Provided by: dose-distcheck_3.1.3-7ubuntu0.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       dose-distcheck - check installability of packages according to metadata

SYNOPSIS

       dose-distcheck [option] ... uri
       dose-debcheck [option] ... [file]
       dose-rpmcheck [option] ... [file]
       dose-eclipsecheck [option] ... [file]

DESCRIPTION

       dose-distcheck determines, for a set of package control stanzas, called the repository,
       whether packages of the repository can be installed relative to the repository according
       to the inter-package relationsships expressed in the package control stanzas.  The exact
       set of relevant control fields and their meaning depends on the type of the repository.
       The constraint solving algorithm is complete, that is it finds a solution whenever there
       exists one, even for multiple disjunctive dependencies and deep package conflicts. This
       problem is computationally infeasible in theory (that is, NP-complete), but can be solved
       very efficiently for package repositories that actually occur in practice.

       Packages are split into foreground and background: only packages in the foreground are
       checked for installability, but dependencies may be satisfied by foreground packages and
       by background packages. By default, all packages are in the foreground.

Input Specification

       Currently supported input types are debian, rpm, and eclipse. The dose-distcheck tool
       expects its input specifiations in the form type://pathname where type is one of deb,
       synthesis, hdlist or eclipse, and pathname is the pathname of a file containing the input.
       The package metadata found in that file must correspond to the type given in the URI.

       When invoked as dose-typecheck then the type of input is assumed to be type, and
       repositories (in positional arguments or in the values of options --fg and --bg) are
       simply given in form of a pathname of a file containing the repository. If no positional
       argument is given then input is read from standard input.  dose-distcheck also compressed
       files (.gz , .bz2) as positional arguments. Input read on standard input cannot be in
       compressed form.

Input Formats

   Debian
       The input file has to contain stanzas in the format of deb-control(5), separated by one
       blank line. For instance, the Packages files as found on a Debian mirror server, or in the
       directory /var/lib/apt/lists/ of a Debian system, are suitable as input to dose-debcheck.
       Installability of packages is analyzed according to their Depends, Conflicts, and Provides
       fields with their meaning as of Debian policy version 3.9.0. Pre-depends are treated like
       Depends, and Breaks are treated like Conflicts.

       If the input contains several packages with the same values of name, version, and
       architecture than only the last of these is taken into account, and a warning is issued.

       In the case of Debian, it is not possible to install at the same time two packages with
       the same name but different versions.

   Rpm
       The input file can be either a synthesis file or a hdlist file.  By default dose-rpmcheck
       expects a synthesis file as input. To specify a hdlist file dose-distcheck must be invoked
       with a file argument of the form hdlist://

   Eclipse
       The input is an 822 file containing the encoding of OSGi plugins  content.xml files.

OPTIONS

   OPTIONS CONTROLLING FOREGROUND AND BACKGROUND
       --fg=file
               Add packages in file to the foreground.

       --bg=file
               Add packages in file to the background.

       --checkonly package [,package] ...
               Takes a comma-separated list of package names, each of them possibly with a
               version constraint, as argument. The foreground is constituted of all packages
               that match any of the expressions, all other packages are pushed into the
               background. The initial distinction between foreground and background is ignored.
               This option must not be combined with --coinst.

               Example: --checkonly "libc6 , 2ping (= 1.2.3-1)"

       --coinst  package [,package] ...
               Takes a comma-separated list of package names, each of them possibly with a
               version constraint, as argument. If this list consists of n expressions, then co-
               installability will be checked independently for each set of n packages where the
               i-th element of the set matches the i-th expression. The initial distinction
               between foreground and background is ignored. This option must not be combined
               with --checkonly.

               Example: --coinst "a (>1), b"

               If we have package a in versions 1, 2 and 3, and package b in versions 11 and 12,
               then this will check 4 pairs of packages for co-installability, namely (a=2,b=11),
               (a=2,b=12), (a=3,b=11) and (a=3,b=12).

   DEBIAN SPECIFIC OPTIONS
       Multi-arch annotations are correctly considered by distcheck. Packages whose's
       architecture is neither the native architecture nor in the list of foreign architectures
       (see below) are ignored.

       --deb-native-arch=name
               Specify the native architecture. The default behavior is to deduce the native
               architecture from the first package stanza in the input that has an architecture
               different from all.

       --deb-foreign-archs=name [,name] ...
               Specify a comma-separated list of foreign architectures. The default is an empty
               list of foreign architectures.

       --deb-ignore-essential
               Do not consider essential packages as part of the installation problem.  By
               default all essential package are considered as part of the installation problem
               for all packages, that is a package is installable if and only if it is co-
               installable with all essential packages. This option allows the user to test the
               installability with no essential packages installed.

   OPTIONS FOR FILTERING THE INPUT
       --latest
               Only the latest version of each package is kept, older versions of packages are
               ignored.

   OPTIONS CONTROLLING OUTPUT
       -f, --failures
               List all packages that are found not to be installable.

       -s, --successes
               List all packages that are found to be installable. May be used together with
               --failures, in this case the value of the status field in the output allows to
               distinguish installable from non-installable packages.

       -e, --explain
               Give explanations. If used together with --failures then the explanation consists
               of dependency chains leading to a conflict or a dependency on a missing package.
               If used together with --successes then the explanation consists of an installation
               set.

       -m, --explain-minimal
               For all packages P that are found installable, and when used in conjunction with
               --success, prints a reduced instllation set containing only those packages in the
               dependency cone of P.  It has no effect together with together with --failures.

       --summary
               Gives a more detailed summary of the findings.

       -ofile  Send output to file.

   MISC OPTIONS
       -v      Enable info / warnings / debug messages.  This option may be repeated up to three
               times in order to increase verbosity.

       --quiet Do not print warning messages

       --progress
               Show progress bars.

       --timers
               Show timing information.

       -h, --help
               Display this list of options.

       --version
               Show program version and exit.

EXIT CODES

       Exit codes 0-63 indicate a normal termination of the program, codes 64-127 indicate
       abnormal termination of the program (such as parse errors, I/O errors).

       In case of normal program termination:

       - exit code 0 indicates that all foreground packages are found installable;

       - exit code 1 indicates that at least one foreground package is found uninstallable.

EXAMPLE

       Check which packages in a particular distribution are not installable and why:

        dose-distcheck -v -f -e \
        --bg deb:///var/lib/apt/lists/ftp.fr.debian.org_debian_dists_sid_main_binary-amd64_Packages\
        --bg deb:///var/lib/apt/lists/ftp.fr.debian.org_debian_dists_sid_non-free_binary-amd64_Packages\
        --fg deb:///var/lib/apt/lists/ftp.fr.debian.org_debian_dists_sid_contrib_binary-amd64_Packages

       where Packages is the file pertaining to that distribution, as for instance found in the
       directory /var/lib/apt/lists.

       Check which packages in contrib are not installable when dependencies may be satisfied
       from main:

         dose-debcheck --failures --bg=main_Packages contrib_Packages

NOTE

       Dose-distcheck is a complete reimplementation of edos-debcheck, written for the EDOS
       project.

AUTHOR

       The first version of debcheck was written by Jerome Vouillon for the EDOS project. The
       current version has been rewritten on the basis of the dose3 library by Pietro Abate.

SEE ALSO

       deb-control(5)

       <http://www.edos-project.org> is the home page of the EDOS project.

       <http://www.mancoosi.org> is the home page of the Mancoosi project.

                                            2015-01-07                               DISTCHECK(1)