pkgbinarymangler 134 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

pkgbinarymangler (134) bionic; urgency=medium

  * Updated tests for the new dpkg which is generating files in the
    .tar.xz format instead of .tar.gz

 -- Sebastien Bacher <email address hidden>  Fri, 09 Feb 2018 11:07:45 +0100

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Sebastien Bacher
Uploaded to:
Bionic
Original maintainer:
Ubuntu Developers
Architectures:
all
Section:
devel
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Builds

Bionic: [FULLYBUILT] amd64

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
pkgbinarymangler_134.tar.xz 39.2 KiB 2519c561c807e40e61a6773d94e97169e296b3862521a58ed4d4af1465c1564e
pkgbinarymangler_134.dsc 965 bytes 301b0dc645c4c8df2c9898dc475741558643bb27c37a2e9115c255fcc0174c12

Available diffs

View changes file

Binary packages built by this source

dh-translations: debhelper extension for translation support

 This package provides a debhelper extension to perform common translation
 related operations during package build:
 .
  * Try to build a current PO template.
 .
  * Remove inline translations from *.desktop, *.server, *.schemas, and
    *.policy files and replace them with a link to the gettext domain, so that
    strings in them will get translated at runtime from *.mo files. This allows
    language packs to ship updated translations.

pkgbinarymangler: strips translations and alters maintainers during build

 pkgbinarymangler consists of a dpkg-deb wrapper that calls the following
 helper applications while building a debian binary package:
 .
 pkgstriptranslations removes all *.mo files in /usr/share/locale from
 all package build directories. It is used to strip off gettext translations
 from generated binary packages, because translations are already shipped
 in the language packs. Its behaviour (which is disabled by default) is
 configured in /etc/pkgbinarymangler/striptranslations.conf.
 .
 pkgmaintainermangler adjusts the maintainer field in binary packages to
 match a set of rules (including whitelists, mass renames by component,
 maintainer name, etc) defined in the pkgmaintainermangler configuration
 file at /etc/pkgbinarymangler/maintainermangler.conf.