PORTLINT(1) BSD General Commands Manual PORTLINT(1)NAMEportlint — a verifier for port directories
SYNOPSISportlint [-abcghvtACNV] [-M ENV] [-B n] [dir]
DESCRIPTIONportlint tries to verify the content of a port directory. The purpose of
portlint can be separated into two parts: (1) to let the submitters eas‐
ily polish their own port directory, and (2) to decrease the labor of the
committers.
portlint uses very simple regular-expression matching for verifying files
that make up a port directory. Note that it does NOT implement a com‐
plete parser for those files. Because of this the user may see some
extra warnings, especially when checking complex Makefiles.
Options
-a Perform additional checks for extra files, such as scripts/*
and pkg-*.
-b Warn the use of $(VARIABLE). Some of the committers prefer
${VARIABLE} instead of $(VARIABLE), even though they are
semantically the same.
-c Committer flag. It will add several checks useful only for
committers. If you are a committer and performing check just
before committing a port, use this option.
-g Group and consolidate errors so that redundant error messages
are rolled up into one line with a list of all affected line
numbers (where appropriate). This option is disabled if -v
is specified.
-h Show the summary of command line options, then exit.
-m Adds checks for $PORTSDIR/MOVED, $PORTSDIR/UIDs, and $PORTS‐
DIR/GIDs.
-v Be verbose. Show the progress report for items that are
being checked.
-t Nit pick about use of spaces.
-A Turn on all additional checks.
-C Pedantic committer flag. This is equivalent to -abcmt.
-N New port flag. Adds several checks specific to newly submit‐
ted port. If you are willing to submit the directory to be
checked as a new port, use this option.
-V Print the portlint version and exit.
-M ENV Set make variables to ENV (ex. PORTSDIR=/usr/dports.work).
-B n Set the number of contiguous blank lines allowed in Makefile
to n. (by default, n is 1)
dir The port directory to be checked. If omitted, check will be
performed over the current directory.
ENVIRONMENT
The following environment variables affect the execution of portlint:
PL_SVN_IGNORE Set to a Perl-compatible regular expression, of patterns
to ignore when checking to see if files are in the SVN
repository. For example, '^\d+$|^pr-patch$'.
PORTSDIR The fully-qualified path to the ports tree. For example,
“/usr/dports”.
FILES
bsd.port.mk master Makefile for ports (bsd.pkg.mk on NetBSD / OpenBSD)
/usr/dports/* ports collection (/usr/pkgsrc/* on NetBSD / OpenBSD); can
be overriden by setting the PORTSDIR environment variable.
DIAGNOSTICS
Messages will be sent to standard output, not standard error output.
FATAL: ... This type of error message suggests that there is some
fatal error in the port directory. For example, if some
files need a rewrite, or if some inevitable files are miss‐
ing, this message will show up. This kind of errors should
be avoided BEFORE submitting a port via send-pr to the com‐
mitters.
WARN: ... This type of error message suggests that some files may (or
may not) need some fix. Basically, warnings are produced
when portlint is not completely sure about the result. For
example, complex Makefiles may need some statements that
can match the regular expression portlint uses for sanity
checks. In those cases, the user should evaluate the
result manually, and obey/ignore the result.
OK: ... This types of message is used in verbose mode (-v).
AUTHORS
Joe Marcus Clarke ⟨marcus@FreeBSD.org⟩
Michael Haro ⟨mharo@FreeBSD.org⟩
Jun-ichiro Hagino ⟨itojun@itojun.org⟩ and
Yoshishige Arai ⟨ryo2@on.rim.or.jp⟩.
Many people have contributed patches and comments/suggestions.
BUGSportlint is not a magic wand, as described above.
BSD April 1, 2010 BSD