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dpkg-split(1) |
dpkg suite |
dpkg-split(1) |
dpkg-split - Debian package archive split/join tool
dpkg-split [option...] command
dpkg-split splits Debian binary package files into smaller parts and
reassembles them again, to support the storage of large package files on small
media such as floppy disks.
It can be operated manually using the --split,
--join and --info options.
It also has an automatic mode, invoked using the --auto
option, where it maintains a queue of parts seen but not yet reassembled and
reassembles a package file when it has seen all of its parts. The
--listq and --discard options allow the management of the
queue.
All splitting, joining and queueing operations produce informative
messages on standard output; these may safely be ignored.
- -s, --split complete-archive [prefix]
- Splits a single Debian binary package into several parts.
The parts are named
prefix.NofM.deb where N
is the part number, starting at 1, and M is the total number of
parts (both in decimal).
If no prefix is supplied then the
complete-archive filename is taken, including directory, with any
trailing .deb removed.
- -j, --join part...
- Joins the parts of a package file together, reassembling the original file
as it was before it was split.
The part files given as arguments must be all the parts of
exactly the same original binary file. Each part must occur exactly once
in the argument list, though the parts to not need to be listed in
order.
The parts must of course all have been generated with the same
part size specified at split time, which means that they must usually
have been generated by the same invocation of dpkg-split
--split.
The parts' filenames are not significant for the reassembly
process.
By default the output file is called
package_version_arch.deb.
- -I, --info part...
- Prints information, in a human-readable format, about the part file(s)
specified. Arguments which are not binary package parts produce a message
saying so instead (but still on standard output).
- -a, --auto -o complete-output part
- Automatically queue parts and reassemble a package if possible.
The part specified is examined, and compared with other
parts of the same package (if any) in the queue of packages file
parts.
If all parts of the package file of which part is a
part are available then the package is reassembled and written to
complete-output (which should not usually already exist, though
this is not an error).
If not then the part is copied into the queue and
complete-output is not created.
If part is not a split binary package part then
dpkg-split will exit with status 1; if some other trouble
occurs then it will exit with status 2.
The --output or -o option must be supplied when
using --auto. (If this were not mandatory the calling program
would not know what output file to expect.)
- -l, --listq
- Lists the contents of the queue of packages to be reassembled.
For each package file of which parts are in the queue the
output gives the name of the package, the parts in the queue, and the
total number of bytes stored in the queue.
- -d, --discard [package...]
- This discards parts from the queue of those waiting for the remaining
parts of their packages.
If no package is specified then the queue is cleared
completely; if any are specified then only parts of the relevant
package(s) are deleted.
- -?, --help
- Show the usage message and exit.
- --version
- Show the version and exit.
- --depotdir directory
- Specifies an alternative directory for the queue of parts awaiting
automatic reassembly. The default is /var/db/dpkg.
- -S, --partsize kibibytes
- Specifies the maximum part size when splitting, in kibibytes (1024 bytes).
The default is 450 KiB.
- -o, --output complete-output
- Specifies the output file name for a reassembly.
This overrides the default for a manual reassembly
(--join) and is mandatory for an automatic queue-or-reassemble
(--auto).
- -Q, --npquiet
- When doing automatic queue-or-reassembly dpkg-split usually prints
a message if it is given a part that is not a binary package part.
This option suppresses this message, to allow programs such as dpkg
to cope with both split and unsplit packages without producing spurious
messages.
- --msdos
- Forces the output filenames generated by --split to be
msdos-compatible.
This mangles the prefix - either the default derived from the
input filename or the one supplied as an argument: alphanumerics are
lowercased, plus signs are replaced by x's and all other
characters are discarded.
The result is then truncated as much as is necessary, and
filenames of the form prefixNofM.deb are
generated.
- 0
- The requested split, merge, or other command succeeded. --info
commands count as successful even if the files are not binary package
parts.
- 1
- Only occurs with --auto and indicates that the part file was
not a binary package part.
- 2
- Fatal or unrecoverable error due to invalid command-line usage, a file
that looked like a package part file but was corrupted, or interactions
with the system, such as accesses to the database, memory allocations,
etc.
- DPKG_COLORS
- Sets the color mode (since dpkg 1.18.5). The currently accepted values
are: auto (default), always and never.
- SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH
- If set, it will be used as the timestamp (as seconds since the epoch) in
the deb-split(5)'s ar(5) container.
- /var/db/dpkg/parts
- The default queue directory for part files awaiting automatic reassembly.
The filenames used in this directory are in a format internal
to dpkg-split and are unlikely to be useful to other programs,
and in any case the filename format should not be relied upon.
Full details of the packages in the queue are impossible to get without digging
into the queue directory yourself.
There is no easy way to test whether a file that may be a binary
package part is one.
deb(5), deb-control(5), dpkg-deb(1), dpkg(1).
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