NAME
uscan - scan upstream sources for new releases of software
SYNOPSIS
uscan [options] [path-to-debian-source-packages ...]
DESCRIPTION
uscan scans the given directories (or the current directory if
none are specified) and all of their subdirectories for packages
containing a control file debian/watch. Parameters are then
read from those control files and upstream ftp or http sites are
inspected for newly available updates (as compared with the upstream
version number retrieved from the debian/changelog file in the
same directory). The newest updates are retrieved (as determined by
their version numbers) and if specified in the watchfile, a program
may then be executed on the newly downloaded source.
The traditional debian/watch files can still be used, but the
current format offers both simpler and more flexible services. We do
not describe the old format here; for their documentation, see the
source code for uscan.
FORMAT of debian/watch files
The following demonstrates the type of entries which can appear in a
debian/watch file. Obviously, not all of these would appear in
one such file; usually, one would have one line for the current
package.
# format version number, currently 3; this line is compulsory!
version=3
# Line continuations are performed with \
# This the format for an FTP site:
# Full-site-with-pattern [Version [Action]]
ftp://ftp.tex.ac.uk/tex-archive/web/c_cpp/cweb/cweb-(.*)\.tar\.gz \ debian uupdate
# This is the format for an FTP site with regex special characters in
# the filename part
ftp://ftp.worldforge.org/pub/worldforge/libs/Atlas-C++/transitional/Atlas-C\+\+-(.*)\.tar\.gz
# This is the format for an FTP site with directory pattern matching
ftp://ftp.nessus.org/pub/nessus/nessus-([\d\.]+)/src/nessus-core-([\d\.]+)\.tar\.gz
# This can be used if you want to override the PASV setting
# for a specific site
# opts=pasv ftp://.../...
# This is one format for an HTTP site, which is the same
# as the FTP format. uscan starts by downloading the homepage,
# obtained by removing the last component of the URL; in this case,
# http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Text/
http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Text/Text-CSV_XS-(.*)\.tar\.gz
# This is a variant HTTP format which allows direct specification of
# the homepage:
# Homepage Pattern [Version [Action]]
http://www.dataway.ch/~lukasl/amph/amph.html \ files/amphetamine-([\d\.]*).tar.bz2
# This one shows that recursive directory scanning works, in either of
# two forms, as long as the website can handle requests of the form
# http://site/inter/mediate/dir/
http://tmrc.mit.edu/mirror/twisted/Twisted/(\d\.\d)/ \ Twisted-([\d\.]*)\.tar\.bz2
http://tmrc.mit.edu/mirror/twisted/Twisted/(\d\.\d)/Twisted-([\d\.]*)\.tar\.bz2
# If your package is located on sourceforge, use one of the following
# formats to automatically use the qa.debian.org redirector, avoiding
# SF's difficult mirror system.
http://sf.net/audacity/audacity-src-(.+)\.tar\.gz
http://sf.net/audacity/ audacity-src-(.+)\.tar\.gz
# This is the format for a site which has funny version numbers;
# the parenthesised groups will be joined with dots to make a
# sanitised version number
http://www.site.com/pub/foobar/foobar_v(\d+)_(\d+)\.tar\.gz
# This is another way of handling site with funny version numbers,
# this time using mangling. (Note that multiple groups will be
# concatenated before mangling is performed, and that mangling will
# only be performed on the basename version number, not any path
# version numbers.)
opts="uversionmangle=s/^/0.0./" \ ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/ALPHA/wine/development/Wine-(.*)\.tar\.gz
# Similarly, the upstream part of the Debian version number can be
# mangled:
opts=dversionmangle=s/\.dfsg\.\d+$// \ http://some.site.org/some/path/foobar-(.*)\.tar\.gz
# The filename is found by taking the last component of the URL and
# removing everything after any '?'. If this would not make a usable
# filename, use filenamemangle. For example,
# <A href="http://foo.bar.org/download/?path=&download=foo-0.1.1.tar.gz">
# could be handled as:
# opts=filenamemangle=s/.*=(.*)/$1/ \ # http://foo.bar.org/download/\?path=&download=foo-(.*)\.tar\.gz
#
# <A href="http://foo.bar.org/download/?path=&download_version=0.1.1">
# could be handled as:
# opts=filenamemangle=s/.*=(.*)/foo-$1\.tar\.gz/ \ # http://foo.bar.org/download/\?path=&download_version=(.*)
# The option downloadurlmangle can be used to mangle the URL of the file
# to download. This can only be used with http:// URLs. This may be
# necessary if the link given on the webpage needs to be transformed in
# some way into one which will work automatically, for example:
# opts=downloadurlmangle=s/prdownload/download/ \ # http://developer.berlios.de/project/showfiles.php?group_id=2051 \ # http://prdownload.berlios.de/softdevice/vdr-softdevice-(.*).tgz
Comment lines may be introduced with a `#' character. Continuation
lines may be indicated by terminating a line with a backslash
character.
The first (non-comment) line of the file must begin `version=3'. This
allows for future extensions without having to change the name of the
file.
There are two possibilities for the syntax of an HTTP watchfile line,
and only one for an FTP line. We begin with the common (and simpler)
format. We describe the optional opts=... first field below, and
ignore it in what follows.
The first field gives the full pattern of URLs being searched for. In
the case of an FTP site, the directory listing for the requested
directory will be requested and this will be scanned for files
matching the basename (everything after the trailing `/'). In the
case of an HTTP site, the URL obtained by stripping everything after
the trailing slash will be downloaded and searched for hrefs (links of
the form <a href=...>) to either the full URL pattern given, or to the
absolute part (everything without the http://host.name/ part), or to
the basename (just the part after the final `/'). Everything up to
the final slash is taken as a verbatim URL, as long as there are no
parentheses (`(' and ')') in this part of the URL: if it does, the
directory name will be matched in the same way as the final component
of the URL as described below. (Note that regex metacharacters such
as `+' are regarded literally unless they are in a path component
containing parentheses; see the Atlas-C++ example above. Also, the
parentheses must match within each path component.)
The pattern (after the final slash) is a Perl regexp (see
perlre(1) for details of these). You need to make the pattern
so tight that it matches only the upstream software you are interested
in and nothing else. Also, the pattern will be anchored at the
beginning and at the end, so it must match the full filename. (Note
that for HTTP URLs, the href may include the absolute path or full
site and path and still be accepted.) The pattern must contain at
least one Perl group as explained in the next paragraph.
Having got a list of `files' matching the pattern, their version
numbers are extracted by treating the part matching the Perl regexp
groups, demarcated by `(...)', joining them with `.' as a separator,
and using the result as the version number of the file. The version
number will then be mangled if required by the uversionmangle option
described below. Finally, the file versions are then compared to find
the one with the greatest version number, as determined by dpkg
--compare-versions. Note that if you need Perl groups which are
not to be used in the version number, either use `(?:...)' or use the
uversionmangle option to clean up the mess!
The current (upstream) version can be specified as the second
parameter in the watchfile line. If this is debian or absent,
then the current Debian version (as determined by
debian/changelog) is used to determine the current upstream
version. The current upstream version may also be specified by the
command-line option --upstream-version, which specifies the
upstream version number of the currently installed package (i.e., the
Debian version number without epoch and Debian revision). The
upstream version number will then be mangled using the dversionmangle
option if one is specified, as described below. If the newest version
available is newer than the current version, then it is downloaded
into the parent directory, unless the --report or
--report-status option has been used. Once the file has been
downloaded, then a symlink to the file is made from
<package>_<version>.orig.tar.gz if the file has a .tar.gz
or a .tgz suffix and from <package>_<version>.orig.tar.bz2
if the file has a .tar.bz2 or a .tbz or .tbz2
suffix.
Finally, if a third parameter (an action) is given in the watchfile
line, this is taken as the name of a command, and the command
command --upstream-version version filename
is executed, using either the original file or the symlink name. A
common such command would be
uupdate(1). (Note that the calling
syntax was slightly different when using watchfiles without a
`version=...' line; there the command executed was `command filename
version'.) If the command is
uupdate, then the
--no-symlink option is given to uupdate as a first
option, since any requested symlinking will already be done by
uscan.
The alternative version of the watchfile syntax for HTTP URLs is as
follows. The first field is a homepage which should be downloaded and
then searched for hrefs matching the pattern given in the second
field. (Again, this pattern will be anchored at the beginning and the
end, so it must match the whole href. If you want to match just the
basename of the href, you can use a pattern like
".*/name-(.*)\.tar\.gz" if you know that there is a full URL, or
better still: "(?:.*/)?name-(.*)\.tar\.gz" if there may or may not
be. Note the use of (?:...) to avoid making a backreference.) If any
of the hrefs in the homepage which match the (anchored) pattern are
relative URLs, they will be taken as being relative to the base URL of
the homepage (i.e., with everything after the trailing slash removed),
or relative to the base URL specified in the homepage itself with a
<base href="..."> tag. The third and fourth fields are the version
number and action fields as before.
PER-SITE OPTIONS
A watchfile line may be prefixed with `opts=options', where
options is a comma-separated list of options. The whole
options string may be enclosed in double quotes, which is
necessary if options contains any spaces. The recognised
options are as follows:
active and passive (or pasv)
If used on an FTP line, these override the choice of whether to use
PASV mode or not, and force the use of the specified mode for this
site.
uversionmangle=rules
This is used to mangle the upstream version number as matched by the
ftp://... or http:// rules as follows. First, the
rules string
is split into multiple rules at every `;'. Then the upstream version
number is mangled by executing the Perl command:
$version =~ rule;
for each rule. Thus, suitable rules might be `s/^/0./' to prepend
`0.' to the version number and `s/_/./' to change underscores into
periods. Note that the
rules string may not contain commas;
this should not be a problem.
dversionmangle=rules
This is used to mangle the Debian version number of the currently
installed package in the same way as the uversionmangle option.
Thus, a suitable rule might be `s/\.dfsg\.\d+$//' to remove a
`.dfsg.1' suffix from the Debian version number, or to handle `.pre6'
type version numbers. Again, the rules string may not contain
commas; this should not be a problem.
versionmangle=rules
This is a syntactic shorthand for
uversionmangle=rules,dversionmangle=rules, applying the
same rules to both the upstream and Debian version numbers.
filenamemangle=rules
This is used to mangle the filename with which the downloaded file
will be saved, and is parsed in the same way as the
uversionmangle option. Examples of its use are given in the
examples section above.
downloadurlmangle=rules
This is used to mangle the URL to be used for the download. The URL
is first computed based on the homepage downloaded and the pattern
matched, then the version number is determined from this URL.
Finally, any rules given by this option are applied before the actual
download attempt is made. An example of its use is given in the
examples section above.
Directory name checking
Similarly to several other scripts in the devscripts package,
uscan explores the requested directory trees looking for
debian/changelog and debian/watch files. As a safeguard
against stray files causing potential problems, and in order to
promote efficiency, it will examine the name of the parent directory
once it finds the debian/changelog file, and check that the
directory name corresponds to the package name. It will only attempt
to download newer versions of the package and then perform any
requested action if the directory name matches the package name.
Precisely how it does this is controlled by two configuration file
variables DEVSCRIPTS_CHECK_DIRNAME_LEVEL and
DEVSCRIPTS_CHECK_DIRNAME_REGEX, and their corresponding command-line
options --check-dirname-level and
--check-dirname-regex.
DEVSCRIPTS_CHECK_DIRNAME_LEVEL can take the following values:
0
Never check the directory name.
1
Only check the directory name if we have had to change directory in
our search for debian/changelog, that is, the directory
containing debian/changelog is not the directory from which
uscan was invoked. This is the default behaviour.
2
Always check the directory name.
The directory name is checked by testing whether the current directory
name (as determined by pwd(1)) matches the regex given by the
configuration file option DEVSCRIPTS_CHECK_DIRNAME_REGEX or by the
command line option --check-dirname-regex regex. Here
regex is a Perl regex (see perlre(3perl)), which will be
anchored at the beginning and the end. If regex contains a '/',
then it must match the full directory path. If not, then it must
match the full directory name. If regex contains the string
\'PACKAGE', this will be replaced by the source package name, as
determined from the changelog. The default value for the regex is:
\'PACKAGE(-.*)?', thus matching directory names such as PACKAGE and
PACKAGE-version.
EXAMPLE
This script will perform a fully automatic upstream update.
#!/bin/sh -e
# called with '--upstream-version' <version> <file>
uupdate "$@"
package=`dpkg-parsechangelog | sed -n 's/^Source: //p'`
cd ../$package-$2
debuild
Note that we don't call
dupload or dput automatically, as
the maintainer should perform sanity checks on the software before
uploading it to Debian.
OPTIONS
--report, --no-download
Only report about available newer versions but do not download anything.
--report-status
Report on the status of all packages, even those which are up-to-date,
but do not download anything.
--download
Report and download. (This is the default behaviour.)
--force-download
Download upstream even if up to date (will not overwrite local files, however)
--pasv
Force PASV mode for FTP connections.
--no-pasv
Do not use PASV mode for FTP connections.
--timeout N
Set timeout to N seconds (default 20 seconds).
--symlink
Make orig.tar.gz symlinks to any downloaded files if their extensions
are .tar.gz or .tgz, and similarly for to orig.tar.bz2 for
the suffixes .tar.gz, .tbz and .tbz2. (This is the
default behaviour.)
--rename
Instead of symlinking, rename the downloaded files to their Debian
orig.tar.gz names if their extensions are .tar.gz or .tgz,
and similarly for tar.bz2 files.
--no-symlink
Don't make these symlinks and don't rename the files.
--dehs
Use an XML format for output, as required by the DEHS system.
--no-dehs
Use the traditional uscan output format. (This is the default behaviour.)
--package package
Specify the name of the package to check for rather than examining
debian/changelog; this requires the --upstream-version
and --watchfile options as well. Furthermore, no directory
scanning will be done and nothing will be downloaded. This option is
probably most useful in conjunction with the DEHS system (and
--dehs).
--upstream-version upstream-version
Specify the current upstream version rather than examine the watchfile
or changelog to determine it. This is ignored if a directory scan is
being performed and more than one watchfile is found.
--watchfile watchfile
Specify the watchfile rather than perform a directory scan to
determine it. If this option is used without --package, then
uscan must be called from within the Debian package source tree
(so that debian/changelog can be found simply by stepping up
through the tree).
--verbose
Give verbose output.
--no-verbose
Don't give verbose output. (This is the default behaviour.)
--debug
Dump the downloaded web pages to stdout for debugging your watch file.
--check-dirname-level N
See the above section "Directory name checking" for an explanation of
this option.
--check-dirname-regex regex
See the above section "Directory name checking" for an explanation of
this option.
--user-agent, --useragent
Override the default user agent header.
--no-conf, --noconf
Do not read any configuration files. This can only be used as the
first option given on the command-line.
--help
Give brief usage information.
--version
Display version information.
CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
The two configuration files /etc/devscripts.conf and
~/.devscripts are sourced by a shell in that order to set
configuration variables. These may be overridden by command line
options. Environment variable settings are ignored for this purpose.
If the first command line option given is --noconf, then these
files will not be read. The currently recognised variables are:
USCAN_DOWNLOAD
If this is set to no, then newer upstream files will not be
downloaded; this is equivalent to the --report or
--no-download options.
USCAN_PASV
If this is set to yes or no, this will force FTP
connections to use PASV mode or not to, respectively. If this is set
to default, then Net::FTP(3) make the choice (primarily based on
the FTP_PASSIVE environment variable).
USCAN_SYMLINK
If this is set to no, then a pkg_version.orig.tar.{gz|bz2}
symlink will not be made (equivalent to the --no-symlink
option). If it is set to yes or symlink, then the
symlinks will be made. If it is set to rename, then the files
are renamed (equivalent to the --rename option).
USCAN_DEHS_OUTPUT
If this is set to yes, then DEHS-style output will be used.
This is equivalent to the --dehs option.
USCAN_VERBOSE
If this is set to yes, then verbose output will be given. This
is equivalent to the --verbose option.
USCAN_USER_AGENT
If set, the specified user agent string will be used in place of the
default. This is equivalent to the --user-agent option.
EXIT STATUS
The exit status gives some indication of whether a newer version was
found or not; one is advised to read the output to determine exactly
what happened and whether there were any warnings to be noted.
0
Either --help or --version was used, or for some
watchfile which was examined, a newer upstream version was located.
1
No newer upstream versions were located for any of the watchfiles
examined.
HISTORY AND UPGRADING
This section briefly describes the backwards-incompatible watchfile
features which have been added in each watchfile version, and the
first version of the devscripts package which understood them.
Pre-version 2
The watchfile syntax was significantly different in those days. Don't
use it. If you are upgrading from a pre-version 2 watchfile, you are
advised to read this manpage and to start from scratch.
Version 2
devscripts version 2.6.90: The first incarnation of the current style
of watchfiles.
Version 3
devscripts version 2.8.12: Introduced the following: correct handling
of regex special characters in the path part, directory/path pattern
matching, version number in several parts, version number mangling.
Later versions have also introduced URL mangling.
If you are upgrading from version 2, the key incompatibility is if you
have multiple groups in the pattern part; whereas only the first one
would be used in version 2, they will all be used in version 3. To
avoid this behaviour, change the non-version-number groups to be
(?:...) instead of a plain (...) group.
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
The original version of uscan was written by Christoph Lameter
<clameter@debian.org>. Significant improvements, changes and bugfixes
were made by Julian Gilbey <jdg@debian.org>. HTTP support was added
by Piotr Roszatycki <dexter@debian.org>. The program was rewritten
in Perl by Julian Gilbey.