Skip to content

Show information about binary and source packages in multiple (independent) apt-repositories utilizing libapt / python-apt/ apt_pkg without the need to change the local system and it's apt-setup.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

lhm-limux/apt-repos

 
 

Repository files navigation

Short Description

Show information about binary and source packages in multiple (independent) apt-repositories utilizing libapt / python-apt/ apt_pkg without the need to change the local system and it's apt-setup.

Long Description

This tool is aimed for people that extensively work with multiple apt-repositores, e.g. developers of an own debian based software distribution, debian package maintainers or debian users who just want to get an overview about packages that are provided in various apt-repositories and suites. Similar to the well known tools 'apt-cache (show|policy|search)', 'apt-get (update)', 'dpkg (-l)' it prints information about binary packages and source packages that live in apt-repositories. In contrast to these tools that typically work on a concrete local host with a concrete local apt-setup, this tool allows to inspect multiple indipendent apt-repositories and suites without coupling the local system to these repositories.

The Use-Cases

As known from /etc/apt/sources.list-Files, Apt-Repositories are uniquely identified by an URI pointing to the root of a file system structure that is typically exported per http. Each repository can provide packages for multiple suites, components and architectures. A sources.list definition can contain multiple repository/suite/component combinations that are logically merged into one apt-setup that is valid for the concrete local system. On my Ubuntu-System, for example the following apt repository/suite/component combinations are currently active:

deb http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ xenial main restricted
deb http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ xenial-updates main restricted
deb http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ xenial universe
deb http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ xenial-updates universe
deb http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ xenial multiverse
deb http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ xenial-updates multiverse
deb http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu xenial-security main restricted
deb http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu xenial-security universe
deb http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu xenial-security multiverse

With the help the tool apt-cache it is now possible to retrieve information about packages provided by the above apt-setup. There is currently no simple way to retrieve information about packages in other repository/suite/component constellations without modifying the local apt-setup. This means that it is not easily possible to e.g. show the list of packages provided by an older ubuntu-suite like trusty.

The following use-cases are addressed by this project:

  • People that create their own debian based software distribution want to inspect the own apt-repositories independently from the local machine setup. Typically queries or tasks could be:
    • List binary packages and versions in a repository/suite combination
    • List about binary packages and versions provided for a particular architecture.
    • List about binary packages and versions provided in a particular component
    • Compare the versions of a binary package in different suites
  • As a debian package developer you might want to
    • Show detailed package information for foreign repository/suite combinations similar to the information that 'apt-cache show' prints for local apt-setups.
    • Map from a binary package to the source package that it was created from or vice versa.
    • Download foreign binary or source packages to do something with them on the local system.
  • Maybe a debian user wants to check if a particular package version is available in a particular foreign PPA or backports repository.

The Solution

Each repository URI is mapped to a shortname. E.g. http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ to the much more simple form "ubuntu:". We just add the suite-name and are now able to address the above example repository/suite combinations with very short names, e.g. "ubuntu:xenial", "ubuntu:xenial-updates" or "ubuntu:xenial-security". From now on will call such a short name suite-id.

One or more apt-repos specific configuration files describe the mappings from suite-id's to SourcesList-entries, such as

[
   {
      "Suite" : "ubuntu:xenial",
      "SourcesList" : "deb http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ xenial main restricted universe multiverse"
      "DebSrc" : true,
      "Architectures" : [ "i386", "amd64" ]
   },
   {
      "Suite" : "ubuntu:xenial-security",
      "SourcesList" : "deb http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu xenial-security main restricted universe multiverse"
      "DebSrc" : true,
      "Architectures" : [ "i386", "amd64" ]
   },
   {
      "Suite" : "kubuntu-backports:xenial",
      "SourcesList" : "deb http://ppa.launchpad.net/kubuntu-ppa/backports/ubuntu xenial main"
      "DebSrc" : true,
      "Architectures" : [ "i386", "amd64" ]
   }
   
]

There are various ways to define single suites or multiple suites from an apt-repository. Apt-repos also has the ability to scan existing apt-repositories to dynamically find and map contained suites to suite-id's. More information about how to configure apt-repos can be found in docs/Configuration.

A new command line tool apt-repos prints information about the packages in these repositories. Analogue to the nomenclature of apt-cache, apt-repos it provides various sub commands:

  • apt-repos list|ls: Query for binary packages that meet particular criteria and show the results as a list
  • apt-repos sources|src: Query for source packages that meet particular criteria and show the results as a list
  • apt-repos show: Show detailed information about selected debian packages analogue to 'apt-cache show'
  • apt-repos suites: List registered suites and their corresponding 'apt/sources.list' entries that would be generated in the background for particular suite-selectors.
  • apt-repos dsc: Print the URLs of dsc-files for particular source packages. The output could e.g. be combined with the well known 'dget … URL' from the devscripts package

We use so called suite-selectors to describe in which repository/suite combinations we want to search for a particular query. The following ways of selecting suites are possible:

  • Select a single suite by a full qualified suite-id: e.g. "ubuntu:xenial" selects exactly one suite as specified in the above suite configuration
  • Select all suites in a repository, specified by the reporitory-prefix (which ist the first part of the suite-id including the colon): e.g. "ubuntu:" selects all defined ubuntu-suites --> ubuntu:xenial and ubuntu:xenial-security
  • Select multiple suites by a suite-name (the part after the colon, only): e.g. "xenial" would select the suites "ubuntu:xenial" and "kubuntu-backports:xenial"
  • Select multiple suites with the same tag: Each Suite can be assigned one or more tags used to group suites that logically belong together. We could for example assign a tag "production" to all three above specified suites and select these suites with the selector "production:". Please see docs/Configuration on how to set tags.

Each time a particular repository/suite combination is scanned, apt-repos checks if there are new Packages-Files available in the repository and downloads the Packages-Files if necessary into a local cache.

A python module python3-apt-repos (provided in this git-repository) allows us to access the information in the local cache. Also the command line interface apt-repos uses this library. This way we can easily access package information not only in apt-repos but also in other custom python modules.

State

Current State:

  • The command line interface (CLI) apt-repos exists and provides the above mentioned subcommands.
  • There is a python3 library python3-apt-repos which provides access to the apt-repos configuration data and the scanned packages from custom python3 code. This way it can be reused by other components / use-cases than the CLI apt-repos, too. Parts of the library / API can not yet be considered stable (while others are)!
  • There are various examples in the 'test'-folder. This folder contains a very simple test mechanism that already contains some testcases with a quite good (but of course still improvable) test coverage. We have unittests and integration tests (here called 'clitests') to test the command line interface.
  • There's a debian packaging mechanism to create the debian-packages apt-repos (the CLI) and pyton3-apt-repo (the library package)
  • There are manpages for the CLI apt-repos and it's subcommands
  • The tool has already been proven to reliaby support a complex development process.

Contributions from interrested people via patches or pull requests are very welcome.

License

Everything there is licensed under LGPL version 2.1 or any later version.

About

Show information about binary and source packages in multiple (independent) apt-repositories utilizing libapt / python-apt/ apt_pkg without the need to change the local system and it's apt-setup.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 79.2%
  • Shell 15.2%
  • Makefile 5.2%
  • Dockerfile 0.4%