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PACKAGES-SPECS(7) Miscellaneous Information Manual PACKAGES-SPECS(7)

packages-specsbinary package names specifications

Each package has a name consisting of at most three parts:

stem-version[-flavors]

The stem part identifies the package. It may contain some dashes, but its form is mostly conventional. For instance, japanese packages usually start with a ‘ja’ prefix, e.g., "ja-kterm-6.2.0".

The version part starts at the first digit that follows a ‘-’, and goes on up to the following ‘-’, or to the end of the package name, whichever comes first.

It is followed by the (possibly empty) [-flavors] part.

Thus, version numbers should always start with a digit and cannot contain a ‘-’, whereas flavors should never start with a digit.

All packages must have a version number. Normally, the version number directly matches the original software distribution version number, or release date. In case there are substantial changes in the OpenBSD package, a patch level marker should be appended, e.g., ‘p0’, ‘p1 ...’ For example, assuming that the screen package for release 2.8 was named "screen-2.9.8" and that an important security patch led to a newer package, the new package would be called "screen-2.9.8p0". Obviously, these specific markers are reserved for OpenBSD purposes. See REVISION in bsd.port.mk(5).

Version comparison is done using the dewey notation with a few specific rules.

In some rare cases, version numbering changes completely upstream. A version style marker, of the form ‘v0’, ‘v1 ...’ can be appended to the version number (after the patch level) to denote the new numbering scheme. See EPOCH in bsd.port.mk(5).

Flavored packages will also contain a list of flavors after the version identifier, in a canonical order determined by FLAVORS in the corresponding port's Makefile. For instance, kterm has an xaw3d flavor: "ja-kterm-xaw3d".

Note that, to uniquely identify the version part, no flavor shall ever start with a digit. Usually, flavored packages are slightly different versions of the same package that offer very similar functionalities.

Most conflicts between packages are handled on a package name basis. Unless the packages have been specially prepared, it is normally not possible to install two packages with the same stem.

Note that the stem ends at the version part. So, for instance, "kdelibs-1.1.2" and "kdelibs-2.1.1" conflict. But "openldap-2.0.7" and "openldap-client-2.0.7" don't. Neither do "qt-1.45" and "qt2-3.0".

Packages may depend on other packages, as specified by their port's Makefile, in a BUILD_DEPENDS, LIB_DEPENDS, TEST_DEPENDS or RUN_DEPENDS. All those conform to

[pkgspec:]pkgpath

The pkgpath(7) part of the dependency is always used to obtain the default dependency for the given package (the package that will be built and installed if no package is found). The corresponding package name is also used as a package specification, after removing any version and flavor requirements.

Without a ‘pkgspec:’ part, by default, any package with the right stem will do: in effect, the pkgspec used is ‘stem-*’.

In OpenBSD 4.9, the dependent port may override this default, and set PKGSPEC to achieve a more restrictive default, for instance, databases/db/v3 sets the default to "PKGSPEC = db->=3,<4" to avoid collision with databases/db/v4. Be extra cautious with this functionality: this tweaks the depends line for any including package, thus usually requiring a version bump, and is in general only required for very messy cases where several incompatible versions of the same software coexist as packages with the same stem.

An explicit specification such as "png-1.0.7". may be used to ask for a more specific version number. Version numbers may also include ranges, separated by commas, so for instance, "foo->=1.3" would match any foo with version at least 1.3, and "foo->=1.3,<=1.5" would match any version of foo between 1.3 and 1.5, inclusive.

As a convenience, the ports tree recognizes a specification that starts with STEM, and will replace this with the correct stem, which can be useful for embarrassingly long package names.

As another convenience, the ports tree recognizes constructs like "graphics/png>=1.2.0" and transforms it into "STEM->=1.2.0:graphics/png". More specifically, package paths never contain <, >, or =, and those characters trigger the transform.

If the flavor specification is left blank, any flavor will do. Note that most default package names don't contain flavor specification, which means that any flavor will do For instance, in

LIB_DEPENDS = graphics/aalib

both "aalib-1.2" and "aalib-1.2-no_x11" will do. To restrict the specification to packages that match flavor ‘f’, append ‘-f’. To restrict the specification to packages that do not match flavor ‘f’, append ‘-!f’. In the preceding case, one may use

LIB_DEPENDS = aalib-*-!no_x11:graphics/aalib

to ensure the no_x11 flavor is not picked.

Several packages may be specified for a dependency: "foo-*|bar-*" will match either any version of package foo, or any version of package bar. In the general case, each package holds a tree of dependencies. Resolution occurs at pkg_add(1) time, and all dependencies are tracked only as far as needed.

For instance, if package "foo-1.0" depends on either "bar-*" or "fuzz-*", and "bar-2.0" depends on "toughluck-*", pkg_add(1) will first check whether "bar-*" or "fuzz-*" is installed. If either is there, the "toughluck-*" dependency will never be examined. It would only be used in the case where neither "bar-*" nor "fuzz-*" are present, thus pkg_add(1) would decide to bring in "bar-2.0", and so would check on "toughluck-*".

pkg_add(1), bsd.port.mk(5), library-specs(7), packages(7), pkgpath(7), ports(7)

Support for a more complex form of those package specifications first appeared in OpenBSD 2.9. The current simplified form was introduced in OpenBSD 4.9.

October 27, 2014 OpenBSD-6.6