gbp-import-srpm - Import source RPM packages into a Git
repository
gbp import-srpm
[--version] [--help] [--verbose]
[--color=[auto|on|off]] [--color-scheme= COLOR_SCHEME]
[--vendor= VENDOR] [--allow-same-versions]
[--author-is-committer] [--packaging-branch=
BRANCH-NAME] [--packaging-tag= TAG-FORMAT]
[--skip-packaging-tag] [--packaging-dir= DIRECTORY]
[--filter= PATTERN] [--keyid= GPG-KEYID]
[--[no-]create-missing-branches] [--[no-]pristine-tar]
[--[no-]sign-tags] [--upstream-branch= BRANCH-NAME]
[--upstream-tag= TAG-FORMAT] [--upstream-vcs-tag=
TAG-FORMAT] [--native] [--repo-user=
[GIT|DEBIAN]] [--repo-email= [GIT|DEBIAN]] SRPM
| DIRECTORY [target]
gbp import-srpm
[options] URL [target]
gbp import-srpm imports an RPM source package into a
Git repository, notes the package version in the commit logs, and commits
the change. All information, including package name, version and upstream
source is automatically detected from the source package but you can
override the location of the new repository by optionally specifying the
target argument. The tool supports importing both archived (src.rpm
files) or unpacked (directory) source RPMs. It also imports from
http(s)-URLs.
- --version
- Print version of the program, i.e. version of the git-buildpackage
suite
- -v, --verbose
- Verbose execution
- -h, --help
- Print help and exit
- --color=[auto|on|off]
- Whether to use colored output.
- --color-scheme=COLOR_SCHEME
- Colors to use in output (when color is enabled). The format for
COLOR_SCHEME is
'<debug>:<info>:<warning>:<error>'. Numerical
values and color names are accepted, empty fields imply the default color.
For example, --git-color-scheme='cyan:34::' would show debug
messages in cyan, info messages in blue and other messages in default
(i.e. warning and error messages in red).
- --vendor=VENDOR
- Distribution vendor name.
- --upstream-branch=BRANCH-NAME
- The branch in the Git repository the upstream sources are put onto.
Default is upstream.
- --packaging-branch=BRANCH-NAME
- The branch in the Git repository the packaging files are put onto. Default
is master.
- --[no-]sign-tags
- GPG sign all created tags.
- --keyid=GPG-KEYID
- Use this keyid for gpg signing tags.
- --packaging-tag=TAG-FORMAT
- Use this tag format when tagging released versions, default is
%(vendor)s/%(version)s.
- --skip-packaging-tag
- Do not create packaging tag after importing the packaging files.
- --upstream-tag=TAG-FORMAT
- Use this tag format when tagging upstream versions, default is
upstream/%(version)s.
- --upstream-vcs-tag=TAG-NAME
- Add TAG-FORMAT as an additional parent of the commit of the
upstream tarball. Useful when upstream uses git and you want to link to
its revision history. TAG-FORMAT can be a pattern similar to what
--upstream-tag supports.
- --git-packaging-dir=DIRECTORY
- Subdirectory where to put the RPM packaging files.
- --filter=PATTERN
- Filter out files glob-matching pattern. Can be given multiple times.
- --pristine-tar
- Generate pristine-tar delta file.
- --allow-same-version
- Allow one to re-import a package with an already existing version. This
will not re-import the upstream sources - only packaging files will be
re-imported.
- --author-is-committer
- Use the author identity as the committer when importing upstream sources
and packaging files.
- --[no-]create-missing-branches
- Create missing upstream and/or packaging branch if missing.
- --orphan-packaging
- Import packaging files into an orphan branch that will not be based on the
upstream branch. Useful if you want to maintain (non-native) package using
the 'orphan-packaging' model. This option have no effect if
--native is used.
- --native
- Treat the package as native package. No separate upstream branch or
upstream tags will be created.
- --repo-user=[GIT|DEBIAN]
- When set to DEBIAN use the DEBUSER environment variable to
set the user.name Git configuration otherwise use Git's defaults. Only
affects newly created repos.
- --repo-email=[GIT|DEBIAN]
- When set to DEBIAN use the DEBEMAIL environment variable to
set the user.email Git configuration otherwise use Git's defaults. Only
affects newly created repos.
Several gbp.conf files are parsed to set defaults for the
above command-line arguments. See the gbp.conf(5) manpage for
details.
Markus Lehtonen <markus.lehtonen@linux.intel.com>