генерировать зависимости подварки разделяемой библиотеки (generate shared library substvar dependencies)
Имя (Name)
dpkg-shlibdeps - generate shared library substvar dependencies
Синопсис (Synopsis)
dpkg-shlibdeps
[option...] [-e
]executable [option...]
Описание (Description)
dpkg-shlibdeps
calculates shared library dependencies for
executables named in its arguments. The dependencies are added to
the substitution variables file debian/substvars
as variable
names shlibs:
dependency-field where dependency-field is a
dependency field name. Any other variables starting with shlibs:
are removed from the file.
dpkg-shlibdeps
has two possible sources of information to
generate dependency information. Either symbols files or shlibs
files. For each binary that dpkg-shlibdeps
analyzes, it finds out
the list of libraries that it's linked with. Then, for each
library, it looks up either the symbols file, or the shlibs file
(if the former doesn't exist or if debian/shlibs.local contains
the relevant dependency). Both files are supposed to be provided
by the library package and should thus be available as
/usr/local/var/lib/dpkg/info/package.symbols or
/usr/local/var/lib/dpkg/info/package.shlibs. The package name is
identified in two steps: find the library file on the system
(looking in the same directories that ld.so
would use), then use
dpkg -S
library-file to lookup the package providing the library.
Symbols files
Symbols files contain finer-grained dependency information by
providing the minimum dependency for each symbol that the library
exports. The script tries to find a symbols file associated to a
library package in the following places (first match is used):
debian/*/DEBIAN/symbols
Shared library information generated by the current build
process that also invoked dpkg-shlibdeps
. They are
generated by dpkg-gensymbols(1). They are only used if
the library is found in a package's build tree. The
symbols file in that build tree takes precedence over
symbols files from other binary packages.
/usr/local/etc/dpkg/symbols/package.symbols.arch
/usr/local/etc/dpkg/symbols/package.symbols
Per-system overriding shared library dependency
information. arch is the architecture of the current
system (obtained by dpkg-architecture -qDEB_HOST_ARCH
).
Output from 'dpkg-query --control-path
package symbols'
Package-provided shared library dependency information.
Unless overridden by --admindir
, those files are located
in /usr/local/var/lib/dpkg.
While scanning the symbols used by all binaries, dpkg-shlibdeps
remembers the (biggest) minimal version needed for each library.
At the end of the process, it is able to write out the minimal
dependency for every library used (provided that the information
of the symbols files are accurate).
As a safe-guard measure, a symbols file can provide a
Build-Depends-Package
meta-information field and dpkg-shlibdeps
will extract the minimal version required by the corresponding
package in the Build-Depends
field and use this version if it's
higher than the minimal version computed by scanning symbols.
Shlibs files
Shlibs files associate directly a library to a dependency
(without looking at the symbols). It's thus often stronger than
really needed but very safe and easy to handle.
The dependencies for a library are looked up in several places.
The first file providing information for the library of interest
is used:
debian/shlibs.local
Package-local overriding shared library dependency
information.
/usr/local/etc/dpkg/shlibs.override
Per-system overriding shared library dependency
information.
debian/*/DEBIAN/shlibs
Shared library information generated by the current build
process that also invoked dpkg-shlibdeps
. They are only
used if the library is found in a package's build tree.
The shlibs file in that build tree takes precedence over
shlibs files from other binary packages.
Output from 'dpkg-query --control-path
package shlibs'
Package-provided shared library dependency information.
Unless overridden by --admindir
, those files are located
in /usr/local/var/lib/dpkg.
/usr/local/etc/dpkg/shlibs.default
Per-system default shared library dependency information.
The extracted dependencies are then directly used (except if they
are filtered out because they have been identified as duplicate,
or as weaker than another dependency).
Параметры (Options)
dpkg-shlibdeps
interprets non-option arguments as executable
names, just as if they'd been supplied as -e
executable.
-e
executable
Include dependencies appropriate for the shared libraries
required by executable. This option can be used multiple
times.
-l
directory
Prepend directory to the list of directories to search for
private shared libraries (since dpkg 1.17.0). This option
can be used multiple times.
Note: Use this option instead of setting LD_LIBRARY_PATH
,
as that environment variable is used to control the run-
time linker and abusing it to set the shared library paths
at build-time can be problematic when cross-compiling for
example.
-d
dependency-field
Add dependencies to be added to the control file
dependency field dependency-field. (The dependencies for
this field are placed in the variable shlibs:
dependency-
field.)
The -d
dependency-field option takes effect for all
executables after the option, until the next -d
dependency-
field. The default dependency-field is Depends
.
If the same dependency entry (or set of alternatives)
appears in more than one of the recognized dependency
field names Pre-Depends
, Depends
, Recommends
, Enhances
or
Suggests
then dpkg-shlibdeps
will automatically remove the
dependency from all fields except the one representing the
most important dependencies.
-p
varname-prefix
Start substitution variables with varname-prefix:
instead
of shlibs:
. Likewise, any existing substitution variables
starting with varname-prefix:
(rather than shlibs:
) are
removed from the substitution variables file.
-O
[filename]
Print substitution variable settings to standard output
(or filename if specified, since dpkg 1.17.2), rather than
being added to the substitution variables file
(debian/substvars
by default).
-t
type Prefer shared library dependency information tagged for
the given package type. If no tagged information is
available, falls back to untagged information. The default
package type is deb
. Shared library dependency information
is tagged for a given type by prefixing it with the name
of the type, a colon, and whitespace.
-L
local-shlibs-file
Read overriding shared library dependency information from
local-shlibs-file instead of debian/shlibs.local
.
-T
substvars-file
Write substitution variables in substvars-file; the
default is debian/substvars
.
-v
Enable verbose mode (since dpkg 1.14.8). Numerous
messages are displayed to explain what dpkg-shlibdeps
does.
-x
package
Exclude the package from the generated dependencies (since
dpkg 1.14.8). This is useful to avoid self-dependencies
for packages which provide ELF binaries (executables or
library plugins) using a library contained in the same
package. This option can be used multiple times to exclude
several packages.
-S
package-build-dir
Look into package-build-dir first when trying to find a
library (since dpkg 1.14.15). This is useful when the
source package builds multiple flavors of the same library
and you want to ensure that you get the dependency from a
given binary package. You can use this option multiple
times: directories will be tried in the same order before
directories of other binary packages.
-I
package-build-dir
Ignore package-build-dir when looking for shlibs, symbols,
and shared library files (since dpkg 1.18.5). You can use
this option multiple times.
--ignore-missing-info
Do not fail if dependency information can't be found for a
shared library (since dpkg 1.14.8). Usage of this option
is discouraged, all libraries should provide dependency
information (either with shlibs files, or with symbols
files) even if they are not yet used by other packages.
--warnings=
value
value is a bit field defining the set of warnings that can
be emitted by dpkg-shlibdeps
(since dpkg 1.14.17). Bit 0
(value=1) enables the warning 'symbol sym used by binary
found in none of the libraries', bit 1 (value=2) enables
the warning 'package could avoid a useless dependency' and
bit 2 (value=4) enables the warning 'binary should not be
linked against library'. The default value is 3: the
first two warnings are active by default, the last one is
not. Set value to 7 if you want all warnings to be active.
--admindir=
dir
Change the location of the dpkg
database (since dpkg
1.14.0). The default location is /usr/local/var/lib/dpkg.
-?
, --help
Show the usage message and exit.
--version
Show the version and exit.
Окружение (Environment)
DPKG_COLORS
Sets the color mode (since dpkg 1.18.5). The currently
accepted values are: auto
(default), always
and never
.
DPKG_NLS
If set, it will be used to decide whether to activate
Native Language Support, also known as
internationalization (or i18n) support (since dpkg
1.19.0). The accepted values are: 0
and 1
(default).
Диагностика (Diagnostic)
Warnings
Since dpkg-shlibdeps
analyzes the set of symbols used by each
binary of the generated package, it is able to emit warnings in
several cases. They inform you of things that can be improved in
the package. In most cases, those improvements concern the
upstream sources directly. By order of decreasing importance,
here are the various warnings that you can encounter:
symbol
sym used by
binary found in none of the libraries.
The indicated symbol has not been found in the libraries
linked with the binary. The binary is most likely a
library and it needs to be linked with an additional
library during the build process (option -l
library of the
linker).
binary contains an unresolvable reference to symbol
sym: it's
probably a plugin
The indicated symbol has not been found in the libraries
linked with the binary. The binary is most likely a plugin
and the symbol is probably provided by the program that
loads this plugin. In theory a plugin doesn't have any
SONAME but this binary does have one and as such it could
not be clearly identified as such. However the fact that
the binary is stored in a non-public directory is a strong
indication that's it's not a normal shared library. If the
binary is really a plugin, then disregard this warning.
But there's always the possibility that it's a real
library and that programs linking to it are using an RPATH
so that the dynamic loader finds it. In that case, the
library is broken and needs to be fixed.
package could avoid a useless dependency if
binary was not linked
against
library (it uses none of the library's symbols)
None of the binaries that are linked with library use any
of the symbols provided by the library. By fixing all the
binaries, you would avoid the dependency associated to
this library (unless the same dependency is also generated
by another library that is really used).
package could avoid a useless dependency if
binaries were not
linked against
library (they use none of the library's symbols)
Exactly the same as the above warning, but for multiple
binaries.
binary should not be linked against
library (it uses none of the
library's symbols)
The binary is linked to a library that it doesn't need.
It's not a problem but some small performance improvements
in binary load time can be obtained by not linking this
library to this binary. This warning checks the same
information as the previous one but does it for each
binary instead of doing the check globally on all binaries
analyzed.
Errors
dpkg-shlibdeps
will fail if it can't find a public library used
by a binary or if this library has no associated dependency
information (either shlibs file or symbols file). A public
library has a SONAME and is versioned (libsomething.so.X). A
private library (like a plugin) should not have a SONAME and
doesn't need to be versioned.
couldn't find library
library-soname needed by
binary (its RPATH
is '
rpath')
The binary uses a library called library-soname but
dpkg-shlibdeps
has been unable to find the library.
dpkg-shlibdeps
creates a list of directories to check as
following: directories listed in the RPATH of the binary,
directories added by the -l
option, directories listed in
the LD_LIBRARY_PATH
environment variable, cross multiarch
directories (ex. /lib/arm64-linux-gnu,
/usr/lib/arm64-linux-gnu), standard public directories
(/lib, /usr/lib), directories listed in /etc/ld.so.conf,
and obsolete multilib directories (/lib32, /usr/lib32,
/lib64, /usr/lib64). Then it checks those directories in
the package's build tree of the binary being analyzed, in
the packages' build trees indicated with the -S
command-
line option, in other packages' build trees that contains
a DEBIAN/shlibs or DEBIAN/symbols file and finally in the
root directory. If the library is not found in any of
those directories, then you get this error.
If the library not found is in a private directory of the
same package, then you want to add the directory with -l
.
If it's in another binary package being built, you want to
make sure that the shlibs/symbols file of this package is
already created and that -l
contains the appropriate
directory if it also is in a private directory.
no dependency information found for
library-file (used by
binary).
The library needed by binary has been found by
dpkg-shlibdeps
in library-file but dpkg-shlibdeps
has been
unable to find any dependency information for that
library. To find out the dependency, it has tried to map
the library to a Debian package with the help of dpkg -S
library-file. Then it checked the corresponding shlibs
and symbols files in /usr/local/var/lib/dpkg/info/, and in
the various package's build trees (debian/*/DEBIAN/).
This failure can be caused by a bad or missing shlibs or
symbols file in the package of the library. It might also
happen if the library is built within the same source
package and if the shlibs files has not yet been created
(in which case you must fix debian/rules to create the
shlibs before calling dpkg-shlibdeps
). Bad RPATH can also
lead to the library being found under a non-canonical name
(example: /usr/lib/openoffice.org/../lib/libssl.so.0.9.8
instead of /usr/lib/libssl.so.0.9.8) that's not associated
to any package, dpkg-shlibdeps
tries to work around this
by trying to fallback on a canonical name (using
realpath(3)) but it might not always work. It's always
best to clean up the RPATH of the binary to avoid
problems.
Calling dpkg-shlibdeps
in verbose mode (-v
) will provide
much more information about where it tried to find the
dependency information. This might be useful if you don't
understand why it's giving you this error.
Смотри также (See also)
deb-shlibs(5), deb-symbols(5), dpkg-gensymbols(1).