dpkg-deb - Debian package archive (.deb) manipulation tool
dpkg-deb [option...] command
dpkg-deb packs, unpacks and provides information about
Debian archives.
Use dpkg to install and remove packages from your
system.
You can also invoke dpkg-deb by calling dpkg with
whatever options you want to pass to dpkg-deb. dpkg will spot
that you wanted dpkg-deb and run it for you.
For most commands taking an input archive argument, the archive
can be read from standard input if the archive name is given as a single
minus character («-»); otherwise lack of support will
be documented in their respective command description.
- -b, --build
binary-directory [archive|directory]
- Creates a debian archive from the filesystem tree stored in
binary-directory. binary-directory must have a DEBIAN
subdirectory, which contains the control information files such as the
control file itself. This directory will not appear in the binary
package's filesystem archive, but instead the files in it will be put in
the binary package's control information area.
Unless you specify --nocheck, dpkg-deb will read
DEBIAN/control and parse it. It will check the file for syntax
errors and other problems, and display the name of the binary package
being built. dpkg-deb will also check the permissions of the
maintainer scripts and other files found in the DEBIAN control
information directory.
If no archive is specified then dpkg-deb will
write the package into the file binary-directory.deb.
If the archive to be created already exists it will be
overwritten.
If the second argument is a directory then dpkg-deb
will write to the file
directory/package_version_arch.deb.
When a target directory is specified, rather than a file, the
--nocheck option may not be used (since dpkg-deb needs to
read and parse the package control file to determine which filename to
use).
- -I, --info
archive [control-file-name...]
- Provides information about a binary package archive.
If no control-file-names are specified then it will
print a summary of the contents of the package as well as its control
file.
If any control-file-names are specified then
dpkg-deb will print them in the order they were specified; if any
of the components weren't present it will print an error message to
stderr about each one and exit with status 2.
- -W, --show
archive
- Provides information about a binary package archive in the format
specified by the --showformat argument. The default format displays
the package's name and version on one line, separated by a tabulator.
- -f, --field
archive [control-field-name...]
- Extracts control file information from a binary package archive.
If no control-field-names are specified then it will
print the whole control file.
If any are specified then dpkg-deb will print their
contents, in the order in which they appear in the control file. If more
than one control-field-name is specified then dpkg-deb
will precede each with its field name (and a colon and space).
No errors are reported for fields requested but not found.
- -c, --contents
archive
- Lists the contents of the filesystem tree archive portion of the package
archive. It is currently produced in the format generated by tar's
verbose listing.
- -x, --extract
archive directory
- Extracts the filesystem tree from a package archive into the specified
directory.
Note that extracting a package to the root directory will
not result in a correct installation! Use dpkg to install
packages.
directory (but not its parents) will be created if
necessary, and its permissions modified to match the contents of the
package.
- -X, --vextract
archive directory
- Is like --extract (-x) with --verbose (-v)
which prints a listing of the files extracted as it goes.
- -R, --raw-extract
archive directory
- Extracts the filesystem tree from a package archive into a specified
directory, and the control information files into a DEBIAN
subdirectory of the specified directory (since dpkg 1.16.1).
The target directory (but not its parents) will be created if
necessary.
The input archive is not (currently) processed sequentially,
so reading it from standard input («-») is
not supported.
- --ctrl-tarfile
archive
- Extracts the control data from a binary package and sends it to standard
output in tar format (since dpkg 1.17.14). Together with
tar(1) this can be used to extract a particular control file from a
package archive. The input archive will always be processed
sequentially.
- --fsys-tarfile
archive
- Extracts the filesystem tree data from a binary package and sends it to
standard output in tar format. Together with tar(1) this can
be used to extract a particular file from a package archive. The input
archive will always be processed sequentially.
- -e, --control
archive [directory]
- Extracts the control information files from a package archive into the
specified directory.
If no directory is specified then a subdirectory DEBIAN
in the current directory is used.
The target directory (but not its parents) will be created if
necessary.
- -?, --help
- Show the usage message and exit.
- --version
- Show the version and exit.
- --showformat=format
- This option is used to specify the format of the output --show will
produce. The format is a string that will be output for each package
listed.
The string may reference any status field using the
“${field-name}” form, a list of the valid fields
can be easily produced using -I on the same package. A complete
explanation of the formatting options (including escape sequences and
field tabbing) can be found in the explanation of the
--showformat option in dpkg-query(1).
The default for this field is
“${Package}\t${Version}\n”.
- -zcompress-level
- Specify which compression level to use on the compressor backend, when
building a package (default is 9 for gzip, 6 for xz, 3 for zstd). The
accepted values are compressor specific. For gzip, from 0-9 with 0 being
mapped to compressor none. For xz from 0-9. For zstd from 0-22, with
levels from 20 to 22 enabling its ultra mode. Before dpkg 1.16.2 level 0
was equivalent to compressor none for all compressors.
- -Scompress-strategy
- Specify which compression strategy to use on the compressor backend, when
building a package (since dpkg 1.16.2). Allowed values are none
(since dpkg 1.16.4), filtered, huffman, rle and
fixed for gzip (since dpkg 1.17.0) and extreme for xz.
- -Zcompress-type
- Specify which compression type to use when building a package. Allowed
values are gzip, xz (since dpkg 1.15.6), zstd (since
dpkg 1.21.18) and none (default is xz).
- --[no-]uniform-compression
- Specify that the same compression parameters should be used for all
archive members (i.e. control.tar and data.tar; since dpkg
1.17.6). Otherwise only the data.tar member will use those
parameters. The only supported compression types allowed to be uniformly
used are none, gzip, xz and zstd. The
--no-uniform-compression option disables uniform compression (since
dpkg 1.19.0). Uniform compression is the default (since dpkg 1.19.0).
- --threads-max=threads
- Sets the maximum number of threads allowed for compressors that support
multi-threaded operations (since dpkg 1.21.9).
- --root-owner-group
- Set the owner and group for each entry in the filesystem tree data to root
with id 0 (since dpkg 1.19.0).
Note: This option can be useful for rootless builds
(see rootless-builds.txt), but should not be used when the
entries have an owner or group that is not root. Support for these will
be added later in the form of a meta manifest.
- --deb-format=format
- Set the archive format version used when building (since dpkg 1.17.0).
Allowed values are 2.0 for the new format, and 0.939000 for
the old one (default is 2.0).
The old archive format is less easily parsed by non-Debian
tools and is now obsolete; its only use is when building packages to be
parsed by versions of dpkg older than 0.93.76 (September 1995), which
was released as i386 a.out only.
- --nocheck
- Inhibits dpkg-deb --build's usual checks on the proposed contents
of an archive. You can build any archive you want, no matter how broken,
this way.
- -v, --verbose
- Enables verbose output (since dpkg 1.16.1). This currently only affects
--extract making it behave like --vextract.
- -D, --debug
- Enables debugging output. This is not very interesting.
- 0
- The requested action was successfully performed.
- 2
- Fatal or unrecoverable error due to invalid command-line usage, or
interactions with the system, such as accesses to the database, memory
allocations, etc.
- DPKG_DEB_THREADS_MAX
- Sets the maximum number of threads allowed for compressors that support
multi-threaded operations (since dpkg 1.21.9).
The --threads-max option overrides this value.
- DPKG_DEB_COMPRESSOR_TYPE
- Sets the compressor type to use (since dpkg 1.21.10).
The -Z option overrides this value.
- DPKG_DEB_COMPRESSOR_LEVEL
- Sets the compressor level to use (since dpkg 1.21.10).
The -z option overrides this value.
- DPKG_COLORS
- Sets the color mode (since dpkg 1.18.5). The currently accepted values
are: auto (default), always and never.
- TMPDIR
- If set, dpkg-deb will use it as the directory in which to create
temporary files and directories.
- SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH
- If set, it will be used as the timestamp (as seconds since the epoch) in
the deb(5)'s ar(5) container and used to clamp the mtime in
the tar(5) file entries.
Do not attempt to use just dpkg-deb to install software!
You must use dpkg proper to ensure that all the files are correctly
placed and the package's scripts run and its status and contents
recorded.
dpkg-deb -I package1.deb
package2.deb does the wrong thing.
There is no authentication on .deb files; in fact, there
isn't even a straightforward checksum. (Higher level tools like APT support
authenticating .deb packages retrieved from a given repository, and
most packages nowadays provide an md5sum control file generated by
debian/rules. Though this is not directly supported by the lower level
tools.)