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pacman/doc/makepkg-template.1.txt
Wieland Hoffmann 0f302df5ed makepkg-template.1: Clarify which file version-less markers use
The old text could be interpreted such that makepkg-template compares
the version numbers of the templates to find the most recent
one. Rephrase this to make it explicit that "$template_name.template" is
used.

Signed-off-by: Florian Pritz <bluewind@xinu.at>
2015-06-20 17:32:56 +10:00

122 lines
3.4 KiB
Plaintext

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vim:set ts=4 sw=4 syntax=asciidoc noet spell spelllang=en_us:
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makepkg-template(1)
===================
Name
----
makepkg-template - package build templating utility
Synopsis
--------
'makepkg-template' [options]
Description
-----------
'makepkg-template' is a script to ease the work of maintaining multiple similar
PKGBUILDs. It allows you to move most of the code from the PKGBUILD into a
template file and uses markers to allow in-place updating of existing PKGBUILDs
if the template has been changed.
Template files can contain any code allowed in a PKGBUILD. You can think of
them like external files included with "." or "source", but they will be
inlined into the PKGBUILD by 'makepkg-template' so you do not depend on the
template file when building the package.
Markers are bash comments in the form of:
# template start; key=value; key2=value2; ...
and
# template end;
Currently used keys are: name (mandatory) and version. Template names are limited to
alphanumerics, "@", "+", ".", "-", and "_". Versions are limited to numbers and ".".
For initial creation there is a one line short cut which does not need an end marker:
# template input; key=value;
Using this short-cut will result in 'makepkg-template' replacing it with start
and end markers and the template code on the first run.
Template files should be stored in one directory and filenames should be
"$template_name-$version.template" with a symlink "$template_name.template"
pointing to the most recent template. If the version is not set in the marker,
'makepkg-template' will automatically use the target of "$template_name.template",
otherwise the specified version will be used. This allows for easier
verification of untrusted PKGBUILDs if the template is trusted. You verify the
non-template code and then use a command similar to this:
diff -u <(makepkg-template -o -) PKGBUILD
Template files may also contain markers leading to nested templates in the
resulting PKGBUILD. If you use markers in a template, please set the version
you used/tested with in the start/input marker so other people can properly
recreate from templates.
Options
-------
*-p, \--input* <build script>::
Read the package script `build script` instead of the default.
*-o, \--output* <build script>::
Write the updated file to `build script` instead of overwriting the input file.
*-n, \--newest*::
Always use the newest available template file.
*\--template-dir* <dir>::
Change the dir where we are looking for template files. This option may be
given multiple times in which case files found in directory given last will
take precedence.
Example PKGBUILD
----------------
pkgname=perl-config-simple
pkgver=4.58
pkgrel=1
pkgdesc="simple configuration file class"
arch=('any')
license=('PerlArtistic' 'GPL')
depends=('perl')
source=("http://search.cpan.org/CPAN/authors/id/S/SH/SHERZODR/Config-Simple-${pkgver}.tar.gz")
md5sums=('f014aec54f0a1e2e880d317180fce502')
_distname="Config-Simple"
# template start; name=perl-module; version=1.0;
_distdir="${_distname}-${pkgver}"
url="https://metacpan.org/release/${_distname}"
options+=('!emptydirs')
build() {
cd "$srcdir/$_distdir"
perl Makefile.PL INSTALLDIRS=vendor
make
}
check() {
cd "$srcdir/$_distdir"
make test
}
package() {
cd "$srcdir/$_distdir"
make DESTDIR="$pkgdir" install
}
# template end;
See Also
--------
linkman:makepkg[8], linkman:PKGBUILD[5]
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