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Portage API
This page is the beginning of the missing documentation on the Portage Python API.
Introduction
Portage has always had a Python API; however, this API does not appear to be documented at all. This page represents an initial effort to document the API that is available for querying packages, etc.
Portage DBAPI
The API that exists in Portage to query this is called the DBAPI. The "porttree" is the nickname used to describe the Portage tree, which is typically stored in /usr/portage
. In these examples, we will use Portage's python DBAPI to query the porttree using the interactive python
interpreter.
w520 drobbins # python Python 3.3.5 (default, Sep 21 2015, 23:01:43) [GCC 4.9.3] on linux Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. >>> portage.root '/' >>> import portage >>> p = portage.db[portage.root]["porttree"].dbapi >>>
p
now contains a reference to the DBAPI associated with the Portage tree associated with the system installed at portage.root
, which is typically /usr/portage
. We can now perform various queries using this variable.
>>> p.cp_list("sys-apps/portage")
['sys-apps/portage-2.3.6-r9', 'sys-apps/portage-2.3.8']
Above, cp_list
takes what is called a "catpkg", which is a reference to a particular ebuild in a repository in "category/packagename" format. We can also get lists of specific available packages, using other functions:
>>> p.match("sys-apps/portage") ['sys-apps/portage-2.3.6-r9', 'sys-apps/portage-2.3.8'] >>> p.match("=sys-apps/portage-2*") ['sys-apps/portage-2.3.6-r9', 'sys-apps/portage-2.3.8']
While at first the match()
method looks no different than the cp_list()
method, you can see that it accepts any valid dependency atom, which is any individual dependency reference to a particular package. The match()
method is actually a shortcut for the more sophisticated xmatch()
method -- it matches all visible (non-masked) packages that satisfy the dependency.
Using xmatch()
, more sophisticated matching can be performed:
>>> p.xmatch("match-visible", "=sys-apps/portage-2*")
['sys-apps/portage-2.3.6-r9', 'sys-apps/portage-2.3.8']
As you can see, xmatch()
with the "match_visible" gives us the identical results as match()
. In fact, match()
is a shortcut for this particular xmatch()
call. However, xmatch()
has other matching methods, detailed below:
match mode | Description | Return Type |
---|---|---|
bestmatch-visible | Find the best (highest) visible (unmasked) match for the dependency. | single string |
match-all | Find all matches, masked or unmasked. | list of strings |
match-visible | Find all visible (unmasked) matches for the dependency. | list of strings |
minimum-all | Find the lowest match for the dependency, ignoring masks. | single string |
minimum-visible | Find the lowest match for the dependency, respecting masks. | single string |
Querying Package Metadata
Portage is designed to extract and cache a certain set of data from each ebuild, called metadata, and this metadata is queryable and used for dependency calculations, fetching sources, etc. Querying of metadata for a particular ebuild can be performed using the aux_get()
DBAPI method:
>>> p.aux_get("sys-apps/portage-2.3.8", ["EAPI", "SRC_URI"])
['5-progress', 'https://www.github.com/funtoo/portage-funtoo/tarball/funtoo-2.3.8 -> portage-funtoo-2.3.8.tar.gz']
The parameters of the aux_get()
method are, first, the name of a package in "catpkg-v" format, which is a reference to a specific version of a package in "category/packagename-version(-revision)" format. The second argument is a list or tuple of metadata to return. A list is returned containing the queried metadata in the order specified in the first argument. If necessary, Portage will evaluate the contents of the ebuild to extract and cache this metadata. For porttrees, the following metadata is available (and this may vary by EAPI):
Metadata | Description |
---|---|
DEFINED_PHASES | String containing all phases (see Ebuild Functions) defined in the ebuild, delimited by spaces. |
DEPEND | Build dependencies |
EAPI | Ebuild API version |
HDEPEND | Host Build Dependencies (EAPI 5-hdepend only) |
INHERITED | A complete list of eclasses used by this ebuild, directly or indirectly (via eclasses inheriting other eclasses) |
IUSE | IUSE variable from ebuild |
KEYWORDS | KEYWORDS (masking) setting |
LICENSE | LICENSE variable from ebuild |
PDEPEND | PDEPEND variable from ebuild |
PROPERTIES | PROPERTIES variable from ebuild |
PROVIDE | PROVIDE variable from ebuild |
RDEPEND | Runtime dependencies |
REQUIRED_USE | REQUIRED_USE variable from ebuild |
repository | Repository name ("gentoo" in main Gentoo or Funtoo Portage tree) |
RESTRICT | RESTRICT variable from ebuild |
SLOT | SLOT variable from ebuild |
Manipulating Package Strings
Portage's API contains a number of functions that are used to manipulate and split Portage's various types of package strings. Here is a list of the various functions available:
Function name | Description | Example | Result |
---|---|---|---|
catpkgsplit(cpv_string) | Takes a complete catpkg-version string, and splits into category, package name, package version, package revision. Will return None if argument string is invalid -- such as missing a version, or category. | portage.catpkgsplit("foo-bar/oni-1.0-r1") | ('foo-bar', 'oni', '1.0', 'r1') |
catsplit(catpkg_string) | Takes a string in catpkg or catpkg-version format, and splits into category and "other" part (list of length 2) at the initial "/" separator. Equivalent to string.split(catpkg_string, "/", maxsplit=1) . No validation of the package or package-version part is performed. | portage.catsplit("foo-bar/oni-1.0-r1") portage.catsplit("foo-bar/oni-2asdfz00") | ['foo-bar', 'oni-1.0'] ['foo-bar', 'oni-2asdfz00'] |