pkgcore-based QA utility
Project description
pkgcheck
Dependencies
pkgcheck is developed alongside pkgcore. To run the development version of pkgcheck you will need the development version of pkgcore.
The metadata.xml checks require either xmllint (installed as part of libxml2) or the python bindings to libxml2 (installed as part of libxml2 with USE=python), with the latter preferred for speed reasons.
Installation
No installation is strictly required: just run the pkgcheck script and as long as you are not root things should work. If you want to make pkgcheck available system-wide use the provided setup.py (see Installing python modules for details).
Notes
Currently full tree scans will use a large amount of memory (up to ~1.7GB) in part due to pkgcore’s restriction design in relation to the expanding use of transitive use flag dependencies across the tree. To alleviate this pkgcore.restrictions will be refactored, probably leading to splitting conditionals off into their own set.
Configuration
No configuration is required, but some configuration makes pkgcheck easier to use.
Suites
With no configuration it will try to guess the repository to use based on your working directory and the list of repositories pkgcore knows about. This will usually not quite work because the same location often has multiple “repositories” with a slightly different configuration and pkgcheck cannot guess which one to use.
Defining “suites” in the configuration solves this ambiguity. A “suite” contains a target repository, optionally a source repository to use as a base and optionally a set of checks to run. If there is a single suite with a target repository containing the current directory it is used. So with the following suite definition in ~/.pkgcore.conf:
[pkgcheck-gentoo-suite] class=pkgcheck.base.Suite target_repo=gentoo
you can run pkgcheck with no further arguments inside your portage directory and it will do the right thing.
For use with overlays you need to define the “source” repo too:
[pkgcheck-overlay-suite] class=pkgcheck.base.Suite target_repo=/usr/local/portage/private src_repo=gentoo
(the target_repo and src_repo settings are both names of repository sections, not arbitrary filesystem paths).
See Overlays for more information on src_repo.
Finally, you can define a different checkset per suite:
[pkgcheck-gentoo-suite] class=pkgcheck.base.Suite target_repo=gentoo checkset=no-arch-checks
This disables checks that are not interesting unless you can set stable keywords for this suite. See Checksets for more information.
Instead of relying on the working directory to pick the right suite you can specify one explicitly with pkgcheck --suite.
Checksets
By default pkgcheck runs all available checks. This is not always desired. For example, checks about missing stable keywords are often just noise in the output for ebuild devs. A checkset defines a subset of checks to run. There are two kinds: one enabling a specific set of checks and one running every available check except for the specified ones. Examples:
[no-arch-checks] class=pkgcheck.base.Blacklist patterns=unstable_only stale_unstable imlate [only-arch-checks] class=pkgcheck.base.Whitelist patterns=unstable_only stale_unstable imlate
The first disables the three specified checks, the second enables only those three. For available names see pkgcheck --list-checks.
patterns is a whitespace-separated list. If the values are strings they need to match a component of the name in --list-checks exactly. If it looks like a regexp (currently defined as “contains a + or *”) this needs to match the entire name.
Checksets called no-arch-checks and all-checks are defined by default.
There are various ways to pick the checkset to use: pquery --checkset, the checkset setting of a suite and setting default=true on a checkset in the configuration.
Overlays
Checking just an overlay does not work very well since pkgcheck needs to know about profiles and checks if all dependencies are available. To do this you will usually have to specify a base or “source” repo to pull this data from. You can set this with pkgcheck --overlayed-repo or the pkgcheck -o shorthand, or you can set it in the configuration file as part of a suite definition.
Reporters
By default the output is in a colorful human-readable format. For full tree checks this format may not be optimal since it is a bit hard to grep. To use an output format that prints everything on one line, put this in your configuration:
[pkgcheck-plain-reporter] class=pkgcheck.reporters.plain_reporter default=true
To use a non-default reporter use pkgcheck --reporter. To see the reporters available use pconfig configurables pkgcheck_reporter_factory.
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