Provided by: lintian_2.118.0ubuntu1.1_all
NAME
lintian - Static analysis tool for Debian packages
SYNOPSIS
lintian [action] [options] [packages] ...
DESCRIPTION
Lintian dissects Debian packages and reports bugs and policy violations. It contains automated checks for many aspects of Debian policy as well as some checks for common errors. There are two ways to specify binary, udeb or source packages for Lintian to process: by file name (the .deb file for a binary package or the .dsc file for a source package), or by naming a .changes file. If you specify a .changes file, Lintian will process all packages listed in that file. This is convenient when checking a new package before uploading it. If you specify packages to be checked or use the option --packages-from-file, the packages requested will be processed. Otherwise, if debian/changelog exists, it is parsed to determine the name of the .changes file to look for in the parent directory. See "CHECKING LAST BUILD" for more information.
OPTIONS
Actions of the lintian command: (Only one action can be specified per invocation) -c, --check Run all checks over the specified packages. This is the default action. -C chk1,chk2,..., --check-part chk1,chk2,... Run only the specified checks. You can either specify the name of the check script or the abbreviation. For details, see the "CHECKS" section below. -F, --ftp-master-rejects Run only the checks that issue tags that result in automatic rejects from the Debian upload queue. The list of such tags is refreshed with each Lintian release, so may be slightly out of date if it has changed recently. This is implemented via a profile and thus this option cannot be used together with --profile. -T tag1,tag2,..., --tags tag1,tag2,... Run only the checks that issue the requested tags. The tests for other tags within the check scripts will be run but the tags will not be issued. With this options all tags listed will be displayed regardless of the display settings. --tags-from-file filename Same functionality as --tags, but read the list of tags from a file. Blank lines and lines beginning with # are ignored. All other lines are taken to be tag names or comma-separated lists of tag names to (potentially) issue. With this options all tags listed will be displayed regardless of the display settings. -X chk1,chk2,..., --dont-check-part chk1,chk2,... Run all but the specified checks. You can either specify the name of the check script or the abbreviation. For details, see the "CHECKS" section below. General options: -h, --help Display usage information and exit. -q, --quiet Suppress all informational messages including override comments (normally shown with --show-overrides). This option is silently ignored if --debug is given. Otherwise, if both --verbose and --quiet is used, the last of these two options take effect. This option overrides the verbose and the quiet variable in the configuration file. In the configuration file, this option is enabled by using quiet variable. The verbose and quiet variables may not both appear in the config file. -v, --verbose Display verbose messages. If --debug is used this option is always enabled. Otherwise, if both --verbose and --quiet is used (and --debug is not used), the last of these two options take effect. This option overrides the quiet variable in the configuration file. In the configuration file, this option is enabled by using verbose variable. The verbose and quiet variables may not both appear in the config file. -V, --version Display lintian version number and exit. --print-version Print unadorned version number and exit. Behavior options for lintian. --color (auto|never|always|html) Whether to colorize tags in lintian output based on their visibility. The default is "auto" will use color only if the output is going to a terminal. "never" will never use color, "always" will always use color, and "html" will use HTML <span> tags with a color style attribute (instead of ANSI color escape sequences). This option overrides the color variable in the configuration file. --hyperlinks (on|off) Shows text-based hyperlinks to tag descriptions on lintian.debian.org on terminals that support it. The default is on for terminals that support it, unless the user selected '--color never'. This currently only works in GNOME Terminal. This option overrides the color variable in the configuration file. --default-display-level Reset the current display level to the default. Basically, this option behaves exactly like passing the following options to lintian: -L ">=warning" The primary use for this is to ensure that lintian's display level has been reset to the built-in default values. Notably, this can be used to override display settings earlier on the command-line or in the lintian configuration file. Further changes to the display level can be done after this option. Example: --default-display-level --display-info gives you the default display level plus informational ("I:") tags. --display-source X Only display tags from the source X (e.g. the Policy Manual or the Developer Reference). This option can be used multiple times to add additional sources. Example sources are "policy" or "devref" being the Policy Manual and the Developer Reference (respectively). The entire list of sources can be found in $LINTIAN_BASE/data/output/manual-references -E, --display-experimental, --no-display-experimental Control whether to display experimental ("X:") tags. They are normally suppressed. If a tag is marked experimental, this means that the code that generates this message is not as well tested as the rest of Lintian, and might still give surprising results. Feel free to ignore Experimental messages that do not seem to make sense, though of course bug reports are always welcome (particularly if they include fixes). These options overrides the display-experimental variable in the configuration file. --fail-on {error | warning | info | pedantic | experimental | override | none} Causes lintian to exit with a program status of 2 for the given conditions. This option can be a comma-separated list, or it may be specified multiple times. The default is error. Also, 'warning' does not imply 'error'. Please specify both if you want both. -i, --info Print explanatory information about each problem discovered in addition to the lintian error tags. To print a long tag description without running lintian, see lintian-explain-tags(1) or check the website at https://lintian.debian.org. To negate it, please use --no-info. This option overrides info (or no-info) variable in the configuration file. -I, --display-info Display informational ("I:") tags as well. They are normally suppressed. (This is equivalent to -L ">=info"). This option overrides the display-info variable in the configuration file. Note: display-level and display-info may not both appear in the configuration file. -L [+|-|=][>=|>|=|<|<=][S|C|S/C], --display-level [+|-|=][>=|>|=|<|<=][S|C|S/C] Fine-grained selection of tags to be displayed. It is possible to add, remove or set the levels to display, specifying a visibility (error, warning, info, pedantic, or classification. The default settings are equivalent to -L ">=warning". The value consists of 3 parts, where two of them are optional. The parts are: modifier operator How to affect the current display level. Can be one of add to ("+"), remove from ("-") or set to ("=") the display level(s) denoted by the following selection. The default value is "=" (i.e. set the display level). set operator The visibility to be selected. The operator can be one of ">=", ">", "=", "<" or "<=". As an example, this can be used to select all info (and more serious) tags via ">=info". The default value is "=", which means "exactly" the given visibility. This option overrides the display-level variable in the configuration file. The value of the display-level in configuration file should be space separated entries in the same format as passed via command-line. Note: display-level may not be used with display-info or pedantic in the configuration file. -o, --no-override Ignore all overrides provided by the package. This option will overrule --show-overrides. This option overrides the override variable in the configuration file. --pedantic Display pedantic ("P:") tags as well. They are normally suppressed. (This is equivalent to -L "+=pedantic"). Pedantic tags are Lintian at its most pickiest and include checks for particular Debian packaging styles and checks that many people disagree with. Expect false positives and Lintian tags that you don't consider useful if you use this option. Adding overrides for pedantic tags is probably not worth the effort. This option overrides the pedantic variable in the configuration file. Note: pedantic and display-level may not both appear in the configuration file. --profile vendor[/prof] Use the profile from vendor (or the profile with that name). If the profile name does not contain a slash, the default profile for than vendor is chosen. As an example, if you are on Ubuntu and want to use Lintian's Debian checks, you can use: --profile debian Likewise, on a Debian machine you can use this to request the Ubuntu checks. If the token {VENDOR} appears in the profile name, lintian will substitute the token with a vendor name to find the profile. lintian uses Dpkg::Vendor to determine the best vendor to use (the closer to the current vendor, the better). This is mostly useful for people implementing their own checks on top of Lintian. If not specified, the default value is {VENDOR}/main. Please Refer to the Lintian User Manual for the full documentation of profiles. --show-overrides Controls whether tags that have been overridden should be shown. --show-overrides will show overridden tags and mark them as overridden (using an "O" code). If the overridden tags are shown, the related override comments will also be displayed (unless --quiet is used). Please refer to the Lintian User Manual for the documentation on how lintian relates comments to a given override. To negate it, i.e. suppress the showing of overridden tags, please use --no-show-overrides. This option overrides the show-overrides (or no-show-overrides) variable in the configuration file. --suppress-tags tag1,tag2,... Suppress the listed tags. They will not be reported if they occur and will not affect the exit status of Lintian. This option can be given multiple times and can be mixed with --suppress-tags-from-file. This option can be used together with --dont-check-part ("Not those checks nor these tags") and --check-part ("Only those checks, but not these tags (from those checks)") to further reduce the selection of tags. When used with --tags, this option is mostly ignored. --suppress-tags-from-file file Suppress all tags listed in the given file. Blank lines and lines beginning with # are ignored. All other lines are taken to be tag names or comma-separated lists of tag names to suppress. The suppressed tags will not be reported if they occur and will not affect the exit status of Lintian. Tags parsed from the file will be handled as if they had been given to the --suppress-tags option (e.g. ignored if --tags is used). --tag-display-limit[=NUM] By default, lintian limits itself to emitting at most 4 instances of each tag per processable when STDOUT is a TTY. This option specifies that limit. When STDOUT is not a TTY, lintian has no limit. To disable the limit, please use a value of zero. This option overrides the tag-display-limit variable in the configuration file. Configuration options: --cfg configfile Read the configuration from configfile rather than the default locations. This option overrides the LINTIAN_CFG environment variable. --no-cfg Do not read any configuration file. This option overrides the --cfg above. --ignore-lintian-env Ignore all environment variables starting with LINTIAN_. This option is mostly useful for applications running lintian for checking packages and do not want the invoking user to affect the result (by setting LINTIAN_PROFILE etc.). Note it does not cause lintian to ignore the entire environment like TMPDIR or DEB_VENDOR. The latter can affect the default profile (or "{VENDOR}" token for --profile). Should usually be combined with --no-user-dirs (or unsetting $HOME and all XDG_ variables). --include-dir dir Use dir as an additional "LINTIAN_BASE". The directory is expected have a similar layout to the LINTIAN_BASE (if it exists), but does not need to be a full self- contained root. lintian will check this directory for (additional) profiles, data files, support libraries and checks. The latter two imply that Lintian may attempt to load and execute code from this directory. This option may appear more than once; each time adding an additional directory. Directories are searched in the order they appear on the command line. The additional directories will be checked after the user directories (though see --no-user-dirs) and before the core LINTIAN_BASE. Note: This option should be the very first if given. -j X, --jobs=X Set the limit for how many jobs Lintian will run in parallel. This option overrides the jobs variable in the configuration file. By default Lintian will use nproc to determine a reasonable default (or 2, if the nproc fails). --user-dirs, --no-user-dirs By default, lintian will check $HOME and /etc for files supplied by the user or the local sysadmin (e.g. config files and profiles). This default can be disabled (and re-enabled) by using --no-user-dirs (and --user-dirs, respectively). These options will not affect the inclusion of LINTIAN_BASE, which is always included. These option can appear multiple times, in which case the last of them to appear determines the result. Note that if the intention is only to disable the user's $HOME, then unsetting $HOME and XDG_*_HOME may suffice. Alternatively, /etc can be "re-added" by using --include-dir (caveat: /etc/lintianrc will be ignored by this). If the intention is to avoid (unintentional) side-effects from the calling user, then this option could be combined with --ignore-lintian-env. If for some reason --no-user-dirs cannot be used, then consider unsetting $HOME and all the $XDG_* variables (not just the $XDG_*_HOME ones). Note: This option should be the very first if given. Developer/Special usage options: --allow-root Override lintian's warning when it is run with superuser privileges. --packages-from-file X The line is read as the path to a file to process (all whitespace is included!). If X is "-", Lintian will read the packages from STDIN. --perf-debug Enable performance related debug logging to STDERR. The data logged and the format used is subject to change with every release. Note that some of the information may also be available (possibly in a different format) with the --debug option.
FILES
Lintian looks for its configuration file in the following locations, in this order: • The argument given to --cfg • $LINTIAN_CFG • $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/lintian/lintianrc • XDG_DIR/lintian/lintianrc Where XDG_DIR is a directory listed in $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS (or /etc/xdg if $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS is unset). • $HOME/.lintianrc Please consider using the XDG based variant above (usually, in ~/.config). • /etc/lintianrc Lintian uses the following directories: /tmp Lintian defaults to creating a temporary lab directory in /tmp. To change the directory used, set the TMPDIR environment variable to a suitable directory. TMPDIR can be set in the configuration file. /usr/share/lintian/checks Scripts that check aspects of a package. /usr/share/lintian/collection Scripts that collect information about a package and store it for use by the check scripts. /usr/share/lintian/data Supporting data used by Lintian checks and for output formatting. /usr/share/lintian/lib Utility scripts used by the other lintian scripts. For binary packages, Lintian looks for overrides in a file named usr/share/lintian/overrides/<package> inside the binary package, where <package> is the name of the binary package. For source packages, Lintian looks for overrides in debian/source/lintian-overrides and then in debian/source.lintian-overrides if the first file is not found. The first path is preferred. See the Lintian User's Manual for the syntax of overrides.
CONFIGURATION FILE
The configuration file can be used to specify default values for some options. The general format is: option = value All whitespace adjacent to the "=" sign as well as leading and trailing whitespace is ignored. However whitespace within the value is respected, as demonstrated by this example: # Parsed as "opt1" with value "val1" opt1 = val1 # Parsed as "opt2" with value "val2.1 val2.2 val2.3" opt2 = val2.1 val2.2 val2.3 Unless otherwise specified, no option may appear more than once. Lintian will ignore empty lines or lines starting with the #-character. Generally options will be the long form of the command-line option without the leading dashes. There some exceptions (such as --profile), where Lintian uses the same name as the environment variable. Lintian only allows a subset of the options specified in the configuration file; please refer to the individual options in "OPTIONS". In the configuration file, all options listed must have a value, even if they do not accept a value on command line (e.g. --pedantic). The values "yes", "y", "1", or "true" will enable such an option and "no", "n", "0" or "false" will disable it. Prior to the 2.5.2 release, these values were case sensitive. For other options, they generally take the same values as they do on the command line. Though some options allow a slightly different format (e.g. --display-level). These exceptions are explained for the relevant options in "OPTIONS". Beyond command line options, it is also allowed to specify the environment variable "TMPDIR" in the configuration file. A sample configuration file could look like: # Sample configuration file for lintian # # Set the default profile (--profile) LINTIAN_PROFILE = debian # Set the default TMPDIR for lintian to /var/tmp/lintian # - useful if /tmp is tmpfs with "limited" size. TMPDIR = /var/tmp/lintian/ # Show info (I:) tags by default (--display-info) # NB: this cannot be used with display-level display-info=yes # Ignore all overrides (--no-override) # NB: called "override" in the config file # and has inverted value! override = no # Automatically determine if color should be used color = auto
EXIT STATUS
0 Normal operation. 1 Lintian run-time error. An error message is sent to stderr. 2 Detected a condition specified via the --fail-on option. This can be used to trigger a non-zero exit value in case of policy violations.
CHECKING LAST BUILD
When run in an unpacked package dir (with no package selection arguments), Lintian will use debian/changelog to determine the source and version of the package. Lintian will then attempt to find a matching .changes file for this source and version combination. Lintian will (in order) search the following directories: .. Used by dpkg-buildpackage(1). ../build-area Used by svn-buildpackage(1). /var/cache/pbuilder/result Used by pbuilder(1) and cowbuilder(1). In each directory, Lintian will attempt to find a .changes file using the following values as architecture (in order): $DEB_BUILD_ARCH (or dpkg --print-architecture) The environment variable DEB_BUILD_ARCH (if not set, "dpkg --print-architecture" will be used instead) $DEB_HOST_ARCH The environment variable DEB_HOST_ARCH. dpkg --print-foreign-architectures If dpkg(1) appears to support multi-arch, then any architecture listed by "dpkg --print-foreign-architectures" will be used (in the order returned by dpkg). multi Pseudo architecture used by mergechanges(1). all Used when building architecture indep packages only (e.g. dpkg-buildpackage -A). source Used for "source only" builds (e.g. dpkg-buildpackage -S). If a .changes file matches any combination above exists, Lintian will process the first match as if you had passed it per command line. If no .changes file can be found, Lintian will print a list of attempted locations on STDERR and exit 0.
EXAMPLES
$ lintian foo.changes Check the changes file itself and any (binary, udeb or source) package listed in it. $ lintian foo.deb Check binary package foo given by foo.deb. $ lintian foo.dsc Check source package foo given by foo.dsc. $ lintian foo.dsc -L +info Check source package foo given by foo.dsc, including info tags. $ lintian -i foo.changes Check the changes file and, if listed, the source and binary package of the upload. The output will contain detailed information about the reported tags. $ lintian Assuming debian/changelog exists, look for a changes file for the source in the parent dir. Otherwise, print usage information and exit.
BUGS
Lintian does not have any locking mechanisms yet. (Running several Lintian processes on the same laboratory simultaneously is likely to fail or corrupt the laboratory.) If you discover any other bugs in lintian, please contact the authors.
SEE ALSO
lintian-explain-tags(1), Lintian User Manual (/usr/share/doc/lintian/lintian.html) Packaging tools: debhelper(7), dh_make(1), dpkg-buildpackage(1).
AUTHORS
Niels Thykier <niels@thykier.net> Richard Braakman <dark@xs4all.nl> Christian Schwarz <schwarz@monet.m.isar.de> Please use the email address <lintian-maint@debian.org> for Lintian related comments.