</tag>
<item>
<p>
- A package may also provide both of the targets
+ A package may also provide one or both of the targets
<tt>build-arch</tt> and <tt>build-indep</tt>.
The <tt>build-arch</tt> target, if provided, should
perform all the configuration and compilation required for
architecture-independent binary packages (those packages
for which the body of the <tt>Architecture</tt> field
in <tt>debian/control</tt> is <tt>all</tt>).
- The <tt>build</tt> target should depend on those of the
- targets <tt>build-arch</tt> and <tt>build-indep</tt> that
- are provided in the rules file.<footnote>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ If <tt>build-arch</tt> or <tt>build-indep</tt> targets are
+ provided in the rules file, the <tt>build</tt> target
+ should either depend on those targets or take the same
+ actions as invoking those targets would perform.<footnote>
The intent of this split is so that binary-only builds
need not install the dependencies required for
the <tt>build-indep</tt> target. However, this is not
</p>
<p>
- Each paragraph consists of a series of data fields; each
- field consists of the field name, followed by a colon and
- then the data/value associated with that field. The field
- name is composed of printable ASCII characters (i.e.,
- characters that have values between 33 and 126, inclusive)
- except colon and must not with a begin with #. The
- field ends at the end of the line or at the end of the
- last continuation line (see below). Horizontal whitespace
- (spaces and tabs) may occur immediately before or after the
- value and is ignored there; it is conventional to put a
- single space after the colon. For example, a field might
- be:
+ Each paragraph consists of a series of data fields. Each field
+ consists of the field name followed by a colon and then the
+ data/value associated with that field. The field name is
+ composed of US-ASCII characters excluding control characters,
+ space, and colon (i.e., characters in the ranges 33-57 and
+ 59-126, inclusive). Field names must not begin with the comment
+ character, <tt>#</tt>.
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ The field ends at the end of the line or at the end of the last
+ continuation line (see below). Horizontal whitespace (spaces
+ and tabs) may occur immediately before or after the value and is
+ ignored there; it is conventional to put a single space after
+ the colon. For example, a field might be:
<example compact="compact">
Package: libc6
</example>
<heading><tt>DM-Upload-Allowed</tt></heading>
<p>
- The most recent version of a package uploaded to unstable or
- experimental must include the field <tt>DM-Upload-Allowed:
- yes</tt> in the source section of its source control file for
- the Debian archive to accept uploads signed with a key in the
- Debian Maintainer keyring. See the General
+ Indicates that Debian Maintainers may upload this package to
+ the Debian archive. The only valid value is <tt>yes</tt>. If
+ the field <tt>DM-Upload-Allowed: yes</tt> is present in the
+ source section of the source control file of the most recent
+ version of a package in unstable or experimental, the Debian
+ archive will accept uploads of this package signed with a key
+ in the Debian Maintainer keyring. See the General
Resolution <url id="http://www.debian.org/vote/2007/vote_003"
name="Endorse the concept of Debian Maintainers"> for more
details.
<heading>File System Structure</heading>
<p>
- The location of all installed files and directories must
- comply with the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard (FHS),
- version 2.3, with the exceptions noted below, and except
- where doing so would violate other terms of Debian
- Policy. The following exceptions to the FHS apply:
+ The location of all files and directories must comply with the
+ Filesystem Hierarchy Standard (FHS), version 2.3, with the
+ exceptions noted below, and except where doing so would
+ violate other terms of Debian Policy. The following
+ exceptions to the FHS apply:
<enumlist>
<item>
as its interpreter. Checking your script
with <prgn>checkbashisms</prgn> from
the <package>devscripts</package> package or running your script
- with <prgn>posh</prgn> may help uncover violations of the above
- requirements. If in doubt whether a script complies with these
- requirements, use <file>/bin/bash</file>.
+ with an alternate shell such as <prgn>posh</prgn> may help
+ uncover violations of the above requirements. If in doubt
+ whether a script complies with these requirements,
+ use <file>/bin/bash</file>.
</p>
<p>
<file>README.Debian</file> or some other appropriate place.
</p>
+ <p>
+ All copyright files must be encoded in UTF-8.
+ </p>
+
<sect1 id="copyrightformat">
<heading>Machine-readable copyright information</heading>
the <prgn>PATH</prgn> if necessary, and pass its
second and subsequent arguments to the command it
calls. If no <var>root-command</var> is supplied
- then <var>dpkg-buildpackage</var> will take no
- special action to gain root privilege, so that for
- most packages it will have to be invoked as root to
- start with.</p>
+ then <var>dpkg-buildpackage</var> will use
+ the <prgn>fakeroot</prgn> command, which is sufficient
+ to build most packages without actually requiring root
+ privileges.</p>
</item>
<tag><tt>-b</tt>, <tt>-B</tt></tag>
<item>