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1 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2 <!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
3 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd" [
4 <!ENTITY % aptent SYSTEM "apt.ent"> %aptent;
5 <!ENTITY % aptverbatiment SYSTEM "apt-verbatim.ent"> %aptverbatiment;
6 <!ENTITY % aptvendor SYSTEM "apt-vendor.ent"> %aptvendor;
7 ]>
8
9 <book lang="en">
10
11 <title>dpkg technical manual</title>
12
13 <bookinfo>
14
15 <authorgroup>
16 <author>
17 <personname>Tom Lees</personname><email>tom@lpsg.demon.co.uk</email>
18 </author>
19 </authorgroup>
20
21 <releaseinfo>Version &apt-product-version;</releaseinfo>
22
23 <abstract>
24 <para>
25 This document describes the minimum necessary workings for the APT dselect
26 replacement. It gives an overall specification of what its external interface
27 must look like for compatibility, and also gives details of some internal
28 quirks.
29 </para>
30 </abstract>
31
32 <copyright><year>1997</year><holder>Tom Lees</holder></copyright>
33
34 <legalnotice>
35 <title>License Notice</title>
36 <para>
37 APT and this document are free software; you can redistribute them and/or
38 modify them under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
39 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your
40 option) any later version.
41 </para>
42 <para>
43 For more details, on Debian systems, see the file
44 /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL for the full license.
45 </para>
46 </legalnotice>
47
48 </bookinfo>
49
50 <chapter id="ch1"><title>Quick summary of dpkg's external interface</title>
51
52 <section id="control"><title>Control files</title>
53 <para>
54 The basic dpkg package control file supports the following major features:-
55 </para>
56 <itemizedlist>
57 <listitem>
58 <para>
59 5 types of dependencies:-
60 </para>
61 <itemizedlist>
62 <listitem>
63 <para>
64 Pre-Depends, which must be satisfied before a package may be unpacked
65 </para>
66 </listitem>
67 <listitem>
68 <para>
69 Depends, which must be satisfied before a package may be configured
70 </para>
71 </listitem>
72 <listitem>
73 <para>
74 Recommends, to specify a package which if not installed may severely limit the
75 usefulness of the package
76 </para>
77 </listitem>
78 <listitem>
79 <para>
80 Suggests, to specify a package which may increase the productivity of the
81 package
82 </para>
83 </listitem>
84 <listitem>
85 <para>
86 Conflicts, to specify a package which must NOT be installed in order for the
87 package to be configured
88 </para>
89 </listitem>
90 <listitem>
91 <para>
92 Breaks, to specify a package which is broken by the package and which should
93 therefore not be configured while broken
94 </para>
95 </listitem>
96 </itemizedlist>
97 <para>
98 Each of these dependencies can specify a version and a depedency on that
99 version, for example "&lt;= 0.5-1", "== 2.7.2-1", etc. The comparators
100 available are:-
101 </para>
102 <itemizedlist>
103 <listitem>
104 <para>
105 "&lt;&lt;" - less than
106 </para>
107 </listitem>
108 <listitem>
109 <para>
110 "&lt;=" - less than or equal to
111 </para>
112 </listitem>
113 <listitem>
114 <para>
115 "&gt;&gt;" - greater than
116 </para>
117 </listitem>
118 <listitem>
119 <para>
120 "&gt;=" - greater than or equal to
121 </para>
122 </listitem>
123 <listitem>
124 <para>
125 "==" - equal to
126 </para>
127 </listitem>
128 </itemizedlist>
129 </listitem>
130 <listitem>
131 <para>
132 The concept of "virtual packages", which many other packages may provide,
133 using the Provides mechanism. An example of this is the "httpd" virtual
134 package, which all web servers should provide. Virtual package names may be
135 used in dependency headers. However, current policy is that virtual packages
136 do not support version numbers, so dependencies on virtual packages with
137 versions will always fail.
138 </para>
139 </listitem>
140 <listitem>
141 <para>
142 Several other control fields, such as Package, Version, Description, Section,
143 Priority, etc., which are mainly for classification purposes. The package
144 name must consist entirely of lowercase characters, plus the characters '+',
145 '-', and '.'. Fields can extend across multiple lines - on the second and
146 subsequent lines, there is a space at the beginning instead of a field name
147 and a ':'. Empty lines must consist of the text " .", which will be ignored,
148 as will the initial space for other continuation lines. This feature is
149 usually only used in the Description field.
150 </para>
151 </listitem>
152 </itemizedlist>
153 </section>
154
155 <section id="s1.2"><title>The dpkg status area</title>
156 <para>
157 The "dpkg status area" is the term used to refer to the directory where dpkg
158 keeps its various status files (GNU would have you call it the dpkg shared
159 state directory). This is always, on Debian systems, /var/lib/dpkg. However,
160 the default directory name should not be hard-coded, but #define'd, so that
161 alteration is possible (it is available via configure in dpkg 1.4.0.9 and
162 above). Of course, in a library, code should be allowed to override the
163 default directory, but the default should be part of the library (so that
164 the user may change the dpkg admin dir simply by replacing the library).
165 </para>
166 <para>
167 Dpkg keeps a variety of files in its status area. These are discussed later
168 on in this document, but a quick summary of the files is here:-
169 </para>
170 <itemizedlist>
171 <listitem>
172 <para>
173 available - this file contains a concatenation of control information from all
174 the packages which dpkg knows about. This is updated using the dpkg commands
175 "--update-avail &lt;file&gt;", "--merge-avail &lt;file&gt;", and
176 "--clear-avail".
177 </para>
178 </listitem>
179 <listitem>
180 <para>
181 status - this file contains information on the following things for every
182 package:-
183 </para>
184 <itemizedlist>
185 <listitem>
186 <para>
187 Whether it is installed, not installed, unpacked, removed, failed
188 configuration, or half-installed (deconfigured in favour of another package).
189 </para>
190 </listitem>
191 <listitem>
192 <para>
193 Whether it is selected as install, hold, remove, or purge.
194 </para>
195 </listitem>
196 <listitem>
197 <para>
198 If it is "ok" (no installation problems), or "not-ok".
199 </para>
200 </listitem>
201 <listitem>
202 <para>
203 It usually also contains the section and priority (so that dselect may classify
204 packages not in available)
205 </para>
206 </listitem>
207 <listitem>
208 <para>
209 For packages which did not initially appear in the "available" file when they
210 were installed, the other control information for them.
211 </para>
212 </listitem>
213 </itemizedlist>
214 <para>
215 The exact format for the "Status:" field is:
216 </para>
217 <screen>
218 Status: Want Flag Status
219 </screen>
220 <para>
221 Where <replaceable>Want</replaceable> may be one of
222 <emphasis>unknown</emphasis>, <emphasis>install</emphasis>,
223 <emphasis>hold</emphasis>, <emphasis>deinstall</emphasis>,
224 <emphasis>purge</emphasis>. <replaceable>Flag</replaceable> may
225 be one of <emphasis>ok</emphasis>, <emphasis>reinstreq</emphasis>,
226 <emphasis>hold</emphasis>,
227 <emphasis>hold-reinstreq</emphasis>. <replaceable>Status</replaceable> may
228 be one of <emphasis>not-installed</emphasis>, <emphasis>unpacked</emphasis>,
229 <emphasis>half-configured</emphasis>, <emphasis>installed</emphasis>,
230 <emphasis>half-installed</emphasis> <emphasis>config-files</emphasis>,
231 <emphasis>post-inst-failed</emphasis>, <emphasis>removal-failed</emphasis>.
232 The states are as follows:-
233 </para>
234 <variablelist>
235 <varlistentry>
236 <term>not-installed</term>
237 <listitem>
238 <para>
239 No files are installed from the package, it has no config files left, it
240 uninstalled cleanly if it ever was installed.
241 </para>
242 </listitem>
243 </varlistentry>
244 <varlistentry>
245 <term>unpacked</term>
246 <listitem>
247 <para>
248 The basic files have been unpacked (and are listed in
249 /var/lib/dpkg/info/[package].list. There are config files present, but the
250 postinst script has _NOT_ been run.
251 </para>
252 </listitem>
253 </varlistentry>
254 <varlistentry>
255 <term>half-configured</term>
256 <listitem>
257 <para>
258 The package was installed and unpacked, but the postinst script failed in some
259 way.
260 </para>
261 </listitem>
262 </varlistentry>
263 <varlistentry>
264 <term>installed</term>
265 <listitem>
266 <para>
267 All files for the package are installed, and the configuration was also
268 successful.
269 </para>
270 </listitem>
271 </varlistentry>
272 <varlistentry>
273 <term>half-installed</term>
274 <listitem>
275 <para>
276 An attempt was made to remove the packagem but there was a failure in the
277 prerm script.
278 </para>
279 </listitem>
280 </varlistentry>
281 <varlistentry>
282 <term>config-files</term>
283 <listitem>
284 <para>
285 The package was "removed", not "purged". The config files are left, but
286 nothing else.
287 </para>
288 </listitem>
289 </varlistentry>
290 <varlistentry>
291 <term>post-inst-failed</term>
292 <listitem>
293 <para>
294 Old name for half-configured. Do not use.
295 </para>
296 </listitem>
297 </varlistentry>
298 <varlistentry>
299 <term>removal-failed</term>
300 <listitem>
301 <para>
302 Old name for half-installed. Do not use.
303 </para>
304 </listitem>
305 </varlistentry>
306 </variablelist>
307 <para>
308 The two last items are only left in dpkg for compatibility - they are
309 understood by it, but never written out in this form.
310 </para>
311 <para>
312 Please see the dpkg source code, <literal>lib/parshelp.c</literal>,
313 <emphasis>statusinfos</emphasis>, <emphasis>eflaginfos</emphasis> and
314 <emphasis>wantinfos</emphasis> for more details.
315 </para>
316 </listitem>
317 <listitem>
318 <para>
319 info - this directory contains files from the control archive of every
320 package currently installed. They are installed with a prefix of
321 "&lt;packagename&gt;.". In addition to this, it also contains a file
322 called &lt;package&gt;.list for every package, which contains a list
323 of files. Note also that the control file is not copied into here; it
324 is instead found as part of status or available.
325 </para>
326 </listitem>
327 <listitem>
328 <para>
329 methods - this directory is reserved for "method"-specific files - each
330 "method" has a subdirectory underneath this directory (or at least,
331 it can have). In addition, there is another subdirectory "mnt", where
332 misc. filesystems (floppies, CD-ROMs, etc.) are mounted.
333 </para>
334 </listitem>
335 <listitem>
336 <para>
337 alternatives - directory used by the "update-alternatives" program. It
338 contains one file for each "alternatives" interface, which contains
339 information about all the needed symlinked files for each alternative.
340 </para>
341 </listitem>
342 <listitem>
343 <para>
344 diversions - file used by the "dpkg-divert" program. Each diversion takes
345 three lines. The first is the package name (or ":" for user diversion), the
346 second the original filename, and the third the diverted filename.
347 </para>
348 </listitem>
349 <listitem>
350 <para>
351 updates - directory used internally by dpkg. This is discussed later, in the
352 section <xref linkend="updates"/>.
353 </para>
354 </listitem>
355 <listitem>
356 <para>
357 parts - temporary directory used by dpkg-split
358 </para>
359 </listitem>
360 </itemizedlist>
361 </section>
362
363 <section id="s1.3"><title>The dpkg library files</title>
364 <para>
365 These files are installed under /usr/lib/dpkg (usually), but
366 /usr/local/lib/dpkg is also a possibility (as Debian policy dictates). Under
367 this directory, there is a "methods" subdirectory. The methods subdirectory in
368 turn contains any number of subdirectories for each general method processor
369 (note that one set of method scripts can, and is, used for more than one of
370 the methods listed under dselect).
371 </para>
372 <para>
373 The following files may be found in each of these subdirectories:-
374 </para>
375 <itemizedlist>
376 <listitem>
377 <para>
378 names - One line per method, two-digit priority to appear on menu at
379 beginning, followed by a space, the name, and then another space and
380 the short description.
381 </para>
382 </listitem>
383 <listitem>
384 <para>
385 desc.&lt;name&gt; - Contains the long description displayed by dselect
386 when the cursor is put over the &lt;name&gt; method.
387 </para>
388 </listitem>
389 <listitem>
390 <para>
391 setup - Script or program which sets up the initial values to be used
392 by this method. Called with first argument as the status area directory
393 (/var/lib/dpkg), second argument as the name of the method (as in the
394 directory name), and the third argument as the option (as in the names file).
395 </para>
396 </listitem>
397 <listitem>
398 <para>
399 install - Script/program called when the "install" option of dselect is run
400 with this method. Same arguments as for setup.
401 </para>
402 </listitem>
403 <listitem>
404 <para>
405 update - Script/program called when the "update" option of dselect is
406 run. Same arguments as for setup/install.
407 </para>
408 </listitem>
409 </itemizedlist>
410 </section>
411
412 <section id="s1.4"><title>The "dpkg" command-line utility</title>
413
414 <section id="s1.4.1"><title>"Documented" command-line interfaces</title>
415 <para>
416 As yet unwritten. You can refer to the other manuals for now. See
417 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>dpkg</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
418 </para>
419 </section>
420
421 <section id="s1.4.2"><title>Environment variables which dpkg responds to</title>
422 <itemizedlist>
423 <listitem>
424 <para>
425 DPKG_NO_TSTP - if set to a non-null value, this variable causes dpkg to run a
426 child shell process instead of sending itself a SIGTSTP, when the user selects
427 to background the dpkg process when it asks about conffiles.
428 </para>
429 </listitem>
430 <listitem>
431 <para>
432 SHELL - used to determine which shell to run in the case when DPKG_NO_TSTP
433 is set.
434 </para>
435 </listitem>
436 <listitem>
437 <para>
438 CC - used as the C compiler to call to determine the target architecture. The
439 default is "gcc".
440 </para>
441 </listitem>
442 <listitem>
443 <para>
444 PATH - dpkg checks that it can find at least the following files in the path
445 when it wants to run package installation scripts, and gives an error if it
446 cannot find all of them:-
447 </para>
448 <itemizedlist>
449 <listitem>
450 <para>
451 ldconfig
452 </para>
453 </listitem>
454 <listitem>
455 <para>
456 start-stop-daemon
457 </para>
458 </listitem>
459 <listitem>
460 <para>
461 install-info
462 </para>
463 </listitem>
464 <listitem>
465 <para>
466 update-rc.d
467 </para>
468 </listitem>
469 </itemizedlist>
470 </listitem>
471 </itemizedlist>
472 </section>
473
474 <section id="s1.4.3"><title>Assertions</title>
475 <para>
476 The dpkg utility itself is required for quite a number of packages, even if
477 they have been installed with a tool totally separate from dpkg. The reason
478 for this is that some packages, in their pre-installation scripts, check that
479 your version of dpkg supports certain features. This was broken from the
480 start, and it should have actually been a control file header "Dpkg-requires",
481 or similar. What happens is that the configuration scripts will abort or
482 continue according to the exit code of a call to dpkg, which will stop them
483 from being wrongly configured.
484 </para>
485 <para>
486 These special command-line options, which simply return as true or false are
487 all prefixed with "--assert-". Here is a list of them (without the prefix):-
488 </para>
489 <itemizedlist>
490 <listitem>
491 <para>
492 support-predepends - Returns success or failure according to whether a version
493 of dpkg which supports predepends properly (1.1.0 or above) is installed,
494 according to the database.
495 </para>
496 </listitem>
497 <listitem>
498 <para>
499 working-epoch - Return success or failure according to whether a version of
500 dpkg which supports epochs in version properly (1.4.0.7 or above) is installed,
501 according to the database.
502 </para>
503 </listitem>
504 </itemizedlist>
505 <para>
506 Both these options check the status database to see what version of the
507 "dpkg" package is installed, and check it against a known working version.
508 </para>
509 </section>
510
511 <section id="s1.4.4"><title>--predep-package</title>
512 <para>
513 This strange option is described as follows in the source code:
514 </para>
515 <screen>
516 /* Print a single package which:
517 * (a) is the target of one or more relevant predependencies.
518 * (b) has itself no unsatisfied pre-dependencies.
519 * If such a package is present output is the Packages file entry,
520 * which can be massaged as appropriate.
521 * Exit status:
522 * 0 = a package printed, OK
523 * 1 = no suitable package available
524 * 2 = error
525 */
526 </screen>
527 <para>
528 On further inspection of the source code, it appears that what is does is
529 this:-
530 </para>
531 <itemizedlist>
532 <listitem>
533 <para>
534 Looks at the packages in the database which are selected as "install",
535 and are installed.
536 </para>
537 </listitem>
538 <listitem>
539 <para>
540 It then looks at the Pre-Depends information for each of these packages
541 from the available file. When it find a package for which any of the
542 pre-dependencies are not satisfied, it breaks from the loop through the
543 packages.
544 </para>
545 </listitem>
546 <listitem>
547 <para>
548 It then looks through the unsatisfied pre-dependencies, and looks for
549 packages which would satisfy this pre-dependency, stopping on the first
550 it finds. If it finds none, it bombs out with an error.
551 </para>
552 </listitem>
553 <listitem>
554 <para>
555 It then continues this for every dependency of the initial package.
556 </para>
557 </listitem>
558 </itemizedlist>
559 <para>
560 Eventually, it writes out the record of all the packages to satisfy the
561 pre-dependencies. This is used by the disk method to make sure that its
562 dependency ordering is correct. What happens is that all pre-depending
563 packages are first installed, then it runs dpkg -iGROEB on the directory,
564 which installs in the order package files are found. Since pre-dependencies
565 mean that a package may not even be unpacked unless they are satisfied, it
566 is necessary to do this (usually, since all the package files are unpacked
567 in one phase, the configured in another, this is not needed).
568 </para>
569 </section>
570
571 </section>
572
573 </chapter>
574
575 <chapter id="ch2"><title>dpkg-deb and .deb file internals</title>
576 <para>
577 This chapter describes the internals to the "dpkg-deb" tool, which is used by
578 "dpkg" as a back-end. dpkg-deb has its own tar extraction functions, which is
579 the source of many problems, as it does not support long filenames, using
580 extension blocks.
581 </para>
582
583 <section id="s2.1"><title>The .deb archive format</title>
584 <para>
585 The main principal of the new-format Debian archive (I won't describe the old
586 format - for that have a look at deb-old.5), is that the archive really is an
587 archive - as used by "ar" and friends. However, dpkg-deb uses this format
588 internally, rather than calling "ar". Inside this archive, there are usually
589 the following members:-
590 </para>
591 <itemizedlist>
592 <listitem>
593 <para>
594 debian-binary
595 </para>
596 </listitem>
597 <listitem>
598 <para>
599 control.tar.gz
600 </para>
601 </listitem>
602 <listitem>
603 <para>
604 data.tar.gz
605 </para>
606 </listitem>
607 </itemizedlist>
608 <para>
609 The debian-binary member consists simply of the string "2.0", indicating
610 the format version. control.tar.gz contains the control files (and scripts),
611 and the data.tar.gz contains the actual files to populate the filesystem
612 with. Both tarfiles extract straight into the current directory. Information
613 on the tar formats can be found in the GNU tar info page. Since dpkg-deb
614 calls "tar -cf" to build packages, the Debian packages use the GNU extensions.
615 </para>
616 </section>
617
618 <section id="s2.2"><title>The dpkg-deb command-line</title>
619 <para>
620 dpkg-deb documents itself thoroughly with its '--help' command-line
621 option. However, I am including a reference to these for
622 completeness. dpkg-deb supports the following options:-
623 </para>
624 <itemizedlist>
625 <listitem>
626 <para>
627 --build (-b) &lt;dir&gt; - builds a .deb archive, takes a directory which
628 contains all the files as an argument. Note that the directory
629 &lt;dir&gt;/DEBIAN will be packed separately into the control archive.
630 </para>
631 </listitem>
632 <listitem>
633 <para>
634 --contents (-c) &lt;debfile&gt; - Lists the contents of the "data.tar.gz"
635 member.
636 </para>
637 </listitem>
638 <listitem>
639 <para>
640 --control (-e) &lt;debfile&gt; - Extracts the control archive into a directory
641 called DEBIAN. Alternatively, with another argument, it will extract it into a
642 different directory.
643 </para>
644 </listitem>
645 <listitem>
646 <para>
647 --info (-I) &lt;debfile&gt; - Prints the contents of the "control" file in the
648 control archive to stdout. Alternatively, giving it other arguments will cause
649 it to print the contents of those files instead.
650 </para>
651 </listitem>
652 <listitem>
653 <para>
654 --field (-f) &lt;debfile&gt; &lt;field&gt; ... - Prints any number of fields
655 from the "control" file. Giving it extra arguments limits the fields it prints
656 to only those specified. With no command-line arguments other than a filename,
657 it is equivalent to -I and just the .deb filename.
658 </para>
659 </listitem>
660 <listitem>
661 <para>
662 --extract (-x) &lt;debfile&gt; &lt;dir&gt; - Extracts the data archive of a
663 debian package under the directory &lt;dir&gt;.
664 </para>
665 </listitem>
666 <listitem>
667 <para>
668 --vextract (-X) &lt;debfile&gt; &lt;dir&gt; - Same as --extract, except it
669 is equivalent of giving tar the '-v' option - it prints the filenames as it
670 extracts them.
671 </para>
672 </listitem>
673 <listitem>
674 <para>
675 --fsys-tarfile &lt;debfile&gt; - This option outputs a gunzip'd version of
676 data.tar.gz to stdout.
677 </para>
678 </listitem>
679 <listitem>
680 <para>
681 --new - sets the archive format to be used to the new Debian format
682 </para>
683 </listitem>
684 <listitem>
685 <para>
686 --old - sets the archive format to be used to the old Debian format
687 </para>
688 </listitem>
689 <listitem>
690 <para>
691 --debug - Tells dpkg-deb to produce debugging output
692 </para>
693 </listitem>
694 <listitem>
695 <para>
696 --nocheck - Tells dpkg-deb not to check the sanity of the control file
697 </para>
698 </listitem>
699 <listitem>
700 <para>
701 --help (-h) - Gives a help message
702 </para>
703 </listitem>
704 <listitem>
705 <para>
706 --version - Shows the version number
707 </para>
708 </listitem>
709 <listitem>
710 <para>
711 --licence/--license (UK/US spellings) - Shows a brief outline of the GPL
712 </para>
713 </listitem>
714 </itemizedlist>
715
716 <section id="s2.2.1"><title>Internal checks used by dpkg-deb when building packages</title>
717 <para>
718 Here is a list of the internal checks used by dpkg-deb when building
719 packages. It is in the order they are done.
720 </para>
721 <itemizedlist>
722 <listitem>
723 <para>
724 First, the output Debian archive argument, if it is given, is checked using
725 stat. If it is a directory, an internal flag is set. This check is only made
726 if the archive name is specified explicitly on the command-line. If the
727 argument was not given, the default is the directory name, with ".deb"
728 appended.
729 </para>
730 </listitem>
731 <listitem>
732 <para>
733 Next, the control file is checked, unless the --nocheck flag was specified on
734 the command-line. dpkg-deb will bomb out if the second argument to --build was
735 a directory, and --nocheck was specified. Note that dpkg-deb will not be able
736 to determine the name of the package in this case. In the control file, the
737 following things are checked:-
738 </para>
739 <itemizedlist>
740 <listitem>
741 <para>
742 The package name is checked to see if it contains any invalid characters (see
743 <xref linkend="control"/> for this).
744 </para>
745 </listitem>
746 <listitem>
747 <para>
748 The priority field is checked to see if it uses standard values, and
749 user-defined values are warned against. However, note that this check is now
750 redundant, since the control file no longer contains the priority - the
751 changes file now does this.
752 </para>
753 </listitem>
754 <listitem>
755 <para>
756 The control file fields are then checked against the standard list of fields
757 which appear in control files, and any "user-defined" fields are reported as
758 warnings.
759 </para>
760 </listitem>
761 <listitem>
762 <para>
763 dpkg-deb then checks that the control file contains a valid version number.
764 </para>
765 </listitem>
766 </itemizedlist>
767 </listitem>
768 <listitem>
769 <para>
770 After this, in the case where a directory was specified to build the .deb file
771 in, the filename is created as "directory/pkg_ver.deb" or
772 "directory/pkg_ver_arch.deb", depending on whether the control file contains
773 an architecture field.
774 </para>
775 </listitem>
776 <listitem>
777 <para>
778 Next, dpkg-deb checks for the &lt;dir&gt;/DEBIAN directory. It complains if it
779 doesn't exist, or if it has permissions &lt; 0755, or &gt; 0775.
780 </para>
781 </listitem>
782 <listitem>
783 <para>
784 It then checks that all the files in this subdir are either symlinks or plain
785 files, and have permissions between 0555 and 0775.
786 </para>
787 </listitem>
788 <listitem>
789 <para>
790 The conffiles file is then checked to see if the filenames are too
791 long. Warnings are produced for each that is. After this, it checks
792 that the package provides initial copies of each of these conffiles,
793 and that they are all plain files.
794 </para>
795 </listitem>
796 </itemizedlist>
797 </section>
798
799 </section>
800
801 </chapter>
802
803 <chapter id="ch3"><title>dpkg internals</title>
804 <para>
805 This chapter describes the internals of dpkg itself. Although the low-level
806 formats are quite simple, what dpkg does in certain cases often does not make
807 sense.
808 </para>
809
810 <section id="updates"><title>Updates</title>
811 <para>
812 This describes the /var/lib/dpkg/updates directory. The function of this
813 directory is somewhat strange, and seems only to be used internally. A
814 function called cleanupdates is called whenever the database is scanned. This
815 function in turn uses
816 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>scandir</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
817 to sort the files in this directory. Files who names do not consist entirely
818 of digits are discarded. dpkg also causes a fatal error if any of the
819 filenames are different lengths.
820 </para>
821 <para>
822 After having scanned the directory, dpkg in turn parses each file the same way
823 it parses the status file (they are sorted by the scandir to be in numerical
824 order). After having done this, it then writes the status information back to
825 the "status" file, and removes all the "updates" files.
826 </para>
827 <para>
828 These files are created internally by dpkg's "checkpoint" function, and are
829 cleaned up when dpkg exits cleanly.
830 </para>
831 <para>
832 Juding by the use of the updates directory I would call it a Journal. Inorder
833 to efficiently ensure the complete integrity of the status file dpkg will
834 "checkpoint" or journal all of it's activities in the updates directory. By
835 merging the contents of the updates directory (in order!!) against the original
836 status file it can get the precise current state of the system, even in the
837 event of a system failure while dpkg is running.
838 </para>
839 <para>
840 The other option would be to sync-rewrite the status file after each operation,
841 which would kill performance.
842 </para>
843 <para>
844 It is very important that any program that uses the status file abort if the
845 updates directory is not empty! The user should be informed to run dpkg
846 manually (what options though??) to correct the situation.
847 </para>
848 </section>
849
850 <section id="s3.2"><title>What happens when dpkg reads the database</title>
851 <para>
852 First, the status file is read. This gives dpkg an initial idea of the
853 packages that are there. Next, the updates files are read in, overriding the
854 status file, and if necessary, the status file is re-written, and updates files
855 are removed. Finally, the available file is read. The available file is read
856 with flags which preclude dpkg from updating any status information from it,
857 though - installed version, etc., and is also told to record that the packages
858 it reads this time are available, not installed.
859 </para>
860 <para>
861 More information on updates is given above.
862 </para>
863 </section>
864
865 <section id="s3.3"><title>How dpkg compares version numbers</title>
866 <para>
867 Version numbers consist of three parts: the epoch, the upstream version, and
868 the Debian revision. Dpkg compares these parts in that order. If the epochs
869 are different, it returns immediately, and so on.
870 </para>
871 <para>
872 However, the important part is how it compares the versions which are
873 essentially stored as just strings. These are compared in two distinct
874 parts: those consisting of numerical characters (which are evaluated, and
875 then compared), and those consisting of other characters. When comparing
876 non-numerical parts, they are compared as the character values (ASCII),
877 but non-alphabetical characters are considered "greater than" alphabetical
878 ones. Also note that longer strings (after excluding differences where
879 numerical values are equal) are considered "greater than" shorter ones.
880 </para>
881 <para>
882 Here are a few examples of how these rules apply:-
883 </para>
884 <screen>
885 15 &gt; 10
886 0010 == 10
887
888 d.r &gt; dsr
889 32.d.r == 0032.d.r
890 d.rnr &lt; d.rnrn
891 </screen>
892 </section>
893
894 </chapter>
895
896 </book>