X-Git-Url: https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/ucgi/~ianmdlvl/git?p=dgit.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=dgit-user.7.pod;h=d34160564c62c048e77f044901982b51c9e61f04;hp=98234658f5b5ca96f4f10f6d93046d187590d936;hb=a98d0e0d68a2167e9909ec2da04ebf56c7f97b6f;hpb=8429b9f82e9bca4f1536c6eb586a6799aeb58655 diff --git a/dgit-user.7.pod b/dgit-user.7.pod index 98234658..d3416056 100644 --- a/dgit-user.7.pod +++ b/dgit-user.7.pod @@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ or L and L. =over 4 - % dgit clone glibc jessie + % dgit clone glibc jessie,-security % cd glibc % wget 'https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=28250;mbox=yes;msg=89' | patch -p1 -u % git commit -a -m 'Fix libc lost output bug' @@ -288,6 +288,8 @@ but not to build a source package. =head1 INSTALLING +=head2 Debian Jessie or older + =over 4 % sudo dpkg -i ../libc6_*.deb @@ -301,6 +303,14 @@ If the dependencies aren't installed, you will get an error, which can usually be fixed with C. +=head2 Debian Stretch or newer + +=over 4 + + % sudo apt install ../libc6_*.deb + +=back + =head1 Multiarch If you're working on a library package and your system has multiple @@ -381,15 +391,15 @@ you need to provide a source package but don't care about its format/layout (for example because some software you have consumes source packages, not git histories) -you can use this recipe to generate a C<1.0> "native" +you can use this recipe to generate a C<3.0 (native)> source package, which is just a tarball with accompanying .dsc metadata file: =over 4 - % git rm debian/source/version - % git commit -m 'switch to 1.0 source format' - % dgit -wgf --dpkg-buildpackage:-sn build-source + % echo '3.0 (native)' >debian/source/format + % git commit -m 'switch to native source format' debian/source/format + % dgit -wgf build-source =back