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bpkg-pkg-status(1)	    General Commands Manual	    bpkg-pkg-status(1)

NAME
       bpkg-pkg-status - print package status

SYNOPSIS
       bpkg pkg-status|status [options]	[pkg[/ver]...]

DESCRIPTION
       The  pkg-status command prints the status of the	specified packages or,
       if ver is specified, package versions. If no packages  were  specified,
       then  pkg-status	 prints	the status of all the held packages (which are
       the packages that were explicitly built;	 see  bpkg-pkg-build(1)).  The
       latter  mode can	be modified to print the status	of all the packages by
       specifying the --all|-a option. Additionally, the status	 of  immediate
       or  all dependencies of the above packages can be printed by specifying
       the --immediate|-i or --recursive|-r options, respectively.  Note  that
       the status is written to	stdout,	not stderr.

       The  default  output  format (see the --stdout-format common option) is
       regular with components separated with spaces. Each  line  starts  with
       the package name	followed by one	of the status words listed below. Some
       of  them	can be optionally followed by ',' (no spaces) and a sub-status
       word.  Lines corresponding to dependencies from	linked	configurations
       will  additionally mention the configuration directory in square	brack-
       ets after the package name.

       unknown
	      Package is not part of the configuration nor available from  any
	      of the repositories.

       available
	      Package  is  not part of the configuration but is	available from
	      one of the repositories.

       fetched
	      Package is part of the configuration and is fetched.

       unpacked
	      Package is part of the configuration and is unpacked.

       configured
	      Package is part of the configuration and is configured.  May  be
	      followed	by  the	 system	sub-status indicating a	package	coming
	      from the system. The version of such a system package (described
	      below) may be the	special	'*' value indicating a	wildcard  ver-
	      sion.

       broken
	      Package is part of the configuration and is broken (broken pack-
	      ages can only be purged; see bpkg-pkg-purge(1)).

       If  only	 the  package  name was	specified without the package version,
       then the	available status word is followed by  the  list	 of  available
       versions.   Versions  that  are	only available for up/down-grading are
       printed in '[]' (such version are only available	as  dependencies  from
       prerequisite  repositories  of other repositories). If the --system op-
       tion is specified, then the last	version	in this	list may have the sys:
       prefix indicating an available system version. Such  a  system  version
       may  be	the special '?'	value indicating that a	package	may or may not
       be available from the system and	that its version is unknown.

       The fetched, unpacked, configured, and broken status words are followed
       by the version of the package. If the package  version  was  specified,
       then the	unknown	status word is also followed by	the version.

       If  the	status	is  fetched, unpacked, configured, or broken and newer
       versions	are available, then the	package	version	 is  followed  by  the
       available status	word and the list of newer versions.  To instead see a
       list  of	 all  versions,	 including  the	older ones, specify the	--old-
       available|-o option. In this case the  currently	 selected  version  is
       printed in '()'.

       If  the package name was	specified with the version, then only the sta-
       tus (such as, configured, available, etc.) of this version  is  consid-
       ered.

       If a package is being held, then	its name is printed prefixed with '!'.
       Similarly,  if  a  package  version  is being held, then	the version is
       printed prefixed	with '!'. Held packages	and  held  versions  were  se-
       lected  by the user and are not automatically dropped and upgraded, re-
       spectively.

       Below are some examples,	assuming the configuration  has	 libfoo	 1.0.0
       configured  and held (both package and version) as well as libfoo 1.1.0
       and 1.1.1 available from	source and 1.1.0 from the system.

       bpkg status libbar
       libbar unknown

       bpkg status libbar/1.0.0
       libbar unknown 1.0.0

       bpkg status libfoo/1.0.0
       !libfoo configured !1.0.0

       bpkg status libfoo/1.1.0
       libfoo available	1.1.0

       bpkg status --system libfoo/1.1.0
       libfoo available	1.1.0 sys:1.1.0

       bpkg status libfoo
       !libfoo configured !1.0.0 available 1.1.0 1.1.1

       bpkg status libfoo/1.1.1	libbar
       libfoo available	1.1.1
       libbar unknown

       Assuming	now that we dropped libfoo from	the configuration:

       bpkg status libfoo/1.0.0
       libfoo unknown 1.0.0

       bpkg status libfoo
       libfoo available	1.1.0 1.1.1

       And assuming now	that we	built libfoo as	 a  system  package  with  the
       wildcard	version:

       bpkg status libfoo
       !libfoo configured,system !* available 1.1.0 1.1.1

       Another example of the status output this time including	dependencies:

       bpkg status -r libbaz
       !libbaz configured 1.0.0
	 libfoo	configured 1.0.0
	   bison [.bpkg/host/] configured 1.0.0
	 libbar	configured 2.0.0

       If  the	output	format is json,	then the output	is a JSON array	of ob-
       jects which are the serialized  representation  of  the	following  C++
       struct package_status:

       struct available_version
       {
	 string	version;
	 bool	system;
	 bool	dependency;
       };

       struct package_status
       {
	 string			   name;
	 optional<string>	   configuration;
	 optional<string>	   constraint;
	 string			   status;
	 optional<string>	   sub_status;
	 optional<string>	   version;
	 bool			   hold_package;
	 bool			   hold_version;
	 vector<available_version> available_versions;
	 vector<package_status>	   dependencies;
       };

       For example:

       [
	 {
	   "name": "hello",
	   "status": "configured",
	   "version": "1.0.0",
	   "hold_package": true,
	   "available_versions": [
	     {
	       "version": "1.0.1"
	     },
	     {
	       "version": "2.0.0"
	     }
	   ],
	   "dependencies": [
	     {
	       "name": "libhello",
	       "status": "configured",
	       "version": "1.0.2",
	     }
	   ]
	 }
       ]

       See  the	 JSON  OUTPUT section in bpkg-common-options(1)	for details on
       the overall properties of this format and the semantics of  the	struct
       serialization.

       In  package_status,  the	configuration member contains the absolute di-
       rectory of a linked configuration if this package resides in  a	linked
       configuration.  The  constraint	member	is  present only if the	--con-
       straint option is specified. The	version	member is absent if the	status
       member is unknown or available and no package version is	 specified  on
       the  command line. If the sub_status member is system, then the version
       member can be special *.	The dependencies member	is present only	if the
       --immediate|-i or --recursive|-r	options	are specified.

       In available_version, if	the system member is true, then	 this  version
       is  available  from the system, in which	case the version member	can be
       special ? or *. If the dependency member	is true, then this version  is
       only  available as a dependency from prerequisite repositories of other
       repositories.

PKG-STATUS OPTIONS
       --all|-a
	      Print the	status of all the packages, not	just held.

       --link Also print the status of held/all	packages from linked  configu-
	      rations.

       --immediate|-i
	      Also print the status of immediate dependencies.

       --recursive|-r
	      Also print the status of all dependencies, recursively.

       --old-available|-o
	      Print old	available versions.

       --constraint
	      Print version constraints	for dependencies.

       --system
	      Check the	availability of	packages from the system.

       --no-hold
	      Don't print the package or version hold status.

       --no-hold-package
	      Don't print the package hold status.

       --no-hold-version
	      Don't print the version hold status.

       --directory|-d dir
	      Assume  configuration is in dir rather than in the current work-
	      ing directory.

COMMON OPTIONS
       The common options are summarized below with a more  detailed  descrip-
       tion available in bpkg-common-options(1).

       -v     Print essential underlying commands being	executed.

       -V     Print all	underlying commands being executed.

       --quiet|-q
	      Run quietly, only	printing error messages.

       --verbose level
	      Set the diagnostics verbosity to level between 0 and 6.

       --stdout-format format
	      Representation format to use for printing	to stdout.

       --jobs|-j num
	      Number of	jobs to	perform	in parallel.

       --no-result
	      Don't print informational	messages about the outcome of perform-
	      ing a command or some of its parts.

       --structured-result fmt
	      Write the	result of performing a command in a structured form.

       --progress
	      Display progress indicators for long-lasting operations, such as
	      network transfers, building, etc.

       --no-progress
	      Suppress	progress  indicators for long-lasting operations, such
	      as network transfers, building, etc.

       --diag-color
	      Use color	in diagnostics.

       --no-diag-color
	      Don't use	color in diagnostics.

       --build path
	      The build	program	to be used to build packages.

       --build-option opt
	      Additional option	to be passed to	the build program.

       --fetch path
	      The fetch	program	to be used to download resources.

       --fetch-option opt
	      Additional option	to be passed to	the fetch program.

       --fetch-timeout sec
	      The fetch	and fetch-like (for example, git) program timeout.

       --pkg-proxy url
	      HTTP proxy server	to use when  fetching  package	manifests  and
	      archives from remote pkg repositories.

       --git path
	      The git program to be used to fetch git repositories.

       --git-option opt
	      Additional common	option to be passed to the git program.

       --sha256	path
	      The sha256 program to be used to calculate SHA256	sums.

       --sha256-option opt
	      Additional option	to be passed to	the sha256 program.

       --tar path
	      The tar program to be used to extract package archives.

       --tar-option opt
	      Additional option	to be passed to	the tar	program.

       --openssl path
	      The openssl program to be	used for crypto	operations.

       --openssl-option	opt
	      Additional option	to be passed to	the openssl program.

       --auth type
	      Types of repositories to authenticate.

       --trust fingerprint
	      Trust repository certificate with	a SHA256 fingerprint.

       --trust-yes
	      Assume the answer	to all authentication prompts is yes.

       --trust-no
	      Assume the answer	to all authentication prompts is no.

       --git-capabilities up=pc
	      Protocol capabilities (pc) for a git repository URL prefix (up).

       --pager path
	      The pager	program	to be used to show long	text.

       --pager-option opt
	      Additional option	to be passed to	the pager program.

       --options-file file
	      Read additional options from file.

       --default-options dir
	      The directory to load additional default options files from.

       --no-default-options
	      Don't load default options files.

       --keep-tmp
	      Don't  remove  the  bpkg's temporary directory at	the end	of the
	      command execution	and print its path at the verbosity level 2 or
	      higher.

DEFAULT	OPTIONS	FILES
       See bpkg-default-options-files(1) for an	overview of  the  default  op-
       tions  files.  For the pkg-status command the search start directory is
       the configuration directory. The	following options files	 are  searched
       for in each directory and, if found, loaded in the order	listed:

       bpkg.options
       bpkg-pkg-status.options

       The following pkg-status	command	options	cannot be specified in the de-
       fault options files:

       --directory|-d

BUGS
       Send bug	reports	to the users@build2.org	mailing	list.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (c) 2014-2024 the build2 authors.

       Permission  is  granted to copy,	distribute and/or modify this document
       under the terms of the MIT License.

bpkg 0.17.0			   June	2024		    bpkg-pkg-status(1)

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