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dpkg-architecture(1)		  dpkg suite		  dpkg-architecture(1)

NAME
       dpkg-architecture  -  set  and  determine  the architecture for package
       building

SYNOPSIS
       dpkg-architecture [option...] [command]

DESCRIPTION
       dpkg-architecture provides a facility to determine and  set  the	 build
       and host architecture for package building.

       The  build  architecture	 is  always  determined by an external call to
       dpkg(1), and cannot be set at the command line.

       You can specify the host architecture by providing one or both  of  the
       options	--host-arch  and  --host-type. The default is determined by an
       external call to gcc(1), or the same as the build architecture if CC or
       gcc  are	 both not available. One out of --host-arch and --host-type is
       sufficient, the value of the other will be set  to  a  usable  default.
       Indeed,	 it   is   often   better   to	 only	specify	 one,  because
       dpkg-architecture will warn you if  your	 choice	 does  not  match  the
       default.

COMMANDS
       -l, --list
	      Print  the  environment  variables, one each line, in the format
	      VARIABLE=value. This is the default action.

       -e, --equal architecture
	      Check for equality of architecture  (since  dpkg	1.13.13).   It
	      compares	the  current  or  specified  Debian  host architecture
	      against architecture, to check if they are equal.	  This	action
	      will  not	 expand	 the architecture wildcards.  Command finishes
	      with an exit status of 0 if matched, 1 if not matched.

       -i, --is architecture-wildcard
	      Check for identity of architecture  (since  dpkg	1.13.13).   It
	      compares	the  current  or  specified  Debian  host architecture
	      against architecture-wildcard after having  expanded  it	as  an
	      architecture wildcard, to check if they match.  Command finishes
	      with an exit status of 0 if matched, 1 if not matched.

       -q, --query variable-name
	      Print the value of a single variable.

       -s, --print-set
	      Print an export command. This can be used to set the environment
	      variables using eval.

       -u, --print-unset
	      Print  a	similar	 command  to  --print-unset  but  to unset all
	      variables.

       -c, --command command-string
	      Execute  a  command-string  in  an  environment  which  has  all
	      variables set to the determined value.

       -L, --list-known
	      Print  a	list of valid architecture names.  Possibly restricted
	      by  one  or  more	 of  the  matching  options  --match-wildcard,
	      --match-bits or --match-endian (since dpkg 1.17.14).

       -?, --help
	      Show the usage message and exit.

       --version
	      Show the version and exit.

OPTIONS
       -a, --host-arch architecture
	      Set the host Debian architecture.

       -t, --host-type gnu-system-type
	      Set the host GNU system type.

       -A, --target-arch architecture
	      Set the target Debian architecture (since dpkg 1.17.14).

       -T, --target-type gnu-system-type
	      Set the target GNU system type (since dpkg 1.17.14).

       -W, --match-wildcard architecture-wildcard
	      Restrict	the  architectures  listed  by	--list-known  to  ones
	      matching	the  specified	architecture  wildcard	 (since	  dpkg
	      1.17.14).

       -B, --match-bits architecture-bits
	      Restrict	the  architectures listed by --list-known to ones with
	      the specified CPU bits (since dpkg 1.17.14). Either 32 or 64.

       -E, --match-endian architecture-endianness
	      Restrict the architectures listed by --list-known to  ones  with
	      the  specified endianness (since dpkg 1.17.14). Either little or
	      big.

       -f, --force
	      Values set by existing environment variables with the same  name
	      as   used	  by   the   scripts   are   honored   (i.e.  used  by
	      dpkg-architecture), except if this force flag is	present.  This
	      allows  the  user	 to  override  a  value	 even when the call to
	      dpkg-architecture is buried in some other	 script	 (for  example
	      dpkg-buildpackage(1)).

TERMS
       build machine
	   The machine the package is built on.

       host machine
	   The machine the package is built for.

       target machine
	   The machine the compiler is building for.  This is only needed when
	   building a cross-toolchain, one that will be	 built	on  the	 build
	   architecture, to be run on the host architecture, and to build code
	   for the target architecture.

       Debian architecture
	   The Debian architecture string, which specifies the binary tree  in
	   the FTP archive. Examples: i386, sparc, hurd-i386.

       Debian architecture tuple
	   A  Debian  architecture  tuple  is the fully qualified architecture
	   with all its components spelled  out.   This	 differs  with	Debian
	   architectures in that at least the cpu component does not embed the
	   abi.	 The current tuple has the  form  abi-libc-os-cpu.   Examples:
	   base-gnu-linux-amd64, eabihf-musl-linux-arm.

       Debian architecture wildcard
	   A  Debian  architecture  wildcard  is a special architecture string
	   that will match any	real  architecture  being  part	 of  it.   The
	   general  form  is  a	 Debian	 architecture  tuple with four or less
	   elements, and with  at  least  one  of  them	 being	any.   Missing
	   elements  of the tuple are prefixed implicitly as any, and thus the
	   following pairs are equivalent:
	       any-any-any-any = any
	       any-any-os-any = os-any
	       any-libc-any-any = libc-any-any
	   Examples:   linux-any,   any-i386,	hurd-any,    eabi-any-any-arm,
	   musl-any-any.

       GNU system type
	   An  architecture  specification  string  consisting	of  two	 parts
	   separated by a hyphen: cpu and system.   Examples:  i586-linux-gnu,
	   sparc-linux-gnu, i686-gnu, x86_64-netbsd.

       multiarch triplet
	   The	clarified  GNU	system	type, used for filesystem paths.  This
	   triplet does not change even when the baseline ISA gets bumped,  so
	   that	 the  resulting	 paths are stable over time.  The only current
	   difference with the GNU system type is that the CPU part  for  i386
	   based   systems   is	  always   i386.    Examples:  i386-linux-gnu,
	   x86_64-linux-gnu.   Example	 paths:	  /lib/powerpc64le-linux-gnu/,
	   /usr/lib/i386-kfreebsd-gnu/.

VARIABLES
       The following variables are set by dpkg-architecture:

       DEB_BUILD_ARCH
	   The Debian architecture of the build machine.

       DEB_BUILD_ARCH_ABI
	   The Debian abi name of the build machine (since dpkg 1.18.11).

       DEB_BUILD_ARCH_LIBC
	   The Debian libc name of the build machine (since dpkg 1.18.11).

       DEB_BUILD_ARCH_OS
	   The Debian system name of the build machine (since dpkg 1.13.2).

       DEB_BUILD_ARCH_CPU
	   The Debian cpu name of the build machine (since dpkg 1.13.2).

       DEB_BUILD_ARCH_BITS
	   The pointer size of the build machine (in bits; since dpkg 1.15.4).

       DEB_BUILD_ARCH_ENDIAN
	   The	endianness  of	the  build  machine  (little / big; since dpkg
	   1.15.4).

       DEB_BUILD_GNU_CPU
	   The CPU part of DEB_BUILD_GNU_TYPE.

       DEB_BUILD_GNU_SYSTEM
	   The System part of DEB_BUILD_GNU_TYPE.

       DEB_BUILD_GNU_TYPE
	   The GNU system type of the build machine.

       DEB_BUILD_MULTIARCH
	   The clarified GNU system  type  of  the  build  machine,  used  for
	   filesystem paths (since dpkg 1.16.0).

       DEB_HOST_ARCH
	   The Debian architecture of the host machine.

       DEB_HOST_ARCH_ABI
	   The Debian abi name of the host machine (since dpkg 1.18.11).

       DEB_HOST_ARCH_LIBC
	   The Debian libc name of the host machine (since dpkg 1.18.11).

       DEB_HOST_ARCH_OS
	   The Debian system name of the host machine (since dpkg 1.13.2).

       DEB_HOST_ARCH_CPU
	   The Debian cpu name of the host machine (since dpkg 1.13.2).

       DEB_HOST_ARCH_BITS
	   The pointer size of the host machine (in bits; since dpkg 1.15.4).

       DEB_HOST_ARCH_ENDIAN
	   The	endianness  of	the  host  machine  (little  / big; since dpkg
	   1.15.4).

       DEB_HOST_GNU_CPU
	   The CPU part of DEB_HOST_GNU_TYPE.

       DEB_HOST_GNU_SYSTEM
	   The System part of DEB_HOST_GNU_TYPE.

       DEB_HOST_GNU_TYPE
	   The GNU system type of the host machine.

       DEB_HOST_MULTIARCH
	   The clarified GNU  system  type  of	the  host  machine,  used  for
	   filesystem paths (since dpkg 1.16.0).

       DEB_TARGET_ARCH
	   The Debian architecture of the target machine (since dpkg 1.17.14).

       DEB_TARGET_ARCH_ABI
	   The Debian abi name of the target machine (since dpkg 1.18.11).

       DEB_TARGET_ARCH_LIBC
	   The Debian libc name of the target machine (since dpkg 1.18.11).

       DEB_TARGET_ARCH_OS
	   The Debian system name of the target machine (since dpkg 1.17.14).

       DEB_TARGET_ARCH_CPU
	   The Debian cpu name of the target machine (since dpkg 1.17.14).

       DEB_TARGET_ARCH_BITS
	   The	pointer	 size  of  the	target	machine	 (in  bits; since dpkg
	   1.17.14).

       DEB_TARGET_ARCH_ENDIAN
	   The endianness of the target machine	 (little  /  big;  since  dpkg
	   1.17.14).

       DEB_TARGET_GNU_CPU
	   The CPU part of DEB_TARGET_GNU_TYPE (since dpkg 1.17.14).

       DEB_TARGET_GNU_SYSTEM
	   The System part of DEB_TARGET_GNU_TYPE (since dpkg 1.17.14).

       DEB_TARGET_GNU_TYPE
	   The GNU system type of the target machine (since dpkg 1.17.14).

       DEB_TARGET_MULTIARCH
	   The	clarified  GNU	system	type  of  the target machine, used for
	   filesystem paths (since dpkg 1.17.14).

FILES
   Architecture tables
       All these files have to be present for dpkg-architecture to work. Their
       location	 can  be  overridden  at runtime with the environment variable
       DPKG_DATADIR.  These tables contain a format  Version  pseudo-field  on
       their  first  line  to  mark their format, so that parsers can check if
       they understand it, such as "# Version=1.0".

       /usr/share/dpkg/cputable
	      Table of known CPU names and mapping to their GNU name.	Format
	      version 1.0 (since dpkg 1.13.2).

       /usr/share/dpkg/ostable
	      Table  of	 known operating system names and mapping to their GNU
	      name.  Format version 2.0 (since dpkg 1.18.11).

       /usr/share/dpkg/tupletable
	      Mapping  between	 Debian	  architecture	 tuples	  and	Debian
	      architecture names.  Format version 1.0 (since dpkg 1.18.11).

       /usr/share/dpkg/abitable
	      Table  of	 Debian	 architecture ABI attribute overrides.	Format
	      version 2.0 (since dpkg 1.18.11).

   Packaging support
       /usr/share/dpkg/architecture.mk
	      Makefile	snippet	 that  properly	 sets  and  exports  all   the
	      variables that dpkg-architecture outputs (since dpkg 1.16.1).

EXAMPLES
       dpkg-buildpackage   accepts   the   -a	option	 and   passes	it  to
       dpkg-architecture. Other examples:

	      CC=i386-gnu-gcc dpkg-architecture -c debian/rules build

	      eval `dpkg-architecture -u`

       Check if the current or specified host  architecture  is	 equal	to  an
       architecture:

	      dpkg-architecture -elinux-alpha

	      dpkg-architecture -amips -elinux-mips

       Check if the current or specified host architecture is a Linux system:

	      dpkg-architecture -ilinux-any

	      dpkg-architecture -ai386 -ilinux-any

   Usage in debian/rules
       The  environment	 variables  set	 by  dpkg-architecture	are  passed to
       debian/rules as make variables (see make documentation).	 However,  you
       should  not  rely  on  them,  as	 this  breaks manual invocation of the
       script.	 Instead,   you	  should   always   initialize	 them	 using
       dpkg-architecture  with	the  -q	 option. Here are some examples, which
       also show how you can improve the cross	compilation  support  in  your
       package:

       Retrieving the GNU system type and forwarding it to ./configure:

	   DEB_BUILD_GNU_TYPE ?= $(shell dpkg-architecture -qDEB_BUILD_GNU_TYPE)
	   DEB_HOST_GNU_TYPE ?= $(shell dpkg-architecture -qDEB_HOST_GNU_TYPE)
	   [...]
	   ifeq ($(DEB_BUILD_GNU_TYPE), $(DEB_HOST_GNU_TYPE))
	     confflags += --build=$(DEB_HOST_GNU_TYPE)
	   else
	     confflags += --build=$(DEB_BUILD_GNU_TYPE) \
			  --host=$(DEB_HOST_GNU_TYPE)
	   endif
	   [...]
	   ./configure $(confflags)

       Doing something only for a specific architecture:

	   DEB_HOST_ARCH ?= $(shell dpkg-architecture -qDEB_HOST_ARCH)

	   ifeq ($(DEB_HOST_ARCH),alpha)
	     [...]
	   endif

       or   if	 you  only  need  to  check  the  CPU  or  OS  type,  use  the
       DEB_HOST_ARCH_CPU or DEB_HOST_ARCH_OS variables.

       Note that you can also rely on an external Makefile snippet to properly
       set all the variables that dpkg-architecture can provide:

	   include /usr/share/dpkg/architecture.mk

	   ifeq ($(DEB_HOST_ARCH),alpha)
	     [...]
	   endif

       In  any	case,  you  should  never use dpkg --print-architecture to get
       architecture information during a package build.

ENVIRONMENT
       DPKG_DATADIR
	      If set, it will be used as the dpkg data	directory,  where  the
	      architecture  tables are located (since dpkg 1.14.17).  Defaults
	      to «/usr/share/dpkg».

NOTES
       All long command and option names available only since dpkg 1.17.17.

SEE ALSO
       dpkg-buildpackage(1).

1.19.0.4			  2017-11-02		  dpkg-architecture(1)
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