X-Git-Url: https://git.donarmstrong.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=policy.sgml;h=d81891c7c5f2b52af5c26cebabde59dc4b2d9014;hb=3ee78f55b70f74b4bb67bcffbae8ed886156a99b;hp=5d2105e6cdd8f25a50b695c5c69e2c280e4386e2;hpb=52ad20d192fa0583a5697031570693cc3bfe6d50;p=debian%2Fdebian-policy.git
diff --git a/policy.sgml b/policy.sgml
index 5d2105e..d81891c 100644
--- a/policy.sgml
+++ b/policy.sgml
@@ -1729,7 +1729,7 @@ zope.
/closes:\s*(?:bug)?\#?\s?\d+(?:,\s*(?:bug)?\#?\s?\d+)*/i
Then all of the bug numbers listed will be closed by the
- archive maintenance script (katie) using the
+ archive maintenance software (dak) using the
version of the changelog entry.
This information is conveyed via the Closes field
@@ -1988,51 +1988,33 @@ zope.
- build-arch (optional),
- build-indep (optional)
+ build-arch (required),
+ build-indep (required)
-
- A package may also provide one or both of the targets
- build-arch and build-indep.
- The build-arch target, if provided, should
+ The build-arch target must
perform all the configuration and compilation required for
producing all architecture-dependant binary packages
(those packages for which the body of the
Architecture field in debian/control is
not all). Similarly, the build-indep
- target, if provided, should perform all the configuration
+ target must perform all the configuration
and compilation required for producing all
architecture-independent binary packages (those packages
for which the body of the Architecture field
in debian/control is all).
-
-
-
- If build-arch or build-indep targets are
- provided in the rules file, the build target
+ The build target
should either depend on those targets or take the same
actions as invoking those targets would perform.
- The intent of this split is so that binary-only builds
- need not install the dependencies required for
- the build-indep target. However, this is not
- yet used in practice since dpkg-buildpackage
- -B, and therefore the autobuilders,
- invoke build rather than build-arch
- due to the difficulties in determining whether the
- optional build-arch target exists.
+ This split allows binary-only builds to not install the
+ dependencies required for the build-indep
+ target and skip any resource-intensive build tasks that
+ are only required when building architecture-independent
+ binary packages.
-
- If one or both of the targets build-arch and
- build-indep are not provided, then invoking
- debian/rules with one of the not-provided
- targets as arguments should produce a exit status code
- of 2. Usually this is provided automatically by make
- if the target is missing.
-
-
The build-arch and build-indep targets
must not do anything that might require root privilege.
@@ -2667,7 +2649,6 @@ Package: libc6
- Source (mandatory)
- Maintainer (mandatory)
- Uploaders
- - DM-Upload-Allowed
- Section (recommended)
- Priority (recommended)
- Build-Depends et al
@@ -2690,6 +2671,7 @@ Package: libc6
- Description (mandatory)
- Homepage
- Built-Using
+ - Package-Type
@@ -2766,13 +2748,13 @@ Package: libc6
- Version (mandatory)
- Maintainer (mandatory)
- Uploaders
- - DM-Upload-Allowed
- Homepage
- Vcs-Browser, Vcs-Git, et al.
- Standards-Version (recommended)
- Build-Depends et al
+ - Package-List (recommended)
- Checksums-Sha1
- and Checksums-Sha256 (recommended)
+ and Checksums-Sha256 (mandatory)
- Files (mandatory)
@@ -2825,7 +2807,7 @@ Package: libc6
- Closes
- Changes (mandatory)
- Checksums-Sha1
- and Checksums-Sha256 (recommended)
+ and Checksums-Sha256 (mandatory)
- Files (mandatory)
@@ -3759,28 +3741,19 @@ Checksums-Sha256:
- In the .dsc file, these fields should list all
+ In the .dsc file, these fields list all
files that make up the source package. In
- the .changes file, these fields should list all
+ the .changes file, these fields list all
files being uploaded. The list of files in these fields
must match the list of files in the Files field.
-
+
DM-Upload-Allowed
- Indicates that Debian Maintainers may upload this package to
- the Debian archive. The only valid value is yes. If
- the field DM-Upload-Allowed: yes 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 for more
- details.
+ Obsolete, see below.
@@ -3830,6 +3803,34 @@ Checksums-Sha256:
+
+
+ Package-List
+
+
+ Multiline field listing all the packages that can be built from
+ the source package, considering every architecture. The first line
+ of the field value is empty. Each one of the next lines describes
+ one binary package, by listing its name, type, section and priority
+ separated by spaces. Fifth and subsequent space-separated items
+ may be present and parsers must allow them. See the
+ Package-Type field for a list of
+ package types.
+
+
+
+
+ Package-Type
+
+
+ Simple field containing a word indicating the type of package:
+ deb for binary packages and udeb for micro binary
+ packages. Other types not defined here may be indicated. In
+ source package control files, the Package-Type field
+ should be omitted instead of giving it a value of deb, as
+ this value is assumed for paragraphs lacking this field.
+
+
@@ -3876,6 +3877,28 @@ Checksums-Sha256:
+
+ Obsolete fields
+
+
+ The following fields have been obsoleted and may be found in packages
+ conforming with previous versions of the Policy.
+
+
+
+ DM-Upload-Allowed
+
+
+ Indicates that Debian Maintainers may upload this package to
+ the Debian archive. The only valid value is yes. This
+ field was used to regulate uploads by Debian Maintainers, See the
+ General Resolution for more details.
+
+
+
+
+
@@ -6641,7 +6664,7 @@ Built-Using: grub2 (= 1.99-9), loadlin (= 1.6e-1)
The shlibs system
- The shlibs system is an simpler alternative to
+ The shlibs system is a simpler alternative to
the symbols system for declaring dependencies for
shared libraries. It may be more appropriate for C++
libraries and other cases where tracking individual symbols is
@@ -8056,33 +8079,28 @@ Reloading description configuration...done.
- Packages which provide the ability to view/show/play,
- compose, edit or print MIME types should register themselves
- as such following the current MIME support policy.
+ Packages which provide programs to view/show/play, compose, edit or
+ print MIME types should register them as such by placing a file in
+ format (RFC 1524) in the directory
+ /usr/lib/mime/packages/. The file name should be the
+ binary package's name.
The mime-support package provides the
- update-mime program which allows packages to
- register programs that can show, compose, edit or print
- MIME types.
-
-
-
- Packages containing such programs must register them
- with update-mime as documented in . They should not depend
- on, recommend, or suggest mime-support. Instead,
- they should just put something like the following in the
- postinst and postrm scripts:
-
-
- if [ -x /usr/sbin/update-mime ]; then
- update-mime
- fi
-
+ update-mime program, which integrates these
+ registrations in the /etc/mailcap file, using dpkg
+ triggers
+ Creating, modifying or removing a file in
+ /usr/lib/mime/packages/ using maintainer scripts will
+ not activate the trigger. In that case, it can be done by calling
+ dpkg-trigger --no-await /usr/lib/mime/packages from
+ the maintainer script after creating, modifying, or removing
+ the file.
+ .
+ Packages using this facility should not depend on,
+ recommend, or suggest mime-support.
-
@@ -8296,6 +8314,74 @@ exec /usr/lib/foo/foo "$@"
+
+ Alternate init systems
+
+ A number of other init systems are available now in Debian that
+ can be used in place of sysvinit. Alternative
+ init implementations must support running SysV init scripts as
+ described at [ for compatibility.
+ ]
+
+ Packages may integrate with these replacement init systems by
+ providing implementation-specific configuration information about
+ how and when to start a service or in what order to run certain
+ tasks at boot time. However, any package integrating with other
+ init systems must also be backwards-compatible with
+ sysvinit by providing a SysV-style init script
+ with the same name as and equivalent functionality to any
+ init-specific job, as this is the only start-up configuration
+ method guaranteed to be supported by all init implementations. An
+ exception to this rule is scripts or jobs provided by the init
+ implementation itself; such jobs may be required for an
+ implementation-specific equivalent of the /etc/rcS.d/
+ scripts and may not have a one-to-one correspondence with the init
+ scripts.
+
+
+ Event-based boot with upstart
+
+
+ Packages may integrate with the upstart event-based
+ boot system by installing job files in the
+ /etc/init directory. SysV init scripts for which
+ an equivalent upstart job is available must query the output of
+ the command initctl version for the string
+ upstart and avoid running in favor of the native
+ upstart job, using a test such as this:
+
+if [ "$1" = start ] && which initctl >/dev/null && initctl version | grep -q upstart
+then
+ exit 1
+fi
+
+
+
+ Because packages shipping upstart jobs may be installed on
+ systems that are not using upstart, maintainer scripts must
+ still use the common update-rc.d and
+ invoke-rc.d interfaces for configuring runlevels
+ and for starting and stopping services. These maintainer
+ scripts must not call the upstart start,
+ restart, reload, or stop
+ interfaces directly. Instead, implementations of
+ invoke-rc.d must detect when upstart is running and
+ when an upstart job with the same name as an init script is
+ present, and perform the requested action using the upstart job
+ instead of the init script.
+
+
+ Dependency-based boot managers for SysV init scripts, such as
+ startpar, may avoid running a given init script
+ entirely when an equivalent upstart job is present, to avoid
+ unnecessary forking of no-op init scripts. In this case, the
+ boot manager should integrate with upstart to detect when the
+ upstart job in question is started or stopped to know when the
+ dependency has been satisfied.
+
+
+
+
@@ -10781,12 +10867,6 @@ END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
dpkg, dselect et al. and the way
they interact with packages.
-
- It also documents the interaction between
- dselect's core and the access method scripts it
- uses to actually install the selected packages, and describes
- how to create a new access method.
-
This manual does not go into detail about the options and
usage of the package building and installation tools. It