The
command is used to dump out information for packages, either packed up in
files with the
pkg_create1
command or already installed on the system
with the
pkg_add1
command.
OPTIONS
The following command line options are supported:
pkg-name ...
The named packages are described.
A package name may either be the name of
an installed package, the pathname to a package distribution file or a
URL to an FTP available package.
Package version numbers can also be matched in a relational manner using the
>= , <= ,
and
<
operators.
For example,
"pkg_info 'portupgrade>=20030723'"
will match versions 20030723 and later of the
portupgrade
package.
-a , -all
Show all currently installed packages.
-b , -blocksize
Use the
BLOCKSIZE
environment variable for output even when the
-q
or
-Q
flag is present.
-h , -help
Print help message.
-v , -verbose
Turn on verbose output.
-p
Show the installation prefix for each package.
-q , -quiet
Be
``quiet''
in emitting report headers and such, just dump the
raw info (basically, assume a non-human reading).
-Q
Be
``quiet''
as above but print preface output with the package name.
-c
Show the (one line) comment field for each package.
-d
Show the long description field for each package.
-D
Show the install-message file for each package.
-f
Show the packing list instructions for each package.
-g
Show files that do not match the recorded checksum.
-i
Show the install script (if any) for each package.
-I
Show an index line for each package.
This option takes
precedence over all other package formatting options.
-j
Show the requirements script (if any) for each package.
-k
Show the de-install script (if any) for each package.
-K , -keep
Keep any downloaded package in
PKGDIR
if it is defined or in current directory by default.
-r
For each of the specified packages,
show the list of packages on which it depends.
-R
For each of the specified packages,
show the list of installed packages which require it.
Show the files within each package.
This is different from just
viewing the packing list, since full pathnames for everything
are generated.
-s
Show the total size occupied by files installed within each package.
-o
Show the
``origin''
path recorded on package generation.
This path is the directory name in the
Fx Ports Collection
of the underlying port from which the package was generated.
-G , -no-glob
Do not try to expand shell glob patterns in the
pkg-name
when selecting packages to be displayed (by default
automatically expands shell glob patterns in the
pkg-name )
-W , -which filename
For the specified
filename
argument show which package it belongs to.
If the file is not in the
current directory, and does not have an absolute path, then the
directories specified in the environment variable
PATH
are searched using
which(1).
-O , -origin origin
List all packages having the specified
origin
-x , -regex
Treat the
pkg-name
as a regular expression and display information only for packages
whose names match that regular expression.
Multiple regular
expressions could be provided, in that case
displays information about all packages that match at least one
regular expression from the list.
-X , -extended
Like
-x
but treats the
pkg-name
as an extended regular expression.
-e , -exists package
If the package identified by
package
is currently installed, return 0, otherwise return 1.
This option
allows you to easily test for the presence of another (perhaps
prerequisite) package from a script.
-E
Show only matching package names.
This option takes
precedence over all other package formatting options.
If any packages match, return 0, otherwise return 1.
-l prefix
Prefix each information category header (see
-q
shown with
prefix
This is primarily of use to front-end programs that want to request a
lot of different information fields at once for a package, but do not
necessarily want the output intermingled in such a way that they cannot
organize it.
This lets you add a special token to the start of
each field.
-t , -template template
Use
template
as the argument to
mktemp(3)
when creating a
``staging area''
By default, this is the string
/tmp/instmp.XXXXXX
but it may be necessary to override it in the situation where
space in your
/tmp
directory is limited.
Be sure to leave some number of
`X'
characters for
mktemp(3)
to fill in with a unique ID.
Note: This should really not be necessary with
,
since very little information is extracted from each package
and one would have to have a very small
/tmp
indeed to overflow it.
-V
Show revision number of the packing list format.
-P , -version
Show revision number of package tools.
TECHNICAL DETAILS
Package info is either extracted from package files named on the
command line, or from already installed package information
in
/var/db/pkg/ Aq pkg-name
ENVIRONMENT
BLOCKSIZE
If the environment variable
BLOCKSIZE
is set the block counts will be displayed in units of that
size block.
PKG_TMPDIR
Points to the directory where
creates its temporary files.
If this variable is not set,
TMPDIR
is used.
If both are unset, the builtin defaults are used.
PKG_DBDIR
Specifies an alternative location for the installed package database.
PKG_PATH
Specifies an alternative package location, if a given package cannot be
found.
PKGDIR
Specifies an alternative location to save downloaded packages to.
FILES
/var/tmp
Used if the environment variables
PKG_TMPDIR
and
TMPDIR
are not set, or if the directories named have insufficient space.
/tmp
The next choice if
/var/tmp
does not exist or has insufficient space.
/usr/tmp
The last choice if
/tmp
is unsuitable.
/var/db/pkg
Default location of the installed package database.