dh_installdocs (1) - Linux Manuals
dh_installdocs: install documentation into package build directories
NAME
dh_installdocs - install documentation into package build directories
SYNOPSIS
dh_installdocs [debhelper options] [-A] [-Xitem] [file ...]DESCRIPTION
dh_installdocs is a debhelper program that is responsible for installing documentation into usr/share/doc/package in package build directories.In compat 10 and earlier, dh_install(1) may be a better tool for handling the upstream documentation, when upstream's own build system installs all the desired documentation correctly. In this case, dh_installdocs is still useful for installing packaging related documentation (e.g. the debian/copyright file).
From debhelper compatibility level 11 on, dh_install will fall back to looking in debian/tmp for files, if it does not find them in the current directory (or wherever you've told it to look using --sourcedir).
In compat 11 and later, dh_installdocs offers many of the features that dh_install(1) also have. Furthermore, dh_installdocs also supports the nodoc build profile to exclude documentation (regardless of compat level).
FILES
- debian/package.docs
- List documentation files to be installed into package.
- debian/copyright
- The copyright file is installed into all packages, unless a more specific copyright file is available.
- debian/package.copyright
- debian/package.README.Debian
- debian/package.TODO
- Each of these files is automatically installed if present for a package.
- debian/README.Debian
- debian/TODO
-
These files are installed into the first binary package listed in
debian/control.
Note that README.debian files are also installed as README.Debian, and TODO files will be installed as TODO.Debian in non-native packages.
- debian/package.doc-base
- Installed as doc-base control files. Note that the doc-id will be determined from the Document: entry in the doc-base control file in question. In the event that multiple doc-base files in a single source package share the same doc-id, they will be installed to usr/share/doc-base/package instead of usr/share/doc-base/doc-id.
- debian/package.doc-base.*
- If your package needs to register more than one document, you need multiple doc-base files, and can name them like this. In the event that multiple doc-base files of this style in a single source package share the same doc-id, they will be installed to usr/share/doc-base/package-* instead of usr/share/doc-base/doc-id.
OPTIONS
- -A, --all
- Install all files specified by command line parameters in ALL packages acted on.
- -Xitem, --exclude=item
- Exclude files that contain item anywhere in their filename from being installed. Note that this includes doc-base files.
- --sourcedir=dir
-
Look in the specified directory for files to be installed. This option
requires compat 11 or later (it is silently ignored in compat 10 or earlier).
Note that this is not the same as the --sourcedirectory option used by the dh_auto_* commands. You rarely need to use this option, since dh_installman automatically looks for files in debian/tmp in debhelper compatibility level 11 and above.
- --doc-main-package=main-package
-
Set the main package for a documentation package. This is used to
install the documentation of the documentation package in /usr/share/doc/main-package as recommended by the Debian policy
manual 3.9.7 in §12.3.
In compat 11 (or later), this option is only useful if debhelper's auto-detection of the main package is wrong. The option can also be used to silence a warning from debhelper when the auto-detection fails but the default happens to be correct.
This option cannot be used when dh_installdocs is instructed to act on multiple packages. If you need this option, you will generally need to combine it with -p to ensure exactly one package is acted on.
Please keep in mind that some documentation (the copyright file, README.Debian, etc.) will be unaffected by this option.
- --link-doc=package
-
Make the documentation directory of all packages acted on be a symlink to
the documentation directory of package. This has no effect when acting on
package itself, or if the documentation directory to be created already
exists when dh_installdocs is run. To comply with policy, package must
be a binary package that comes from the same source package.
debhelper will try to avoid installing files into linked documentation directories that would cause conflicts with the linked package. The -A option will have no effect on packages with linked documentation directories, and copyright, changelog, README.Debian, and TODO files will not be installed.
(An older method to accomplish the same thing, which is still supported, is to make the documentation directory of a package be a dangling symlink, before calling dh_installdocs.)
Please note that this option only applies to the documentation directory for the package itself. When the package ships documentation for another package (e.g. see --doc-main-package), it will not use a symlink for the documentation of the other package.
CAVEAT 1: If a previous version of the package was built without this option and is now built with it (or vice-versa), it requires a ``dir to symlink'' (or ``symlink to dir'') migration. Since debhelper has no knowledge of previous versions, you have to enable this migration itself.
This can be done by providing a "debian/package.maintscript" file and using dh_installdeb(1) to provide the relevant maintainer script snippets.
CAVEAT 2: The use of --link-doc should only be done when the packages have same ``architecture'' type. A link from a architecture independent package to a architecture dependent package (or vice versa) will not work. Since compat 10, debhelper will actively reject unsupported combinations.
- file ...
- Install these files as documentation into the first package acted on. (Or in all packages if -A is specified).
EXAMPLES
This is an example of a debian/package.docs file:
README TODO debian/notes-for-maintainers.txt docs/manual.txt docs/manual.pdf docs/manual-html/
NOTES
Note that dh_installdocs will happily copy entire directory hierarchies if you ask it to (similar to cp -a). If it is asked to install a directory, it will install the complete contents of the directory.AUTHOR
Joey Hess <joeyh [at] debian.org>