#!/usr/bin/perl =head1 NAME dh - debhelper command sequencer =cut use strict; use warnings; use Debian::Debhelper::Dh_Lib; use Debian::Debhelper::SequencerUtil; our $VERSION = DH_BUILTIN_VERSION; =head1 SYNOPSIS B I [B<--with> I[B<,>I ...]] [B<--list>] [S>] =head1 DESCRIPTION B runs a sequence of debhelper commands. The supported Is correspond to the targets of a F file: B, B, B, B, B, B, B, B, B, and B. =head1 OVERRIDE TARGETS A F file using B can override the command that is run at any step in a sequence, by defining an override target. To override I, add a target named BI to the rules file. When it would normally run I, B will instead call that target. The override target can then run the command with additional options, or run entirely different commands instead. See examples below. Override targets can also be defined to run only when building architecture dependent or architecture independent packages. Use targets with names like BIB<-arch> and BIB<-indep>. (Note that to use this feature, you should Build-Depend on debhelper 8.9.7 or above.) =head1 OPTIONS =over 4 =item B<--with> I[B<,>I ...] Add the debhelper commands specified by the given addon to appropriate places in the sequence of commands that is run. This option can be repeated more than once, or multiple addons can be listed, separated by commas. This is used when there is a third-party package that provides debhelper commands. See the F file for documentation about the sequence addon interface. A B relation on the package BI implies a B<--with> I. This avoids the need for an explicit B<--with> in F that only duplicates what is already declared via the build dependencies in F. Note that only relations in the B field are considered (i.e. B and B are deliberately unsupported). Please keep in mind that B insists on "simple" relations (e.g. a relation like "BI | B" will I imply B<--with> I). =item B<--without> I The inverse of B<--with>, disables using the given addon. This option can be repeated more than once, or multiple addons to disable can be listed, separated by commas. =item B<--list>, B<-l> List all available addons. When called only with this option, B can be called from any directory (i.e. it does not need access to files from a source package). =item B<--no-act> Prints commands that would run for a given sequence, but does not run them. Note that dh normally skips running commands that it knows will do nothing. With --no-act, the full list of commands in a sequence is printed. =back Other options passed to B are passed on to each command it runs. This can be used to set an option like B<-v> or B<-X> or B<-N>, as well as for more specialised options. =head1 EXAMPLES To see what commands are included in a sequence, without actually doing anything: dh binary-arch --no-act This is a very simple rules file, for packages where the default sequences of commands work with no additional options. #!/usr/bin/make -f %: dh $@ Often you'll want to pass an option to a specific debhelper command. The easy way to do with is by adding an override target for that command. #!/usr/bin/make -f %: dh $@ override_dh_strip: dh_strip -Xfoo override_dh_auto_configure: dh_auto_configure -- --with-foo --disable-bar Sometimes the automated L and L can't guess what to do for a strange package. Here's how to avoid running either and instead run your own commands. #!/usr/bin/make -f %: dh $@ override_dh_auto_configure: ./mondoconfig override_dh_auto_build: make universe-explode-in-delight Another common case is wanting to do something manually before or after a particular debhelper command is run. #!/usr/bin/make -f %: dh $@ override_dh_fixperms: dh_fixperms chmod 4755 debian/foo/usr/bin/foo Python tools are not run by dh by default, due to the continual change in that area. Here is how to use B. #!/usr/bin/make -f %: dh $@ --with python2 Here is how to force use of Perl's B build system, which can be necessary if debhelper wrongly detects that the package uses MakeMaker. #!/usr/bin/make -f %: dh $@ --buildsystem=perl_build Here is an example of overriding where the BI<*> commands find the package's source, for a package where the source is located in a subdirectory. #!/usr/bin/make -f %: dh $@ --sourcedirectory=src And here is an example of how to tell the BI<*> commands to build in a subdirectory, which will be removed on B. #!/usr/bin/make -f %: dh $@ --builddirectory=build If your package can be built in parallel, please either use compat 10 or pass B<--parallel> to dh. Then B will work. #!/usr/bin/make -f %: dh $@ --parallel If your package cannot be built reliably while using multiple threads, please pass B<--no-parallel> to dh (or the relevant BI<*> command): #!/usr/bin/make -f %: dh $@ --no-parallel Here is a way to prevent B from running several commands that you don't want it to run, by defining empty override targets for each command. #!/usr/bin/make -f %: dh $@ # Commands not to run: override_dh_auto_test override_dh_compress override_dh_fixperms: A long build process for a separate documentation package can be separated out using architecture independent overrides. These will be skipped when running build-arch and binary-arch sequences. #!/usr/bin/make -f %: dh $@ override_dh_auto_build-indep: $(MAKE) -C docs # No tests needed for docs override_dh_auto_test-indep: override_dh_auto_install-indep: $(MAKE) -C docs install Adding to the example above, suppose you need to chmod a file, but only when building the architecture dependent package, as it's not present when building only documentation. override_dh_fixperms-arch: dh_fixperms chmod 4755 debian/foo/usr/bin/foo =head1 INTERNALS If you're curious about B's internals, here's how it works under the hood. In compat 10 (or later), B creates a stamp file F after the build step(s) are complete to avoid re-running them. It is possible to avoid the stamp file by passing B<--without=build-stamp> to B. This makes "no clean" builds behave more like what some people expect at the expense of possibly running the build and test twice (the second time as root or under L). Inside an override target, B commands will create a log file F to keep track of which packages the command(s) have been run for. These log files are then removed once the override target is complete. In compat 9 or earlier, each debhelper command will record when it's successfully run in F. (Which B deletes.) So B can tell which commands have already been run, for which packages, and skip running those commands again. Each time B is run (in compat 9 or earlier), it examines the log, and finds the last logged command that is in the specified sequence. It then continues with the next command in the sequence. The B<--until>, B<--before>, B<--after>, and B<--remaining> options can override this behavior (though they were removed in compat 10). A sequence can also run dependent targets in debian/rules. For example, the "binary" sequence runs the "install" target. B uses the B environment variable to pass information through to debhelper commands that are run inside override targets. The contents (and indeed, existence) of this environment variable, as the name might suggest, is subject to change at any time. Commands in the B, B and B sequences are passed the B<-i> option to ensure they only work on architecture independent packages, and commands in the B, B and B sequences are passed the B<-a> option to ensure they only work on architecture dependent packages. =head1 DEPRECATED OPTIONS The following options are deprecated. It's much better to use override targets instead. They are B available in compat 10. =over 4 =item B<--until> I Run commands in the sequence until and including I, then stop. =item B<--before> I Run commands in the sequence before I, then stop. =item B<--after> I Run commands in the sequence that come after I. =item B<--remaining> Run all commands in the sequence that have yet to be run. =back In the above options, I can be a full name of a debhelper command, or a substring. It'll first search for a command in the sequence exactly matching the name, to avoid any ambiguity. If there are multiple substring matches, the last one in the sequence will be used. =cut # Stash this away before init modifies it. my @ARGV_orig=@ARGV; my (@addons, @addon_requests); inhibit_log(); init(options => { "until=s" => \$dh{UNTIL}, "after=s" => \$dh{AFTER}, "before=s" => \$dh{BEFORE}, "remaining" => \$dh{REMAINING}, "with=s" => sub { my ($option, $value) = @_; push(@addon_requests, map { "+${_}" } split(",", $value)); }, "without=s" => sub { my ($option, $value) = @_; push(@addon_requests, map { "-${_}" } split(",", $value)); }, "l" => \&list_addons, "list" => \&list_addons, }, # Disable complaints about unknown options; they are passed on to # the debhelper commands. ignore_unknown_options => 1, # Bundling does not work well since there are unknown options. bundling => 0, ); set_buildflags(); warn_deprecated(); # If make is using a jobserver, but it is not available # to this process, clean out MAKEFLAGS. This avoids # ugly warnings when calling make. if (is_make_jobserver_unavailable()) { clean_jobserver_makeflags(); } # Process the sequence parameter. my $sequence; if (! compat(7)) { # From v8, the sequence is the very first parameter. $sequence=shift @ARGV_orig; if (defined $sequence && $sequence=~/^-/) { error "Unknown sequence $sequence (options should not come before the sequence)"; } } else { # Before v8, the sequence could be at any position in the parameters, # so was what was left after parsing. $sequence=shift; if (defined $sequence) { @ARGV_orig=grep { $_ ne $sequence } @ARGV_orig; } } if (! defined $sequence) { error "specify a sequence to run"; } # make -B causes the rules file to be run as a target. # Also support completely empty override targets. # Note: it's not safe to use rules_explicit_target before this check, # since it causes dh to be run. if ($sequence eq 'debian/rules' || $sequence =~ /^override_dh_/ || $sequence eq DUMMY_TARGET) { exit 0; } # Definitions of sequences. my $build_stamp_file = 'debian/debhelper-build-stamp'; my %sequences; my @bd_minimal = qw{ dh_testdir }; my @bd = (@bd_minimal, qw{ dh_update_autotools_config dh_auto_configure dh_auto_build dh_auto_test }); my @i = (qw{ dh_testroot dh_prep dh_installdirs dh_auto_install dh_install dh_installdocs dh_installchangelogs dh_installexamples dh_installman dh_installcatalogs dh_installcron dh_installdebconf dh_installemacsen dh_installinfo dh_installinit }, (!compat(10) ? qw(dh_installsystemd) : qw()), qw{ dh_installmenu dh_installmime dh_installlogcheck dh_installlogrotate dh_installpam dh_installppp dh_installudev dh_installgsettings }, (!compat(11) ? qw(dh_installinitramfs) : qw()), qw{ dh_bugfiles dh_ucf dh_lintian dh_gconf dh_icons dh_perl dh_usrlocal dh_link dh_installwm dh_installxfonts dh_strip_nondeterminism dh_compress dh_fixperms dh_missing }); my @ba=( (!compat(11) ? qw(dh_dwz) : qw()), qw{ dh_strip dh_makeshlibs dh_shlibdeps }); if (! getpackages("arch")) { @ba=(); } my @b=qw{ dh_installdeb dh_gencontrol dh_md5sums dh_builddeb }; $sequences{clean} = [@bd_minimal, qw{ dh_auto_clean dh_clean }]; $sequences{'build-indep'} = [@bd]; $sequences{'build-arch'} = [@bd]; $sequences{build} = [to_rules_target("build-arch"), to_rules_target("build-indep")]; $sequences{'install-indep'} = [to_rules_target("build-indep"), @i]; $sequences{'install-arch'} = [to_rules_target("build-arch"), @i]; $sequences{'install'} = [to_rules_target("build"), to_rules_target("install-arch"), to_rules_target("install-indep")]; $sequences{'binary-indep'} = [to_rules_target("install-indep"), @b]; $sequences{'binary-arch'} = [to_rules_target("install-arch"), @ba, @b]; $sequences{binary} = [to_rules_target("install"), to_rules_target("binary-arch"), to_rules_target("binary-indep")]; # Additional command options my %command_opts; # sequence addon interface sub _insert { my ($offset, $existing, $new) = @_; foreach my $sequence (keys %sequences) { my @list=@{$sequences{$sequence}}; next unless grep $existing, @list; my @new; foreach my $command (@list) { if ($command eq $existing) { push @new, $new if $offset < 0; push @new, $command; push @new, $new if $offset > 0; } else { push @new, $command; } } $sequences{$sequence}=\@new; } } sub insert_before { _insert(-1, @_); } sub insert_after { _insert(1, @_); } sub remove_command { my ($command) = @_; foreach my $sequence (keys %sequences) { $sequences{$sequence}=[grep { $_ ne $command } @{$sequences{$sequence}}]; } } sub add_command { my ($command, $sequence) = @_; unshift @{$sequences{$sequence}}, $command; } sub add_command_at_end { my ($command, $sequence) = @_; push(@{$sequences{$sequence}}, $command); } sub add_command_options { my $command=shift; push @{$command_opts{$command}}, @_; } sub remove_command_options { my ($command, @cmd_options) = @_; if (@cmd_options) { # Remove only specified options if (my $opts = $command_opts{$command}) { foreach my $opt (@cmd_options) { $opts = [ grep { $_ ne $opt } @$opts ]; } $command_opts{$command} = $opts; } } else { # Clear all additional options delete $command_opts{$command}; } } sub list_addons { my %addons; for my $inc (@INC) { require File::Spec; my $path = File::Spec->catdir($inc, "Debian/Debhelper/Sequence"); if (-d $path) { for my $module_path (glob "$path/*.pm") { my $name = basename($module_path); $name =~ s/\.pm$//; $name =~ s/_/-/g; $addons{$name} = 1; } } } for my $name (sort keys %addons) { print "$name\n"; } exit 0; } sub _compute_addons { my (@addon_requests_from_args) = @_; my (@enabled_addons, %disabled_addons, %enabled); my @addon_requests; # Order is important; DH_EXTRA_ADDONS must come before everything # else; then comes built-in and finally argument provided add-ons # requests. push(@addon_requests, map { "+${_}" } split(",", $ENV{DH_EXTRA_ADDONS})) if $ENV{DH_EXTRA_ADDONS}; if (not compat(9, 1)) { # Enable autoreconf'ing by default in compat 10 or later. push(@addon_requests, '+autoreconf'); # Enable systemd support by default in compat 10 or later. # - compat 11 injects the dh_installsystemd tool directly in the # sequence instead of using a --with sequence. push(@addon_requests, '+systemd') if compat(10, 1); push(@addon_requests, '+build-stamp'); } push(@addon_requests, map { "+${_}" } Debian::Debhelper::Dh_Lib::bd_dh_sequences()); push(@addon_requests, @addon_requests_from_args); if (dpkg_architecture_value('DEB_HOST_ARCH_OS') eq 'illumos' && -x '/usr/bin/dh_smf') { push(@addon_requests, '+smf'); } # Removing disabled add-ons are expensive (O(N) per time), so we # attempt to make removals in bulk. Note that we have to be order # preserving (due to #885580), so there is a limit to how "smart" # we can be. my $flush_disable_cache = sub { @enabled_addons = grep { not exists($disabled_addons{$_}) } @enabled_addons; for my $addon (keys(%disabled_addons)) { delete($enabled{$addon}); } %disabled_addons = (); }; for my $request (@addon_requests) { if ($request =~ s/^[+]//) { $flush_disable_cache->() if %disabled_addons; push(@enabled_addons, $request) if not $enabled{$request}++; } elsif ($request =~ s/^-//) { $disabled_addons{$request} = 1; } else { error("Internal error: Invalid add-on request: $request (Missing +/- prefix)"); } } $flush_disable_cache->() if %disabled_addons; return @enabled_addons; } @addons = _compute_addons(@addon_requests); # Load addons, which can modify sequences. foreach my $addon (@addons) { my $mod="Debian::Debhelper::Sequence::$addon"; $mod=~s/-/_/g; eval "use $mod"; if ($@) { error("unable to load addon $addon: $@"); } } if (! exists $sequences{$sequence}) { error "Unknown sequence $sequence (choose from: ". join(" ", sort keys %sequences).")"; } # The list of all packages that can be acted on. my @packages=@{$dh{DOPACKAGES}}; my @arch_packages = getpackages("arch"); my @indep_packages = getpackages("indep"); my %sequence2packages = ( 'build-arch' => \@arch_packages, 'install-arch' => \@arch_packages, 'binary-arch' => \@arch_packages, 'build-indep' => \@indep_packages, 'install-indep' => \@indep_packages, 'binary-indep' => \@indep_packages, 'clean' => \@packages, 'build' => \@packages, 'install' => \@packages, 'binary' => \@packages, ); my %completed_sequences; # Get the options to pass to commands in the sequence. # Filter out options intended only for this program. my @options; my $user_specified_options=0; my $build_system_options = 0; if ($sequence eq 'build-arch' || $sequence eq 'install-arch' || $sequence eq 'binary-arch') { push @options, "-a"; # as an optimisation, remove from the list any packages # that are not arch dependent @packages = @{$sequence2packages{$sequence}}; } elsif ($sequence eq 'build-indep' || $sequence eq 'install-indep' || $sequence eq 'binary-indep') { push @options, "-i"; # ditto optimisation for arch indep @packages = @{$sequence2packages{$sequence}}; } while (@ARGV_orig) { my $opt=shift @ARGV_orig; if ($opt =~ /^--?(after|until|before|with|without)$/) { shift @ARGV_orig; next; } elsif ($opt =~ /^--?(no-act|remaining|(after|until|before|with|without)=)/) { next; } elsif ($opt=~/^-/) { if (not @options and $opt eq '--parallel' or $opt eq '--no-parallel') { my $max_parallel; # Ignore the option if it is the default for the given # compat level. next if compat(9) and $opt eq '--no-parallel'; next if not compat(9) and $opt eq '--parallel'; # Having an non-empty "@options" hurts performance quite a # bit. At the same time, we want to promote the use of # --(no-)parallel, so "tweak" the options a bit if there # is no reason to include this option. $max_parallel = get_buildoption('parallel') // 1; next if $max_parallel == 1; } push @options, "-O".$opt; $build_system_options = 1 if $opt ne '--no-parallel' and $opt ne '--parallel'; $user_specified_options=1 unless $opt =~ /^--((?:no-)?parallel|buildsystem|sourcedirectory|builddirectory|)/; } elsif (@options) { $user_specified_options=1; if ($options[$#options]=~/^-O--/) { $options[$#options].="=".$opt; } else { $options[$#options].=$opt; } } else { error "Unknown parameter: $opt"; } } # Figure out at what point in the sequence to start for each package. my (%logged, %startpoint, %stamp_file); if ( -f $build_stamp_file and not compat(9)) { open(my $fd, '<', $build_stamp_file) or error("open($build_stamp_file, ro) failed: $!"); while (my $line = <$fd>) { chomp($line); $stamp_file{$line} = 1; } close($fd); my $build_indep_target_done = 1; my $build_arch_target_done = 1; for my $pkg (@{$sequence2packages{'build-arch'}}) { if (not $stamp_file{$pkg}) { $build_arch_target_done = 0; last; } } for my $pkg (@{$sequence2packages{'build-indep'}}) { if (not $stamp_file{$pkg}) { $build_indep_target_done = 0; last; } } $completed_sequences{'build-arch'} = 1 if $build_arch_target_done; $completed_sequences{'build-indep'} = 1 if $build_indep_target_done; $completed_sequences{'build'} = 1 if $build_indep_target_done and $build_arch_target_done; } # In compat <= 8, the sequences are always inlined (those versions do not # recurse into debian/rules anyway). In compat 9+, we never inline an # existing rules target. my ($rules_targets, $full_sequence) = unpack_sequence(\%sequences, $sequence, (!compat(8) ? 0 : 1), \%completed_sequences ); my $stoppoint = $#{$full_sequence}; if (compat(9)) { foreach my $package (@packages) { my @log = load_log($package, \%logged); if ($dh{AFTER}) { # Run commands in the sequence that come after the # specified command. $startpoint{$package} = command_pos($dh{AFTER}, @{$full_sequence}) + 1; # Write a dummy log entry indicating that the specified # command was, in fact, run. This handles the case where # no commands remain to run after it, communicating to # future dh instances that the specified command should not # be run again. write_log($full_sequence->[$startpoint{$package} - 1], $package); } elsif ($dh{REMAINING}) { # Start at the beginning so all remaining commands will get # run. $startpoint{$package} = 0; } else { # Find the last logged command that is in the sequence, and # continue with the next command after it. If no logged # command is in the sequence, we're starting at the beginning.. $startpoint{$package} = 0; COMMAND: foreach my $command (reverse @log) { foreach my $i (0 .. $#{$full_sequence}) { if ($command eq $full_sequence->[$i]) { $startpoint{$package} = $i + 1; last COMMAND; } } } } } # Figure out what point in the sequence to go to. if ($dh{UNTIL}) { $stoppoint = command_pos($dh{UNTIL}, @{$full_sequence}); } elsif ($dh{BEFORE}) { $stoppoint = command_pos($dh{BEFORE}, @{$full_sequence}) - 1; } } else { foreach my $package (@packages) { $startpoint{$package} = 0; } } for my $rules_command (@{$rules_targets}) { my $rules_target = extract_rules_target_name($rules_command) // error("Internal error: $rules_command was not a rules target!?"); # Don't pass DH_ environment variables, since this is # a fresh invocation of debian/rules and any sub-dh commands. delete($ENV{DH_INTERNAL_OPTIONS}); delete($ENV{DH_INTERNAL_OVERRIDE}); run("debian/rules", $rules_target); my $override_packages = $sequence2packages{$rules_target} // \@packages; for my $package (@{$override_packages}) { my (undef, $seq) = unpack_sequence(\%sequences, $rules_target, 1); COMMAND: for my $c (reverse(@{$seq})) { for my $j (0 .. $#{$full_sequence}) { if ($c eq $full_sequence->[$j]) { # Unfortunately, we do not guarantee any order # between the run targets. Assuming e.g. # "install-arch" and "build" are opague targets # then we could process "install-arch" first and # then "build". In this case, it is important # that we do not "reset" the starting point for # "arch" packages. Otherwise, we might repeat # part of the "install-arch" sequence when we # should not. $startpoint{$package} = $j + 1 if $j + 1 > $startpoint{$package}; last COMMAND; } } } } } # Now run the commands in the sequence. foreach my $i (0..$stoppoint) { my $command = $full_sequence->[$i]; # Figure out which packages need to run this command. my @todo; my @opts=@options; foreach my $package (@packages) { if ($startpoint{$package} > $i || $logged{$package}{$full_sequence->[$i]}) { push @opts, "-N$package"; } else { push @todo, $package; } } next unless @todo; my $rules_target = extract_rules_target_name($command); error("Internal error: $command is a rules target, but it is not supported to be!?") if defined($rules_target); if (my $stamp_file = stamp_target($command)) { my %seen; print " create-stamp ".escape_shell($stamp_file)."\n"; next if $dh{NO_ACT}; open(my $fd, '+>>', $stamp_file) or error("open($stamp_file, rw) failed: $!"); # Seek to the beginning seek($fd, 0, 0) or error("seek($stamp_file) failed: $!"); while (my $line = <$fd>) { chomp($line); $seen{$line} = 1; } for my $pkg (grep { not exists $seen{$_} } @todo) { print {$fd} "$pkg\n"; } close($fd) or error("close($stamp_file) failed: $!"); next; } # Check for override targets in debian/rules, and run instead of # the usual command. (The non-arch-specific override is tried first, # for simplest semantics; mixing it with arch-specific overrides # makes little sense.) my @oldtodo=@todo; foreach my $override_type (undef, "arch", "indep") { @todo = run_override($override_type, $command, \@todo, @opts); } next unless @todo; if (can_skip($command, @todo) && ! $dh{NO_ACT}) { # This mkdir is to avoid skipping the command causing # breakage if some later command assumed that the # command ran, and created the tmpdir, as a side effect. # No commands in debhelper should make such an assuption, # but there may be third party commands or other things # in the rules file that does. if (! compat(10)) { foreach my $package (@todo) { mkdir(tmpdir($package)); } } next; } # No need to run the command for any packages handled by the # override targets. my %todo=map { $_ => 1 } @todo; foreach my $package (@oldtodo) { if (! $todo{$package}) { push @opts, "-N$package"; } } run($command, @opts); } sub run { my ($command, @options) = @_; # Include additional command options if any unshift @options, @{$command_opts{$command}} if exists $command_opts{$command}; # 3 space indent lines the command being run up under the # sequence name after "dh ". if (!$dh{QUIET}) { print " ".escape_shell($command, @options)."\n"; } return if $dh{NO_ACT}; my $ret=system { $command } $command, @options; if ($ret >> 8 != 0) { exit $ret >> 8; } elsif ($ret) { exit 1; } } # Tries to run an override target for a command. Returns the list of # packages that it was unable to run an override target for. sub run_override { my ($override_type, $command, $packages, @options) = @_; my $override="override_$command". (defined $override_type ? "-".$override_type : ""); # Check which packages are of the right architecture for the # override_type. my (@todo, @rest); my $has_explicit_target = rules_explicit_target($override); if (defined $override_type) { foreach my $package (@{$packages}) { my $isall=package_is_arch_all($package); if (($override_type eq 'indep' && $isall) || ($override_type eq 'arch' && !$isall)) { push @todo, $package; } else { push @rest, $package; push @options, "-N$package"; } } } else { @todo=@{$packages}; } return @{$packages} unless defined $has_explicit_target; # no such override return @rest if ! $has_explicit_target; # has empty override return @rest unless @todo; # has override, but no packages to act on if (defined $override_type) { # Ensure appropriate -a or -i option is passed when running # an arch-specific override target. my $opt=$override_type eq "arch" ? "-a" : "-i"; push @options, $opt unless grep { $_ eq $opt } @options; } # Discard any override log files before calling the override # target if (not compat(9)) { my @files = glob('debian/*.debhelper.log'); rm_files(@files) if @files; } # This passes the options through to commands called # inside the target. $ENV{DH_INTERNAL_OPTIONS}=join("\x1e", @options); $ENV{DH_INTERNAL_OVERRIDE}=$command; run("debian/rules", $override); delete $ENV{DH_INTERNAL_OPTIONS}; delete $ENV{DH_INTERNAL_OVERRIDE}; # Update log for overridden command now that it has # finished successfully. # (But avoid logging for dh_clean since it removes # the log earlier.) if (! $dh{NO_ACT} && $command ne 'dh_clean' && compat(9)) { write_log($command, @todo); commit_override_log(@todo); } # Override targets may introduce new helper files. Strictly # speaking this *shouldn't* be necessary, but lets make no # assumptions. Debian::Debhelper::Dh_Lib::dh_clear_unsafe_cache(); return @rest; } sub stamp_target { my ($command) = @_; if ($command =~ s/^create-stamp\s+//) { return $command; } return; } sub warn_deprecated { foreach my $deprecated ('until', 'after', 'before', 'remaining') { if (defined $dh{uc $deprecated}) { if (compat(9)) { warning("The --$deprecated option is deprecated. Use override targets instead."); } else { error("The --$deprecated option is not supported in compat 10+. Use override targets instead."); } } } } sub command_pos { my ($command, @sequence) = @_; foreach my $i (0..$#sequence) { if ($command eq $sequence[$i]) { return $i; } } my @matches; foreach my $i (0..$#sequence) { if ($sequence[$i] =~ /\Q$command\E/) { push @matches, $i; } } if (! @matches) { error "command specification \"$command\" does not match any command in the sequence" } else { return pop @matches; } } my %skipinfo; sub can_skip { my ($command, @packages) = @_; return 0 if $user_specified_options || (exists $ENV{DH_OPTIONS} && length $ENV{DH_OPTIONS}); return 0 if exists($command_opts{$command}) and @{$command_opts{$command}}; if (! defined $skipinfo{$command}) { $skipinfo{$command}=[extract_skipinfo($command)]; } my @skipinfo=@{$skipinfo{$command}}; return 0 unless @skipinfo; return 1 if scalar(@skipinfo) == 1 and $skipinfo[0] eq 'always-skip'; my $all_pkgs; foreach my $skipinfo (@skipinfo) { if ($skipinfo=~/^([a-zA-Z0-9-_]+)\((.*)\)$/) { my $type = $1; my $need = $2; if ($type eq 'tmp') { foreach my $package (@packages) { my $tmp = tmpdir($package); return 0 if -e "$tmp/$need"; } } elsif ($type eq 'pkgfile' or $type eq 'pkgfile-logged') { my $pkgs; if ($type eq 'pkgfile') { $pkgs = \@packages; } else { $all_pkgs //= [getpackages()]; $pkgs = $all_pkgs; } # Use the secret bulk check call return 0 if pkgfile($pkgs, $need) ne ''; } elsif ($type eq 'buildsystem') { # If there are any buildsystem options, we assume that # the build needs a buildsystem. return 0 if $build_system_options; require Debian::Debhelper::Dh_Buildsystems; my $system = Debian::Debhelper::Dh_Buildsystems::load_buildsystem(undef, $need); return 0 if defined($system); } else { # Unknown hint - make no assumptions return 0; } } else { # Use the secret bulk check call return 0 if pkgfile(\@packages, $skipinfo) ne ''; } } return 1; } =head1 SEE ALSO L This program is a part of debhelper. =head1 AUTHOR Joey Hess =cut