dupload.conf - configuration file for dupload
The configuration file is rather straight forward Perl code as it
is included by the dupload script via "do
$config". The config file is read as Perl
code!
Any dupload.conf must begin with
"package config;" because
"config" is the namespace expected by
dupload.
For examples of the configuration please refer to the global
configuration file /etc/dupload.conf.
It contains associative arrays, each indexed by the nickname (see
--to option of dupload), for the following items:
- fqdn
[required]
- The fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the nickname.
For the copy method, this option is ignored and the
local FQDN will be used instead.
- method
[optional]
- The transfer method. The available methods are:
- ftp (default)
- http (since 2.9.9)
- https (since 2.9.9)
- scp (since 1.8)
- scpb (since 1.17)
- rsync (over SSH; since 2.4.1)
- copy (local filesystem; since 2.9.0)
If you are using an upload queue, use ftp because it is
fast. If you are using an authenticated host, always use
https, or one of scp or rsync via SSH, because
ftp transmits the password in clear text.
For scp and rsync to work properly, you have to
setup the remote and local host to establish a ssh/slogin connection using
.shosts/.rhosts or the files in ~/.ssh/. If you do not want or
cannot do that, you may find the scpb more convenient since it
uploads in batch, reducing the number of password prompts.
The only major caveat of the rsync and scpb options
is that the files are processed in a batch mode, i.e. not separately, so in
case of an error dupload will not be able to detect which part of the
transfer failed, and just delete the .upload file completely.
- login
[optional]
- The account name used to log into the remote host. For ftp the
default is anonymous, which should work with firewall logins too.
For scp, scpb and rsync the default is delegated to
SSH and its own configuration. For http and https there is
no default.
- passwordcmd
[optional] (since 2.9.9)
- The command to retrieve a password. It is expected to output the password
on stdout.
If this option has not been specified, and the
secret-tool program is installed, the following command will be
used to retrieve the password from a system secrets store via the Secret
Service interface:
secret-tool lookup host host user user
service dupload
If the command fails, then the password will be requested from
a prompt.
- password
[optional]
- The FTP password for anonymous logins.
- filemode
[optional] (since 2.9.1)
- The destination files mode, in octal. If the value is undef, the
mode will not be modified. The default is 0644.
- incoming
[required]
- Incoming directory, the directory we try to upload to.
- queuedir
[optional]
- The directory we move the uploaded files to (after successful upload to
incoming. Usually necessary only with some special upload
queues.
- distallowlist
[optional] (since 2.9.6)
- The regex of the distributions allowed for this host. This check is done
against the Distribution field in the .changes file.
- distwhitelist
[optional, deprecated] (since 2.9.3)
- Deprecated alias for distallowlist.
- distblocklist
[optional] (since 2.9.6)
- The regex of the distributions blocked for this host. This check is done
against the Distribution field in the .changes file.
- distblacklist
[optional, deprecated] (since 2.9.3)
- Deprecated alias for distblocklist.
- mail [optional] (since
2.9.9)
- The email addresses ("to" and
"cc") where the announcement about the
upload for the "match" distribution
should be sent.
This is an array of hashes with the following keys:
- match
[required]
- The regex of the distribution that needs to match to send an
announcement.
- to [required]
- Email address where the announcement about the packages is sent.
- cc [optional]
- Email address where to send a copy address of the announcement.
- mailto [optional,
deprecated]
- Deprecated alias for:
$cfg{$host}{mail} = [ {
match => qr/^stable/,
to => $mailto,
} ];
- mailtx [optional,
deprecated]
- Deprecated alias for:
$cfg{$host}{mail} = [ {
match => qr/^(?:unstable|experimental)/,
to => $mailtx,
} ];
- cc [optional,
deprecated]
- Deprecated alias for:
$cfg{$host}{mail} = [ {
match => ...,
to => ...,
cc => $cc,
} ];
- fullname
[optional]
- Your full name, one that should appear in the announcement.
If you leave this setting empty, the default will depend on
your mail system. Usually the full name will be copied from the GCOS
field in /etc/passwd.
- visibleuser
[optional]
- Your username that should appear in the announcement. Defaults to
"getlogin()".
- visiblename
[optional]
- The host/domain name that appears as the part to the right of the @
character in the from-part of the announcement. Defaults to the
value your local MTA likes.
- passive
[optional] (since 2.0)
- Set the passive mode for FTP transfers. Since dupload uses
Net::FTP, you can also use the environment variable
FTP_PASSIVE.
- options
[optional] (since 2.6.3.1)
- String that will be added verbatim to the command line of any scp
or rsync calls done.
- dinstall_runs
[optional] (since 2.1)
- Tells dupload that the remote host runs dinstall (or equivalent) so
that dupload will not send a duplicate announcement mail. The
default is 0 (false), set it to 1 to enable it.
- archive
[optional] (since 2.0)
- If set to 0 (false), adds a X-No-Archive: yes header in the
announcement. The default is 1 (true).
The configuration files also contain the following global
variables:
- default_host
[optional] (since 2.1)
- The default host to upload to. The default value of this variable is set
depending on the current vendor, but if there is no configuration for that
vendor it will be left unset.
- mta [optional] (since
2.9.8)
- The pathname to a sendmail compatible MTA. The MTA specified
must support the -f option to set the envelope sender address, and
the -F option to set the sender's full name. The default is
/usr/sbin/sendmail.
- no_parentheses_to_fullname
[optional] (since 2.1)
- Prevents dupload to add parentheses around the full name when
making mail announcements. Default is 0 (false), set it to 1 to enable
it.
Hooks are a powerful way to add actions which will be run before
or after a dupload (like the preinst and postinst script of
dpkg).
You have two sorts of hooks: pre-upload and post-upload. Both are
simple shell commands (executed by "sh -c"
so you can use any shell tricks). Pre-uploads are always run (even in dry
mode) and stop dupload if they fail (failure being measured by the
hook's exit status). Post-uploads are only run when you are not in dry mode
and only if the uploading succeeded.
Both sorts of hooks are run for a given category: changes,
sourcepackage, package, file or deb.
- changes
- This hook is run once per changes file (given as an argument to
dupload) with the filename as its parameter.
- sourcepackage
- This hook is run once per changes file with the source package name
and its version as its two parameters.
- package
- This hook is run once per binary package (a deb file) with the
package name and its version as its two parameters.
- file
- This hook is run once per uploaded file, with the file name as its
parameter.
- deb
- This hook is run once per binary package (a deb file) with the
filename as its parameter.
Hooks are defined in two Perl hashes,
%preupload and %postupload,
each indexed by category. In addition to the global hashes, each host entry
has two fields with the same names, for the host-specific hooks.
Hooks are defined as array references with each item executed in
sequence. Note: For backwards compatibility with old configurations they can
be defined as a simple scalar, even though they will emit a warning, but
this support will be dropped after the next major Debian release.
The shell command will be substituted first:
%1 will be replace by the first argument, etc.
Hooks can be global (for all the hosts) or can be for a specific
host. Host specific hooks override the global ones for each category.
This one runs lintian before uploading. It is global and
guarantees that you will always upload lintian-clean packages (thanks to
lintian return status).
$preupload{'deb'} = [ 'lintian -v -i %1' ];
This one just display the name and versions of successfully
uploaded packages.
$postupload{'package'} = [ 'echo PACKAGE %1 %2 uploaded' ];
Unlike the two others, this one is specific to one host,
debian-ssh, and overrides the default global hook in charge of
checking the OpenPGP signatures:
$cfg{'debian-ssh'}{preupload}{'changes'} = [ 'echo Uploading %1' ];
- /etc/dupload.conf
- ~/.dupload.conf
- --configfile
config-file
- The configuration files are loaded if available in the order listed,
overriding previous files.