APT-FORKTRACER
Section: Maintenance Commands (8)
Updated: 2008-11-16
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NAME
apt-forktracer - a utility for managing package versions
SYNOPSIS
apt-forktracer [ -v ]
DESCRIPTION
Background
Maintaining Debian stable systems sometimes requires installation of unofficial
versions of packages:
- backporting newer versions
-
This is necessary, when significant new functionality is required on the system
but unavailable in the official version found in the current stable release. In
this case, the version string usually sorts as newer than the official stable
version string. This means that pinning is not necessary, as APT will select
such package version by default.
- local changes to the official version
-
Usually these are small changes, so a minor modification of the package version
string is sufficient. There are two ways to do this:
Try to invent a version string newer than the current one, but older than the
next
official one.
This way does not require pinning, but is difficult to do reliably.
It might turn out, that the next official version string is older than the one
invented by you, which would cause the official version to be silently ignored.
The other way is to modify the version string in such way that it sorts as older than the official one.
The tilde character is very useful here, because dpkg treats it in a special way:
it is sufficient to append any string starting with the tilde, to the version string, e.g.
1.2
→
1.2~sl.1.
This requires you to "pin" the package to that version, but it is more reliable,
because works regardless of what the next official version number will be.
In both cases, there is one major drawback: APT will not warn you when newer
versions of official packages (point releases, security updates) will appear in
the stable release.
This means you may miss some important change.
apt-forktracer's
job let you track newer official versions of locally overridden packages.
Official package version definition
Official package version is a version which is available from a source,
whose Release file's Origin header value is equal to the system distributor
identifier, as indicated by the
lsb_release --id
command, or by the
DISTRIB_ID
field in the
/etc/lsb-release
file.
Program operation
apt-forktracer
analyzes each installed package separately, reporting on the standard output
these packages which are in a "non-standard" state. What "non-standard" means
depends on the mode of program operation:
- default (non-verbose) mode
-
this state means packages in an incorrect state (e.g. no candidate version) or
packages whose candidate version is different than the newest available
official version.
- verbose mode
-
this state also includes packages whose installed version is different from the candidate version
In the default mode the program also reads configuration files, which let you ignore
some of the "non-standard" packages, as long as they meet certain criteria.
If there is no configuration for a given package, then a default configuration is used.
More information is available in
forktracer.conf(5).
Message format
The program outputs messages such as the following:
foobar (1.2.3->1.2.4) [Debian: 1.2.3 1.2.4] [Other origin: 1.2.2]
Where:
- foobar
-
package name
- 1.2.3
-
installed package version
- 1.2.4
-
candidate package version - see
apt-cache(8).
- Debian
-
the value of the "Origin" field of one of the package sources. Versions
available from this source are listed after a colon.
- Other origin
-
another source origin
OPTIONS
- -v
-
Turns on the verbose mode.
FILES
/etc/apt/forktracer.conf
/etc/apt/forktracer.d/*.conf
SEE ALSO
forktracer.conf(5),
apt_preferences(5),
apt-cache(8).
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- Background
-
- Official package version definition
-
- Program operation
-
- Message format
-
- OPTIONS
-
- FILES
-
- SEE ALSO
-
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Time: 18:33:43 GMT, November 17, 2008