Provided by: zkg_2.0.7-1_all bug

NAME

       zkg - Zeek Package Manager

       A command-line package manager for Zeek.

          usage: zkg [-h] [--version] [--configfile CONFIGFILE] [--verbose]
                     {test,install,bundle,unbundle,remove,purge,refresh,upgrade,load,unload,pin,unpin,list,search,info,config,autoconfig,env}
                     ...

       Options:

              --version
                     show program's version number and exit

              --configfile
                     Path to Zeek Package Manager config file.

                     See Config File.

              --verbose=0, -v=0
                     Increase  program  output  for debugging. Use multiple times for more output
                     (e.g. -vvv).

       Environment Variables:
          ZKG_CONFIG_FILE:    Same as --configfile option, but has less precedence.

COMMANDS

   test
       Runs the unit tests for the specified  Zeek  packages.  In  most  cases,  the  "zeek"  and
       "zeek-config" programs will need to be in PATH before running this command.

          usage: zkg test [-h] [--version VERSION] package [package ...]

       Positional arguments:

              package
                     The  name(s)  of  package(s)  to  operate  on.   The package may be named in
                     several ways.  If the package is  part  of  a  package  source,  it  may  be
                     referred  to  by the base name of the package (last component of git URL) or
                     its path within the package source. If two  packages  in  different  package
                     sources  have  conflicting  paths,  then  the  package  source  name  may be
                     prepended to the package path to resolve the ambiguity. A full git  URL  may
                     also  be  used  to refer to a package that does not belong to a source. E.g.
                     for a package source called "zeek" that has a package named "foo" located in
                     either "alice/zkg.index" or "alice/bro-pkg.index", the following names work:
                     "foo", "alice/foo", "zeek/alice/foo".

       Options:

              --version
                     The version of the package to test.  Only one package may be specified at  a
                     time  when  using this flag.  A version tag, branch name, or commit hash may
                     be specified here. If the package name refers to a local  git  repo  with  a
                     working  tree,  then  its  currently  active branch is used. The default for
                     other cases is to use the latest version tag, or if a package has none,  the
                     "master" branch.

   install
       Installs  packages  from  a  configured  package source or directly from a git URL.  After
       installing, the package is marked as being "loaded" (see the load command).

          usage: zkg install [-h] [--force] [--skiptests] [--nodeps] [--nosuggestions]
                             [--version VERSION]
                             package [package ...]

       Positional arguments:

              package
                     The name(s) of package(s) to operate  on.   The  package  may  be  named  in
                     several  ways.   If  the  package  is  part  of  a package source, it may be
                     referred to by the base name of the package (last component of git  URL)  or
                     its  path  within  the  package source. If two packages in different package
                     sources have  conflicting  paths,  then  the  package  source  name  may  be
                     prepended  to  the package path to resolve the ambiguity. A full git URL may
                     also be used to refer to a package that does not belong to  a  source.  E.g.
                     for a package source called "zeek" that has a package named "foo" located in
                     either "alice/zkg.index" or "alice/bro-pkg.index", the following names work:
                     "foo", "alice/foo", "zeek/alice/foo".

       Options:

              --force=False
                     Skip the confirmation prompt.

              --skiptests=False
                     Skip running unit tests for packages before installation.

              --nodeps=False
                     Skip  all  dependency  resolution/checks.  Note that using this option risks
                     putting your installed package collection into a broken or unusable state.

              --nosuggestions=False
                     Skip automatically installing suggested packages.

              --version
                     The version of the package to install.  Only one package may be specified at
                     a time when using this flag.  A version tag, branch name, or commit hash may
                     be specified here. If the package name refers to a local  git  repo  with  a
                     working  tree,  then  its  currently  active branch is used. The default for
                     other cases is to use the latest version tag, or if a package has none,  the
                     "master" branch.

   remove
       Unloads (see the unload command) and uninstalls a previously installed package.

          usage: zkg remove [-h] [--force] package [package ...]

       Positional arguments:

              package
                     The  name(s)  of  package(s)  to  operate  on.   The package may be named in
                     several ways.  If the package is  part  of  a  package  source,  it  may  be
                     referred  to  by the base name of the package (last component of git URL) or
                     its path within the package source. If two  packages  in  different  package
                     sources  have  conflicting  paths,  then  the  package  source  name  may be
                     prepended to the package path to resolve the ambiguity. A full git  URL  may
                     also  be  used  to refer to a package that does not belong to a source. E.g.
                     for a package source called "zeek" that has a package named "foo" located in
                     either "alice/zkg.index" or "alice/bro-pkg.index", the following names work:
                     "foo", "alice/foo", "zeek/alice/foo".

       Options:

              --force=False
                     Skip the confirmation prompt.

   purge
       Unloads (see the unload command) and uninstalls all previously installed packages.

          usage: zkg purge [-h] [--force]

       Options:

              --force=False
                     Skip the confirmation prompt.

   bundle
       This command creates  a  bundle  file  containing  a  collection  of  Zeek  packages.   If
       --manifest  is used, the user supplies the list of packages to put in the bundle, else all
       currently installed packages are put in the bundle. A bundle file can be unpacked  on  any
       target  system, resulting in a repeatable/specific set of packages being installed on that
       target system (see the unbundle command).  This command may be useful for those that  want
       to  manage packages on a system that otherwise has limited network connectivity.  E.g. one
       can use a system with an internet connection to create a bundle, transport that bundle  to
       the  target  machine using whatever means are appropriate, and finally unbundle/install it
       on the target machine.

          usage: zkg bundle [-h] [--force] [--nodeps] [--nosuggestions]
                            [--manifest MANIFEST [MANIFEST ...] --]
                            filename.bundle

       Positional arguments:

              filename.bundle
                     The path of the bundle file to create.  It will be overwritten if it already
                     exists.   Note that if --manifest is used before this filename is specified,
                     you should use a double-dash, --, to first terminate that argument list.

       Options:

              --force=False
                     Skip the confirmation prompt.

              --nodeps=False
                     Skip all dependency resolution/checks.  Note that using  this  option  risks
                     creating a bundle of packages that is in a broken or unusable state.

              --nosuggestions=False
                     Skip automatically bundling suggested packages.

              --manifest
                     This  may  either  be  a  file  name or a list of packages to include in the
                     bundle.  If a file name is supplied, it should  be  in  INI  format  with  a
                     single ``[bundle]`` section.  The keys in that section correspond to package
                     names and their values correspond to git  version  tags,  branch  names,  or
                     commit  hashes.   The  values  may be left blank to indicate that the latest
                     available version should be used.

   unbundle
       This command unpacks a bundle file formerly created by the bundle command and installs all
       the packages contained within.

          usage: zkg unbundle [-h] [--force] [--replace] filename.bundle

       Positional arguments:

              filename.bundle
                     The path of the bundle file to install.

       Options:

              --force=False
                     Skip the confirmation prompt.

              --replace=False
                     Using  this flag first removes all installed packages before then installing
                     the packages from the bundle.

   refresh
       Retrieve latest package metadata from sources and checks whether  any  installed  packages
       have  available  upgrades.  Note that this does not actually upgrade any packages (see the
       upgrade command for that).

          usage: zkg refresh [-h] [--aggregate] [--push]
                             [--sources SOURCES [SOURCES ...]]

       Options:

              --aggregate=False
                     Crawls the urls listed in package source zkg.index (or legacy bro-pkg.index)
                     files  and  aggregates  the  metadata  found  in  their  zkg.meta (or legacy
                     bro-pkg.meta) files.  The aggregated metadata is stored in the  local  clone
                     of  the  package  source that zkg uses internally locating package metadata.
                     For each package, the metadata is  taken  from  the  highest  available  git
                     version tag or the master branch if no version tags exist

              --push=False
                     Push all local changes to package sources to upstream repos

              --sources
                     A list of package source names to operate on.  If this argument is not used,
                     then the command will operate on all configured sources.

   upgrade
       Uprades the specified package(s) to latest available version.  If no specific packages are
       specified, then all installed packages that are outdated and not pinned are upgraded.  For
       packages that are installed with --version using a git branch name, the package is updated
       to  the latest commit on that branch, else the package is updated to the highest available
       git version tag.

          usage: zkg upgrade [-h] [--force] [--skiptests] [--nodeps] [--nosuggestions]
                             [package [package ...]]

       Positional arguments:

              package
                     The name(s) of package(s) to operate  on.   The  package  may  be  named  in
                     several  ways.   If  the  package  is  part  of  a package source, it may be
                     referred to by the base name of the package (last component of git  URL)  or
                     its  path  within  the  package source. If two packages in different package
                     sources have  conflicting  paths,  then  the  package  source  name  may  be
                     prepended  to  the package path to resolve the ambiguity. A full git URL may
                     also be used to refer to a package that does not belong to  a  source.  E.g.
                     for a package source called "zeek" that has a package named "foo" located in
                     either "alice/zkg.index" or "alice/bro-pkg.index", the following names work:
                     "foo", "alice/foo", "zeek/alice/foo".

       Options:

              --force=False
                     Skip the confirmation prompt.

              --skiptests=False
                     Skip running unit tests for packages before installation.

              --nodeps=False
                     Skip  all  dependency  resolution/checks.  Note that using this option risks
                     putting your installed package collection into a broken or unusable state.

              --nosuggestions=False
                     Skip automatically installing suggested packages.

   load
       The Zeek Package Manager keeps track of all packages  that  are  marked  as  "loaded"  and
       maintains  a  single Zeek script that, when loaded by Zeek (e.g. via @load packages), will
       load the scripts from all "loaded" packages at once. This command adds a set  of  packages
       to the "loaded packages" list.

          usage: zkg load [-h] package [package ...]

       Positional arguments:

              package
                     Name(s) of package(s) to load.

   unload
       The  Zeek  Package  Manager  keeps  track  of all packages that are marked as "loaded" and
       maintains a single Zeek script that, when loaded by Zeek, will load the scripts  from  all
       "loaded"  packages  at  once.   This  command  removes  a set of packages from the "loaded
       packages" list.

          usage: zkg unload [-h] package [package ...]

       Positional arguments:

              package
                     The name(s) of package(s) to operate  on.   The  package  may  be  named  in
                     several  ways.   If  the  package  is  part  of  a package source, it may be
                     referred to by the base name of the package (last component of git  URL)  or
                     its  path  within  the  package source. If two packages in different package
                     sources have  conflicting  paths,  then  the  package  source  name  may  be
                     prepended  to  the package path to resolve the ambiguity. A full git URL may
                     also be used to refer to a package that does not belong to  a  source.  E.g.
                     for a package source called "zeek" that has a package named "foo" located in
                     either "alice/zkg.index" or "alice/bro-pkg.index", the following names work:
                     "foo", "alice/foo", "zeek/alice/foo".

   pin
       Pinned packages are ignored by the upgrade command.

          usage: zkg pin [-h] package [package ...]

       Positional arguments:

              package
                     The  name(s)  of  package(s)  to  operate  on.   The package may be named in
                     several ways.  If the package is  part  of  a  package  source,  it  may  be
                     referred  to  by the base name of the package (last component of git URL) or
                     its path within the package source. If two  packages  in  different  package
                     sources  have  conflicting  paths,  then  the  package  source  name  may be
                     prepended to the package path to resolve the ambiguity. A full git  URL  may
                     also  be  used  to refer to a package that does not belong to a source. E.g.
                     for a package source called "zeek" that has a package named "foo" located in
                     either "alice/zkg.index" or "alice/bro-pkg.index", the following names work:
                     "foo", "alice/foo", "zeek/alice/foo".

   unpin
       Packages that are not pinned are automatically upgraded by the upgrade command

          usage: zkg unpin [-h] package [package ...]

       Positional arguments:

              package
                     The name(s) of package(s) to operate  on.   The  package  may  be  named  in
                     several  ways.   If  the  package  is  part  of  a package source, it may be
                     referred to by the base name of the package (last component of git  URL)  or
                     its  path  within  the  package source. If two packages in different package
                     sources have  conflicting  paths,  then  the  package  source  name  may  be
                     prepended  to  the package path to resolve the ambiguity. A full git URL may
                     also be used to refer to a package that does not belong to  a  source.  E.g.
                     for a package source called "zeek" that has a package named "foo" located in
                     either "alice/zkg.index" or "alice/bro-pkg.index", the following names work:
                     "foo", "alice/foo", "zeek/alice/foo".

   list
       Outputs a list of packages that match a given category.

          usage: zkg list [-h] [--nodesc]
                          [{all,installed,not_installed,loaded,unloaded,outdated}]

       Positional arguments:

              category
                     Package category used to filter listing.

                     Possible choices: all, installed, not_installed, loaded, unloaded, outdated

       Options:

              --nodesc=False
                     Do not display description text, just the package name(s).

   search
       Perform  a substring search on package names and metadata tags.  Surround search text with
       slashes to indicate it is a regular expression (e.g. /text/).

          usage: zkg search [-h] search_text [search_text ...]

       Positional arguments:

              search_text
                     The text(s) or pattern(s) to look for.

   info
       Shows detailed information/metadata for  given  packages.  If  the  package  is  currently
       installed, additional information about the status of it is displayed.  E.g. the installed
       version or whether it is currently marked as "pinned" or "loaded."

          usage: zkg info [-h] [--version VERSION] [--nolocal] [--json]
                          [--jsonpretty SPACES] [--allvers]
                          package [package ...]

       Positional arguments:

              package
                     The name(s) of package(s) to operate  on.   The  package  may  be  named  in
                     several  ways.   If  the  package  is  part  of  a package source, it may be
                     referred to by the base name of the package (last component of git  URL)  or
                     its  path  within  the  package source. If two packages in different package
                     sources have  conflicting  paths,  then  the  package  source  name  may  be
                     prepended  to  the package path to resolve the ambiguity. A full git URL may
                     also be used to refer to a package that does not belong to  a  source.  E.g.
                     for a package source called "zeek" that has a package named "foo" located in
                     either "alice/zkg.index" or "alice/bro-pkg.index", the following names work:
                     "foo",  "alice/foo", "zeek/alice/foo". If a single name is given and matches
                     one of the same categories as the "list" command, then it  is  automatically
                     expanded to be the names of all packages which match the given category.

       Options:

              --version
                     The version of the package metadata to inspect.  A version tag, branch name,
                     or commit hash and only one package at a time may be given when  using  this
                     flag.   If  unspecified,  the  behavior  depends  on  whether the package is
                     currently installed.  If installed, the metadata will  be  pulled  from  the
                     installed  version.  If not installed, the latest version tag is used, or if
                     a package has no version tags, the "master" branch is used.

              --nolocal=False
                     Do not read information from locally installed packages. Instead  read  info
                     from remote GitHub.

              --json=False
                     Output package information as JSON.

              --jsonpretty
                     Optional number of spaces to indent for pretty-printed JSON output.

              --allvers=False
                     When outputting package information as JSON, show metadata for all versions.
                     This option can be slow since remote repositories  may  be  cloned  multiple
                     times.  Also,  installed  packages will show metadata only for the installed
                     version unless the --nolocal  option is given.

   config
       The default output of this command is a valid package manager config file that corresponds
       to the one currently being used, but also with any defaulted field values filled in.  This
       command also allows for only the value of a specific field to be output  if  the  name  of
       that field is given as an argument to the command.

          usage: zkg config [-h]
                            [{all,sources,user_vars,state_dir,script_dir,plugin_dir,zeek_dist,bro_dist}]

       Positional arguments:

              config_param
                     Name of a specific config file field to output.

                     Possible   choices:   all,   sources,   user_vars,   state_dir,  script_dir,
                     plugin_dir, zeek_dist, bro_dist

   autoconfig
       The output of this command is a valid package manager config file  that  is  generated  by
       using  the  zeek-config  script  that  is  installed along with Zeek.  It is the suggested
       configuration to use  for  most  Zeek  installations.   For  this  command  to  work,  the
       zeek-config (or bro-config) script must be in PATH.

          usage: zkg autoconfig [-h]

   env
       This  command  returns shell commands that, when executed, will correctly set ZEEKPATH and
       ZEEK_PLUGIN_PATH (also BROPATH  and  BRO_PLUGIN_PATH  for  legacy  compatibility)  to  use
       scripts  and  plugins  from packages installed by the package manager. For this command to
       function properly, either have the zeek-config script (installed by zeek) in PATH, or have
       the  ZEEKPATH  and ZEEK_PLUGIN_PATH (or BROPATH and BRO_PLUGIN_PATH) environment variables
       already set so this command can append package-specific paths to them.

          usage: zkg env [-h]

CONFIG FILE

       The zkg command-line tool uses an INI-format config file to allow users to customize their
       Package  Sources,  Package installation paths, Zeek executable/source paths, and other zkg
       options.

       See the default/example config file below for explanations of the  available  options  and
       how to customize them:

          # This is an example config file for zkg to explain what
          # settings are possible as well as their default values.
          # The order of precedence for how zkg finds/reads config files:
          #
          # (1) zkg --configfile=/path/to/custom/config
          # (2) the ZKG_CONFIG_FILE environment variable
          # (3) a config file located at $HOME/.zkg/config
          # (4) if none of the above exist, then zkg uses builtin/default
          #     values for all settings shown below

          [sources]

          # The default package source repository from which zkg fetches
          # packages.  The default source may be removed, changed, or
          # additional sources may be added as long as they use a unique key
          # and a value that is a valid git URL.
          zeek = https://github.com/zeek/packages

          [paths]

          # Directory where source repositories are cloned, packages are
          # installed, and other package manager state information is
          # maintained.  If left blank, this defaults to $HOME/.zkg
          state_dir =

          # The directory where package scripts are copied upon installation.
          # A subdirectory named "packages" is always created within the
          # specified path and the package manager will copy the directory
          # specified by the "script_dir" option of each package's zkg.meta
          # (or legacy bro-pkg.meta) file there.
          # If left blank, this defaults to <state_dir>/script_dir
          # A typical path to set here is <zeek_install_prefix>/share/zeek/site
          # If you decide to change this location after having already
          # installed packages, zkg will automatically relocate them
          # the next time you run any zkg command.
          script_dir =

          # The directory where package plugins are copied upon installation.
          # A subdirectory named "packages" is always created within the
          # specified path and the package manager will copy the directory
          # specified by the "plugin_dir" option of each package's zkg.meta
          # (or legacy bro-pkg.meta) file there.
          # If left blank, this defaults to <state_dir>/plugin_dir
          # A typical path to set here is <zeek_install_prefix>/lib/zeek/plugins
          # If you decide to change this location after having already
          # installed packages, zkg will automatically relocate them
          # the next time you run any zkg command.
          plugin_dir =

          # The directory containing Zeek distribution source code.  This is only
          # needed when installing packages that contain Zeek plugins that are
          # not pre-built.  The legacy name of this option is "bro_dist".
          zeek_dist =

          [user_vars]

          # For any key in this section that is matched for value interpolation
          # in a package's zkg.meta (or legacy bro-pkg.meta) file, the corresponding
          # value is substituted during execution of the package's `build_command`.
          # This section is typically automatically populated with the
          # the answers supplied during package installation prompts
          # and, as a convenience feature, used to recall the last-used settings
          # during subsequent operations (e.g. upgrades) on the same package.

AUTHOR

       The Zeek Project

COPYRIGHT

       2019, The Zeek Project