support the -X option. Moreover, dh_builddeb will rm -rf anything that matches the value in your package build tree.
This can be useful if you are doing a build from a CVS source tree, in which case setting DH_ALWAYS_EXCLUDE=CVS will prevent any CVS directories from sneaking into the package you build. Or, if a package has a source tarball that (unwisely) includes CVS directories, you might want to export DH_ALWAYS_EXCLUDE=CVS in debian/rules, to make it take effect wherever your package is built.
Multiple things to exclude can be separated with colons, as in DH_ALWAYS_EXCLUDE=CVS:.svn
- DH_EXTRA_ADDONS
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If set, this adds the specified dh addons to be run in the appropriate places in the sequence of commands. This is equivalent to specifying the addon to run with the --with flag in the debian/rules file. Any --without calls specifying an addon in this environment variable will not be run.
This is intended to be used by downstreams or specific local configurations that require a debhelper addon to be run during multiple builds without having to patch a large number of rules file. If at all possible, this should be avoided in favor of a --with flag in the rules file.
- DH_COLORS, DPKG_COLORS
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These variables can be used to control whether debhelper commands should use colors in their textual output. Can be set to "always", "auto" (the default), or "never".
Note that DPKG_COLOR also affects a number of dpkg related tools and debhelper uses it on the assumption that you want the same color setting for dpkg and debhelper. In the off-hand chance you want different color setting for debhelper, you can use DH_COLORS instead or in addition to DPKG_COLORS.
- NO_COLOR
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If no explicit request for color has been given (e.g. DH_COLORS and DPKG_COLORS are both unset), the presence of this environment variable cause the default color setting to be "never".
The variable is defined according to https://no-color.org/. In this project, the environment variables (such as DH_COLORS) are considered an explicit request for color.
- CFLAGS, CPPFLAGS, CXXFLAGS, OBJCFLAGS, OBJCXXFLAGS, GCJFLAGS, FFLAGS, FCFLAGS, LDFLAGS
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By default (in any non-deprecated compat level), debhelper will automatically set these flags by using dpkg-buildflags(1), when they are unset. If you need to change the default flags, please use the features from dpkg-buildflags(1) to do this (e.g. DEB_BUILD_MAINT_OPTIONS=hardening=all or DEB_CPPFLAGS_MAINT_APPEND=-DCUSTOM_MACRO=true) rather than setting the concrete variable directly.
- HOME, XDG_*
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In compat 13 and later, these environment variables are reset before invoking the upstream build system via the dh_auto_* helpers. The variables HOME and XDG_RUNTIME_DIR will be set to a writable directory. The remaining variables will be cleared.
The directories will be created as empty directories but they will be reused between calls to dh_auto_*. Any content will persist until explicitly deleted or dh_clean.
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A set of example debian/rules files that use debhelper.
- http://joeyh.name/code/debhelper/
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Debhelper web site.
Joey Hess <joeyh@debian.org>