Provided by: dupload_2.9.7_all bug

NAME

       dupload - Debian package upload tool

SYNOPSIS

       dupload [options...] [changes-file|directory...]

DESCRIPTION

       dupload is a tool that enables people maintaining Debian packages to easily upload them to a Debian
       repository.

       dupload checks each non-option argument to find readable files or directories. It parses the files as
       .changes files, or tries to find such files in the given directories.

       dupload will warn if the name of the file does not end with .changes. Further processing is done changing
       into the directories of the changes files.

       dupload tests the available checksums and size for each file listed in the .changes file, and fails if it
       finds a mismatch. If all this goes well, dupload checks if there is an .upload file with the basename of
       the .changes file.  If the file to be uploaded is recorded to have already been uploaded to the specified
       host, it is skipped.

       After the list of files to upload is finished, dupload tries to connect to the server and upload. Each
       successfully uploaded file is recorded in the .upload log file.

       If all files of a package are processed, the .changes file is mailed to the announcement address
       specified in the configuration file.  If files with
        package.announce, package_UPSTREAMVER.announce, or
        package_UPSTREAMVER-DEBIANREV.announce exist, these files get prepended to the announcement. UPSTREAMVER
       and DEBIANREV are to be replaced with actual version numbers. For example, if your package is called
       foobar, has upstream version 3.14, and Debian revision 2:

       • If you only want the announcement to be made with only ONE upload, you name it foobar_3.14-2.announce.

       • If you want it to be made with every upload of a particular upstream version, name it
         foobar_3.14.announce.

       • If you want it made with every upload of a given package, name it foobar.announce.

   FTP login and password
       If no login (username) is defined in the configuration file, anonymous is used.  The password is derived
       from your login name and your hostname, which is common for anonymous FTP logins.  For anonymous logins
       only, you can provide the "password" in the configuration file.

       For logins other than anonymous, you are asked for the password.  For security reasons there is no way to
       supply it via the commandline or the environment.

   ftp / scp / rsync / copy
       The default transfer method is ftp.  Alternative methods are scp/SSH and rsync/SSH.  For scp and rsync,
       the default login is delegated to SSH and its own configuration.

       The scp/SSH method only works properly if no password is required (see ssh(1)).  When you use scp, it is
       recommended to set the "method" keyword to scpb, which will transfer all files in a batch.

       The copy method works by simply copying the files to another directory in the local filesystem.

       If you are using an upload queue, use ftp because it is fast.  If you are using an authenticated host,
       always use scp or rsync via SSH, because ftp transmits the password in clear text.

OPTIONS

       -d, --debug [level]
                   Enable more verbose output from the FTP module.

       -f, --force Upload regardless of the transfers logged as already completed.

       -k, --keep  Keep going, skipping packages whose checksums does not match.

       -c, --configfile filename
                   Read the file filename as a configuration file, in addition to the global configuration file.

       --no        Dry run, no files are changed, no upload is attempted, only tell what we would do.

       --nomail    Suppress announcement for this run. You can send it later by just calling dupload again w/o
                   this option. Note that this option is by default implied for all hosts with the dinstall_runs
                   option set to 1.

       --mailonly  Acts as if --no has been specified, but sends the announcements, unconditionally.

       --noarchive Adds an X-No-Archive: yes header so that the announcement will not be archived. You can use
                   the per-host archive option in the configuration file.

       -p, --print Print the "database" as read from the config files and exit.  If a host is specified via
                   option --to, only this host's entry is displayed.

       -q, --quiet Be quiet, i.e., suppress normal output and progress bars.

       -t, --to nickname
                   Upload to nickname'd host.  nickname is the key for doing lookups in the config file. You can
                   use the default_host configuration option to specify a host without --to.

       --help      Prints the program usage message and exits.

       -V, --Version
                   Prints version and exits.

FILES

   Configuration
       The configuration files are searched as follows (and read in this order, overriding each other):

               /etc/dupload.conf
               ~/.dupload.conf

   Other
       Various Debian package files are used by dupload: .dsc, .changes, .deb, .orig.tar.*, .debian.tar.*,
       .diff.*

       dupload itself writes the log file package_version-debian.upload, and the additional announcement files
       package.announce, package_upstreamver.announce, or package_upstreamver-debianrev.announce.

   Announcement addresses
       By default, the announcement addresses are unset because dinstall sends mails instead.

BUGS

       dupload is tested on Debian systems only. It should not require too much effort to make it run under
       others systems, though.

SEE ALSO

       dupload.conf(5)