Simple debian package building and management named in memory of the late Ian Murdock, founder of the Debian project.
The purpose of this tool is to decrease the overhead in maintaining a debian package stored in a git repository. It tries to mimic the CLI of other popular tools such as git and bundler. It is intended to be helpful when integrating other build tools/systems and with CI/CD.
It has been ported to golang from the ruby project of the same name.
You can download binaries and Debian packages from the releases page.
I shell out a bit to save time, will eventually make things more native. For now, need the following tools:
- dpkg-deb
- fakeroot
- rsync
This should do it.
sudo apt-get install fakeroot dpkg-dev rsync coreutils findutils
Simple to build / install, provided you have go setup:
go get github.com/penguinpowernz/go-ian
go install github.com/penguinpowernz/go-ian/cmd/ian
Or you can download a pre-built binary or Debian package from the releases page.
This tool is used for working with what Debian called "Binary packages" - that is ones that have the DEBIAN
folder in capitals to slap Debian packages together quickly. It uses dpkg-deb -b in the background which most
Debian package maintainers frown at but it is suitable enough for rolling your own packages quickly, and it
scratches an itch.
ian new my-package
Analogous to bundle new gemname
or rails new appname
this will create a folder called my-package
in the
current folder and initialize it with the appropriate debian files.
ian init
Analagous to git init
this will do the same as new
but do it in the current folder.
Now you will see you have a DEBIAN
folder with a control
and postinst
file.
ian info
This will simply dump the control file contents out.
The architecture and the version can be set quickly in this manner. Other fields are not (yet) supported.
ian set -a amd64
ian set -v 1.2.3-test
You can also use increments on semantic versions like so:
ian set -v +M # increment the Major number
ian set -v +m # increment the minor number
ian set -v +p # increment patch level
ian pkg [-b]
The one you came here for. Packages the repo in a debian package, excluding junk files like .git
and .gitignore
,
moves root files (like README.md
) to a /usr/share/doc
folder so you don't dirty your root partition on install.
The package will be output to a pkg
directory in the root of the repo. It will also generate the md5sums file
and calculate the package size proir to packaging. By adding a -b
flag it will run the build script before
packaging.
ian build
This will run the build script found in DEBIAN/build
parsing it the following arguments:
- root directory of the package git repository
- architecture from the control file
- version from the control file
It can do whatever things you need it to do to prepare for the packaging such as building binaries, etc.
ian push [target]
Setup scripts to run in a file called .ianpush
in the repo root and running ian push
will run all the lines in
the file as commands with the current package. The package filename will be appended to each command unless $PKG
is found on the line, in which case that will be replaced with the package filename. Also the target name can be
given as an argument to push to specfic targets (supports globbing).
package_cloud push user/app-testing/debian/wheezy
stable: package_cloud push user/app-stable/debian/wheezy
devbox: scp $PKG [email protected]:~
s3: aws s3 cp $PKG s3://mybucket/dpkg/
Note that targets requiring input will fail as there is no terminal attached to the command. For SCP, it is recommended to use the SSH config files to your advantage.
Some other commands:
ian install # installs the current package
ian excludes # shows the excluded files
ian size # calculates the package size (in kB)
ian -v # prints the ian version
ian version # prints the package version
ian versions # prints all known versions
ian deps # prints the dependencies line by line
bpi # run build, pkg, install
pi # run pkg, install
pp [target] # run pkg, push
bp # run build, pkg
bpp [target] # run build, pkg push
You can also use the envvar IAN_DIR
in the same way that you would use GIT_DIR
- that is, to do stuff
with ian but from a different folder location.
Use DEBUG=1 ian pkg
to show debug logs for ian commands.
The Debian package Control
struct could come in handy for others. As a quick overview here's what it can do:
Parse([]byte) (Control, error)
- parse the bytes from the control fileRead(string) (Control, error)
- read the given file and parse it's contentsDefault() (Control)
- a default package control filectrl.Filename() string
- the almost Debian standard filename (missing distro name)ctrl.String() string
- render the control file as a stringctrl.WriteFile(string) error
- write the string into the given filename
Plus the exported fields on the Control
struct that mirror the dpkg field names.
For more information please check the godocs.
The debian package source for Ian is actually managed by Ian in the folder dpkg
. So you can build the debian
package for ian, using ian. Give it a try!
go get github.com/penguinpowernz/go-ian
go install github.com/penguinpowernz/go-ian/cmd/ian
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/penguinpowernz/go-ian/dpkg
ian build
ian pkg
sudo $GOBIN/ian install # or sudo dpkg -i pkg/ian_v1.0.0_amd64.deb
- more tests
- add help page
- add subcommands help
- releasing
- pushing
- test pushing
- ignore file
- allow specifying where to output the package to after building
- deps management
- running of a build script
- install after packaging
- package a specific version
- optional semver enforcement
- utilize rules file
- support copyright file
- support changelog
- don't shell out for md5sums
- don't shell out for rsync
- don't shell out for find
- don't shell out for dpkg-deb
- pull maintainer from git config
This project adheres to No Code of Conduct. We are all adults. We accept anyone's contributions. Nothing else matters.
For more information please visit the No Code of Conduct homepage.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/penguinpowernz/ian.
In memory of Ian Ashley Murdock (1973 - 2015) founder of the Debian project.