Provided by: debhelper_13.18ubuntu2_all bug

NAME

       dh - debhelper command sequencer

SYNOPSIS

       dh sequence [--with addon[,addon ...]] [--list] [debhelper options]

DESCRIPTION

       dh runs a sequence of debhelper commands. The supported sequences correspond to the
       targets of a debian/rules file: build-arch, build-indep, build, clean, install-indep,
       install-arch, install, binary-arch, binary-indep, and binary.

OVERRIDE AND HOOK TARGETS

       A debian/rules file using dh can override the command that is run at any step in a
       sequence, by defining an override target.  It is also possible to inject a command before
       or after any step without affecting the step itself.

   Injecting commands before or after a step
       Note: This feature requires debhelper 12.8 or later plus the package must use
       compatibility mode 10 or later.

       To inject commands before dh_command, add a target named execute_before_dh_command to the
       rules files.  Similarly, if you want to inject commands after dh_command, add the target
       execute_after_dh_command.  Both targets can be used for the same dh_command and also even
       if the command is overridden (as described in "Overriding a command" below).

       When these targets are defined, dh will call the targets respectively before or after it
       would invoke dh_command (or its override target).

   Overriding a command
       To override dh_command, add a target named override_dh_command to the rules file. When it
       would normally run dh_command, dh will instead call that target. The override target can
       then run the command with additional options, or run entirely different commands instead.
       See examples below.

   Architecture dependent/independent override and hook targets
       The override and hook targets can also be defined to run only when building architecture
       dependent or architecture independent packages. Use targets with names like
       override_dh_command-arch and execute_after_dh_command-indep.

       This feature is available since debhelper 8.9.7 (for override targets) and 12.8 (for hook
       targets).

   Completely empty targets
       As a special optimization, dh will skip a target if it is completely empty and does not
       depend on any other target.  This is mostly useful for override targets, where the command
       will simply be skipped without the overhead of invoking a dummy target.

       Note that the target has to be completely empty for this to work:

            # Skip dh_bar - the good and optimized way
            # Some rationale for skipping dh_bar goes here
            override_dh_bar:

            # Skip dh_foo - the slow way
            override_dh_foo:
               # Some rationale for skipping dh_foo goes here
               # (these comments causes a dummy target to be run)

   Verifying targets are picked up by dh
       As of debhelper 13.10, you can use dh_assistant(1) to see which override and hook targets
       will be seen by dh.  Here is an example run of dh_assistant(1) along with its output:

           $ dh_assistant detect-hook-targets
           {
              "commands-not-in-path": [
                 "dh_foo"
              ],
              "hook-targets": [
                 {
                    "command": "dh_strip_nondeterminism",
                    "is-empty": true,
                    "package-section-param": null,
                    "target-name": "override_dh_strip_nondeterminism"
                 },
                 {
                    "command": "dh_foo",
                    "is-empty": false,
                    "package-section-param": "-a",
                    "target-name": "override_dh_foo-arch"
                 }
              ]
           }

       The commands-not-in-path is useful for spotting mistakes in the hook target names.  A non-
       empty value implies one of more hook targets are related to a command that is either not
       installed or no command with that name exists at all.  It is generally worth double
       checking these.

       Additionally, the is-empty attribute for each hook target can be used for seeing whether a
       hook target triggers the "Completely empty targets" optimization.

       If you are interested in the other attributes, please read the dh_assistant(1) for the
       details.

       Verifying targets are picked up by dh (when debhelper is older than 13.10)

       On older versions of debhelper, you have to use dh with --no-act.  You can use the
       following command as an example:

           $ dh binary --no-act | grep dh_install | head -n5
                dh_installdirs
                dh_install
                debian/rules execute_after_dh_install
                dh_installdocs
                dh_installchangelogs

       The debian/rules execute_after_dh_install in the output, which signals that dh registered
       a execute_after_dh_install target and would run it directly after dh_install(1).

       Note that "Completely empty targets" will be omitted in the listing above.  This makes it
       a bit harder to spot as you are looking for the omission of a command name.  But
       otherwise, the principle remains the same.

   Caveats with hook targets and makefile conditionals
       If you choose to wrap a hook target in makefile conditionals, please be aware that dh
       computes all the hook targets a head of time and caches the result for that run.
       Furthermore, the conditionals will be invoked again when dh calls the hook target later
       and will assume the answer did not change.

       The parsing and caching often happens before dh knows whether it will build arch:any (-a)
       or/and arch:all (-i) packages, which can produce confusing results - especially when
       dh_listpackages(1) is part of the conditional.

       Most of the problems can be avoided by making the hook target unconditional and then have
       the "body" be partially or completely conditional.  As an example:

             # SIMPLE: It is well-defined what happens.  The hook target
             # is always considered.  The "maybe run this" bit is
             # conditional but dh_foo is definitely skipped.
             #
             # Note: The conditional is evaluated "twice" where its
             # influences what happens.  Once when dh check which hook
             # targets exist and once when the override_dh_foo hook target
             # is run.  If *either* times return false, "maybe run this"
             # is skipped.
             override_dh_foo:
             ifneq (...)
                 maybe run this
             endif

             # SIMPLE: This is also well-defined.  The hook target is always
             # run and dh_bar is skipped.  The "maybe run this" bit is
             # conditional as one might expect.
             #
             # Note: The conditional is still evaluated multiple times (in
             # different process each time).  However, only the evaluation
             # that happens when the hook target is run influences what
             # happens.
             override_dh_bar:
                 : # Dummy command to force the target to always be run
             ifneq (...)
                 maybe run this
             endif

             # COMPLICATED: This case can be non-trivial and have sharp edges.
             # Use at your own peril if dh_listpackages in the conditional.
             #
             # Here, either dh_baz is run normally OR "maybe run this" is run
             # instead.
             #
             # And it gets even more complicated to reason about if dh needs to
             # recurse into debian/rules because you have an "explicit"
             # standard target (e.g. a "build-arch:" target separate from "%:").
             ifneq (...)
             override_dh_baz:
                 maybe run this
             endif

       These recipes are also relevant for conditional dependency targets, which are often seen
       in a variant of the following example:

             COND_TASKS =
             ifneq (...)
             COND_TASKS += maybe-run-this
             endif
             ...

             maybe-run-this:
                 ...

             # SIMPLE: It is well-defined what happens.  Either the
             # $(COND_TASKS) are skipped or run.
             #
             # Note: The conditional is evaluated "twice" where its
             # influences what happens.  Once when dh check which hook
             # targets exist and once when the override_dh_foo hook target
             # is run.  If *either* times return false, $(COND_TASKS)
             # is skipped.
             override_dh_foo: $(COND_TASKS)

             # SIMPLE: This is also well-defined.  The hook target is always
             # run and dh_bar is skipped.  The $(COND_TASKS) bit is
             # conditional as one might expect.
             #
             # Note: The conditional is still evaluated multiple times (in
             # different process each time).  However, only the evaluation
             # that happens when the hook target is run influences what
             # happens.
             override_dh_bar: $(COND_TASKS)
                 : # Dummy command to force the target to always be run

             # COMPLICATED: This case can be non-trivial and have sharp edges.
             # Use at your own peril if dh_listpackages in the conditional.
             #
             ifneq (...)
             override_dh_baz: $(COND_TASKS)
             endif

       When in doubt, pick the relevant SIMPLE case in the examples above that match your need.

OPTIONS

       --with addon[,addon ...]
           Add the debhelper commands specified by the given addon to appropriate places in the
           sequence of commands that is run. This option can be repeated more than once, or
           multiple addons can be listed, separated by commas.  This is used when there is a
           third-party package that provides debhelper commands. See the PROGRAMMING file for
           documentation about the sequence addon interface.

           A Build-Depends relation on the package dh-sequence-addon implies a --with addon. This
           avoids the need for an explicit --with in debian/rules that only duplicates what is
           already declared via the build dependencies in debian/control.  The relation can
           (since 12.5) be made optional via e.g.  build-profiles.  This enables you to easily
           disable an addon that is only useful with certain profiles (e.g. to facilitate
           bootstrapping).

           Since debhelper 12.5, addons can also be activated in indep-only mode (via Build-
           Depends-Indep) or arch-only mode (via Build-Depends-Arch). Such addons are only active
           in the particular sequence (e.g. binary-indep) which simplifies dependency management
           for cross-builds.

           Please note that addons activated via Build-Depends-Indep or Build-Depends-Arch are
           subject to additional limitations to ensure the result is deterministic even when the
           addon is unavailable (e.g. during clean).  This implies that some addons are
           incompatible with these restrictions and can only be used via Build-Depends (or
           manually via debian/rules).  Currently, such addons can only add commands to
           sequences.

       --without addon
           The inverse of --with, disables using the given addon. This option can be repeated
           more than once, or multiple addons to disable can be listed, separated by commas.

       --list, -l
           List all available addons.

           When called only with this option, dh can be called from any directory (i.e. it does
           not need access to files from a source package).

       --no-act
           Prints commands that would run for a given sequence, but does not run them.

           Note that dh normally skips running commands that it knows will do nothing.  With
           --no-act, the full list of commands in a sequence is printed.

       Other options passed to dh are passed on to each command it runs. This can be used to set
       an option like -v or -X or -N, as well as for more specialised options.

EXAMPLES

       To see what commands are included in a sequence, without actually doing anything:

               dh binary-arch --no-act

       This is a very simple rules file, for packages where the default sequences of commands
       work with no additional options.

               #!/usr/bin/make -f
               %:
                       dh $@

       Often you'll want to pass an option to a specific debhelper command. The easy way to do
       with is by adding an override target for that command.

               #!/usr/bin/make -f
               %:
                       dh $@

               override_dh_strip:
                       dh_strip -Xfoo

               override_dh_auto_configure:
                       dh_auto_configure -- --with-foo --disable-bar

       Sometimes the automated dh_auto_configure(1) and dh_auto_build(1) can't guess what to do
       for a strange package. Here's how to avoid running either and instead run your own
       commands.

               #!/usr/bin/make -f
               %:
                       dh $@

               override_dh_auto_configure:
                       ./mondoconfig

               override_dh_auto_build:
                       make universe-explode-in-delight

       Another common case is wanting to do something manually before or after a particular
       debhelper command is run.

               #!/usr/bin/make -f
               %:
                       dh $@

               # Example assumes debhelper/12.8 and compat 10+
               execute_after_dh_fixperms:
                       chmod 4755 debian/foo/usr/bin/foo

       If you are on an older debhelper or compatibility level, the above example would have to
       be written as.

               #!/usr/bin/make -f
               %:
                       dh $@

               # Older debhelper versions or using compat 9 or lower.
               override_dh_fixperms:
                       dh_fixperms
                       chmod 4755 debian/foo/usr/bin/foo

       Python tools are not run by dh by default, due to the continual change in that area. Here
       is how to use dh_python2.

               #!/usr/bin/make -f
               %:
                       dh $@ --with python2

       Here is how to force use of Perl's Module::Build build system, which can be necessary if
       debhelper wrongly detects that the package uses MakeMaker.

               #!/usr/bin/make -f
               %:
                       dh $@ --buildsystem=perl_build

       Here is an example of overriding where the dh_auto_* commands find the package's source,
       for a package where the source is located in a subdirectory.

               #!/usr/bin/make -f
               %:
                       dh $@ --sourcedirectory=src

       And here is an example of how to tell the dh_auto_* commands to build in a subdirectory,
       which will be removed on clean.

               #!/usr/bin/make -f
               %:
                       dh $@ --builddirectory=build

       If your package can be built in parallel, please either use compat 10 or pass --parallel
       to dh. Then dpkg-buildpackage -j will work.

               #!/usr/bin/make -f
               %:
                       dh $@ --parallel

       If your package cannot be built reliably while using multiple threads, please pass
       --no-parallel to dh (or the relevant dh_auto_* command):

               #!/usr/bin/make -f
               %:
                       dh $@ --no-parallel

       Here is a way to prevent dh from running several commands that you don't want it to run,
       by defining empty override targets for each command.

               #!/usr/bin/make -f
               %:
                       dh $@

               # Commands not to run:
               override_dh_auto_test override_dh_compress override_dh_fixperms:

       A long build process for a separate documentation package can be separated out using
       architecture independent overrides.  These will be skipped when running build-arch and
       binary-arch sequences.

               #!/usr/bin/make -f
               %:
                       dh $@

               override_dh_auto_build-indep:
                       $(MAKE) -C docs

               # No tests needed for docs
               override_dh_auto_test-indep:

               override_dh_auto_install-indep:
                       $(MAKE) -C docs install

       Adding to the example above, suppose you need to chmod a file, but only when building the
       architecture dependent package, as it's not present when building only documentation.

               # Example assumes debhelper/12.8 and compat 10+
               execute_after_dh_fixperms-arch:
                       chmod 4755 debian/foo/usr/bin/foo

DEBHELPER PROVIDED DH ADDONS

       The primary purpose of dh addons is to provide easy integration with third-party provided
       features for debhelper.  However, debhelper itself also provide a few sequences that can
       be useful in some cases.  These are documented in this list:

       build-stamp
           A special addon for controlling whether dh (in compat 10 or later) will create stamp
           files to tell whether the build target has been run successfully. See "INTERNALS" for
           more details.

           This addon is active by default but can disabled by using dh $@ --without build-stamp

       dwz (obsolete)
           Adds dh_dwz(1) to the sequence in compat level 11 or below.  Obsolete in compat 12 or
           later.

       elf-tools
           This addon adds tools related to ELF files to the sequence such as dh_strip(1) and
           dh_shlibdeps(1)

           This addon is conditionally active by default for architecture specific packages -
           that is, it is skipped for arch:all packages.  In the special case where you need
           these tools to work on arch:all packages, you can use --with elf-tools to activate it
           unconditionally.

       installinitramfs (obsolete)
           Adds dh_installinitramfs(1) to the sequence in compat level 11 or below.  Obsolete in
           compat 12 or later.

       root-sequence (internal)
           This is reserved for internal usage.

       single-binary
           A special-purpose addon that makes debhelper run in "single binary" mode.

           When active, it will pass --destdir=debian/package/ to dh_auto_install(1).  This makes
           every file "installed" by the upstream build system part of the (only) binary package
           by default without having to use other helpers such as dh_install(1).

           The addon will refuse to activate when the source package lists 2 or more binary
           packages in debian/control as a precaution.

           Before compat 15. this behaviour was the default when there was only a single binary
           package listed in debian/control.  In compat 15 and later, this addon must explicitly
           be activated for this feature to work.

           The rationale for requiring this as an explicit choice is that if it is implicit then
           debhelper will silently change behaviour on adding a new binary package.  This has
           caused many RC bugs when maintainers renamed a binary and added transitional packages
           with the intention of supporting seamless upgrades.  The result would often be two
           empty binary packages that were uploaded to archive with users frustrated as their
           "upgrade" removed their programs.

       systemd (obsolete)
           Adds dh_systemd_enable(1) and dh_systemd_start(1) to the sequence in compat level 10
           or below.  Obsolete in compat 11 or later.

INTERNALS

       If you're curious about dh's internals, here's how it works under the hood.

       In compat 10 (or later), dh creates a stamp file debian/debhelper-build-stamp after the
       build step(s) are complete to avoid re-running them.  It is possible to avoid the stamp
       file by passing --without=build-stamp to dh.  This makes "no clean" builds behave more
       like what some people expect at the expense of possibly running the build and test twice
       (the second time as root or under fakeroot(1)).

       Inside an override target, dh_* commands will create a log file
       debian/package.debhelper.log to keep track of which packages the command(s) have been run
       for.  These log files are then removed once the override target is complete.

       In compat 9 or earlier, each debhelper command will record when it's successfully run in
       debian/package.debhelper.log. (Which dh_clean deletes.) So dh can tell which commands have
       already been run, for which packages, and skip running those commands again.

       Each time dh is run (in compat 9 or earlier), it examines the log, and finds the last
       logged command that is in the specified sequence. It then continues with the next command
       in the sequence.

       A sequence can also run dependent targets in debian/rules.  For example, the "binary"
       sequence runs the "install" target.

       dh uses the DH_INTERNAL_OPTIONS environment variable to pass information through to
       debhelper commands that are run inside override targets. The contents (and indeed,
       existence) of this environment variable, as the name might suggest, is subject to change
       at any time.

       Commands in the build-indep, install-indep and binary-indep sequences are passed the -i
       option to ensure they only work on architecture independent packages, and commands in the
       build-arch, install-arch and binary-arch sequences are passed the -a option to ensure they
       only work on architecture dependent packages.

SEE ALSO

       debhelper(7)

       This program is a part of debhelper.

AUTHOR

       Joey Hess <joeyh@debian.org>