SYNOPSIS

gbp dch [ --version ] [ --help ] [ --verbose ] [ --color=[auto|on|off] ] [ --color-scheme=COLOR_SCHEME ] [ --debian-branch=branch_name ] [ --debian-tag=tag-format ] [ --upstream-tag=tag-format ] [ --ignore-branch ] [ --snapshot | --release ] [ --auto | --since=commitish ] [ --new-version=version ] [ --bpo | --nmu | --qa | --team ] [ --distribution=name ] [ --force-distribution ] [ --urgency=level ] [ --[no-]full ] [ --[no-]meta ] [ --meta-closes=bug-close-tags ] [ --snapshot-number=expression ] [ --id-length=number ] [ --git-log=git-log-options ] [ --[no-]git-author ] [ --[no-]multimaint ] [ --[no-]multimaint-merge ] [ --spawn-editor=[always|snapshot|release] ] [ --commit-msg=msg-format ] [ --commit ] [ --customizations=customization-file ] [path1 path2]

DESCRIPTION

gbp dch reads git commit messages and generates the Debian changelog from it. If no arguments are given gbp dch starts from the last tagged Debian package version up to the current tip of the current branch. If the distribution of the topmost section in debian/changelog is UNRELEASED the changelog entries will be inserted into this section. Otherwise a new section will be created.

If --auto is given gbp dch tries to guess the last Git commit documented in the changelog - this only works in snapshot mode. Otherwise --since can be used to tell gbp dch at which point it should start in the Git history.

The additional path arguments can be used to restrict the repository paths gbp dch looks at. Setting path to debian/ is a good choice if upstream uses Git and all Debian packaging changes are restricted to the debian/ subdir. In more sophisticated cases (like backports) you can use --git-log to restrict the generated changelog entries further. E.g. by using --git-log="--author=Foo Bar".

OPTIONS

--version

Print version of the program, i.e. version of the git-buildpackage suite

-v

--verbose

Verbose execution

-h

--help

Print help and exit

--color=[auto|on|off]

Whether to use colored output.

--color-scheme=COLOR_SCHEME

Colors to use in output (when color is enabled). The format for COLOR_SCHEME is '<debug>:<info>:<warning>:<error>'. Numerical values and color names are accepted, empty fields imply the default color. For example --git-color-scheme='cyan:34::' would show debug messages in cyan, info messages in blue and other messages in default (i.e. warning and error messages in red).

--debian-branch=branch_name

The branch in the Git repository the Debian package is being developed on, default is master.

--ignore-branch

Don't check if the current branch matches debian-branch.

--debian-tag=tag-format

tag format used, when tagging debian versions, default is debian/%(version)s

--since=committish

Start reading commit messages at committish.

--auto, -a

Guess the last commit documented in the changelog from the snapshot banner (or from the last tag if no snapshot banner exists).

--[no-]meta

Parse meta tags like Closes:, Thanks: and Git-Dch:. See META TAGS below.

--meta-closes=bug-close-tags

What meta tags to look for to generate bug-closing changelog entries. The default is 'Closes|LP' to support Debian and Launchpad.

--[no-]full

Include the full commit message in the changelog output.

--snapshot, -S

Create a snapshot release entry. This adds a snapshot release number and a warning banner to the changelog entry. The release version number is being auto incremented with every new snapshot release to avoid packages downgrades during snapshot testing.

--snapshot-number=expression

Python expression that gets eval()ed to the new snapshot number.

--release, -R

Remove any snapshot release banners and version suffixes, set the current distribution to unstable and open the changelog for final tweaking.

--new-version=version, -N version

Add a new changelog section with version newversion. Together with --snapshot the snapshot number will be appended to newversion.

--team

Create a Team upload changelog entry.

--bpo

Increment the Debian release number for an upload to backports, and add a backport upload changelog comment.

--nmu

Increment the Debian release number for a non-maintainer upload.

--qa

Increment the Debian release number for a Debian QA Team upload, and add a QA upload changelog comment.

--distribution=name

Set the distribution field to name.

--force-distribution

Force the distribution specified with --distribution to be used, even if it doesn't match the list of known distributions.

--urgency=level

Set the urgency field to level.

--git-log=git-log-options

Options passed on verbatim to git-log(1).

--id-length=N

Include N digits of the commit id in the changelog entry. Default is to not include any commit ids at all.

--ignore-regex=regex

Ignore commit lines matching regex when generating the changelog.

--git-author

Use user.name and user.email from git-config(1) for changelog trailer.

--[no-]multimaint-merge

Merge commits by maintainer.

--spawn-editor=[always|snapshot|release]

Whether to spawn an editor: always, when doing snapshots or when doing a release.

--commit-msg=msg-format

use this format string for the commit message when committing the generated changelog file (when --commit is given). Default is Update changelog for %(version)s release

--commit

Commit the generated changelog.

--customizations=customization-file

Load Python code from customization-file. At the moment, the only useful thing the code can do is define a custom format_changelog_entry() function.

SNAPSHOT MODE

Snapshot mode can be used for quick test and install cycles without having to worry about version numbers or changelog entries.

When using --snapshot or -S gbp dch uses a pseudo header in the Debian changelog to remember the last git commit it added a changelog entry for. It also sets a version number ending in ~<snaspshotnumber>.gbp<commitid>. It automatically increments the snapshot number on subsequent invocations of gbp dch -S so that later snapshots automatically have a higher version number. To leave snapshot mode invoke gbp dch with the --release option. This removes the pseudo header and unmangles the version number so the released version has a higher version number than the snapshots.

META TAGS

Additional to the above options the formatting of the commit message in debian/changelog can be modified by special tags (called Meta Tags) given in the git commit message. Meta Tag processing can be activated via the --meta option. The tags must start at the first column of a commit message but can appear on any line. They are of the form Tagname: value. Valid Meta Tags are:

Git-Dch: action

Supported actions are: Ignore which will ignore this commit when generating debian/changelog, Short which will only use the description (the first line) of the commit message when generating the changelog entry (useful when --full is given) and Full which will use the full commit message when generating the changelog entry (useful when --full is not given).

Thanks: msg

Add a thanks message after the commit message.

Closes: bugnumber

Indicate in the debian/changelog that the bug was closed by this commit. See the --meta-closes on how to extend this for other bugtrackers.

The following git commit message:

      Document meta tags

      so one doesn't have to consult the manual

      Git-Dch: Short
      Closes: #636088
      Thanks: Raphaël Hertzog for the suggestion

Results in this debian/changelog entry:

      * Document meta tags.
        Thanks to Raphaël Hertzog for the suggestion (Closes: #636088)

CONFIGURATION FILES

Several gbp.conf files are parsed to set defaults for the above commandline arguments. See the gbp.conf(5) manpage for details.

RELATED TO git-dch…

gbp-buildpackage(1), gbp-import-dsc(1), gbp-import-dscs(1), gbp-import-orig(1), gbp.conf(5), debuild(1), git(1), pristine-tar(1), The Git-Buildpackage Manual <URL:file:///usr/share/doc/git-buildpackage/manual-html/index.html> Cl2vcs <URL:https://honk.sigxcpu.org/cl2vcs>,

AUTHOR

Guido Guenther <[email protected]>