SLACKDTXT(8)SLACKDTXT(8)NAMEslackdtxt - Create package description files for Slackware packages
SYNOPSISslackdtxt [options] <tgz file or list of files>
DESCRIPTIONslackdtxt is tool for creating the package description
(packagename.txt) files that can be see in the Slackware package series
directories. It can also optionally sign the Slackware package with
your GnuPG secret key.
All Slackware packages have an 'install/slack-desc' file contained
within the package file. This file gives a brief description of the
package and is displayed by the installpkg program when the package is
installed, or by upgradepkg when the package is upgraded.
Within the Slackware binary distribution package 'series' directories
are the '.t?z' files and an accompanying .txt file. However, the
slack-desc files contained within the .t?z often have comments and 'the
handy ruler' which should not appear the .txt version. slackdtxt
removes this and generates a 'standard' .txt version from the slack-
desc file.
slackdtxt can either take an existing slack-desc file and convert it,
or extract the slack-desc from the specified .t?z package file.
The basic purpose of slackdtxt is to build .txt files after you have
run Slackware's official SlackBuild scripts. Slackware's SlackBuild
scripts leave the packages in /tmp, and it is presumed that you would
like to move them into a safe place and create a .txt file at the same
time. Therefore slackdtxt enables you to specify a destination
directory in which to copy or move the .t?z and to create the .txt
file.
slackdtxt was written with porting Slackware to other architectures in
mind.
Slackware Package file extensions
Starting with Slackware version 13, four types of package compression
formats are suported.
.tgz - Gzip
.tbz - Bzip2
.tlz - LZMA
.txz - XZ
Where this document mentions '.t?z', it refers to one of the above
formats.
OPTIONS - GENERAL
-h, --help
Show the available options and exit
-v, --version
Show the version information and exit
OPTIONS - MAIN
-s, --slackdescfile <path to slack-desc file>
Specify the name of/path to the 'slack-desc' file.
You would typically want to use this option if you are in the
package build directory that contains the slack-desc file.
Note: You cannot use this option when specifying more than one .t?z
package file; all slack-desc files will be extracted from the .t?z
file.
This option is not mandatory.
-d, --destdir <directory>
If this option is specified, slackdtxt will move (or copy, see
--nodelete) the .t?z file into this directory. The .txt and .asc
files will also be created in this directory.
See the examples document for the purpose of this option.
This option is not mandatory.
Note: Omitting this flag implies --nodelete
-n, --nodelete
This option is used in conjunction with --destdir
With this option, when slackdtxt has created the .txt file and
copied the .t?z file into the destination directory, it will not
delete the original version.
For example, if your file is /tmp/foobar-2.0-i386-4.tgz and you
feed slackdtxt--destdir /data/slackware/ then the
/tmp/foobar-2.0-i386-4.tgz will remain.
By default, the original will be deleted unless there is no
destination directory specified by --destdir
-G, --gpg-sign <id>
Sign the original .t?z package file with specified GnuPG key. The
GnuPG signature file will have the same name as the .t?z file but
with an extra .asc suffixed (e.g. foobar-1.0-i486-5.tgz.asc).
EXAMPLES
# slackdtxt foo-1.00-i486-1.tgz
This will create a single file named foo-1.00-i486-1.txt within the
current working directory. To specify a different directory, see
options -d, --destdir
# slackdtxt *.t?z
This will make slackdtxt create '.txt' files for every '.t?z'
package file within the current working directory.
RETURN VALUES
These are the exit codes that slackdtxt will produce when it encounters
certain problems. You may wish to use these return codes to indicate
success or failure when slackdtxt is called from unattended auto
builder scripts.
0 Clean exit
slackdtxt exited without encountering any errors. This is the
default exit code.
1 Reserved
This error code is not currently used.
6 Missing destination directory
The destination directory specified by the --destdir switch does
not exist.
7 Missing user specified file
A file specified by the user does not exist. Typically this will
be the .t?z package file.
8 Error moving data or moved data is corrupt
slackdtxt failed to copy or move a data file correctly, or the file
was moved correctly (mv or cp did not exit with a non-zero value)
but a further verify failed.
FILES
/usr/bin/slackdtxt the slackdtxt script
/usr/doc/slacktrack-2.15/SLACKDTXT.examples slackdtxt usage examples
AUTHOR
Stuart Winter <mozes@slackware.com>
SEE ALSOslacktrack(8), makepkg(8), installpkg(8), explodepkg(8),
removepkg(8), pkgtool(8), upgradepkg(8)24-Sep-2011 slackdtxt Version 1.03 SLACKDTXT(8)