oracular (1) dgit.1.gz

Provided by: dgit_11.10_all bug

NAME

       dgit - git integration with the Debian archive

SYNOPSIS

       dgit [dgit-opts] clone [dgit-opts] package [suite] [./dir|/dir]
       dgit [dgit-opts] fetch|pull [dgit-opts] [suite]
       dgit [dgit-opts] build|sbuild|build-source [build-opts]
       dgit [dgit-opts] pbuilder|cowbuilder [debbuildopts]
       dgit [dgit-opts] push|push-built [dgit-opts] [suite]
       dgit [dgit-opts] rpush|rpush-built build-host:build-dir [push args...]
       dgit [dgit-opts] action ...

DESCRIPTION

       dgit allows you to treat the Debian archive as if it were a git repository.  Conversely, it allows Debian
       to publish the source of its packages as git branches, in a format which is directly useable by  ordinary
       people.

       This is the command line reference.  Please read the tutorial(s):

       dgit-user(7)             for users: edit, build and share packages
       dgit-nmu-simple(7)       for DDs: do a straightforward NMU
       dgit-maint-native(7)     for maintainers of Debian-native packages
       dgit-maint-debrebase(7)  for maintainers: a pure-git rebasish workflow
       dgit-maint-merge(7)      for maintainers: a pure-git merging workflow
       dgit-maint-gbp(7)        for maintainers already using git-buildpackage
       dgit-sponsorship(7)      for sponsors and sponsored contributors
       dgit-downstream-dsc(7)   setting up dgit push for a new distro

       See  dgit(7)  for detailed information about the data model, common problems likely to arise with certain
       kinds of package, etc.

OPERATIONS

       dgit clone package [suite] [./dir|/dir]
              Consults the archive and dgit-repos to construct the git view of history for package in suite (sid
              by  default)  in  a new directory (named ./package by default); also, downloads any necessary orig
              tarballs.

              The suite's git tip  is  left  on  the  local  branch  dgit/suite  ready  for  work,  and  on  the
              corresponding  dgit  remote  tracking  branch.   The  origin remote will be set up to point to the
              package's dgit-repos tree for the distro to which suite belongs.

              suite may be a combination of several underlying suites in  the  form  mainsuite,subsuite...;  see
              COMBINED SUITES in dgit(7).

              For your convenience, the vcs-git remote will be set up from the package's Vcs-Git field, if there
              is one - but note that in the general case the history found there may be  different  to  or  even
              disjoint from dgit's view.  (See also dgit update-vcs-git.)

       dgit fetch [suite]
              Consults  the  archive  and  git-repos to update the git view of history for a specific suite (and
              downloads   any   necessary   orig   tarballs),   and   updates   the   remote   tracking   branch
              remotes/dgit/dgit/suite.   If  the current branch is dgit/suite then dgit fetch defaults to suite;
              otherwise it parses debian/changelog and uses the suite specified there.  suite may be a  combined
              suite, as for clone.

       dgit pull [suite]
              Does   dgit   fetch,   and   then   merges   the   new   head   of   the  remote  tracking  branch
              remotes/dgit/dgit/suite into the current branch.

       dgit checkout suite
              Checks out the local branch dgit/suite.

              If the branch does not exist, dgit checkout creates it, and sets it up the same way as dgit  clone
              would.   In that case, if the archive remote tracking branch does not exist, dgit checkout will do
              a dgit fetch first.

              NB: dgit checkout will only do a fetch if it has to.  If you already have the  suite  branch,  and
              want to merge your branch with updates from the archive, use dgit pull.

              dgit  checkout will normally need to access the archive server, to canonicalise the provided suite
              name.  The exception is if you specify the canonical name, and the  branch  (or  tracking  branch)
              already exists.

       dgit build ...
              Runs  dpkg-buildpackage  with  some  suitable  options.  Options and arguments after build will be
              passed on to dpkg-buildpackage.  It is not necessary to use dgit build when using dgit; it  is  OK
              to  use  any  approach which ensures that the generated source package corresponds to the relevant
              git commit.

              Tagging, signing and actually uploading should be left to dgit push.

              dgit's build operations access the network, to get the -v option right.  See -v, below.

       dgit build-source ...
              Builds the source package, and a changes file for a prospective source-only  upload,  using  dpkg-
              source.  The output is left in package_version.dsc and package_version_source.changes.

              Tagging, signing and actually uploading should be left to dgit push-source, or dgit push.

       dgit clean
              Cleans the current working tree (according to the --clean= option in force).

       dgit update-vcs-git [suite|.] [--] [git fetch options]
       dgit update-vcs-git [suite|.] -
              Sets up, or updates the url of, the vcs-git remote, and (unless - was specified) runs git fetch on
              it.

              By default, the Vcs-Git field of the .dsc from Debian sid is used, as that is probably most up  to
              date.   Another  suite  may  be  specified,  or  .   to  indicate  that  the  Vcs-Git of the cwd's
              debian/control should be used instead.

       dgit help
              Print a usage summary.

       dgit sbuild ...
              Constructs the source package, uses sbuild to do a binary build, and uses  mergechanges  to  merge
              the  source  and  binary  changes  files.  Options and arguments after sbuild will be passed on to
              sbuild.  The output is left in package_version_multi.changes.

              Tagging, signing and actually uploading should be left to dgit push.

       dgit pbuilder [debbuildopts]
              Constructs the source package, uses pbuilder to do a binary build, and uses mergechanges to  merge
              the source and binary changes files.  The output is left in package_version_multi.changes.

              You should ensure that your dgit --build-products-dir setting matches your pbuilder --buildresult.

              The  debbuildopts  are  passed  to  pbuilder using its --debbuildopts option.  If you want to pass
              other options to pbuilder, use the --pbuilder: dgit option as described below (remember that  dgit
              options should appear between dgit and pbuilder).

              You  should  ensure that in your pbuilderrc you do not have the setting SOURCE_ONLY_CHANGES=yes as
              this may cause trouble.

       dgit cowbuilder [debbuildopts]
              Like dgit pbuilder, but uses cowbuilder instead of pbuilder.

       dgit gbp-build ...
              Runs git-buildpackage with some suitable options.  Options and arguments after gbp-build  will  be
              passed on to git-buildpackage.

              By  default  this  uses  --quilt=gbp,  so  HEAD  should  be a git-buildpackage style branch, not a
              patches-applied branch.

              Tagging, signing and actually uploading should be left to dgit push.

       dgit push-source [suite]
              Does an `upload': sends the current HEAD to dgit-repos (as git commits), and to the archive (as  a
              source package, built by this command).

              This  is  the  usual  way  to  upload to Debian.  It is like saying "update the source code in the
              archive to match my git HEAD, and let the autobuilders do the rest."

              In more detail: dgit push-source builds a source package from HEAD.  It then pushes  the  HEAD  to
              the  suite's dgit-repos branch, adjusts the .changes to include any .origs which the archive lacks
              and exclude .origs which the archive has (so -sa and -sd are not needed  when  building  for  dgit
              push),  makes a signed git tag, edits the .dsc to contain the dgit metadata field, runs debsign to
              sign the upload (.dsc and .changes), pushes the signed tag, and finally uses dput  to  upload  the
              .changes to the archive.

              dgit  push  always  uses  the package, suite and version specified in the debian/changelog and the
              .dsc, which must agree.  If the command line specifies a suite then that must match too.

              When used on a git-debrebase branch, dgit calls git-debrebase to prepare  the  branch  for  source
              package upload and push.

              With  -C,  dgit  push-source  performs  a  dgit  push-built,  additionally ensuring that no binary
              packages are uploaded.

       dgit push-built [suite]
              Does an `upload' of a previously built package, possibly including binaries.   Sends  the  current
              HEAD  to  dgit-repos (as git commits); and, sends the previously built source package and binaries
              to the archive.

              The package must already have been built ready for upload, with the .dsc and .changes left in  the
              parent directory.  It is normally best to do the build with dgit too (e.g. with dgit sbuild): some
              existing build tools pass unhelpful options to dpkg-source et al by default, which can  result  in
              the built source package not being identical to the git tree.

              dgit  will  check  that the .dsc corresponds exactly to the current HEAD, ensuring that all users,
              whether of the dgit git view, or of the traditional archive, see the same source package.

       dgit rpush-source|rpush-built build-host:src-dir [push args...]
              Pushes the contents of the specified directory on a remote machine.  This  is  like  running  dgit
              push  on build-host with src-dir as the current directory; however, signing operations are done on
              the invoking host.  This allows you to do a push when the system which has the  source  code  (and
              any built binaries) has no access to the key:

              1.   Clone on build host (dgit clone)
              2.   Edit code on build host (edit, git commit)
              3.   Build package on build host (dgit build)
              4.   Test package on build host or elsewhere (dpkg -i, test)
              5.   Upload by invoking dgit rpush on host with your GPG key.

              However,  the  build-host must be able to ssh to the dgit repos.  If this is not already the case,
              you must organise it separately, for example by the use of ssh agent forwarding.

              The remaining arguments are treated just as dgit push-source or dgit push-built would handle them.

              build-host and build-dir can be passed as separate arguments; this is assumed to be  the  case  if
              the first argument contains no : (except perhaps one in [ ], to support IPv6 address literals).

              You  will  need  similar  enough  versions of dgit on the build-host and the invocation host.  The
              build-host needs gnupg installed, with your public key in its keyring (but not your  private  key,
              obviously).

       dgit push|rpush ...
              Configurable  aliases  for dgit push-built and dgit rpush-built.  These aliases will in the future
              change to mean dgit push-source and dgit rpush-source, and therefore  they  currently  generate  a
              warning.

              The behaviour of dgit push is controlled by the dgit.default.push-subcmd git config option:

              source       runs dgit push-source             future default
              built        and runs dgit push-built
              built,warn   warns, and runs dgit push-built   current default
              reject       fails

              For  dgit  rpush,  the  behaviour  is  controlled  by  dgit.default.rpush-subcmd,  falling back to
              dgit.default.push-subcmd if that is not set.  Because dgit rpush is not typically  run  in  a  git
              working tree, only global git config options (and -c command line options) are relevant.

              These  settings  can  safely  be  passed to older dgit (via -c); the value built will be supported
              indefinitely.  This should be used in scripts that need to work with both  old  versions  of  dgit
              (that don't have push-built) and new versions (where push-source is the default).

       dgit setup-new-tree
              Configure  the  current  working  tree the way that dgit clone would have set it up.  Like running
              dgit setup-useremail, setup-mergechangelogs and setup-gitattributes (but only does each  thing  if
              dgit  is  configured  to  do it automatically).  You can use these in any git repository, not just
              ones used with the other dgit operations.  Does not run update-vcs-git (as  that  requires  Debian
              packaging information).

       dgit setup-useremail
              Set the working tree's user.name and user.email from the distro-specific dgit configuration (dgit-
              distro.distro.user-name and .user-email), or DEBFULLNAME or DEBEMAIL.

       dgit setup-mergechangelogs
              Configures a git merge helper for the file debian/changelog which uses dpkg-mergechangelogs.

       dgit setup-gitattributes
              Set up the working tree's .git/info/attributes to disable  all  transforming  attributes  for  all
              files.   This is done by defining a macro attribute, dgit-defuse-attrs, and applying it to *.  For
              why, see GITATTRIBUTES in dgit(7).  Note that only  attributes  affecting  the  working  tree  are
              suppressed.  git-archive may remain exciting.

              If  there is an existing macro attribute line [attr]dgit-defuse-attrs in .git/info/attributes, but
              it is insufficient, because it was made by an earlier version of dgit and git has since introduced
              new transforming attributes, this modifies the macro to disable the newer transformations.

              (If  there is already a macro attribute line [attr]dgit-defuse-attrs in .git/info/attributes which
              does what dgit requires (whatever files it effects), this operation does  nothing  further.   This
              fact  can be used to defeat or partially defeat dgit setup-gitattributes and hence dgit setup-new-
              tree.)

       dgit quilt-fixup
              `3.0 (quilt)' format source packages need changes  representing  not  only  in-tree  but  also  as
              patches  in debian/patches.  dgit quilt-fixup checks whether this has been done; if not, dgit will
              make appropriate patches in debian/patches and also commit the resulting changes to git.

              This is normally done automatically by dgit build and dgit push.

              dgit will try to turn each relevant commit in your git history  into  a  new  quilt  patch.   dgit
              cannot  convert  nontrivial  merges, or certain other kinds of more exotic history.  If dgit can't
              find a suitable linearisation of your history, by default it will fail, but  you  can  ask  it  to
              generate a single squashed patch instead.

              When  used  with a git-debrebase branch, dgit will ask git-debrebase to prepare patches.  However,
              dgit can make patches in some situations where git-debrebase fails, so  dgit  quilt-fixup  can  be
              useful  in its own right.  To always use dgit's own patch generator instead of git-debrebase make-
              patches, pass --git-debrebase=true to dgit.

              See FORMAT 3.0 (QUILT) in dgit(7).

       dgit import-dsc [sub-options] ../path/to/.dsc [+|..]branch
              Import a Debian-format source package, specified by its .dsc, into git, the way dgit  fetch  would
              do.

              This  does  about  half  the  work  of dgit fetch: it will convert the .dsc into a new, orphan git
              branch.  Since dgit has no access to a corresponding source package archive or  knowledge  of  the
              history  it  does  not  consider  whether  this  version  is  newer  than  any  previous import or
              corresponding git branches; and it therefore does not make a pseudomerge to bind the  import  into
              any existing git history.

              Because  a  .dsc  can  contain  a  Dgit  field naming a git commit (which you might not have), and
              specifying where to find that commit (and any history rewrite table), import-dsc might need online
              access.   If  this  is a problem (or dgit's efforts to find the commit fail), consider --no-chase-
              dsc-distro or --force-import-dsc-with-dgit-field.

              There is only one sub-option:

              --require-valid-signature causes dgit to insist that the signature on the .dsc is valid (using the
              same  criteria  as dpkg-source -x).  Otherwise, dgit tries to verify the signature but the outcome
              is reported only as messages to stderr.

              If branch is prefixed with + then if it already exists, it will be simply overwritten,  no  matter
              its existing contents.  If branch is prefixed with ..  then if it already exists and dgit actually
              imports the dsc (rather than simply reading the git commit out of the Dgit field), dgit will  make
              a pseudomerge so that the result is necessarily fast forward from the existing branch.  Otherwise,
              if branch already exists, dgit will stop with an error message.

              If branch does not start with refs/, refs/heads/ is prepended.

       dgit version
              Prints version information and exits.

       dgit clone-dgit-repos-server destdir
              Tries to fetch a copy of the source code for the dgit-repos-server, as actually being used on  the
              dgit git server, as a git tree.

       dgit print-dgit-repos-server-source-url
              Prints  the url used by dgit clone-dgit-repos-server.  This is hopefully suitable for use as a git
              remote url.  It may not be useable in a browser.

       dgit print-dpkg-source-ignores
              Prints the -i and -I arguments which must be passed to dpkg-souce to cause it to  exclude  exactly
              the  .git  directory  and nothing else.  The separate arguments are unquoted, separated by spaces,
              and do not contain spaces.

       dgit print-unapplied-treeish
              Constructs a tree-ish approximating the patches-unapplied state of your 3.0 (quilt)  package,  and
              prints the git object name to stdout.  This requires appropriate .orig tarballs.  This tree object
              is identical to your .origs as regards upstream files.  The contents of the debian subdirectory is
              not  interesting and should not be inspected; except that debian/patches will be identical to your
              HEAD.

              To make this operate off-line, the access configuration key which is used to determine the  build-
              products-dir  is  the uncanonicalised version of the suite name from the changelog, or (of course)
              dgit.default.build-products-dir.  See ACCESS CONFIGURATION, below.

              This function is primarily provided for the benefit of git-debrebase.

OPTIONS

       -kkeyid
              Use keyid for signing the tag and the upload.  The default comes from the  distro's  keyid  config
              setting   (see   CONFIGURATION,   below),   or   failing   that,  the  uploader  trailer  line  in
              debian/changelog.

       --no-sign
              does not sign tags or uploads (meaningful only with push).

       -ppackage
              Specifies that we should process source package package rather than looking in  debian/control  or
              debian/changelog.  Valid with dgit fetch and dgit pull, only.

       --clean=git | -wg
              Use  git  clean  -xdf  to  clean  the  working tree, rather than running the package's rules clean
              target.

              This will delete all files which are not tracked by git.  (Including any files you forgot  to  git
              add.)

              --clean=...   options  other  than  dpkg-source  are  useful  when  the  package's clean target is
              troublesome, or to avoid needing the build-dependencies.

              dgit will only actually clean the tree if it needs to  (because  it  needs  to  build  the  source
              package  or  binaries  from  your  working  tree).  Otherwise it will just check that there are no
              untracked unignored files.  See --clean=git[-ff],always, below.

       --clean=git-ff | -wgf
              Use git clean -xdff to clean the working tree.  Like git  clean  -xdf  but  it  also  removes  any
              subdirectories containing different git trees (which only unusual packages are likely to create).

       --clean=git[-ff],always | -wga | -wgfa
              Like  --clean=git,  but  always  does  the  clean and not just a check, deleting any untracked un-
              ignored files.

       --clean=check | --clean=check,ignores | -wc | -wci
              Merely check that the tree is clean (does not contain uncommitted files).   Avoids  running  rules
              clean, and can avoid needing the build-dependencies.

              With  ,ignores  or  -wci, untracked files covered by .gitignore are tolerated, so only files which
              show up as ?  in git status (ie, ones you maybe forgot to git add) are treated as a problem.

       --clean=none | -wn
              Do not clean the tree, nor check that it is clean.  Avoids running  rules  clean,  and  can  avoid
              needing  the build-dependencies.  If there are files which are not in git, or if the build creates
              such files, a subsequent dgit push will fail.

       --clean=dpkg-source[-d] | -wd | -wdd
              Use dpkg-buildpackage to do the clean, so that  the  source  package  is  cleaned  by  dpkg-source
              running the package's clean target.  --clean=dpkg-source is the default.

              Without the extra d, requires the package's build dependencies.

              With  ...-d  or  -wdd,  the  build-dependencies  are  not  checked  (due  to  passing  -d to dpkg-
              buildpackage), which violates policy, but may work in practice.

              The rules clean target will only be run if it is needed: when dgit is going  to  build  source  or
              binary  packages  from your working tree, rather than from your git branch (for example because of
              --include-dirty or because the binary package build uses your working tree).

              In all cases, dgit will check that there are (after rules clean, if applicable) no  untracked  un-
              ignored files, in case these are files you forgot to git add.  (Except that this check is not done
              for a `3.0 (quilt)' package when dgit has to apply patches, dirtily, to  the  working  tree.)   If
              your  package  does not have a good .gitignore you will probably need --clean=dpkg-source,no-check
              aka -wdn.

       --clean=dpkg-source[-d],no-check | -wdn | -wddn
              Like --clean=dpkg-source, but does not care about untracked un-ignored files.

       --clean=dpkg-source[-d],all-check | -wda | -wdda
              Like --clean=dpkg-source, but fails even on ignored untracked files.  This could perhaps  be  used
              to detect bugs in your rules clean target.

       -N | --new
              The  package  is,  or may be, new in this suite.  Without this, dgit will refuse to push.  Needing
              --new is not unusual; for example, it is frequently needed for uploading to Debian experimental.

              Note that dgit may be unable to access the git history for an entirely new package which  has  not
              been accepted by the archive.  So for an entirely new package you need to properly coordinate with
              anyone else who might upload.

       --include-dirty
              Do not complain if the working tree does not match your git HEAD, and when building,  include  the
              changes  from  your  working  tree.   This  can be useful with build, if you plan to commit later.
              (dgit push will still ensure that the .dsc you upload and the git tree you push are identical,  so
              this option won't make broken pushes.)

              Note  that  this  does not prevent dgit from cleaning your tree, so if the changes in your working
              tree are in  the  form  of  untracked  files,  those  might  still  be  deleted,  especially  with
              --clean=git.   If  you  want  to include untracked files in the build, you can use --clean=none or
              --clean=dpkg-source[-d] in addition to --include-dirty.  Note that this combination  can  fail  if
              the untracked files are under debian/patches/.

       --ignore-dirty
              Deprecated alias for --include-dirty.

       --collab-non-dgit
              Make  dgit  push, behave more suitably for collaborating (using shared git history) with git-using
              co-developers who aren't using dgit.

              With this option, dgit won't mind that the git history you're using isn't necessarily fast forward
              from  the  dgit  view;  instead, it will rely on the changelog to prevent accidentally overwriting
              changes.

              And, the synthetic commits needed to make the dgit git history fast forward will  appear  only  on
              the  dgit  git  server, and local dgit suite branches, not on your own main branch.  So they won't
              end up in the maintainer-visible history, when you push your own branch to make a merge request.

              This is equivalent to --split-view=always --trust-changelog.

       --trust-changelog | --overwrite=previous-version
              Declare that your HEAD really does contain all the (wanted) changes from all  versions  listed  in
              its  changelog;  or, all (wanted) changes from previous-version.  This promise is needed when your
              git branch is not a descendant of the version  in  the  archive  according  to  the  git  revision
              history.

              It  is  safer  to  specify  --trust-changelog,  than --overwrite=previous-version, and usually the
              latter is not needed.

              --trust-changelog is useful if you are the maintainer, and you have incorporated NMU changes  into
              your  own git workflow in a way that doesn't make your branch a fast forward from the NMU.  It can
              also be useful when there was an upload made without dgit since the most recent upload  made  with
              dgit.

              It  is  also  usually  necessary the first time a package is pushed with dgit push to a particular
              suite.  See dgit-maint-*(7).

              With --trust-changelog dgit will check that the version  in  the  archive  is  mentioned  in  your
              debian/changelog.   (This  will  avoid losing changes, unless someone committed to git a finalised
              changelog entry, and then made later changes to that version.)

              With --overwrite=previous-version that version ought to be the version currently in  the  archive,
              and it will be unconditionally overwritten, regardless of what's in the changelog.

              These  options  will,  if  necessary,  make a pseudo-merge (that is, something that looks like the
              result of git merge -s ours) to stitch the archive's version into your own git  history,  so  that
              your push is a fast forward from the archive.

              (In  quilt mode gbp, dpm, unpatched or baredebian*, implying a split between the dgit view and the
              maintainer view, the pseudo-merge will appear only in the dgit view;  --split-view=always  can  be
              used to force that behaviour, e.g. in other quilt modes.)

              --overwrite without a version number is an obsolete way of specifying --trust-changelog.

       --delayed=days
              Upload to a DELAYED queue.

              WARNING: If the maintainer responds by cancelling your upload from the queue, and does not make an
              upload of their own, this will not rewind the git branch on the dgit git server.  Other dgit users
              will  then  see  your push (with a warning message from dgit) even though the maintainer wanted to
              abolish it.  Such users might unwittingly reintroduce your changes.

              If this situation arises, someone should make a suitable dgit push to update the contents of dgit-
              repos to a version without the controversial changes.

       --no-chase-dsc-distro
              Tells  dgit  not  to  look  online  for additional git repositories containing information about a
              particular .dsc being imported.  Chasing is the default.

              For most operations (such as fetch and pull), disabling chasing means dgit will  access  only  the
              git server for the distro you are directly working with, even if the .dsc was copied verbatim from
              another distro.  For import-dsc, disabling chasing means dgit will work completely offline.

              Disabling chasing can be hazardous: if the .dsc names a git commit which  has  been  rewritten  by
              those  in  charge of the distro, this option may prevent that rewrite from being effective.  Also,
              it can mean that dgit fails to find necessary git commits.

       --save-dgit-view=branch|ref
              Specifies that when split view is in operation, and dgit calculates (or looks up in its  cache)  a
              dgit  view  corresponding  to  your HEAD, the dgit view will be left in ref.  The specified ref is
              unconditionally overwritten, so don't specify a branch you want to keep.

              This option is effective only with the following operations: quilt-fixup; push; all  builds.   And
              it is only effective when split view is actually in operation.

              If ref does not start with refs/ it is taken to be a branch - i.e. refs/heads/ is prepended.

              --dgit-view-save is a deprecated alias for --save-dgit-view.

       --deliberately-something
              Declare  that  you are deliberately doing something.  This can be used to override safety catches,
              including safety catches which relate to distro-specific policies.  The use of  --deliberately  is
              declared  and published in the signed tags generated for you by dgit, so that the archive software
              can give effect to your intent, and for the  benefit  of  humans  looking  at  the  history.   The
              meanings of somethings understood in the context of Debian are discussed below:

       --deliberately-not-fast-forward
              Declare  that  you  are  deliberately rewriting history.  This could be because your branch is not
              fast forward from the dgit server history, or not fast  forward  from  a  locally-synthesised  dsc
              import.

              When  pushing  to  Debian,  use  this only when you are making a renewed upload of an entirely new
              source package whose previous version was not accepted for release from NEW  because  of  problems
              with copyright or redistributibility; or, exceptionally, for the very first upload with dgit.

              When  split  view is in operation, this also prevents the construction by dgit of a pseudomerge to
              make the dgit view fast forwarding.  Normally only  one  of  --trust-changelog  (which  creates  a
              suitable  pseudomerge)  and  --deliberately-not-fast-forward (which suppresses the pseudomerge and
              the fast forward checks) should be needed; --trust-changelog is usually better.

       --deliberately-include-questionable-history
              Declare that you are deliberately including, in the git history  of  your  current  push,  history
              which  contains  a previously-submitted version of this package which was not approved (or has not
              yet been approved) by the ftpmasters.   When  pushing  to  Debian,  only  use  this  option  after
              verifying  that:  none of the rejected-from-NEW (or never-accepted) versions in the git history of
              your current push, were rejected by ftpmaster for copyright or redistributability reasons.

       --deliberately-fresh-repo
              Declare that you are deliberately rewriting history and want to throw away the existing repo.  Not
              relevant when pushing to Debian, as the Debian server will do this automatically when necessary.

       --quilt=linear
              With format `3.0 (quilt)', insist on a linear patch stack: one new patch for each relevant commit.
              If such a stack cannot be generated, fail.  This is the default for Debian.

              HEAD should be a series of plain commits (not touching debian/patches/), and pseudomerges, with as
              ancestor a patches-applied branch.

       --quilt=try-linear
              With  format  `3.0  (quilt)',  prefer  a  linear  patch stack (as with --quilt=linear) but if that
              doesn't seem possible, try to generate a single squashed patch for all the changes made in git (as
              with --quilt=smash).  This is not a good idea for an NMU in Debian.

       --quilt=smash
              With  format  `3.0  (quilt)',  assume patches-applied (as obtained from dgit clone) and generate a
              single additional patch for all the changes made in git.  This is not a good idea for  an  NMU  in
              Debian.

              (If  HEAD has any in-tree patches already, they must apply cleanly.  This will be the case for any
              trees produced by dgit fetch or clone; if you do not change the upstream version nor make  changes
              in debian/patches, it will remain true.)

       --quilt=single
              With  format  `3.0  (quilt)', assume patches-applied (as obtained from dgit clone), delete all the
              existing patches, and then generate a single patch for all the changes made in git.  This is not a
              good idea for an NMU in Debian.

              Use  this  instead  of the single-debian-patch dpkg-source format option.  That dpkg-source option
              cannot handle certain changes to the tree that dpkg-source otherwise permits, and in some cases it
              can generate strange source packages that dpkg-source appears to accept but which become corrupted
              when people later try to modify them.

       --quilt=nofix
              With format `3.0 (quilt)', assume patches-applied (as obtained from dgit clone),  and  check  that
              the  patch  metadata  is  up  to date.  If it isn't, fail; you must then fix the metadata yourself
              somehow before pushing.  (NB that dpkg-source --commit will not work because  the  dgit  git  tree
              does not have a .pc directory.)

       --quilt=nocheck | --no-quilt-fixup
              With  format `3.0 (quilt)', assume that the tree is patches-applied (as obtained from dgit clone),
              and assume that the patch metadata is up to date.  If you use this option and the  patch  metadata
              is out of date, dgit push will fail.

       --[quilt=]gbp | --[quilt=]dpm | --quilt=unapplied | --[quilt=]baredebian[+git|+tarball]
              Tell  dgit  that  you are using a nearly-dgit-compatible git branch, aka a maintainer view, and do
              not want your branch changed by dgit.

              These quilt modes are known as splitting quilt modes.  See --split-view, below.

              --gbp (short for --quilt=gbp) is for use with git-buildpackage.  Your HEAD is  expected  to  be  a
              patches-unapplied  git  branch, except that it might contain changes to upstream .gitignore files.
              This is the default for dgit gbp-build.

              --dpm (short for --quilt=dpm) is for use with git-dpm.  Your HEAD is expected  to  be  a  patches-
              applied git branch, except that it might contain changes to upstream .gitignore files.

              --quilt=unapplied specifies that your HEAD is a patches-unapplied git branch (and that any changes
              to upstream .gitignore files are represented as patches in debian/patches).

              --quilt=baredebian (or its alias --quilt=baredebian+git) specifies that your HEAD contains only  a
              debian/  directory,  with  any changes to upstream files represented as patches in debian/patches.
              The upstream source must be available in git, by  default,  in  a  suitably  named  git  tag;  see
              --upstream-commitish.  In this mode, dgit cannot check that all edited upstream files are properly
              represented as patches: dgit relies on debian/patches being correct.

              --quilt=baredebian+tarball is like --quilt=baredebian, but is used when there  is  no  appropriate
              upstream  git  history.  To construct the dgit view, dgit will import your orig tarballs' contents
              into git.  In this mode, dgit cannot check that the upstream parts of your  upload  correspond  to
              what  you  intend:  dgit  relies  on  the right orig tarball(s) existing, and debian/patches being
              correct.

              With --quilt=gbp|dpm|unapplied|baredebian*, dgit push (or precursors like quilt-fixup  and  build)
              will  automatically  generate a conversion of your git branch into the right form.  dgit push will
              push the dgit-compatible form (the dgit view) to the dgit git  server.   The  dgit  view  will  be
              visible  to  you  in  the dgit remote tracking branches, but your own branch will not be modified.
              dgit  push  will  create  a  tag  debian/version  for  the  maintainer  view,  and  the  dgit  tag
              archive/debian/version  for the dgit view.  dgit quilt-fixup will merely do some checks, and cache
              the maintainer view.

              If you have a branch like this it is essential to specify the appropriate --quilt=  option!   This
              is because it is not always possible to tell: a patches-unapplied git branch of a package with one
              patch, for example, looks very like a patches-applied branch where the user has used git revert to
              undo  the  patch,  expecting  to  actually  revert  it.  However, if you fail to specify the right
              --quilt option, and you aren't too lucky, dgit will notice the problem and  stop,  with  a  useful
              hint.

       -ddistro | --distro=distro
              Specifies  that  the suite to be operated on is part of distro distro.  This overrides the default
              value found from the git config option dgit-suite.suite.distro.  The only  effect  is  that  other
              configuration   variables  (used  for  accessing  the  archive  and  dgit-repos)  used  are  dgit-
              distro.distro.*.

              If your suite is part of a distro that dgit already knows about, you can use this option  to  make
              dgit  work  even if your dgit doesn't know about the suite.  For example, specifying -ddebian will
              work when the suite is an unknown suite in the Debian archive.

              To define a new distro it is necessary to define methods and URLs  for  fetching  (and,  for  dgit
              push,  altering)  a variety of information both in the archive and in dgit-repos.  How to set this
              up is not yet documented.

       --split-view=auto|always|never
              Controls whether dgit operates a split view, separating your own  branch  (as  Debian  maintainer)
              from that shown to users of dgit clone and dgit fetch.

              When  split  view  is  in  operation dgit will not make or merge any commits onto your own branch.
              Specifically, only the dgit view will contain  dgit's  pseudomerges,  which  bring  into  the  git
              history previous uploads made with dgit push, and any commits in debian/patches required to make a
              correct `3.0 (quilt)' source package.

              auto is the default, and splits the view only when needed: i.e., when you are working with a  `3.0
              (quilt)' source package and a splitting quilt mode: --[quilt=]gbp, dpm, unpatched or baredebian*.

              always splits the view regardless of the source format and the quilt mode.

              never will cause dgit to fail if split view is needed.

              When  split  view  is  in operation, the dgit view is visible in your local git clone, but only in
              refs specific to dgit: notably remotes/dgit/dgit/suite and archive/distro/version.

              Note that split view does not affect dgit fetch, and is not compatible with dgit pull.

       -Cchangesfile
              Specifies the .changes file which is to be uploaded.  By default dgit  push  looks  for  a  single
              .changes  file  in  the  parent  directory whose filename suggests it is for the right package and
              version.

              If the specified changesfile pathname contains slashes, the directory part is  also  used  as  the
              value  for  --build-products-dir;  otherwise,  the  changes file is expected in that directory (by
              default, in ..).

       --upstream-commitish=upstream
              For use with --quilt=baredebian only.  Specifies the commit containing the upstream source.   This
              commit  must be identical to your .orig tarball.  The default is to look for one of the git tags U
              vU upstream/U (in that order), where U is the upstream version.

       --rm-old-changes
              When doing a build, delete any changes files matching package_version_*.changes  before  starting.
              This  ensures that dgit push (and dgit sbuild) will be able to unambiguously identify the relevant
              changes files from the most recent build, even if there have been previous builds  with  different
              tools or options.  The default is not to remove, but --no-rm-old-changes can be used to override a
              previous --rm-old-changes or the .rm-old-changes configuration setting.

              Note that dgit push-source will always find the right .changes, regardless of this option.

       --build-products-dir=directory
              Specifies where to find and create tarballs, binary packages, source packages, .changes files, and
              so on.

              By default, dgit uses the parent directory (..).

              Changing  this  setting  may  necessitate  moving  .orig  tarballs  to the new directory, so it is
              probably best to use the dgit.default.build-products-dir configuration setting (see CONFIGURATION,
              below) which this command line option overrides).

       --no-rm-on-error
              Do not delete the destination directory if clone fails.

       --dep14tag
              Generates  a  DEP-14  tag  (eg  debian/version) as well as a dgit tag (eg archive/debian/version).
              This is the default.

       --no-dep14tag
              Do not generate a DEP-14 tag, except when split view is in operation.

       --always-dep14tag
              Obsolete alias for --dep14tag, retained for compatibility.

       -D     Prints debugging information to stderr.  Repeating the option produces more output (currently,  up
              to -DDDD is meaningfully different).

       --keep-playground|--no--keep-playground
              Controls  whether  to  retain the "playground" working directory .git/dgit/unpack even on success,
              for examination and debugging.  The default is --no-keep-playground which  deletes  the  directory
              after a successful execution.

       -cname=value
              Specifies  a git configuration option, to be used for this run.  dgit itself is also controlled by
              git configuration options.

       -vversion|_ | --since-version=version|_
              Specifies the  -vversion  option  to  pass  to  dpkg-genchanges,  during  builds.   Changes  (from
              debian/changelog)  since this version will be included in the built changes file, and hence in the
              upload.  If this option is not specified, dgit will query the archive and use the  latest  version
              uploaded to the intended suite.

              Specifying  _  inhibits  this,  so  that  no -v option will be passed to dpkg-genchanges (and as a
              result, only the last stanza from debian/changelog will be used for the build and upload).

       -mmaintaineraddress
              Passed to dpkg-genchanges (eventually).

       --ch:option
              Specifies a single additional option to pass, eventually, to dpkg-genchanges.

              Options which are safe to pass include -C (and also -si -sa -sd although  these  should  never  be
              necessary with Debian since dgit automatically calculates whether .origs need to be uploaded.)

              For other options the caveat below applies.

       --curl:option | --dput:option |...
              Specifies  a  single  additional  option  to  pass  to  curl,  dput,  debsign,  dpkg-source, dpkg-
              buildpackage, dpkg-genchanges, sbuild, pbuilder, cowbuilder, ssh,  dgit,  git-debrebase,  apt-get,
              apt-cache, gbp-pq, gbp-build, or mergechanges.  Can be repeated as necessary.

              Use  of this ability should not normally be necessary.  It is provided for working around bugs, or
              other unusual situations.  If you use these options, you may violate dgit's assumptions about  the
              behaviour of its subprograms and cause lossage.

              For  dpkg-buildpackage, dpkg-genchanges, mergechanges and sbuild, the option applies only when the
              program is invoked directly by dgit.  Usually, for passing options to dpkg-genchanges, you  should
              use --ch:option.

              Specifying --git is not effective for some lower-level read-only git operations performed by dgit,
              and also not when git is invoked by another program run by dgit.

              See notes below regarding ssh and dgit.

              NB that --gpg:option is not supported (because debsign does not have that facility).  But  see  -k
              and the keyid distro config setting.

       --curl!:option | --dput!:option |...
              Specifies  an  option  to  remove  from  the  command  line  for  a program called by dgit, as for
              --program:option (and the same caveats apply).

              Any options or arguments exactly identical to option are removed.  (It is not an  error  if  there
              were none.)

              This  can  only be used to delete options which are always passed by default by dgit, or to undo a
              previous --program:option.  It cannot be used to override  option(s)  dynamically  decided  on  by
              dgit.

       --curl=program | --dput=program |...
              Specifies  alternative  programs  to  use  instead  of  curl,  dput,  debsign,  dpkg-source, dpkg-
              buildpackage, dpkg-genchanges, sbuild, pbuilder, cowbuilder, gpg, ssh, dgit,  git-debrebase,  apt-
              get, apt-cache, git, gbp-pq, gbp-build, or mergechanges.

              For  dpkg-buildpackage,  dpkg-genchanges,  mergechanges  and  sbuild,  this  applies only when the
              program is invoked directly by dgit.

              For dgit, specifies the command to run on the remote host when dgit rpush needs to invoke a remote
              copy  of itself.  (dgit also reinvokes itself as the EDITOR for dpkg-source --commit; this is done
              using argv[0], and is not affected by --dgit=).

              gbp-build's value is used instead of gbp build or git-buildpackage.  (The default  is  the  latter
              unless  the  former  exists  on  PATH.)  gbp-pq's value is used instead of gbp pq.  In both cases,
              unusually, the specified value is split on whitespace to  produce  a  command  and  possibly  some
              options and/or arguments.

              For  pbuilder  and  cowbuilder,  the  defaults  are  sudo  -E  pbuilder  and  sudo  -E  cowbuilder
              respectively.  Like with gbp-build and gbp pq, the specified value is split on whitespace.

              For ssh, the default value is taken from the DGIT_SSH or GIT_SSH  environment  variables,  if  set
              (see  below).   And, for ssh, when accessing the archive and dgit-repos, this command line setting
              is overridden by the git config variables dgit-distro.distro.ssh and .dgit.default.ssh (which  can
              in  turn  be  overridden  with -c).  Also, when dgit is using git to access dgit-repos, only git's
              idea of what ssh to use (eg, GIT_SSH) is relevant.

       --existing-package=package
              dgit push needs to canonicalise the suite name.  Sometimes, dgit lacks a way to ask the archive to
              do  this  without  knowing  the  name  of  an existing package.  Without --new we can just use the
              package we are trying to push.  But with --new that will not work, so we guess  dpkg  or  use  the
              value  of  this  option.   This option is not needed with the default mechanisms for accessing the
              archive.

       -h|--help
              Print a usage summary.

       --initiator-tempdir=directory
              dgit rpush uses a temporary directory on the invoking (signing) host.  This option causes dgit  to
              use  directory  instead.   Furthermore,  the  specified  directory  will  be  emptied, removed and
              recreated before dgit starts, rather than removed after dgit finishes.   The  directory  specified
              must be an absolute pathname.

       --dry-run | -n
              Go through the motions, fetching all information needed, but do not actually update the output(s).
              For push, dgit does the required checks and leaves the new .dsc in a temporary file, but does  not
              sign, tag, push or upload.

              This is not a very good simulation.  It can easily go wrong in ways that a for-real push wouldn't.

       --damp-run | -L
              Go  through many more of the motions: do everything that doesn't involve either signing things, or
              making changes on the public servers.

              Using this will make unsigned tags, and possibly other local changes, that will get in the way  of
              a for-real push.  So be prepared to burn the version number you're using.

       --force-something
              Instructs  dgit to try to proceed despite detecting what it thinks is going to be a fatal problem.
              This is probably not going to work.  These options are provided as an escape hatch, in  case  dgit
              is confused.  (They might also be useful for testing error cases.)

       --force-import-dsc-with-dgit-field
              Tell dgit import-dsc to treat a .dsc with a Dgit field like one without it.  The result is a fresh
              import, discarding the git history that the person who pushed that .dsc was working with.

       --force-reusing-version
              Carry on even though this involves reusing a version number of a previous push or upload.   It  is
              normally best to give different versions different numbers.  Some servers (including, usually, the
              Debian server) will reject attempts to reuse or replace already-pushed versions.

       --force-uploading-binaries
              Carry on and upload binaries even though dgit thinks your distro does not permit that.

       --force-uploading-source-only
              Carry on and do a source-only upload, without any binaries, even though dgit  thinks  your  distro
              does not permit that, or does not permit that in this situation.

       --force-unrepresentable
              Carry on even if dgit thinks that your git tree contains changes (relative to your .orig tarballs)
              which dpkg-source is not able to represent.  Your build or push will probably fail later.

       --force-changes-origs-exactly
              Use the set of .origs specified in your .changes, exactly,  without  regard  to  what  is  in  the
              archive already.  The archive may well reject your upload.

       --force-unsupported-source-format
              Carry  on despite dgit not understanding your source package format.  dgit will probably mishandle
              it.

       --force-dsc-changes-mismatch
              Do not check whether .dsc and .changes match.  The archive will probably reject your upload.

       --force-import-gitapply-absurd | --force-import-gitapply-no-absurd
              Force on or off the use of the  absurd  git-apply  emulation  when  running  gbp  pq  import  when
              importing a package from a .dsc.  See Debian bug #841867.

       --force-push-tainted
              Go  ahead  and try to push even tainted git objects hat the server says it is going to reject, but
              without declaring any --deliberately.  This option is provided for testing or strange  situations,
              and  is  not  the way to override the taint check: using it will probably just fail later, burning
              the version number you are using.  Use the appropriate --deliberately option instead.

       --for-push
              Override the dgit-distro.distro.readonly configuration setting, to specify that we have read/write
              access and should use the corresponding git and achieve access approach even if the operation is a
              read-only one.

CONFIGURATION

       dgit can be configured via the git config system.  You may set keys with git-config  (either  in  system-
       global or per-tree configuration), or provide -ckey=value on the dgit command line.

       Settings likely to be useful for an end user include:

       dgit.default.build-products-dir
              Specifies  where  to  find  the  built  files  to  be  uploaded,  when --build-products-dir is not
              specified.  The default is the parent directory (..).

       dgit-suite.suite.distro distro
              Specifies the distro for a suite.  dgit keys off the  suite  name  (which  appears  in  changelogs
              etc.),  and  uses  that  to determine the distro which is involved.  The config used is thereafter
              that for the distro.

              suite may be a glob pattern.

       dgit.default.distro distro
              The default distro for an unknown suite.

              This is only used if no /usr/share/distro-info/somedistro.csv mentions the specified suite.

       dgit.default.default-suite suite
              The default suite (eg for clone).

       dgit.default.*
              for each dgit-distro.distro.*, the default value used if there is no distro-specific setting.

       dgit-distro.distro.clean-mode
              One of the values for the command line --clean= option; used if --clean is not specified.

       dgit-distro.distro.clean-mode-newer
              Like .clean-mode, but ignored if the value is unknown to  this  version  of  dgit.   Setting  both
              .clean-mode  and  .clean-mode-newer  is  useful  to  provide  a  single git config compatible with
              different dgit versions.

       dgit-distro.distro.quilt-mode
              One of the values for the command line --quilt= option; used if --quilt is not specified.

       dgit-distro.distro.split-view

       dgit-distro.distro.rm-old-changes
              Boolean, used if neither --rm-old-changes nor --no-rm-old-changes is specified.   The  default  is
              not to remove.

       dgit-distro.distro.readonly auto|a | true|t|y|1 | false|f|n|0
              Whether you have push access to the distro.  For Debian, it is OK to use auto, which uses readonly
              mode if you are not pushing right now; but, setting this to false will avoid relying on the mirror
              of the dgit git repository server.

       dgit-distro.distro.keyid
              See also -k.

       dgit-distro.distro.mirror url

       dgit-distro.distro.username
              Not relevant for Debian.

       dgit-distro.distro.upload-host
              Might be useful if you have an intermediate queue server.

       dgit-distro.distro.user-name dgit-distro.distro.user-email
              Values  to  configure  for  user.name  and  user.email  in  new  git trees.  If not specified, the
              DEBFULLNAME and DEBEMAIL environment variables are  used,  respectively.   Only  used  if  .setup-
              usermail is not disabled.

       dgit-distro.distro.setup-useremail
              Whether  to  set  user.name  and  user.email in new git trees.  True by default.  Ignored for dgit
              setup-useremail, which does it anyway.

       dgit-distro.distro.setup-mergechangelogs
              Whether to set up a merge driver which uses dpkg-mergechangelogs for  debian/changelog.   True  by
              default.  Ignored for dgit setup-mergechangelogs, which does it anyway.

       dgit-distro.distro.setup-gitattributes
              Whether   to   configure   .git/info/attributes   to   suppress   checkin/checkout   file  content
              transformations in new git trees.  True by default.  Ignored for dgit  setup-gitattributes,  which
              does it anyway.

       dgit-distro.distro.cmd-cmd
              Program to use instead of cmd.  Works like --cmd=... .

       dgit-distro.distro.opts-cmd
              Extra options to pass to cmd.  Works like --cmd:... .  To pass several options, configure multiple
              values in git config (with git config --add).  The options  for  dgit.default.opts-cmd  and  dgit-
              distro.distro/push.opts-cmd are all used, followed by options from dgit's command line.

ACCESS CONFIGURATION

       There  are  many  other  settings  which specify how a particular distro's services (archive and git) are
       provided.  These should not normally be adjusted, but are documented for the benefit of distros who  wish
       to adopt dgit.

       dgit-distro.distro.nominal-distro
              Shown in git tags, Dgit fields, and so on.

       dgit-distro.distro.alias-canon
              Used for all access configuration lookup.

       dgit-distro.distro/push.*
              If  set,  overrides  corresponding  non  /push  config  when  readonly=false,  or when pushing and
              readonly=auto.

       dgit-distro.distro.git-url

       dgit-distro.distro.git-url[-suffix]

       dgit-distro.distro.git-proto

       dgit-distro.distro.git-path

       dgit-distro.distro.git-check true|false|url|ssh-cmd

       dgit-distro.distro.git-check-suffix

       dgit-distro.distro.policy-query-supported-ssh false|unknown|true

       dgit-distro.distro.diverts.divert new-distro|/distro-suffix

       dgit-distro.distro.git-create ssh-cmd|true

       dgit-distro.distro.archive-query    ftpmasterapi:    |     madison:distro     |     dummycat:/path      |
       sshpsql:user@host:dbname | aptget:

       dgit-distro.distro.archive-query-(url|tls-key|curl-ca-args)

       dgit-distro.distro.madison-distro

       dgit-distro.distro.archive-query-default-component

       dgit-distro.distro.dep14tag want|no[|always]

       dgit-distro.distro.ssh

       dgit-distro.distro.sshpsql-dbname

       dgit-distro.distro.(git|sshpsql)-(user|host|user-force)

       dgit-distro.distro.backports-quirk

       dgit-distro.distro.rewrite-map-enable

       dgit-distro.distro.source-only-uploads ok|always|never|not-wholly-new

       dgit.default.old-dsc-distro

       dgit.dsc-url-proto-ok.protocol

       dgit.dsc-url-proto-ok.bad-syntax

       dgit.default.dsc-url-proto-ok

       dgit.default.push-subcmd source|built|warn,built
              Controls the behaviour of dgit push.

       dgit.vcs-git.suites suite[;...]

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       DGIT_SSH, GIT_SSH
              specify an alternative default program (and perhaps arguments) to use instead of ssh.  DGIT_SSH is
              consulted first and may contain arguments; if it contains any whitespace will  be  passed  to  the
              shell.   GIT_SSH  specifies just the program; no arguments can be specified, so dgit interprets it
              the same way as git does.  See also the --ssh= and --ssh: options.

       DEBEMAIL, DEBFULLNAME
              Default git user.email and user.name for new trees.  See dgit setup-new-tree.

       gpg, dpkg-..., debsign, git, [lib]curl, dput
              and other subprograms and modules used by dgit are  affected  by  various  environment  variables.
              Consult the documentation for those programs for details.

BUGS

       There  should  be  a  `dgit rebase-prep' command or some such to turn a fast-forwarding branch containing
       pseudo-merges back into a rebasing patch stack.  It might have to leave a note for a future dgit push.

       If the dgit push fails halfway through, it is not necessarily restartable and idempotent.   It  would  be
       good to check that the proposed signing key is available before starting work.

       dgit's  build  functions,  and dgit push, may make changes to your current HEAD.  Sadly this is necessary
       for packages in the `3.0 (quilt)' source format.  This is  ultimately  due  to  what  I  consider  design
       problems in quilt and dpkg-source.

       --dry-run  does  not  always work properly, as not doing some of the git fetches may result in subsequent
       actions being different.  Doing a non-dry-run dgit fetch first will help.  --damp-run is likely  to  work
       much better.

SEE ALSO

       dgit(7),   dgit-*(7),   curl(1),   dput(1),   debsign(1),   git-config(1),   git-buildpackage(1),   dpkg-
       buildpackage(1),
       https://browse.dgit.debian.org/