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lsbpkgchk3
Langue: en
Version: 265493 (debian - 07/07/09)
Section: 1 (Commandes utilisateur)
NAME
lsbpkgchk - check LSB conformance of a packageSYNOPSIS
lsbpkgchk [-hvnAt] [-L LANANANAME] [-T PRODUCT] [-M MODULE]... ] [-j JOURNAL] [-d DEPENDENCY] [long-options] pkgnameDESCRIPTION
Measure a package's conformance to the Linux Standard Base (LSB) specification. The format of the package and the contents of the payload are checked. Warnings are produced for anything that is used, but not contained in the LSB specification.
- -h, --help
- Print a help message and exit.
- -v, --version
- Output the program version and LSB version to standard output. The version and LSB version are always logged to the journal file irrespective of this option.
- -n, --nojournal
- Do not create a journal file.
- -L LANANNAME, --lanana=LANANANAME
- Specify the LANANA registered package or provider name to be used when evaluating pathnames for FHS conformance.
- -t
- Check the LSB conformance of the executable files in the archive payload of the package. All shared libraries present in the package are assumed to be a part of the application, hence lsbpkgchk does not complain about symbols in executable files which are provided in those shared libraries.
- -r VERSION, --lsb-version=VERSION
- Specify the lsb version the application should be checked against.
- -T [core,c++|core,c++,desktop], --lsb-product [core,c++|core,c++,desktop]
- Specify the lsb spec/product to load modules for- 3.0, and 3.1, respectively.
- -M modulename
- Also check the symbols found in module modulename. The default module name is LSB-Core. Other choices are LSB-Graphics and LSB-C++ (module names are not case-sensitive).
- -j JOURNAL, --journal=JOURNAL
- Write the journal file to JOURNAL instead of to the default filename in the current directory.
- -d DEPENDENCY, --dependency=DEPENDENCY
- Add DEPENDENCY provided by another customer provided package to the list of expected dependencies. Without this option a package that has a dependency on another customer provided package will report that it has an unexpected dependency.
A journal file is created named journal.pkgchk.pkgname where pkgname is the package specified on the command line. It contains a record of the test results in a format that can be submitted for LSB Certification. You must have write access to the current working directory in order to run lsbpkgchk successfully, or use the -j option to specify an alternate location for the journal. The journal file can be omitted by the use of the -n option. Journal files may be examined with the tjreport tool, available from the LSB project as part of the lsb-tet3-lite package.
AUTHORS
The contributors to the Linux Standard Base.REPORTING BUGS
If you obtained this checker from the LSB ftp site, report bugs at http://bugs.linuxbase.org or email to <lsb-discuss@linux-foundation.org>. If you obtained this from your distribution, report bugs back to the distribution in the normal way.BUGS
Should be able to specify where to write the journal file.SEE ALSO
Linux Standard Base specification and other documents at http://www.linux-foundation.org/Contenus ©2006-2024 Benjamin Poulain
Design ©2006-2024 Maxime Vantorre