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dpkg-gensymbols(1)                        dpkg utilities                       dpkg-gensymbols(1)



NAME
       dpkg-gensymbols - generate symbols files (shared library dependency information)

SYNOPSIS
       dpkg-gensymbols [option...]

DESCRIPTION
       dpkg-gensymbols scans a temporary build tree (debian/tmp by default) looking for libraries
       and generates a symbols file describing them. This file, if non-empty, is  then  installed
       in  the  DEBIAN  subdirectory of the build tree so that it ends up included in the control
       information of the package.

       When generating those files, it uses as input some symbols files  provided  by  the  main‐
       tainer. It looks for the following files (and uses the first that is found):

       ·   debian/package.symbols.arch

       ·   debian/symbols.arch

       ·   debian/package.symbols

       ·   debian/symbols

       The main interest of those files is to provide the minimal version associated to each sym‐
       bol provided by the libraries. Usually it corresponds to the first version of that package
       that  provided the symbol, but it can be manually incremented by the maintainer if the ABI
       of the symbol is extended without breaking backwards compatibility. It's the  responsibil‐
       ity  of  the  maintainer  to keep those files up-to-date and accurate, but dpkg-gensymbols
       helps with that.

       When the generated symbols files differ from the maintainer supplied one,  dpkg-gensymbols
       will print a diff between the two versions.  Furthermore if the difference is too signifi‐
       cant, it will even fail (you can customize how much difference you can tolerate,  see  the
       -c option).

MAINTAINING SYMBOLS FILES
       The  symbols  files  are  really  useful only if they reflect the evolution of the package
       through several releases. Thus the maintainer has to update them every  time  that  a  new
       symbol  is  added  so that its associated minimal version matches reality.  The diffs con‐
       tained in the build logs can be used as a starting point, but  the  maintainer,  addition‐
       ally,  has  to make sure that the behaviour of those symbols has not changed in a way that
       would make anything using those symbols and linking against the new version, stop  working
       with the old version.  In most cases, the diff applies directly to the debian/package.sym‐
       bols file. That said, further tweaks are usually needed: it's recommended for  example  to
       drop  the  Debian revision from the minimal version so that backports with a lower version
       number but the same upstream version still satisfy the  generated  dependencies.   If  the
       Debian  revision  can't  be dropped because the symbol really got added by the Debian spe‐
       cific change, then one should suffix the version with "~".

       Before applying any patch to the symbols file, the  maintainer  should  double-check  that
       it's  sane. Public symbols are not supposed to disappear, so the patch should ideally only
       add new lines.

       Note that you can put comments in symbols files: any line with '#' as the first  character
       is  a  comment  except  if  it  starts with '#include' (see section Using includes). Lines
       starting with '#MISSING:' are special comments documenting symbols that have disappeared.

       Do not forget to check if old symbol versions need to  be  increased.   There  is  no  way
       dpkg-gensymbols  can warn about this. Blindly applying the diff or assuming there is noth‐
       ing to change if there is no diff, without checking for such changes, can lead to packages
       with  loose  dependencies  that  claim  they can work with older packages they cannot work
       with. This will introduce hard to find bugs with (partial) upgrades.

   Using #PACKAGE# substitution
       In some rare cases, the name of the library varies between architectures.  To avoid  hard‐
       coding  the  name of the package in the symbols file, you can use the marker #PACKAGE#. It
       will be replaced by the real package name during installation of the symbols  files.  Con‐
       trary  to  the  #MINVER#  marker,  #PACKAGE#  will never appear in a symbols file inside a
       binary package.

   Using symbol tags
       Symbol tagging is useful for marking symbols that are special in some way.  Any symbol can
       have an arbitrary number of tags associated with it. While all tags are parsed and stored,
       only some of them are understood by dpkg-gensymbols and trigger special  handling  of  the
       symbols. See subsection Standard symbol tags for reference of these tags.

       Tag  specification  comes  right  before  the  symbol  name  (no  whitespace is allowed in
       between). It always starts with an opening bracket (, ends with a closing  bracket  )  and
       must  contain  at  least one tag. Multiple tags are separated by the | character. Each tag
       can optionally have a value which is separated form the tag name by the =  character.  Tag
       names  and values can be arbitrary strings except they cannot contain any of the special )
       | = characters. Symbol names following a tag specification can optionally be  quoted  with
       either ' or " characters to allow whitespaces in them. However, if there are no tags spec‐
       ified for the symbol, quotes are treated as part of the symbol  name  which  continues  up
       until the first space.

        (tag1=i am marked|tag name with space)"tagged quoted symbol"@Base 1.0
        (optional)tagged_unquoted_symbol@Base 1.0 1
        untagged_symbol@Base 1.0

       The  first symbol in the example is named tagged quoted symbol and has two tags: tag1 with
       value i am marked and tag name with space that has  no  value.  The  second  symbol  named
       tagged_unquoted_symbol  is  only tagged with the tag named optional. The last symbol is an
       example of the normal untagged symbol.

       Since symbol tags are an extension of the deb-symbols(5) format, they can only be part  of
       the  symbols  files  used in source packages (those files should then be seen as templates
       used to build the symbols files that are embedded in binary packages).  When  dpkg-gensym‐
       bols  is  called  without  the  -t  option, it will output symbols files compatible to the
       deb-symbols(5) format: it fully processes symbols according to the requirements  of  their
       standard  tags and strips all tags from the output. On the contrary, in template mode (-t)
       all symbols and their tags (both standard and unknown ones) are kept in the output and are
       written in their original form as they were loaded.

   Standard symbol tags
       optional
              A  symbol  marked  as  optional can disappear from the library at any time and that
              will never cause dpkg-gensymbols to fail.  However,  disappeared  optional  symbols
              will continuously appear as MISSING in the diff in each new package revision.  This
              behaviour serves as a reminder for the maintainer that such a symbol  needs  to  be
              removed  from  the symbol file or readded to the library. When the optional symbol,
              which was previously declared as MISSING, suddenly reappears in the next  revision,
              it  will  be  upgraded  back  to  the  "existing"  status  with its minimum version
              unchanged.

              This tag is useful for symbols which are private where their disappearance  do  not
              cause ABI breakage. For example, most of C++ template instantiations fall into this
              category. Like any other tag, this one may also have an arbitrary value:  it  could
              be used to indicate why the symbol is considered optional.

       arch=architecture list
              This  tag  allows one to restrict the set of architectures where the symbol is sup‐
              posed to exist. When the symbols list is updated with the symbols discovered in the
              library,  all arch-specific symbols which do not concern the current host architec‐
              ture are treated as if they did not exist. If an arch-specific symbol matching  the
              current  host  architecture  does  not  exist in the library, normal procedures for
              missing symbols apply and it may cause dpkg-gensymbols to fail. On the other  hand,
              if the arch-specific symbol is found when it was not supposed to exist (because the
              current host architecture is not listed in the tag), it is made arch neutral  (i.e.
              the arch tag is dropped and the symbol will appear in the diff due to this change),
              but it is not considered as new.

              When operating in the default non-template mode, among arch-specific  symbols  only
              those  that match the current host architecture are written to the symbols file. On
              the contrary, all arch-specific symbols (including those from foreign  arches)  are
              always written to the symbol file when operating in template mode.

              The  format  of  architecture list is the same as the one used in the Build-Depends
              field of debian/control (except the enclosing square brackets []). For example, the
              first  symbol  from  the list below will be considered only on alpha, any-amd64 and
              ia64 architectures, the second only on linux architectures,  while  the  third  one
              anywhere except on armel.

               (arch=alpha any-amd64 ia64)a_64bit_specific_symbol@Base 1.0
               (arch=linux-any)linux_specific_symbol@Base 1.0
               (arch=!armel)symbol_armel_does_not_have@Base 1.0

       ignore-blacklist
              dpkg-gensymbols has an internal blacklist of symbols that should not appear in sym‐
              bols files as they are usually only side-effects of implementation details  of  the
              toolchain.  If for some reason, you really want one of those symbols to be included
              in the symbols file, you should tag the symbol with  ignore-blacklist.  It  can  be
              necessary for some low level toolchain libraries like libgcc.

       c++    Denotes c++ symbol pattern. See Using symbol patterns subsection below.

       symver Denotes  symver  (symbol version) symbol pattern. See Using symbol patterns subsec‐
              tion below.

       regex  Denotes regex symbol pattern. See Using symbol patterns subsection below.

   Using symbol patterns
       Unlike a standard symbol specification, a pattern may cover multiple real symbols from the
       library.  dpkg-gensymbols will attempt to match each pattern against each real symbol that
       does not have a specific symbol counterpart defined in the symbol file. Whenever the first
       matching  pattern is found, all its tags and properties will be used as a basis specifica‐
       tion of the symbol. If none of the patterns matches, the symbol will be considered as new.

       A pattern is considered lost if it does not match any symbol in the  library.  By  default
       this  will  trigger  a  dpkg-gensymbols failure under -c1 or higher level. However, if the
       failure is undesired, the pattern may be marked with the optional tag. Then if the pattern
       does  not  match  anything, it will only appear in the diff as MISSING. Moreover, like any
       symbol, the pattern may be limited to the specific architectures with the arch tag. Please
       refer to Standard symbol tags subsection above for more information.

       Patterns are an extension of the deb-symbols(5) format hence they are only valid in symbol
       file templates. Pattern specification syntax is not any different from the one of  a  spe‐
       cific symbol. However, symbol name part of the specification serves as an expression to be
       matched against name@version of the real symbol. In order to distinguish  among  different
       pattern types, a pattern will typically be tagged with a special tag.

       At the moment, dpkg-gensymbols supports three basic pattern types:

       c++
          This  pattern is denoted by the c++ tag. It matches only C++ symbols by their demangled
          symbol name (as emitted by c++filt(1) utility). This pattern is very handy for matching
          symbols  which  mangled  names  might  vary  across different architectures while their
          demangled names remain the same. One group of such symbols is non-virtual thunks  which
          have  architecture  specific offsets embedded in their mangled names. A common instance
          of this case is a virtual destructor which under diamond inheritance needs  a  non-vir‐
          tual thunk symbol. For example, even if _ZThn8_N3NSB6ClassDD1Ev@Base on 32bit architec‐
          tures will probably be _ZThn16_N3NSB6ClassDD1Ev@Base on 64bit ones, it can  be  matched
          with a single c++ pattern:

          libdummy.so.1 libdummy1 #MINVER#
           [...]
           (c++)"non-virtual thunk to NSB::ClassD::~ClassD()@Base" 1.0
           [...]

          The demangled name above can be obtained by executing the following command:

           $ echo '_ZThn8_N3NSB6ClassDD1Ev@Base' | c++filt

          Please note that while mangled name is unique in the library by definition, this is not
          necessarily true for demangled names. A couple of distinct real symbols  may  have  the
          same  demangled  name.  For  example, that's the case with non-virtual thunk symbols in
          complex inheritance configurations or with most constructors and destructors (since g++
          typically  generates two real symbols for them). However, as these collisions happen on
          the ABI level, they should not degrade quality of the symbol file.

       symver
          This pattern is denoted by the symver tag. Well  maintained  libraries  have  versioned
          symbols  where  each  version  corresponds to the upstream version where the symbol got
          added. If that's the case, you can use a symver pattern to match any symbol  associated
          to the specific version. For example:

          libc.so.6 libc6 #MINVER#
           (symver)GLIBC_2.0 2.0
           [...]
           (symver)GLIBC_2.7 2.7
           access AT GLIBC_2.0 2.2

          All  symbols associated with versions GLIBC_2.0 and GLIBC_2.7 will lead to minimal ver‐
          sion of 2.0 and 2.7 respectively with the exception of the symbol access AT GLIBC_2.0. The
          latter  will  lead  to  a  minimal dependency on libc6 version 2.2 despite being in the
          scope of the "(symver)GLIBC_2.0" pattern because specific symbols take precedence  over
          patterns.

          Please  note that while old style wildcard patterns (denoted by "*@version" in the sym‐
          bol name field) are still supported, they have been  deprecated  by  new  style  syntax
          "(symver|optional)version".  For  example,  "*@GLIBC_2.0  2.0"  should  be  written  as
          "(symver|optional)GLIBC_2.0 2.0" if the same behaviour is needed.

       regex
          Regular expression patterns are denoted by the regex tag. They match by the perl  regu‐
          lar  expression  specified in the symbol name field. A regular expression is matched as
          it is, therefore do not forget to start it with the ^ character or  it  may  match  any
          part of the real symbol name@version string. For example:

          libdummy.so.1 libdummy1 #MINVER#
           (regex)"^mystack_.*@Base$" 1.0
           (regex|optional)"private" 1.0

          Symbols  like "mystack_new@Base", "mystack_push@Base", "mystack_pop@Base" etc.  will be
          matched by the first pattern while e.g. "ng_mystack_new@Base" won't.  The  second  pat‐
          tern will match all symbols having the string "private" in their names and matches will
          inherit optional tag from the pattern.

       Basic patterns listed above can be combined where it makes sense. In that case,  they  are
       processed in the order in which the tags are specified. For example, both

        (c++|regex)"^NSA::ClassA::Private::privmethod\d\(int\)@Base" 1.0
        (regex|c++)N3NSA6ClassA7Private11privmethod\dEi@Base 1.0

       will  match  symbols "_ZN3NSA6ClassA7Private11privmethod1Ei@Base" and "_ZN3NSA6ClassA7Pri‐
       vate11privmethod2Ei@Base". When matching the first pattern, the raw symbol is first deman‐
       gled  as C++ symbol, then the demangled name is matched against the regular expression. On
       the other hand, when matching the second pattern, regular expression  is  matched  against
       the  raw symbol name, then the symbol is tested if it is C++ one by attempting to demangle
       it. A failure of any basic pattern will result  in  the  failure  of  the  whole  pattern.
       Therefore,  for  example,  "__N3NSA6ClassA7Private11privmethod\dEi@Base"  will  not  match
       either of the patterns because it is not a valid C++ symbol.

       In general, all patterns are divided into two groups: aliases (basic c++ and  symver)  and
       generic  patterns  (regex, all combinations of multiple basic patterns). Matching of basic
       alias-based patterns is fast (O(1)) while generic patterns are O(N) (N -  generic  pattern
       count) for each symbol.  Therefore, it is recommended not to overuse generic patterns.

       When  multiple  patterns  match the same real symbol, aliases (first c++, then symver) are
       preferred over generic patterns. Generic patterns are matched in the order they are  found
       in  the  symbol  file template until the first success.  Please note, however, that manual
       reordering of template file entries is not recommended because  dpkg-gensymbols  generates
       diffs based on the alphanumerical order of their names.

   Using includes
       When  the  set of exported symbols differ between architectures, it may become inefficient
       to use a single symbol file. In those cases, an include directive may prove to  be  useful
       in a couple of ways:

       ·   You  can factorize the common part in some external file and include that file in your
           package.symbols.arch file by using an include directive like this:

           #include "packages.symbols.common"

       ·   The include directive may also be tagged like any symbol:

           (tag|...|tagN)#include "file-to-include"

           As a result, all symbols included from file-to-include will be considered to be tagged
           with tag ... tagN by default. You can use this feature to create a common package.sym‐
           bols file which includes architecture specific symbol files:

             common_symbol1@Base 1.0
            (arch=amd64 ia64 alpha)#include "package.symbols.64bit"
            (arch=!amd64 !ia64 !alpha)#include "package.symbols.32bit"
             common_symbol2@Base 1.0

       The symbols files are read line by line, and include directives are processed as  soon  as
       they  are  encountered.  This means that the content of the included file can override any
       content that appeared before the include directive and that any content after  the  direc‐
       tive  can  override  anything  contained in the included file. Any symbol (or even another
       #include directive) in the included file can specify additional tags or override values of
       the  inherited  tags  in its tag specification. However, there is no way for the symbol to
       remove any of the inherited tags.

       An included file can repeat the header line containing the SONAME of the library. In  that
       case,  it  overrides  any  header  line previously read.  However, in general it's best to
       avoid duplicating header lines. One way to do it is the following:

       #include "libsomething1.symbols.common"
        arch_specific_symbol@Base 1.0

   Good library management
       A well-maintained library has the following features:

       ·   its API is stable (public symbols are never  dropped,  only  new  public  symbols  are
           added) and changes in incompatible ways only when the SONAME changes;

       ·   ideally,  it  uses symbol versioning to achieve ABI stability despite internal changes
           and API extension;

       ·   it doesn't export private symbols (such symbols can be tagged optional as workaround).

       While maintaining the symbols file, it's easy to notice appearance  and  disappearance  of
       symbols.  But it's more difficult to catch incompatible API and ABI change. Thus the main‐
       tainer should read thoroughly the upstream changelog looking for cases where the rules  of
       good  library  management  have  been  broken.  If  potential problems are discovered, the
       upstream author should be notified as an upstream fix is always better than a Debian  spe‐
       cific work-around.

OPTIONS
       -Ppackage-build-dir
              Scan package-build-dir instead of debian/tmp.

       -ppackage
              Define  the  package  name.  Required  if more than one binary package is listed in
              debian/control (or if there's no debian/control file).

       -vversion
              Define  the   package   version.   Defaults   to   the   version   extracted   from
              debian/changelog. Required if called outside of a source package tree.

       -elibrary-file
              Only  analyze  libraries explicitly listed instead of finding all public libraries.
              You can use shell patterns used for pathname expansions (see the  File::Glob(3perl)
              manual  page for details) in library-file to match multiple libraries with a single
              argument (otherwise you need multiple -e).

       -Ifilename
              Use filename as reference file to generate the symbols file that is  integrated  in
              the package itself.

       -O[filename]
              Print  the  generated  symbols file to standard output or to filename if specified,
              rather than to debian/tmp/DEBIAN/symbols (or package-build-dir/DEBIAN/symbols if -P
              was used). If filename is pre-existing, its contents are used as basis for the gen‐
              erated symbols file.  You can use this feature to update a symbols file so that  it
              matches a newer upstream version of your library.

       -t     Write  the  symbol  file  in  template  mode rather than the format compatible with
              deb-symbols(5). The main difference is that in the template mode symbol  names  and
              tags are written in their original form contrary to the post-processed symbol names
              with tags stripped in the compatibility mode.   Moreover,  some  symbols  might  be
              omitted  when writing a standard deb-symbols(5) file (according to the tag process‐
              ing rules) while all symbols are always written to the symbol file template.

       -c[0-4]
              Define the checks to do when comparing the generated symbols file with the template
              file  used  as starting point. By default the level is 1. Increasing levels do more
              checks and include all checks of lower levels. Level 0 never fails. Level  1  fails
              if  some  symbols  have  disappeared.  Level  2 fails if some new symbols have been
              introduced. Level 3 fails if some libraries have disappeared. Level 4 fails if some
              libraries have been introduced.

              This   value   can   be   overridden   by  the  environment  variable  DPKG_GENSYM‐
              BOLS_CHECK_LEVEL.

       -q     Keep quiet and never generate a diff between generated symbols file  and  the  tem‐
              plate  file used as starting point or show any warnings about new/lost libraries or
              new/lost symbols. This option only disables informational output but not the checks
              themselves (see -c option).

       -aarch Assume  arch  as host architecture when processing symbol files. Use this option to
              generate a symbol file or diff for  any  architecture  provided  its  binaries  are
              already available.

       -d     Enable  debug mode. Numerous messages are displayed to explain what dpkg-gensymbols
              does.

       -V     Enable verbose mode. The generated symbols file contains deprecated symbols as com‐
              ments. Furthermore in template mode, pattern symbols are followed by comments list‐
              ing real symbols that have matched the pattern.

       -?, --help
              Show the usage message and exit.

       --version
              Show the version and exit.

SEE ALSO
       https://people.redhat.com/drepper/symbol-versioning
       https://people.redhat.com/drepper/goodpractice.pdf
       https://people.redhat.com/drepper/dsohowto.pdf
       deb-symbols(5), dpkg-shlibdeps(1).



Debian Project                              2013-09-06                         dpkg-gensymbols(1)


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