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1<!doctype debiandoc system>
2<!-- -*- mode: sgml; mode: fold -*- -->
3<book>
4<title>APT Cache File Format</title>
5
6<author>Jason Gunthorpe <email>jgg@debian.org</email></author>
b53b7926 7<version>$Id: cache.sgml,v 1.5 1998/12/14 08:23:10 jgg Exp $</version>
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8
9<abstract>
10This document describes the complete implementation and format of the APT
11Cache file. The APT Cache file is a way for APT to parse and store a
12large number of package files for display in the UI. It's primary design
13goal is to make display of a single package in the tree very fast by
14pre-linking important things like dependencies and provides.
15
16The specification doubles as documentation for one of the in-memory
17structures used by the package library and the APT GUI.
18
19</abstract>
20
21<copyright>
c59667c1 22Copyright &copy; Jason Gunthorpe, 1997-1998.
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23<p>
24APT and this document are free software; you can redistribute them and/or
25modify them under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published
26by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your
27option) any later version.
28
29<p>
30For more details, on Debian GNU/Linux systems, see the file
31/usr/doc/copyright/GPL for the full license.
32</copyright>
33
34<toc sect>
35
36<chapt>Introduction
37<!-- Purpose {{{ -->
38<!-- ===================================================================== -->
39<sect>Purpose
40
41<p>
42This document describes the implementation of an architecture
43dependent binary cache file. The goal of this cache file is two fold,
44firstly to speed loading and processing of the package file array and
45secondly to reduce memory consumption of the package file array.
46
47<p>
48The implementation is aimed at an environment with many primary package
49files, for instance someone that has a Package file for their CD-ROM, a
50Package file for the latest version of the distribution on the CD-ROM and a
51package file for the development version. Always present is the information
52contained in the status file which might be considered a separate package
53file.
54
55<p>
56Please understand, this is designed as a -CACHE FILE- it is not ment to be
57used on any system other than the one it was created for. It is not ment to
58be authoritative either, ie if a system crash or software failure occures it
59must be perfectly acceptable for the cache file to be in an inconsistant
60state. Furthermore at any time the cache file may be erased without losing
61any information.
62
63<p>
64Also the structures and storage layout is optimized for use by the APT
65GUI and may not be suitable for all purposes. However it should be possible
66to extend it with associate cache files that contain other information.
67
68<p>
69To keep memory use down the cache file only contains often used fields and
70fields that are inexepensive to store, the Package file has a full list of
71fields. Also the client may assume that all items are perfectly valid and
72need not perform checks against their correctness. Removal of information
73from the cache is possible, but blanks will be left in the file, and
74unused strings will also be present. The recommended implementation is to
75simply rebuild the cache each time any of the data files change. It is
76possible to add a new package file to the cache without any negative side
77effects.
78
79<sect1>Note on Pointer access
80<p>
81Every item in every structure is stored as the index to that structure.
82What this means is that once the files is mmaped every data access has to
83go through a fixup stage to get a real memory pointer. This is done
c59667c1 84by taking the index, multiplying it by the type size and then adding
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85it to the start address of the memory block. This sounds complex, but
86in C it is a single array dereference. Because all items are aligned to
87their size and indexs are stored as multiples of the size of the structure
88the format is immediately portable to all possible architectures - BUT the
89generated files are -NOT-.
90
91<p>
92This scheme allows code like this to be written:
93<example>
94 void *Map = mmap(...);
95 Package *PkgList = (Package *)Map;
96 Header *Head = (Header *)Map;
97 char *Strings = (char *)Map;
98 cout << (Strings + PkgList[Head->HashTable[0]]->Name) << endl;
99</example>
100<p>
101Notice the lack of casting or multiplication. The net result is to return
102the name of the first package in the first hash bucket, without error
103checks.
104
105<p>
106The generator uses allocation pools to group similarly sized structures in
107large blocks to eliminate any alignment overhead. The generator also
108assures that no structures overlap and all indexes are unique. Although
109at first glance it may seem like there is the potential for two structures
110to exist at the same point the generator never allows this to happen.
111(See the discussion of free space pools)
112 <!-- }}} -->
113
114<chapt>Structures
115<!-- Header {{{ -->
116<!-- ===================================================================== -->
117<sect>Header
118<p>
119This is the first item in the file.
120<example>
121 struct Header
122 {
123 // Signature information
124 unsigned long Signature;
125 short MajorVersion;
126 short MinorVersion;
127 bool Dirty;
128
129 // Size of structure values
130 unsigned short HeaderSz;
131 unsigned short PackageSz;
132 unsigned short PackageFileSz;
133 unsigned short VersionSz;
134 unsigned short DependencySz;
135 unsigned short ProvidesSz;
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136 unsigned short VerFileSz;
137
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138 // Structure counts
139 unsigned long PackageCount;
140 unsigned long VersionCount;
141 unsigned long DependsCount;
142 unsigned long PackageFileCount;
ad00ae81 143 unsigned long MaxVerFileSize;
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144
145 // Offsets
146 unsigned long FileList; // PackageFile
147 unsigned long StringList; // StringItem
148
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149 // Allocation pools
150 struct
151 {
152 unsigned long ItemSize;
153 unsigned long Start;
154 unsigned long Count;
155 } Pools[7];
156
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157 // Package name lookup
158 unsigned long HashTable[512]; // Package
159 };
160</example>
161<taglist>
162<tag>Signature<item>
163This must contain the hex value 0x98FE76DC which is designed to verify
164that the system loading the image has the same byte order and byte size as
165the system saving the image
166
167<tag>MajorVersion
168<tag>MinorVersion<item>
169These contain the version of the cache file, currently 0.2.
170
171<tag>Dirty<item>
172Dirty is true if the cache file was opened for reading, the client expects
173to have written things to it and have not fully synced it. The file should
174be erased and rebuilt if it is true.
175
176<tag>HeaderSz
177<tag>PackageSz
178<tag>PackageFileSz
179<tag>VersionSz
180<tag>DependencySz
c59667c1 181<tag>VerFileSz
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182<tag>ProvidesSz<item>
183*Sz contains the sizeof() that particular structure. It is used as an
184extra consistancy check on the structure of the file.
185
186If any of the size values do not exactly match what the client expects then
187the client should refuse the load the file.
188
189<tag>PackageCount
190<tag>VersionCount
191<tag>DependsCount
192<tag>PackageFileCount<item>
193These indicate the number of each structure contianed in the cache.
194PackageCount is especially usefull for generating user state structures.
195See Package::Id for more info.
196
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197<tag>MaxVerFileSize<item>
198The maximum size of a raw entry from the original Package file
199(ie VerFile::Size) is stored here.
200
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201<tag>FileList<item>
202This contains the index of the first PackageFile structure. The PackageFile
203structures are singely linked lists that represent all package files that
204have been merged into the cache.
205
206<tag>StringList<item>
207This contains a list of all the unique strings (string item type strings) in
208the cache. The parser reads this list into memory so it can match strings
209against it.
210
c59667c1 211<tag>Pools<item>
578bfd0a 212The Pool structures manage the allocation pools that the generator uses.
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213Start indicates the first byte of the pool, Count is the number of objects
214remaining in the pool and ItemSize is the structure size (alignment factor)
215of the pool. An ItemSize of 0 indicates the pool is empty. There should be
216the same number of pools as there are structure types. The generator
217stores this information so future additions can make use of any unused pool
218blocks.
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219
220<tag>HashTable<item>
221HashTable is a hash table that provides indexing for all of the packages.
222Each package name is inserted into the hash table using the following has
223function:
224<example>
225 unsigned long Hash(string Str)
226 {
227 unsigned long Hash = 0;
228 for (const char *I = Str.begin(); I != Str.end(); I++)
229 Hash += *I * ((Str.end() - I + 1));
230 return Hash % _count(Head.HashTable);
231 }
232</example>
233<p>
234By iterating over each entry in the hash table it is possible to iterate over
235the entire list of packages. Hash Collisions are handled with a singely linked
236list of packages based at the hash item. The linked list contains only
237packages that macth the hashing function.
238
239</taglist>
240 <!-- }}} -->
241<!-- Package {{{ -->
242<!-- ===================================================================== -->
243<sect>Package
244<p>
245This contians information for a single unique package. There can be any
246number of versions of a given package. Package exists in a singly
247linked list of package records starting at the hash index of the name in
248the Header->HashTable.
249<example>
250 struct Pacakge
251 {
252 // Pointers
253 unsigned long Name; // Stringtable
254 unsigned long VersionList; // Version
255 unsigned long TargetVer; // Version
256 unsigned long CurrentVer; // Version
257 unsigned long TargetDist; // StringTable (StringItem)
258 unsigned long Section; // StringTable (StringItem)
259
260 // Linked lists
261 unsigned long NextPackage; // Package
262 unsigned long RevDepends; // Dependency
263 unsigned long ProvidesList; // Provides
264
265 // Install/Remove/Purge etc
266 unsigned char SelectedState; // What
267 unsigned char InstState; // Flags
268 unsigned char CurrentState; // State
269
270 // Unique ID for this pkg
271 unsigned short ID;
c59667c1 272 unsigned long Flags;
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273 };
274</example>
275
276<taglist>
277<tag>Name<item>
278Name of the package.
279
280<tag>VersionList<item>
281Base of a singely linked list of version structures. Each structure
282represents a unique version of the package. The version structures
283contain links into PackageFile and the original text file as well as
284detailed infromation about the size and dependencies of the specific
285package. In this way multiple versions of a package can be cleanly handled
286by the system. Furthermore, this linked list is guarenteed to be sorted
287from Highest version to lowest version with no duplicate entries.
288
289<tag>TargetVer
290<tag>CurrentVer<item>
291This is an index (pointer) to the sub version that is being targeted for
292upgrading. CurrentVer is an index to the installed version, either can be
2930.
294
295<tag>TargetDist<item>
296This indicates the target distribution. Automatic upgrades should not go
297outside of the specified dist. If it is 0 then the global target dist should
298be used. The string should be contained in the StringItem list.
299
300<tag>Section<item>
301This indicates the deduced section. It should be "Unknown" or the section
302of the last parsed item.
303
304<tag>NextPackage<item>
305Next link in this hash item. This linked list is based at Header.HashTable
306and contains only packages with the same hash value.
307
308<tag>RevDepends<item>
309Reverse Depends is a linked list of all dependencies linked to this package.
310
311<tag>ProvidesList<item>
312This is a linked list of all provides for this package name.
313
314<tag>SelectedState
315<tag>InstState
316<tag>CurrentState<item>
317These corrispond to the 3 items in the Status field found in the status
318file. See the section on defines for the possible values.
319<p>
320SelectedState is the state that the user wishes the package to be
321in.
322<p>
323InstState is the installation state of the package. This normally
324should be Ok, but if the installation had an accident it may be otherwise.
325<p>
326CurrentState indicates if the package is installed, partially installed or
327not installed.
328
329<tag>ID<item>
330ID is a value from 0 to Header->PackageCount. It is a unique value assigned
331by the generator. This allows clients to create an array of size PackageCount
332and use it to store state information for the package map. For instance the
333status file emitter uses this to track which packages have been emitted
334already.
335
336<tag>Flags<item>
337Flags are some usefull indicators of the package's state.
338
339</taglist>
340
341 <!-- }}} -->
342<!-- PackageFile {{{ -->
343<!-- ===================================================================== -->
344<sect>PackageFile
345<p>
346This contians information for a single package file. Package files are
347referenced by Version structures. This is a singly linked list based from
348Header.FileList
349<example>
350 struct PackageFile
351 {
352 // Names
353 unsigned long FileName; // Stringtable
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354 unsigned long Archive; // Stringtable
355 unsigned long Component; // Stringtable
578bfd0a 356 unsigned long Version; // Stringtable
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357 unsigned long Origin; // Stringtable
358 unsigned long Label; // Stringtable
359 unsigned long Architecture; // Stringtable
578bfd0a 360 unsigned long Size;
b0b4efb9 361
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362 // Linked list
363 unsigned long NextFile; // PackageFile
364 unsigned short ID;
c59667c1 365 unsigned long Flags;
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366 time_t mtime; // Modification time
367 };
368</example>
369<taglist>
370
371<tag>FileName<item>
372Refers the the physical disk file that this PacakgeFile represents.
373
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374<tag>Archive
375<tag>Component
376<tag>Version
377<tag>Origin
378<tag>Label
379<tag>Architecture
380<tag>NotAutomatic<item>
381This is the release information. Please see the files document for a
382description of what the release information means.
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383
384<tag>Size<item>
385Size is provided as a simple check to ensure that the package file has not
386been altered.
387
388<tag>ID<item>
389See Package::ID.
390
391<tag>Flags<item>
392Provides some flags for the PackageFile, see the section on defines.
393
394<tag>mtime<item>
395Modification time for the file at time of cache generation.
396
397</taglist>
398
399 <!-- }}} -->
400<!-- Version {{{ -->
401<!-- ===================================================================== -->
402<sect>Version
403<p>
404This contians the information for a single version of a package. This is a
405singley linked list based from Package.Versionlist.
406
407<p>
408The version list is always sorted from highest version to lowest version by
409the generator. Also there may not be any duplicate entries in the list (same
410VerStr).
411
412<example>
413 struct Version
414 {
415 unsigned long VerStr; // Stringtable
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416 unsigned long Section; // StringTable (StringItem)
417
418 // Lists
c59667c1 419 unsigned long FileList; // VerFile
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420 unsigned long NextVer; // Version
421 unsigned long DependsList; // Dependency
422 unsigned long ParentPkg; // Package
423 unsigned long ProvidesList; // Provides
c59667c1 424
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425 unsigned long Size;
426 unsigned long InstalledSize;
427 unsigned short ID;
428 unsigned char Priority;
429 };
430</example>
431<taglist>
432
433<tag>VerStr<item>
434This is the complete version string.
435
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436<tag>FileList<item>
437References the all the PackageFile's that this version came out of. FileList
438can be used to determine what distribution(s) the Version applies to. If
439FileList is 0 then this is a blank version. The structure should also have
440a 0 in all other fields excluding VerStr and Possibly NextVer.
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441
442<tag>Section<item>
443This string indicates which section it is part of. The string should be
444contained in the StringItem list.
445
446<tag>NextVer<item>
447Next step in the linked list.
448
449<tag>DependsList<item>
450This is the base of the dependency list.
451
452<tag>ParentPkg<item>
453This links the version to the owning package, allowing reverse dependencies
454to determine the package.
455
456<tag>ProvidesList<item>
457Head of the linked list of Provides::NextPkgProv, forward provides.
458
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459<tag>Size
460<tag>InstalledSize<item>
461The archive size for this version. For debian this is the size of the .deb
462file. Installed size is the uncompressed size for this version
463
464<tag>ID<item>
465See Package::ID.
466
467<tag>Priority<item>
468This is the parsed priority value of the package.
469</taglist>
470
471 <!-- }}} -->
472<!-- Dependency {{{ -->
473<!-- ===================================================================== -->
474<sect>Dependency
475<p>
476Dependency contains the information for a single dependency record. The records
477are split up like this to ease processing by the client. The base of list
478linked list is Version.DependsList. All forms of dependencies are recorded
479here including Conflicts, Suggests and Recommends.
480
481<p>
482Multiple depends on the same package must be grouped together in
483the Dependency lists. Clients should assume this is always true.
484
485<example>
486 struct Dependency
487 {
488 unsigned long Version; // Stringtable
489 unsigned long Package; // Package
490 unsigned long NextDepends; // Dependency
491 unsigned long NextRevDepends; // Reverse dependency linking
492 unsigned long ParentVer; // Upwards parent version link
493
494 // Specific types of depends
495 unsigned char Type;
496 unsigned char CompareOp;
497 unsigned short ID;
498 };
499</example>
500<taglist>
501<tag>Version<item>
502The string form of the version that the dependency is applied against.
503
504<tag>Package<item>
505The index of the package file this depends applies to. If the package file
506does not already exist when the dependency is inserted a blank one (no
507version records) should be created.
508
509<tag>NextDepends<item>
510Linked list based off a Version structure of all the dependencies in that
511version.
512
513<tag>NextRevDepends<item>
514Reverse dependency linking, based off a Package structure. This linked list
515is a list of all packages that have a depends line for a given package.
516
517<tag>ParentVer<item>
518Parent version linking, allows the reverse dependency list to link
519back to the version and package that the dependency are for.
520
521<tag>Type<item>
522Describes weather it is depends, predepends, recommends, suggests, etc.
523
524<tag>CompareOp<item>
525Describes the comparison operator specified on the depends line. If the high
526bit is set then it is a logical or with the previous record.
527
528<tag>ID<item>
529See Package::ID.
530
531</taglist>
532
533 <!-- }}} -->
534<!-- Provides {{{ -->
535<!-- ===================================================================== -->
536<sect>Provides
537<p>
538Provides handles virtual packages. When a Provides: line is encountered
539a new provides record is added associating the package with a virtual
540package name. The provides structures are linked off the package structures.
541This simplifies the analysis of dependencies and other aspects A provides
542refers to a specific version of a specific package, not all versions need to
543provide that provides.
544
545<p>
546There is a linked list of provided package names started from each
547version that provides packages. This is the forwards provides mechanism.
548<example>
549 struct Provides
550 {
551 unsigned long ParentPkg; // Package
552 unsigned long Version; // Version
553 unsigned long ProvideVersion; // Stringtable
554 unsigned long NextProvides; // Provides
555 unsigned long NextPkgProv; // Provides
556 };
557</example>
558<taglist>
559<tag>ParentPkg<item>
560The index of the package that head of this linked list is in. ParentPkg->Name
561is the name of the provides.
562
563<tag>Version<item>
564The index of the version this provide line applies to.
565
566<tag>ProvideVersion<item>
567Each provides can specify a version in the provides line. This version allows
568dependencies to depend on specific versions of a Provides, as well as allowing
569Provides to override existing packages. This is experimental.
570
571<tag>NextProvides<item>
572Next link in the singly linked list of provides (based off package)
573
574<tag>NextPkgProv<item>
575Next link in the singly linked list of provides for 'Version'.
576
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577</taglist>
578
579 <!-- }}} -->
580<!-- VerFile {{{ -->
581<!-- ===================================================================== -->
582<sect>VerFile
583<p>
584VerFile associates a version with a PackageFile, this allows a full
585description of all Versions in all files (and hence all sources) under
586consideration.
587
588<example>
589 struct pkgCache::VerFile
590 {
591 unsigned long File; // PackageFile
592 unsigned long NextFile; // PkgVerFile
593 unsigned long Offset;
594 unsigned short Size;
595 }
596</example>
597<taglist>
598<tag>File<item>
599The index of the package file that this version was found in.
600
601<tag>NextFile<item>
602The next step in the linked list.
603
604<tag>Offset
605<tag>Size<item>
606These describe the exact position in the package file for the section from
607this version.
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608</taglist>
609
610 <!-- }}} -->
611<!-- StringItem {{{ -->
612<!-- ===================================================================== -->
613<sect>StringItem
614<p>
615StringItem is used for generating single instances of strings. Some things
616like Section Name are are usefull to have as unique tags. It is part of
617a linked list based at Header::StringList.
618<example>
619 struct StringItem
620 {
621 unsigned long String; // Stringtable
622 unsigned long NextItem; // StringItem
623 };
624</example>
625<taglist>
626<tag>String<item>
627The string this refers to.
628
629<tag>NextItem<item>
630Next link in the chain.
631</taglist>
632 <!-- }}} -->
633<!-- StringTable {{{ -->
634<!-- ===================================================================== -->
635<sect>StringTable
636<p>
637All strings are simply inlined any place in the file that is natural for the
638writer. The client should make no assumptions about the positioning of
639strings. All stringtable values point to a byte offset from the start of the
640file that a null terminated string will begin.
641 <!-- }}} -->
642<!-- Defines {{{ -->
643<!-- ===================================================================== -->
644<sect>Defines
645<p>
646Several structures use variables to indicate things. Here is a list of all
647of them.
648
649<sect1>Definitions for Dependency::Type
650<p>
651<example>
652#define pkgDEP_Depends 1
653#define pkgDEP_PreDepends 2
654#define pkgDEP_Suggests 3
655#define pkgDEP_Recommends 4
656#define pkgDEP_Conflicts 5
657#define pkgDEP_Replaces 6
658</example>
659</sect1>
660
661<sect1>Definitions for Dependency::CompareOp
662<p>
663<example>
664#define pkgOP_OR 0x10
665#define pkgOP_LESSEQ 0x1
666#define pkgOP_GREATEREQ 0x2
667#define pkgOP_LESS 0x3
668#define pkgOP_GREATER 0x4
669#define pkgOP_EQUALS 0x5
670</example>
671The lower 4 bits are used to indicate what operator is being specified and
672the upper 4 bits are flags. pkgOP_OR indicates that the next package is
673or'd with the current package.
674</sect1>
675
676<sect1>Definitions for Package::SelectedState
677<p>
678<example>
679#define pkgSTATE_Unkown 0
680#define pkgSTATE_Install 1
681#define pkgSTATE_Hold 2
682#define pkgSTATE_DeInstall 3
683#define pkgSTATE_Purge 4
684</example>
685</sect1>
686
687<sect1>Definitions for Package::InstState
688<p>
689<example>
690#define pkgSTATE_Ok 0
691#define pkgSTATE_ReInstReq 1
692#define pkgSTATE_Hold 2
693#define pkgSTATE_HoldReInstReq 3
694</example>
695</sect1>
696
697<sect1>Definitions for Package::CurrentState
698<p>
699<example>
700#define pkgSTATE_NotInstalled 0
701#define pkgSTATE_UnPacked 1
702#define pkgSTATE_HalfConfigured 2
703#define pkgSTATE_UnInstalled 3
704#define pkgSTATE_HalfInstalled 4
705#define pkgSTATE_ConfigFiles 5
706#define pkgSTATE_Installed 6
707</example>
708</sect1>
709
710<sect1>Definitions for Package::Flags
711<p>
712<example>
713#define pkgFLAG_Auto (1 << 0)
714#define pkgFLAG_New (1 << 1)
715#define pkgFLAG_Obsolete (1 << 2)
716#define pkgFLAG_Essential (1 << 3)
717#define pkgFLAG_ImmediateConf (1 << 4)
718</example>
719</sect1>
720
721<sect1>Definitions for Version::Priority
722<p>
723Zero is used for unparsable or absent Priority fields.
724<example>
725#define pkgPRIO_Important 1
726#define pkgPRIO_Required 2
727#define pkgPRIO_Standard 3
728#define pkgPRIO_Optional 4
729#define pkgPRIO_Extra 5
730</example>
731</sect1>
732
733<sect1>Definitions for PackageFile::Flags
734<p>
735<example>
736#define pkgFLAG_NotSource (1 << 0)
b53b7926 737#define pkgFLAG_NotAutomatic (1 << 1)
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738</example>
739</sect1>
740
741 <!-- }}} -->
742
743<chapt>Notes on the Generator
744<!-- Notes on the Generator {{{ -->
745<!-- ===================================================================== -->
746<p>
747The pkgCache::MergePackageFile function is currently the only generator of
748the cache file. It implements a conversion from the normal textual package
749file into the cache file.
750
751<p>
752The generator assumes any package declaration with a
753Status: line is a 'Status of the package' type of package declaration.
754A Package with a Target-Version field should also really have a status field.
755The processing of a Target-Version field can create a place-holder Version
756structure that is empty to refer to the specified version (See Version
757for info on what a empty Version looks like). The Target-Version syntax
758allows the specification of a specific version and a target distribution.
759
760<p>
761Different section names on different versions is supported, but I
762do not expect to use it. To simplify the GUI it will mearly use the section
763in the Package structure. This should be okay as I hope sections do not change
764much.
765
766<p>
767The generator goes through a number of post processing steps after producing
768a disk file. It sorts all of the version lists to be in descending order
769and then generates the reverse dependency lists for all of the packages.
770ID numbers and count values are also generated in the post processing step.
771
772<p>
773It is possible to extend many of the structures in the cache with extra data.
774This is done by using the ID member. ID will be a unique number from 0 to
775Header->??Count. For example
776<example>
777struct MyPkgData;
778MyPkgData *Data = new MyPkgData[Header->PackageCount];
779Data[Package->ID]->Item = 0;
780</example>
781This provides a one way reference between package structures and user data. To
782get a two way reference would require a member inside the MyPkgData structure.
783
784<p>
785The generators use of free space pools tend to make the package file quite
786large, and quite full of blank space. This could be fixed with sparse files.
787
788 <!-- }}} -->
789
790<chapt>Future Directions
791<!-- Future Directions {{{ -->
792<!-- ===================================================================== -->
793<p>
794Some good directions to take the cache file is into a cache directory that
795contains many associated caches that cache other important bits of
796information. (/var/cache/apt, FHS2)
797
798<p>
799Caching of the info/*.list is an excellent place to start, by generating all
800the list files into a tree structure and reverse linking them to the package
801structures in the main cache file major speed gains in dpkg might be achived.
802
803 <!-- }}} -->
804
805</book>