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dpkg-buildpackage(1)		  dpkg suite		  dpkg-buildpackage(1)

NAME
       dpkg-buildpackage - build binary or source packages from sources

SYNOPSIS
       dpkg-buildpackage [option...]

DESCRIPTION
       dpkg-buildpackage is a program that automates the process of building a
       Debian package. It consists of the following steps:

       1. It prepares the build environment  by	 setting  various  environment
	  variables   (see   ENVIRONMENT),  runs  the  init  hook,  and	 calls
	  dpkg-source --before-build (unless -T or --target has been used).

       2. It  checks  that  the	 build-dependencies  and  build-conflicts  are
	  satisfied (unless -d or --no-check-builddeps is specified).

       3. If  one  or  more specific targets have been selected with the -T or
	  --target option, it calls those targets and stops here. Otherwise it
	  runs	the  preclean  hook  and  calls fakeroot debian/rules clean to
	  clean the build-tree (unless -nc or --no-pre-clean is specified).

       4. It runs the source hook and calls dpkg-source	 -b  to	 generate  the
	  source package (if a source build has been requested with --build or
	  equivalent options).

       5. It runs the build hook and  calls  debian/rules  build-target,  then
	  runs the binary hook followed by fakeroot debian/rules binary-target
	  (unless a source-only build has been requested  with	--build=source
	  or  equivalent  options).   Note that build-target and binary-target
	  are either build and binary (default case, or	 if  an	 any  and  all
	  build	 has  been  requested  with --build or equivalent options), or
	  build-arch and binary-arch (if an any and not	 all  build  has  been
	  requested  with  --build  or equivalent options), or build-indep and
	  binary-indep (if an all and not any build has	 been  requested  with
	  --build or equivalent options).

       6. It runs the buildinfo hook and calls dpkg-genbuildinfo to generate a
	  .buildinfo file.  Several dpkg-buildpackage options are forwarded to
	  dpkg-genbuildinfo.

       7. It  runs  the	 changes  hook and calls dpkg-genchanges to generate a
	  .changes file.  The name of the .changes file	 will  depend  on  the
	  type of build and will be as specific as necessary but not more; for
	  a build that includes	 any  the  name	 will  be  source-name_binary-
	  version_arch.changes, or otherwise for a build that includes all the
	  name will be	source-name_binary-version_all.changes,	 or  otherwise
	  for	a  build  that	includes  source  the  name  will  be  source-
	  name_source-version_source.changes.  Many dpkg-buildpackage  options
	  are forwarded to dpkg-genchanges.

       8. It  runs the postclean hook and if -tc or --post-clean is specified,
	  it will call fakeroot debian/rules clean again.

       9. It calls dpkg-source --after-build.

       10.
	  It runs the check hook and calls a package checker for the  .changes
	  file	(if  a	command	 is  specified	in  DEB_CHECK_COMMAND  or with
	  --check-command).

       11.
	  It runs the sign hook and calls gpg2 or gpg (as long as it is not an
	  UNRELEASED  build,  or --no-sign is specified) to sign the .dsc file
	  (if  any,  unless  -us  or  --unsigned-source	 is  specified),   the
	  .buildinfo   file   (unless	-ui,   --unsigned-buildinfo,   -uc  or
	  --unsigned-changes is specified) and the .changes file  (unless  -uc
	  or --unsigned-changes is specified).

       12.
	  It runs the done hook.

OPTIONS
       All  long  options can be specified both on the command line and in the
       dpkg-buildpackage system and user configuration files.	Each  line  in
       the  configuration  file	 is  either an option (exactly the same as the
       command line option but without leading hyphens) or a  comment  (if  it
       starts with a ‘#’).

       --build=type
	      Specifies	  the  build  type  from  a  comma-separated  list  of
	      components (since dpkg 1.18.5).  Passed to dpkg-genchanges.

	      The allowed values are:

	      source Builds the source package.	 Note: when using  this	 value
		     standalone	 and  if what you want is simply to (re-)build
		     the source package, using dpkg-source is always better as
		     it	  does	not  require  any  build  dependencies	to  be
		     installed to be able to call the clean target.

	      any    Builds the architecture specific binary packages.

	      all    Builds the architecture independent binary packages.

	      binary Builds the architecture specific and  independent	binary
		     packages.	This is an alias for any,all.

	      full   Builds  everything.  This is an alias for source,any,all,
		     and the same as the default case when no build option  is
		     specified.

       -g     Equivalent to --build=source,all (since dpkg 1.17.11).

       -G     Equivalent to --build=source,any (since dpkg 1.17.11).

       -b     Equivalent to --build=binary or --build=any,all.

       -B     Equivalent to --build=any.

       -A     Equivalent to --build=all.

       -S     Equivalent to --build=source.

       -F     Equivalent    to	  --build=full,	   --build=source,binary    or
	      --build=source,any,all (since dpkg 1.15.8).

       --target=target[,...]
       --target target[,...]
       -T, --rules-target=target[,...]
	      Calls debian/rules  target  once	per  target  specified,	 after
	      having   setup   the   build  environment	 (except  for  calling
	      dpkg-source --before-build), and stops the package build process
	      here  (since  dpkg 1.15.0, long option since dpkg 1.18.8, multi-
	      target support since dpkg 1.18.16).  If --as-root is also given,
	      then the command is executed as root (see --root-command).  Note
	      that known targets that are required to be run as	 root  do  not
	      need  this  option  (i.e.	 the  clean,  binary,  binary-arch and
	      binary-indep targets).

       --as-root
	      Only meaningful together	with  --target	(since	dpkg  1.15.0).
	      Requires that the target be run with root rights.

       -si
       -sa
       -sd
       -vversion
       -Cchanges-description
       -m, --release-by=maintainer-address
       -e, --build-by=maintainer-address
	      Passed unchanged to dpkg-genchanges. See its manual page.

       -a, --host-arch architecture
	      Specify  the Debian architecture we build for (long option since
	      dpkg 1.17.17).  The architecture of the machine we build	on  is
	      determined  automatically,  and is also the default for the host
	      machine.

       -t, --host-type gnu-system-type
	      Specify the GNU system type we build for (long option since dpkg
	      1.17.17).	  It  can  be  used  in	 place	of --host-arch or as a
	      complement to override the default GNU system type of  the  host
	      Debian architecture.

       --target-arch architecture
	      Specify  the  Debian  architecture the binaries built will build
	      for (since  dpkg	1.17.17).   The	 default  value	 is  the  host
	      machine.

       --target-type gnu-system-type
	      Specify  the  GNU	 system type the binaries built will build for
	      (since dpkg 1.17.17).  It can be used in place of	 --target-arch
	      or  as  a	 complement to override the default GNU system type of
	      the target Debian architecture.

       -P, --build-profiles=profile[,...]
	      Specify the profile(s)  we  build,  as  a	 comma-separated  list
	      (since dpkg 1.17.2, long option since dpkg 1.18.8).  The default
	      behavior is to build for no specific profile. Also sets them (as
	      a	 space	separated  list) as the DEB_BUILD_PROFILES environment
	      variable which allows, for example, debian/rules	files  to  use
	      this information for conditional builds.

       -j, --jobs[=jobs|auto]
	      Number  of jobs allowed to be run simultaneously, number of jobs
	      matching the number of online processors if  auto	 is  specified
	      (since  dpkg  1.17.10),  or  unlimited  number  if  jobs	is not
	      specified, equivalent to the make(1) option  of  the  same  name
	      (since  dpkg  1.14.7,  long option since dpkg 1.18.8).  Will add
	      itself to the MAKEFLAGS environment variable, which should cause
	      all  subsequent  make  invocations  to  inherit the option, thus
	      forcing the parallel setting on the packaging (and possibly  the
	      upstream	build  system  if  that uses make) regardless of their
	      support for parallel builds, which might cause  build  failures.
	      Also  adds  parallel=jobs	 or  parallel to the DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS
	      environment variable which allows debian/rules files to use this
	      information  for their own purposes.  The -j value will override
	      the parallel=jobs or parallel option  in	the  DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS
	      environment  variable.   Note  that  the	auto  value  will  get
	      replaced by the actual number of	currently  active  processors,
	      and as such will not get propagated to any child process. If the
	      number of online processors cannot be  inferred  then  the  code
	      will  fallback  to  using serial execution (since dpkg 1.18.15),
	      although this should  only  happen  on  exotic  and  unsupported
	      systems.

       -J, --jobs-try[=jobs|auto]
	      This  option  (since dpkg 1.18.2, long option since dpkg 1.18.8)
	      is equivalent to the -j option except that it does not  set  the
	      MAKEFLAGS	 environment  variable, and as such it is safer to use
	      with any package including those	that  are  not	parallel-build
	      safe.

	      auto  is	the default behavior (since dpkg 1.18.11). Setting the
	      number of jobs to 1 will restore a serial behavior.

       -D, --check-builddeps
	      Check build dependencies and  conflicts;	abort  if  unsatisfied
	      (long option since dpkg 1.18.8).	This is the default behavior.

       -d, --no-check-builddeps
	      Do not check build dependencies and conflicts (long option since
	      dpkg 1.18.8).

       --ignore-builtin-builddeps
	      Do not check built-in build dependencies	and  conflicts	(since
	      dpkg  1.18.2).   These  are  the	distribution specific implicit
	      build dependencies usually required in a build environment,  the
	      so called Build-Essential package set.

       -nc, --no-pre-clean
	      Do  not  clean  the source tree (long option since dpkg 1.18.8).
	      Implies -b if nothing else has been selected among -F,  -g,  -G,
	      -B, -A or -S.  Implies -d with -S (since dpkg 1.18.0).

       --pre-clean
	      Clean the source tree before building (since dpkg 1.18.8).

       -tc, --post-clean
	      Clean  the  source  tree	(using	gain-root-command debian/rules
	      clean) after the package has been built (long option since  dpkg
	      1.18.8).

       -r, --root-command=gain-root-command
	      When  dpkg-buildpackage  needs  to  execute  part	 of  the build
	      process as root, it prefixes the command it executes with	 gain-
	      root-command  if	one has been specified (long option since dpkg
	      1.18.8).	Otherwise, if none has been specified,	fakeroot  will
	      be  used	by  default,  if  the  command is present.  gain-root-
	      command should start with the name of a program on the PATH  and
	      will  get	 as  arguments the name of the real command to run and
	      the arguments it should  take.   gain-root-command  can  include
	      parameters   (they   must	  be  space-separated)	but  no	 shell
	      metacharacters.  gain-root-command might typically be  fakeroot,
	      sudo,  super  or	really.	 su is not suitable, since it can only
	      invoke the user's shell with -c  instead	of  passing  arguments
	      individually to the command to be run.

       -R, --rules-file=rules-file
	      Building a Debian package usually involves invoking debian/rules
	      as a  command  with  several  standard  parameters  (since  dpkg
	      1.14.17,	long option since dpkg 1.18.8).	 With this option it's
	      possible to use another program invocation to build the  package
	      (it  can	include space separated parameters).  Alternatively it
	      can be used to execute the standard rules file with another make
	      program	(for   example	 by   using   /usr/local/bin/make   -f
	      debian/rules as rules-file).

       --check-command=check-command
	      Command used to check the .changes file itself and any  artifact
	      built  referenced	 in the file (since dpkg 1.17.6).  The command
	      should take the .changes pathname as an argument.	 This  command
	      will usually be lintian.

       --check-option=opt
	      Pass   option   opt   to	 the   check-command   specified  with
	      DEB_CHECK_COMMAND or --check-command (since dpkg	1.17.6).   Can
	      be used multiple times.

       --hook-hook-name=hook-command
	      Set the specified shell code hook-command as the hook hook-name,
	      which will run at the times specified in the  run	 steps	(since
	      dpkg  1.17.6).   The  hooks  will always be executed even if the
	      following action is not performed (except for the binary	hook).
	      All the hooks will run in the unpacked source directory.

	      Note:  Hooks  can	 affect	 the  build  process,  and cause build
	      failures if their commands fail, so  watch  out  for  unintended
	      consequences.

	      The current hook-name supported are:

	      init  preclean  source  build binary buildinfo changes postclean
	      check sign done

	      The hook-command	supports  the  following  substitution	format
	      string, which will get applied to it before execution:

	      %%     A single % character.

	      %a     A	boolean	 value	(0  or	1),  representing  whether the
		     following action is being performed.

	      %p     The source package name.

	      %v     The source package version.

	      %s     The source package version (without the epoch).

	      %u     The upstream version.

       --buildinfo-option=opt
	      Pass option opt to dpkg-genbuildinfo (since dpkg 1.18.11).   Can
	      be used multiple times.

       -p, --sign-command=sign-command
	      When  dpkg-buildpackage  needs  to  execute GPG to sign a source
	      control (.dsc) file or a .changes file it will run  sign-command
	      (searching  the  PATH if necessary) instead of gpg2 or gpg (long
	      option since  dpkg  1.18.8).   sign-command  will	 get  all  the
	      arguments	 that  gpg2  or	 gpg  would  have gotten. sign-command
	      should not contain spaces or any other shell metacharacters.

       -k, --sign-key=key-id
	      Specify a key-ID to use when signing packages (long option since
	      dpkg 1.18.8).

       -us, --unsigned-source
	      Do not sign the source package (long option since dpkg 1.18.8).

       -ui, --unsigned-buildinfo
	      Do not sign the .buildinfo file (since dpkg 1.18.19).

       -uc, --unsigned-changes
	      Do not sign the .buildinfo and .changes files (long option since
	      dpkg 1.18.8).

       --no-sign
	      Do not sign any file, this  includes  the	 source	 package,  the
	      .buildinfo file and the .changes file (since dpkg 1.18.20).

       --force-sign
	      Force  the  signing  of the resulting files (since dpkg 1.17.0),
	      regardless of -us, --unsigned-source, -ui, --unsigned-buildinfo,
	      -uc, --unsigned-changes or other internal heuristics.

       -sn
       -ss
       -sA
       -sk
       -su
       -sr
       -sK
       -sU
       -sR
       -i, --diff-ignore[=regex]
       -I, --tar-ignore[=pattern]
       -z, --compression-level=level
       -Z, --compression=compressor
	      Passed unchanged to dpkg-source. See its manual page.

       --source-option=opt
	      Pass option opt to dpkg-source (since dpkg 1.15.6).  Can be used
	      multiple times.

       --changes-option=opt
	      Pass option opt to dpkg-genchanges (since dpkg 1.15.6).  Can  be
	      used multiple times.

       --admindir=dir
       --admindir dir
	      Change  the  location  of the dpkg database (since dpkg 1.14.0).
	      The default location is /var/lib/dpkg.

       -?, --help
	      Show the usage message and exit.

       --version
	      Show the version and exit.

ENVIRONMENT
   External environment
       DEB_CHECK_COMMAND
	      If set, it will be used as the command  to  check	 the  .changes
	      file  (since  dpkg  1.17.6).   Overridden by the --check-command
	      option.

       DEB_SIGN_KEYID
	      If set, it will be used to sign  the  .changes  and  .dsc	 files
	      (since dpkg 1.17.2).  Overridden by the --sign-key option.

       DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS
	      If  set,	it will contain a space-separated list of options that
	      might affect the build process in debian/rules, and the behavior
	      of some dpkg commands.

	      With  nocheck  the  DEB_CHECK_COMMAND  variable will be ignored.
	      With parallel=N the parallel jobs will be set to	N,  overridden
	      by the --jobs-try option.

       DEB_BUILD_PROFILES
	      If  set,	it will be used as the active build profile(s) for the
	      package  being  built  (since  dpkg  1.17.2).   It  is  a	 space
	      separated list of profile names.	Overridden by the -P option.

       DPKG_COLORS
	      Sets the color mode (since dpkg 1.18.5).	The currently accepted
	      values are: auto (default), always and never.

   Internal environment
       Even if dpkg-buildpackage exports some variables,  debian/rules	should
       not  rely  on  their  presence  and  should  instead use the respective
       interface to retrieve the needed values, because that file is the  main
       entry  point  to	 build	packages  and  running it standalone should be
       supported.

       DEB_BUILD_*
       DEB_HOST_*
       DEB_TARGET_*
	      dpkg-architecture is  called  with  the  -a  and	-t  parameters
	      forwarded.  Any  variable	 that  is  output  by its -s option is
	      integrated in the build environment.

       DPKG_GAIN_ROOT_CMD
	      This  variable  is  set  to  gain-root-command  when  the	 field
	      Rules-Requires-Root  is  set  to	a  value  different  to no and
	      binary-targets.

       SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH
	      This variable is set to the Unix timestamp since	the  epoch  of
	      the  latest  entry  in  debian/changelog,	 if  it is not already
	      defined.

FILES
       /etc/dpkg/buildpackage.conf
	      System wide configuration file

       $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/dpkg/buildpackage.conf or
       $HOME/.config/dpkg/buildpackage.conf
	      User configuration file.

NOTES
   Compiler flags are no longer exported
       Between dpkg 1.14.17 and 1.16.1,	 dpkg-buildpackage  exported  compiler
       flags  (CFLAGS,	CXXFLAGS, FFLAGS, CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS) with values as
       returned by dpkg-buildflags. This is no longer the case.

   Default build targets
       dpkg-buildpackage is using the build-arch and build-indep targets since
       dpkg  1.16.2.  Those targets are thus mandatory. But to avoid breakages
       of existing packages, and ease the transition, if  the  source  package
       does  not  build	 both  architecture  independent  and dependent binary
       packages (since dpkg 1.18.8) it will fallback to use the	 build	target
       if make -f debian/rules -qn build-target returns 2 as exit code.

BUGS
       It  should  be  possible to specify spaces and shell metacharacters and
       initial arguments for gain-root-command and sign-command.

SEE ALSO
       dpkg-source(1), dpkg-architecture(1), dpkg-buildflags(1),
       dpkg-genbuildinfo(1), dpkg-genchanges(1), fakeroot(1), lintian(1),
       gpg2(1), gpg(1).

1.19.0.4			  2017-11-02		  dpkg-buildpackage(1)
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