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2026-01-13 08:47:33
2026-01-13 09:30:40
https://tests.reproducible-builds.org/debian/forky/arm64/pkg_set_CIP_build-depends.html
CIP_build-depends package set for forky/arm64 Debian navigation Change suite/architecture Tested architectures: amd64 arm64 Tested suites: unstable forky trixie bookworm Test results statistics Results for forky/arm64 Unreproducible packages: with notes without notes Other package states: package sets Recently tested packages: last 24h last 48h all tested packages packages with .buildinfo files packages without .buildinfo files Scheduled for arm64 Maintainers of in forky Reproducible Debian overview Development dashboard Past releases dashboard Categorized issues Bugs filed Variations tested Packages with notifications enabled ⚑ Repositories overview Backend related Broken pieces Documentation (eg. on manual scheduling) Performance stats Health monitoring node overview job overview daily graphs weekly graphs monthly graphs yearly graphs The Reproducible Builds project reproducible-builds.org Reproducible Builds - Docs • News Reproducible Builds in Debian - Wiki SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH specification reproduce.debian.net aims for 100% bit-for-bit identical rebuilds of Debian other CI tests CIP_build-depends package set for forky/arm64 All tracked package sets for forky/arm64 Debian package sets: essential required important build-essential build-essential-depends popcon_top1337-installed-sources key_packages installed_on_debian.org had_a_DSA cii-census cloud-image cloud-image_build-depends desktop package sets: gnome gnome_build-depends kde kde_build-depends mate mate_build-depends xfce xfce_build-depends Debian distribution package sets: CIP CIP_build-depends debian-edu debian-edu_build-depends freedombox freedombox_build-depends grml grml_build-depends tails tails_build-depends pureos_default_install pureos_default_install_build-depends maintenance team package sets: maint_debian-accessibility maint_debian-boot maint_debian-lua maint_debian-med maint_debian-ocaml maint_debian-on-mobile-maintainers maint_debian-python maint_debian-qa maint_debian-science maint_debian-x maint_pkg-android-tools-devel maint_pkg-erlang-devel maint_pkg-fonts-devel maint_pkg-games-devel maint_pkg-golang-maintainers maint_pkg-grass-devel maint_pkg-haskell-maintainers maint_pkg-java-maintainers maint_pkg-javascript-devel maint_pkg-multimedia-maintainers maint_pkg-perl-maintainers maint_pkg-php-pear maint_pkg-openstack maint_pkg-r maint_pkg-ruby-extras-maintainers maint_pkg-rust-maintainers maint_reproducible-builds The package set CIP_build-depends in forky/arm64 consists of 672 packages: 19 (2.8%) packages failed to build reproducibly: xorg-server fltk1.3 dejagnu black python3.13 systemtap libtool nss librsvg gtk4 libdebian-installer valgrind + pycparser + pam mesa lynx libzstd libnet bluez 17 (2.5%) packages failed to build from source: autogen gnutls28 nghttp2 efivar meson gnu-efi python-dateutil libtirpc llvm-toolchain-21 vim gcc-15 linux libunwind gem2deb rustc rust-sequoia-sq tpm2-tss 2 (0.3%) packages are either in depwait state, blacklisted, not for us, or cannot be downloaded: intel-processor-trace level-zero 634 (94.3%) packages successfully build reproducibly: acl alsa-lib apache2 # apparmor apr apr-util apt asciidoc asciidoctor aspell aspell-en atf attr audit autoconf autoconf2.69 autoconf-archive autoconf-dickey autodep8 automake autotools-dev avahi babeltrace base-files bash bash-completion bats bats-assert bc binutils # bison boost-defaults brotli bsdmainutils byacc bzip2 ca-certificates cairo cdbs cdebconf check checkpolicy chrpath cluster-glue cmake cmocka codespell colord corosync cpio cppcheck cracklib2 cron cryptsetup cscope cunit curl cvs cvsps cyrus-sasl2 cython + czmq db5.3 db-defaults dbus dbus-glib dbus-python dctrl-tools debhelper debianutils debugedit desktop-file-utils dh-autoreconf dh-exec dh-python dh-runit directx-headers dist distro-info distro-info-data dlm docbook docbook2x docbook-dsssl docbook-to-man docbook-utils docbook-xml docbook-xsl dos2unix dosfstools doxygen dpkg # duktape dwarves dwz e2fsprogs ed elfutils ell equivs evolution-data-server exo expat fakechroot fakeroot faketime fftw3 fig2dev file flatbuffers flex fontconfig fonts-dejavu fonts-urw-base35 freeipmi freerdp3 freetype fribidi fstrm fuse3 gawk + gcc-defaults gdb gdbm gdk-pixbuf geoip geoip-database gettext ghostscript git glib2.0 glibc gloox glslang gmp gnulib gnumach gnupg2 gobject-introspection golang-defaults golang-github-armon-circbuf golang-github-armon-go-metrics golang-github-hashicorp-go-msgpack golang-github-hashicorp-go-syslog golang-github-hashicorp-logutils golang-github-hashicorp-mdns golang-github-hashicorp-memberlist golang-github-mitchellh-cli golang-github-mitchellh-mapstructure golang-github-ryanuber-columnize googletest gosop gperf gpm graphviz + groff gsl gst-plugins-base1.0 gstreamer1.0 gtk+2.0 gtk+3.0 gtk-doc guile-3.0 gyp heimdal help2man hiredis hwloc i18nspector icu imagemagick imlib2 impacket indent inetutils iniparser init-system-helpers intltool iproute2 iptables iputils isort itstool ivykis jack-audio-connection-kit jansson java-common javatools # jdupes jemalloc jetring jinja2 jq json-c junit4 kcoreaddons keyutils khronos-opencl-headers ki18n kmod krb5 # kronosnet kwallet-kf5 kyua latex2html lcms2 lcov less libaio libalgorithm-diff-perl libarchive libassuan libasyncns libatasmart libatomic-ops libavif libblockdev libbpf libbsd libcanberra libcap2 libcap-ng libcapture-tiny-perl libcgi-pm-perl libconfig-autoconf-perl libconfig-inifiles-perl libconvert-asn1-perl libcpan-meta-check-perl libcpan-meta-requirements-perl libcrypt-openssl-bignum-perl libcrypt-openssl-guess-perl libcrypt-openssl-random-perl libdaemon libdatetime-locale-perl libdatetime-timezone-perl libdbd-sqlite3-perl libdbi libdevel-checkbin-perl libdevel-cover-perl libdisplay-info libdist-checkconflicts-perl libdrm libdshconfig libedit liberror-perl libestr libevdev libevent libexporter-tiny-perl libfastjson libffi libfido2 libfile-dirlist-perl libfile-homedir-perl libfile-touch-perl libgcrypt20 libgd2 libgitlab-api-v4-perl libglu libglvnd libgpg-error libgudev libheif libhttp-daemon-perl libhttp-date-perl libiberty libical3 libice libidn2 libimagequant libinih libinput libio-pty-perl libio-string-perl libipc-run-perl libisoburn libjpeg-turbo libjson-perl libksba liblist-moreutils-xs-perl liblocale-gettext-perl liblognorm liblwp-protocol-psgi-perl libmailtools-perl libmaxminddb libmd libmnl libmodule-build-perl libmodule-implementation-perl libmoo-perl libnamespace-autoclean-perl libnetfilter-conntrack libnet-telnet-perl libnfnetlink libnftnl libnsl libogg libonig libopenobex libpaper libparams-validationcompiler-perl libpcap libpciaccess libpipeline libpng1.6 libpod-pom-view-restructured-perl libproxy libpsl libpthread-stubs libqb librabbitmq librdkafka libreadonly-perl librelp libscalar-list-utils-perl libsdl2 libseccomp libsecret libselinux libsemanage libsepol libsigsegv libsm libsndfile libsodium libsoxr libspecio-perl libssh libssh2 libstatgrab libstring-shellquote-perl libtasn1-6 libtest-cleannamespaces-perl libtest-cmd-perl libtest-deep-perl libtest-fatal-perl libtest-leaktrace-perl libtest-minimumversion-perl libtest-output-perl libtest-perl-critic-perl libtest-pod-coverage-perl libtest-pod-perl libtest-requires-perl libtest-simple-perl libtest-spelling-perl libtest-strict-perl libtest-synopsis-perl libtest-taint-perl libtest-warnings-perl libtest-without-module-perl libtext-glob-perl libtextwrap libtimedate-perl libtime-parsedate-perl libtomcrypt libtommath libtraceevent libtracefs libtry-tiny-perl libunistring liburcu liburing liburi-perl libusb-1.0 libutempter libuv1 libva libversion-perl libverto libvirt libvpx libwebp libwww-perl libx11 libxau libxaw libxcb libxcomposite libxcrypt libxcursor libxdamage libxdmcp libxext libxfce4ui libxfce4util libxfixes libxi libxinerama libxkbcommon libxkbfile libxml2 libxml-twig-perl libxmu libxnvctrl libxpm libxrandr libxrender libxshmfence libxslt libxss libxt libxtst libxv libxvmc libxxf86dga libxxf86vm libyaml libyaml-perl linux-atm linuxdoc-tools lirc lksctp-tools llvm-defaults lmdb lm-sensors logrotate lsb-release-minimal lsof lua5.1 lua5.4 lvm2 lxml lz4 lzip lzma lzo2 lzop m4 mako man-db maven-repo-helper mawk mdocml mig modemmanager mongo-c-driver motif mpfr4 mpi-defaults mtdev mysql-defaults nasm ncompress ncurses neatvnc netbase netcat-openbsd netpbm-free net-snmp nettle net-tools network-manager networkx newt nftables nghttp3 ngtcp2 ninja-build nose2 npth nspr nss-wrapper numactl ocl-icd openipmi open-isns openjade openldap openssh openssl + orc p11-kit pacemaker package-notes pandoc pango1.0 parted patch patchelf patchutils pci.ids pciutils pcre2 pcsc-lite perl perl-openssl-defaults pexpect pipewire pixman pkcs11-helper pkgconf ply po4a po-debconf policykit-1 poppler popt postgresql-18 postgresql-common procps protobuf-c psmisc psutils py3c pycodestyle pycurl pyflakes pygments pygobject pylint pyroute2 pytest python3-defaults python3-stdlib-extensions python-boto3 python-build python-dbusmock python-debian python-distutils-extra python-docutils python-flake8 python-googleapi python-google-auth python-kubernetes python-packaging python-pip python-urllib3 pyyaml qtbase-opensource-src # # # qttools-opensource-src quilt rdfind rdma-core readline recode rename requests resource-agents riemann-c-client rsync rtmpdump ruby-defaults rust-bindgen-cli rust-cbindgen rust-paste rust-rsop rust-rustc-hash-2 rust-sequoia-chameleon-gnupg rust-sequoia-sop rust-sequoia-sqv rust-syn samba sbc scdoc scowl seatd serf setuptools setuptools-scm sharutils shellcheck shunit2 slang2 snappy socat source-highlight speexdsp sphinx spirv-llvm-translator-21 spirv-tools sqlite3 squashfs-tools strip-nondeterminism subunit subversion # suds swig swtpm symlinks sysfsutils sysprof systemd tcl8.6 tcltk-defaults tcp-wrappers texi2html texinfo texlive-base + texlive-extra tiff time triehash tzdata uchardet umockdev unicode-data unifont unzip utf8proc util-linux valgrind-if-available vulkan-loader w3m wayland wayland-protocols webrtc-audio-processing wget wtmpdb xcb-proto xcb-util xcb-util-cursor xen xfce4-dev-tools xfce4-panel xfconf xfonts-utils xfsprogs xft xml-core xmlto xmltoman xorg-docs xorgproto xorg-sgml-doctools xtensor xtrans xutils-dev xwayland xxhash xz-utils yajl zeromq3 zip zlib A package name displayed with a bold font is an indication that this package has a note. Visited packages are linked in green, those which have not been visited are linked in blue. A # sign after the name of a package indicates that a bug is filed against it. Likewise, a + sign indicates there is a patch available, a P means a pending bug while # indicates a closed bug. In cases of several bugs, the symbol is repeated. This page was built by the jenkins job reproducible_html_pkg_sets which is configured via this git repo . There is more information about jenkins.debian.net and about reproducible builds of Debian available elsewhere. Please send technical feedback about this setup to the Debian jenkins development list , or as a bug report against the jenkins.debian.org package . Feedback about specific job results should go to their respective lists and/or the BTS. The code of jenkins.debian.net is mostly GPL-2 licensed. The weather icons are public domain and were taken from the Tango Icon Library . Copyright 2014-2024 Holger Levsen and many others . Last update: 2026-01-13 06:47 UTC
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://draft.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=8072464059979174136&postID=7555653532420926758&from=pencil
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2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://tests.reproducible-builds.org/debian/forky/arm64/pkg_set_debian-edu_build-depends.html
debian-edu_build-depends package set for forky/arm64 Debian navigation Change suite/architecture Tested architectures: amd64 arm64 Tested suites: unstable forky trixie bookworm Test results statistics Results for forky/arm64 Unreproducible packages: with notes without notes Other package states: package sets Recently tested packages: last 24h last 48h all tested packages packages with .buildinfo files packages without .buildinfo files Scheduled for arm64 Maintainers of in forky Reproducible Debian overview Development dashboard Past releases dashboard Categorized issues Bugs filed Variations tested Packages with notifications enabled ⚑ Repositories overview Backend related Broken pieces Documentation (eg. on manual scheduling) Performance stats Health monitoring node overview job overview daily graphs weekly graphs monthly graphs yearly graphs The Reproducible Builds project reproducible-builds.org Reproducible Builds - Docs • News Reproducible Builds in Debian - Wiki SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH specification reproduce.debian.net aims for 100% bit-for-bit identical rebuilds of Debian other CI tests debian-edu_build-depends package set for forky/arm64 All tracked package sets for forky/arm64 Debian package sets: essential required important build-essential build-essential-depends popcon_top1337-installed-sources key_packages installed_on_debian.org had_a_DSA cii-census cloud-image cloud-image_build-depends desktop package sets: gnome gnome_build-depends kde kde_build-depends mate mate_build-depends xfce xfce_build-depends Debian distribution package sets: CIP CIP_build-depends debian-edu debian-edu_build-depends freedombox freedombox_build-depends grml grml_build-depends tails tails_build-depends pureos_default_install pureos_default_install_build-depends maintenance team package sets: maint_debian-accessibility maint_debian-boot maint_debian-lua maint_debian-med maint_debian-ocaml maint_debian-on-mobile-maintainers maint_debian-python maint_debian-qa maint_debian-science maint_debian-x maint_pkg-android-tools-devel maint_pkg-erlang-devel maint_pkg-fonts-devel maint_pkg-games-devel maint_pkg-golang-maintainers maint_pkg-grass-devel maint_pkg-haskell-maintainers maint_pkg-java-maintainers maint_pkg-javascript-devel maint_pkg-multimedia-maintainers maint_pkg-perl-maintainers maint_pkg-php-pear maint_pkg-openstack maint_pkg-r maint_pkg-ruby-extras-maintainers maint_pkg-rust-maintainers maint_reproducible-builds The package set debian-edu_build-depends in forky/arm64 consists of 1305 packages: 44 (3.4%) packages failed to build reproducibly: flite mathpiper nbconvert haskell-cryptonite xorg-server haskell-zip-archive haskell-memory python-cycler haskell-attoparsec haskell-async dejagnu fonts-cantarell spglib haskell-tls haskell-conduit haskell-regex-applicative haskell-http-conduit python3.13 systemtap libtool nss qt6-scxml librsvg qtdeclarative-opensource-src haskell-fgl gtk4 libdebian-installer qtsensors-opensource-src courier-authlib qt6-multimedia nbsphinx pyzmq pam underscore libitext5-java comedilib + mesa lynx r-base mksh kf6-ktexttemplate libzstd libnet bluez 45 (3.4%) packages failed to build from source: qtlocation-opensource-src openbabel qtquickcontrols-opensource-src haskell-http-types jupyter-notebook eigen3 python-tzlocal node-postcss node-xterm highway abseil strace qt6-base gnutls28 nghttp2 ghc # qtwebengine-opensource-src swt4-gtk qt6-declarative meson highlight.js nodejs ipywidgets qt6-webengine python-dateutil webkit2gtk libtirpc mypy kf6-kconfigwidgets inkscape libreoffice # vim terminado gcc-15 linux sssd libunwind llvm-toolchain-19 gem2deb rustc numpy kf6-kconfig kf6-kcoreaddons rust-sequoia-sq tpm2-tss 2 (0.2%) packages are either in depwait state, blacklisted, not for us, or cannot be downloaded: libvpl libx86emu 1214 (93.0%) packages successfully build reproducibly: a52dec aalib acl advancecomp adwaita-icon-theme alsa-lib alure analitza ant aom apache2 # apache-log4j2 apparmor appstream apr apr-util apt argon2 aribb24 asciidoc asciidoctor aspell aspell-en astyle atf at-spi2-core attr audiofile audit augeas autoconf autoconf2.69 autoconf-archive autoconf-dickey automake autotools-dev avahi avogadrolibs ayatana-ido babl backbone bash bash-completion batik bats bats-assert bc bdfresize beautifulsoup4 binaryen bind9 # binutils # bison blends blt boost-defaults bouncycastle breezy brotli byacc bzip2 ca-certificates cairo cairocffi camlp4 c-ares cdbs cdebconf cdparanoia cfitsio chafa check chemical-mime-data chmlib chromaprint chrpath cifs-utils cmake cmake-extras cmark cmocka cm-super codec2 codemirror-js codespell colord colorspacious commons-beanutils commons-exec commons-httpclient commons-io commons-math contourpy courier-unicode cpdb-libs cpio cppcheck cppunit cracklib2 cron cryptsetup cscope cunit cups # curl cvs cyrus-sasl2 cython + czmq dav1d db5.3 db-defaults dblatex dbus dbus-broker dbus-glib dbus-python dbus-test-runner dconf dctrl-tools debhelper debian-archive-keyring debugedit desktop-file-utils deviceinfo devscripts dh-autoreconf dh-exec dh-lua dh-ocaml dh-python dh-runit dh-vim-addon dictd ding-libs dist distro-info-data docbook docbook2x docbook-to-man docbook-utils docbook-xml docbook-xsl doxygen doxyqml dpkg # dssi dvipng dwz e2fsprogs ed editorconfig-core elfutils enchant-2 espeak espeak-ng exiv2 expat expect exuberant-ctags facile fakechroot fakeroot faketime farstream-0.2 feedparser ffmpeg fftw3 fig2dev file findlib flac flatpak flex flit fluidsynth fontconfig fonts-android fonts-dejavu fonts-dejima-mincho fonts-font-awesome fonts-freefont fonts-kacst-one fonts-liberation fonts-noto fonts-noto-cjk fonts-noto-color-emoji fonts-quicksand fonts-wqy-zenhei fonttools foomatic-db-engine fpc freeglut freehep-io freehep-util freehep-vectorgraphics freehep-xml freetype frei0r fribidi fstrm ftgl fuse3 game-music-emu gawk + gcc-defaults gcem gcr gcr4 gdb gdbm gdk-pixbuf gdm3 gegl gengetopt geonames gettext gexiv2 ghostscript gi-docgen giflib git gl2ps glew glib2.0 glibc glib-networking glm glslang glusterfs glw gmime gmp gnome-desktop gnome-online-accounts gnucap gnulib gnumach gnupg2 gobject-introspection go-md2man-v2 goocanvas-2.0 googletest gosop gperf gpm gpsd gputils grantlee5 graphene graphicsmagick graphite2 graphviz + groff grunt gsasl gsettings-qt gsl gspell gss-ntlmssp gst-plugins-base1.0 gstreamer1.0 gtk+2.0 gtk+3.0 gtk-doc gtksourceview5 gtkspell harfbuzz haskell-base16-bytestring haskell-constraints haskell-data-ordlist haskell-devscripts haskell-hashable haskell-html haskell-mmap haskell-network haskell-network-uri haskell-old-time haskell-regex-base haskell-regex-tdfa haskell-safe haskell-shake haskell-tar haskell-temporary haskell-terminal-size haskell-unix-compat haskell-utf8-string haskell-vector haskell-zlib hatchling hdf5 heimdal help2man hesiod hiredis html5lib html5-parser hunspell hunspell-fr hwloc hyphen i18nspector icu igerman98 ijs imagemagick imath imlib2 impacket indent indi + intltool iproute2 iptables ipykernel ipython ipython-genutils iso-codes itstool jack-audio-connection-kit jackd2 jackson-annotations jackson-core jackson-databind jansson javacc java-common javahelp2 javatools # jbigkit jdupes jeepney jemalloc jetring jfugue jigit jimtcl jmdns jose jpeg-xl jq jquery-typeahead.js jqueryui jsch jsemver json-c json-glib jsonrpc-glib jssc junit junit4 jupyter-client jupyter-core jxrlib karchive kcmutils kcompletion kconfig kconfigwidgets kcoreaddons kcrash kdbusaddons kddockwidgets kdegraphics-mobipocket kdevelop-pg-qt kdoctools kerberos-configs keyutils kf6-extra-cmake-modules kf6-karchive kf6-kbookmarks kf6-kcmutils kf6-kcolorscheme kf6-kcompletion kf6-kcrash kf6-kdbusaddons kf6-kdeclarative kf6-kdoctools kf6-kfilemetadata kf6-kguiaddons kf6-ki18n kf6-kiconthemes kf6-kio kf6-kirigami kf6-kitemmodels kf6-kitemviews kf6-kjobwidgets kf6-knewstuff kf6-knotifications kf6-knotifyconfig kf6-kparts kf6-kplotting kf6-krunner kf6-kservice kf6-ksvg kf6-ktexteditor kf6-ktextwidgets kf6-kunitconversion kf6-kwallet kf6-kwidgetsaddons kf6-kwindowsystem kf6-kxmlgui kf6-modemmanager-qt kf6-networkmanager-qt kf6-prison kf6-purpose kf6-solid kf6-sonnet kf6-syntax-highlighting kf6-threadweaver kfilemetadata-kf5 kglobalaccel kguiaddons ki18n kiconthemes kinit kio kirigami-addons kitemmodels kitemviews kiwisolver kjobwidgets kmod knewstuff knotifications knotifyconfig kparts kplotting kqtquickcharts krb5 # kservice ktexteditor ktextwidgets kwallet-kf5 kwidgetsaddons kwindowsystem kxmlgui kyua lablgtk3 labltk ladspa-sdk lame lcdf-typetools lcms2 lcov lerc less less.js libadwaita-1 libaio libarchive libass libassuan libasyncns libatomic-ops libavc1394 libavif libayatana-appindicator libayatana-indicator libbluray libbpf libbs2b libbsd libburn libcaca libcairo-gobject-perl libcairo-perl libcanberra libcap2 libcap-ng libcbor libcdio libcdio-paranoia libcdr libcloudproviders libcommons-codec-java libcommons-collections3-java libcommons-compress-java libcommons-lang3-java libcommons-logging-java libcommons-net-java libdaemon libdatrie libdbi libdbusmenu libdc1394 libdeflate libdevel-cover-perl libdex libdrm libdvdnav libdvdread libecap libedit libemf libepoxy libestr libev libevdev libevent libexif libexttextcat libextutils-cchecker-perl libextutils-depends-perl libextutils-pkgconfig-perl libfastjson libffi libfido2 libfile-copy-recursive-perl libfile-fcntllock-perl libfile-slurp-perl libfile-which-perl libfont-freetype-perl libfreehand libfyaml libgadu libgcrypt20 libgd2 libgda5 libgit2 libgit2-glib libglib-object-introspection-perl libglib-perl libglu libglvnd libgnome-games-support1 libgnt libgom libgpg-error libgphoto2 libgraph-perl libgringotts libgsf libgsm libgssglue libgtkdatabox libgudev libgusb + libheif libhtml-tagset-perl libhttp-daemon-perl libhttp-message-perl libiberty libical3 libice libidl libidn libidn2 libiec61883 libieee1284 libimagequant libimobiledevice libio-pty-perl libipc-run3-perl libipc-run-perl libiscsi libisofs libjlatexmath-java libjna-java libjpeg-turbo libjson-perl libjs-requirejs-text libkcddb libkcompactdisc libkdcraw libkdegames libkeduvocdocument libkexiv2 libkomparediff2 libksba libksysguard liblinear liblo liblocale-gettext-perl liblockfile liblognorm liblouis liblrdf libmaa libmad libmath-base85-perl libmath-bigint-perl libmaxminddb libmd libmng libmnl libmodule-build-perl libmspack libmspub libmtp libmypaint libmysofa libndp libnetfilter-conntrack libnet-snmp-perl libnfnetlink libnfs libnftnl libnma libnova libnsl libogg libopenmpt libopenshot libpagemaker libpam-x2go libpanel libpaper libpcap libpciaccess libpeas2 libphysfs libplacebo libplasma libplist libpng1.6 libpodofo libpod-pom-view-restructured-perl libportal libpsl libpthread-stubs libqalculate libqt5qxlsx libqtdbusmock libqtdbustest libqtpas libquazip libqxp librabbitmq libraw librdkafka librelp libreoffice-dictionaries librevenge librist librsync libscalar-list-utils-perl libsdl2 libsdl2-gfx libsdl2-image libsdl2-mixer libsdl2-ttf libsdl3 libsdl3-image libsdl3-ttf libseccomp libsecret libselinux libsemanage libsepol libsidplay libsimpleini libsm libsndfile libsocket6-perl libsocket-perl libsodium libsoup3 libsoxr libspectre libspelling libspf2 libssh libssh2 libtablelayout-java libtasn1-6 libteam libtest-consistentversion-perl libtest-deep-perl libtest-minimumversion-perl libtest-number-delta-perl libtest-output-perl libtest-perl-critic-perl libtest-pod-coverage-perl libtest-pod-perl libtest-simple-perl libtest-spelling-perl libtest-strict-perl libtest-synopsis-perl libtext-hogan-perl libtextwrap libthai libtheora libticables libticalcs libticonv libtifiles libtwelvemonkeys-java libunistring liburcu liburing liburi-perl libusb-1.0 libusermetrics libuv1 libva libvdpau libverto libvidstab libvirt libvisio libvorbis libvpx libwebp libwmf libwpg libx11 libxau libxaw libxcb libxcrypt libxcursor libxcvt libxdamage libxdmcp libxext libxfce4util libxfixes libxfont libxi libxinerama libxkbcommon libxkbfile libxklavier libxml2 libxmlb libxml-parser-perl libxmu libxpm libxrandr libxrender libxres libxshmfence libxslt libxss libxt libxtst libxv libyaml libzmf licensecheck lightdm lilv lilypond lintian linux-atm linuxdoc-tools lirc lksctp-tools llvm-defaults lmdb lmodern lm-sensors localehelper logrotate lomiri-api lomiri-app-launch lomiri-download-manager lomiri-indicator-network lomiri-schemas lomiri-system-settings lomiri-ui-toolkit lomiri-wallpapers lowdown lsb-release-minimal lsof lua5.1 lua5.3 lua5.4 luajit lua-json lua-lpeg lumino lvm2 lxml lxml-html-clean lz4 lzlib lzma lzo2 m4 man2html man-db mate-common mate-settings-daemon mathjax maven-antrun-plugin maven-debian-helper maven-dependency-plugin mawk mdocml meanwhile media-types meson-python mgetty midicsv mig mir mlt mm-common mobile-broadband-provider-info modemmanager molequeue mongo-c-driver moreutils motif mpeg2dec mpg123 msgraph mtdev muparser musescore-general-soundfont-small mypaint-brushes mysql-defaults myst-parser nasm nbformat ncurses netbase netcdf netifaces netpbm-free net-snmp nettle net-tools network-manager newt nfs-utils nftables nghttp3 ngspice ngtcp2 ninja-build nlopt node-babel-loader node-bootstrap-tour node-buffer node-css-tree node-deepmerge node-es6-promise node-escape-string-regexp node-fbjs node-grunt-contrib-concat node-grunt-contrib-uglify node-htmlparser2 node-is-plain-object node-jed node-jquery node-js-beautify node-loose-envify node-marked node-moment node-object-assign node-po2json node-react node-source-map node-text-encoding node-typescript node-url node-webpack notification-daemon npth nspr nss-wrapper numactl numix-gtk-theme numix-icon-theme numlockx numpydoc nv-codec-headers ocaml ocamlbuild ocl-icd openal-soft opencore-amr openexr openjpeg2 openldap openscenegraph openssh openssl + opentimelineio optipng opus orc otf2bdf p11-kit package-notes pam-wrapper pandoc pango1.0 pangomm2.48 parted patch patchelf patchutils pax pci.ids pciutils pcre2 pcsc-lite perl perl-openssl-defaults pexpect phonon php-defaults pikepdf pillow pipewire pixman pkcs11-helper pkgconf pkg-js-tools pkg-kde-tools plasma5support plib po4a pocketsphinx po-debconf policykit-1 poppler poppler-data popt portaudio19 portmidi postgresql-18 postgresql-common poxml pps-tools procps protobuf protobuf-c publicsuffix pulseaudio py3c py7zr pyasn1 pybind11 pycairo pychm pycodestyle pycryptodome pycxx pydata-sphinx-theme pyenchant pyflakes pygments pygobject pylint pyopengl pyparsing pyppd pyqt5 pyqt5webengine pyqt6 pyqt6-webengine pyqt-builder pyserial pytest pytest-xdist pytest-xvfb python3-defaults python3-stdlib-extensions python-apsw python-apt python-argon2 python-certifi python-cffi python-css-parser python-cssselect python-daemon python-debian python-distutils-extra python-docutils python-fastjsonschema python-flake8 python-hatch-nodejs-version python-html2text python-jedi python-jsonschema python-ldap python-markdown python-mechanize python-msgpack python-nest-asyncio python-pam python-prometheus-client python-psutil python-pyasn1-modules python-pylibacl python-pyxattr python-pyzstd python-regex python-requests-toolbelt python-requests-unixsocket python-tornado python-xxhash python-zeroconf pyyaml qca2 qcoro qhull qmenumodel qoi qpdf qt6-5compat qt6-charts qt6-imageformats qt6-positioning qt6-sensors qt6-serialport qt6-speech qt6-svg qt6-tools qt6-wayland qtbase-opensource-src # # # qtcharts-opensource-src qtchooser qtdatavis3d-everywhere-src qtkeychain qtmir qtmultimedia-opensource-src qtscript-opensource-src qtserialport-opensource-src qtspeech-opensource-src qtsvg-opensource-src qttools-opensource-src qtwebchannel-opensource-src qtwebsockets-opensource-src qtx11extras-opensource-src qtxmlpatterns-opensource-src quilt radcli rdfind readline rename requests requirejs rhino rnp routes rsync rsyntaxtextarea rtmidi rtmpdump rubberband ruby-defaults rust-bindgen-cli rust-cargo-c rust-cbindgen rust-rav1e rust-rsop rust-sequoia-chameleon-gnupg rust-sequoia-sop rust-sequoia-sqv rust-toml rxtx samba sane-backends sanlock sbc scdoc scowl sdl12-compat sdl2-pango sdl-image1.2 sdl-mixer1.2 sdl-net1.2 sdlpango sdl-ttf2.0 send2trash sendmail serf setuptools setuptools-scm shaderc shadow shapelib shared-mime-info sharutils shellcheck shine shunit2 sip6 six slang2 snappy snowball snowball-data socat softhsm2 sox speech-dispatcher speech-tools speex speexdsp sphinx sphinxcontrib-spelling sphinx-rtd-theme sqlite3 squirrel3 srt startup-notification stellarsolver strip-nondeterminism subversion # suil svgpp svt-av1 swig swtpm symlinks sysprof systemd t4kcommon tap.py tcl8.6 tcltk-defaults tcp-wrappers template-glib tesseract testpath texi2html texinfo texlive-base + texlive-extra threadweaver tiff time tinycdb tinyxml tinyxml2 tk8.6 tokyocabinet traitlets triehash ttf-bitstream-vera twitter-bootstrap3 twolame txt2man tzdata uchardet udisks2 uid-wrapper unbound unicode-data unifont unixodbc unzip uriparser utf8proc util-linux v4l-utils vala valgrind-if-available vo-amrwbenc vorbis-tools vte2.91 vulkan-loader w3c-sgml-lib w3m wabt wayland wayland-protocols wcslib webrtc-audio-processing wget wheel wireless-tools wireshark wtmpdb wxpython4.0 wxwidgets3.2 x11-utils x11-xkb-utils x264 x265 xapian-core xauth xautomation xbae xcb-proto xcb-util xcb-util-image xcb-util-keysyms xcb-util-renderutil xcb-util-wm xdg-utils xen xfce4-dev-tools xfonts-base xfonts-utils xft xkeyboard-config xmhtml xml-core xmlstarlet xmlto xmltoman xorg xorgproto xorg-sgml-doctools xtrans xutils-dev xvidcore xxhash xz-utils yelp-tools zephyr # zeromq3 zimg zip zlib zvbi A package name displayed with a bold font is an indication that this package has a note. Visited packages are linked in green, those which have not been visited are linked in blue. A # sign after the name of a package indicates that a bug is filed against it. Likewise, a + sign indicates there is a patch available, a P means a pending bug while # indicates a closed bug. In cases of several bugs, the symbol is repeated. This page was built by the jenkins job reproducible_html_pkg_sets which is configured via this git repo . There is more information about jenkins.debian.net and about reproducible builds of Debian available elsewhere. Please send technical feedback about this setup to the Debian jenkins development list , or as a bug report against the jenkins.debian.org package . Feedback about specific job results should go to their respective lists and/or the BTS. The code of jenkins.debian.net is mostly GPL-2 licensed. The weather icons are public domain and were taken from the Tango Icon Library . Copyright 2014-2024 Holger Levsen and many others . 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https://tests.reproducible-builds.org/debian/forky/arm64/index_last_48h.html
Packages in forky/arm64 tested in the last 48h for build reproducibility Debian navigation Change suite/architecture Tested architectures: amd64 arm64 Tested suites: unstable forky trixie bookworm experimental Test results statistics Results for forky/arm64 Unreproducible packages: with notes without notes Other package states: package sets Recently tested packages: last 24h last 48h all tested packages packages with .buildinfo files packages without .buildinfo files Scheduled for arm64 Maintainers of in forky Reproducible Debian overview Development dashboard Past releases dashboard Categorized issues Bugs filed Variations tested Packages with notifications enabled ⚑ Repositories overview Backend related Broken pieces Documentation (eg. on manual scheduling) Performance stats Health monitoring node overview job overview daily graphs weekly graphs monthly graphs yearly graphs The Reproducible Builds project reproducible-builds.org Reproducible Builds - Docs • News Reproducible Builds in Debian - Wiki SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH specification reproduce.debian.net aims for 100% bit-for-bit identical rebuilds of Debian other CI tests Packages in forky/arm64 tested in the last 48h for build reproducibility 1159 packages (3.1% of 37499) failed to build reproducibly in total, 39 (3.2% of 1214) of them in the last 48h in forky/arm64: tea-cli fortran-fpm kanboard fsspec cherrypy3 ocaml-atd alex libforms allegro5 # meli eccodes xarray-safe-rcm geomview embark python-keystoneauth1 gnubg bluez vertico marginalia rust-xdg # python-lupa + libimage-librsvg-perl jpylyzer libnet grass haskell-nettle haskell-hslua-module-path haskell-lift-type haskell-active haskell-servant haskell-parsers haskell-libmpd haskell-cryptostore haskell-scotty haskell-invariant haskell-lens haskell-http-client rust-rustpython-parser + python-pyqtgraph 415 packages (1.1% of 37499) failed to build from source in total, 15 (1.2% of 1214) of them in the last 48h in forky/arm64: quantlib-swig ceph growlight chromium ministat tryton-server python-mne haskell-hledger-lib python-autopage tpm2-tss breezy-debian ruby-chef-utils fonts-monapo units-filter haskell-zenc 24 packages (0.1% of 37499) failed to satisfy their build-dependencies, 24 (2.0% of 1214) of them in the last 48h in forky/arm64: macromoleculebuilder gubbins sight jupyter-server oaklisp itkadaptivedenoising cross-toolchain-base-mipsen plastimatch qemu xserver-xorg-video-glide # debian-installer # # # biobambam2 itkgenericlabelinterpolator promod3 minimac4 unicycler hyprpaper psortb dioptas scmutils shovill ants # gpsshogi gcc-14 35694 packages (95.2% of 37499) successfully built reproducibly in total, 1131 (93.2% of 1214) of them in the last 48h in forky/arm64: dhcpcd jverein gnome-shell-extension-flypie ruby-progressbar mustache.js mdadm + mkdocstrings dav-text nanobind curl guvcview python-cheroot gmerlin-avdecoder r-cran-publish fortran-cli2 python-docxcompose python-opt-einsum-fx python-jsonpath nfs-ganesha node-istextorbinary golang-github-gosnmp-gosnmp xdiskusage cyrus-imapd ford rhsrvany ripe-atlas-tools kf6-qqc2-desktop-style lxqt-runner netcdf-fortran fortran-testdrive gsettings-desktop-schemas uncertainties ppp python-text-unidecode lxqt-wayland-session r-cran-plot3d ares onnxruntime morbig debian-reference ntirpc ben rasterio python-b2sdk rocksdb slidge r-cran-sjmisc errbot pyswitchbot network-manager-openconnect libmediainfo u-boot python-josepy gnome-control-center zigpy gnome-calendar dh-make-elpa mintstick ppx-deriving-yojson cryptokit slidge-matridge opencascade liboauth2 node-domino golang-github-aws-smithy-go libmime-lite-perl why3 debian-junior tremotesf python-libusb1 stringtie r-cran-phytools kgb leaflet-markercluster supercat gnome-sudoku fonts-lohit-deva-nepali gnote remaster-iso golang-github-robertkrimen-otto nas thunderbolt-tools r-cran-pixmap liboggz openconnect r-cran-pillar vpnc-scripts r-cran-pheatmap node-compression-webpack-plugin pytest-doctestplus zope.interface lx-gdb node-normalize.css python-dynaconf yojson gssdp advi + debmake libnl3 r-cran-plm pv node-livescript pdfposter libjsonparser neomutt khard node-opentip libtest-future-io-impl-perl r-cran-unitizer django-simple-captcha node-regexpp libnotify snac2 haskell-hadrian disorderfs chiaki kmscon debian-installer-netboot-images gnokii ffmpegfs python-fido2 yubikey-manager publicsuffix eckit cron rgbds ruby-public-suffix origami-pdf libjs-php-date-formatter libcpucycles devscripts gnome-online-accounts python-marshmallow-dataclass qcom-firmware-extract rust-hurl python-wheezy.template libhinawa php-brick-varexporter raysession python-openapi-core rust-dolby-vision jack wireviz python-drizzle phosh-mobile-settings drbl rust-hurlfmt libshumate rust-hurl-core phosh-tour ruptime node-create-react-class apt-mirror2 pmbootstrap vte2.91 rl-renderpm python-tatsu whereami node-jszip-utils glib2.0 healpy tarlz octave-arduino python-pyfunceble node-bootstrap-tour r-cran-tinytex elpa-subed cjson balsa foomuuri kalkun rkdeveloptool cwltool astropy-iers-data jquery-tablesorter rl-accel node-eslint-utils python-aptly libigloo alsa-lib django-allauth openslide-python node-base16 ufolib2 berkeley-express node-util liferea donkey netcdf4-python python-publicsuffix2 python-legacy-cgi node-grunt-contrib-coffee postgresql-hll leaflet-geometryutil prefixfree python-scrapy gddrescue libtsm pytest-runner node-xmldom mp4h node-copy-webpack-plugin python-snappy node-eslint-plugin-flowtype loupe python-astor gnome-shell-extension-gamemode php-doctrine-collections librepfunc qpwgraph pcapfix luajit node-prosemirror-markdown python-django-adminsortable glgrib rust-pwtool rust-test-strategy rust-ndarray rust-imageproc rust-pear-codegen rust-debug-ignore rust-libpam-sys-impls rust-viuer rust-instability rust-enum-utils-from-str rust-typewit gftp coyote rust-lzzzz rust-libpam-sys rust-const-panic rust-reqwest-middleware rust-enum-utils rust-konst-proc-macros rust-rspolib nncp rust-wasm-gen rust-const-panic-proc-macros rust-pear rust-typewit-proc-macros rust-borsh-derive rust-libpam-sys-helpers indi-talon6 gdal-grass nvi rust-konst-kernel rust-lz4-compress indi-eqmod rust-linked-hash-set rust-trawlcat indi-beefocus indi-orion-ssg3 euslisp nim-lapper nim-docopt mmdbinspect indi-gpsnmea rust-core-affinity libevent-rpc-perl hts-nim-tools einsteinpy gmtp scsitools + nim-regex ironic-inspector indi-sx tree-sitter rust-rustybuzz ruby-generator-spec led-ble rust-kanata-parser indi-ffmv pg8000 supertux rust-getrandom onednn rust-adler2 libclass-autouse-perl golang-github-golang-jwt-jwt-v5 yggdrasil zpaqfranz ruby-fog-terremark forwords runit-services rust-command-group python-youtubeaio ruby-exception-notification cwltest libdatrie iperf3 west pyvicare golang-github-apache-arrow-go r-cran-cubature python-oslo.middleware rust-kanata-keyberon neutron-vpnaas-dashboard libsdl3-ttf rust-astral-tokio-tar geventhttpclient plattenalbum rust-rowan pysolfc djangorestframework-api-key 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finit libjs-spin.js fonts-dotgothic16 rust-muldiv golang-github-cloudflare-cbpfc git-timemachine rust-iovec golang-github-shibumi-go-pathspec coffeescript rust-gir-format-check ruby-six iverilog vim-scripts octavia-tempest-plugin ruby-rb-sys ebumeter rust-erbium-net fonts-mononoki wlroots php-net-ldap3 rust-mac-address paper-icon-theme golang-gonum-v1-gonum php-console-commandline libvoikko ruby-et-orbi libdoxygen-filter-perl rust-shared-child libvisual-plugins restic-rest-server barbican-tempest-plugin keystone-tempest-plugin acsccid rust-pep508-rs display-mail-user-agent openrefine A package name displayed with a bold font is an indication that this package has a note. 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Last update: 2026-01-13 08:42 UTC
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://tests.reproducible-builds.org/debian/bookworm/amd64/pkg_set_important.html
bookworm - reproducible builds result bookworm Test Details Good work! This package looks reproducible in our current test framework :) Test history Filter by: amd64 arm64 Suite and Architecture amd64 1.1.2+git20210715-2 in bookworm ♻ 1.1.2+git20210715-4 in trixie ♻ 1.1.2+git20210715-5 in forky ♻ 1.1.2+git20210715-5 in unstable ♻ reproducible at 2026-01-05 18:03:00 UTC buildinfo rbuild (50KB) build2 (48KB) diff arm64 1.1.2+git20210715-2 in bookworm ♻ 1.1.2+git20210715-4 in trixie ♻ 1.1.2+git20210715-5 in forky ♻ 1.1.2+git20210715-5 in unstable ♻ General Package Details PTS BTS Package source debian/ debian/changelog debian/control debian/rules Debian dashboard Variations tested The Reproducible Builds project reproducible-builds.org Reproducible Builds - Docs • News Reproducible Builds in Debian - Wiki SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH specification reproduce.debian.net aims for 100% bit-for-bit identical rebuilds of Debian other CI tests Your browser does not support iframes. Use a different one or follow the links above.
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://draft.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=8072464059979174136&postID=8654617609859570004&from=pencil
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2026-01-13T09:30:27
http://hackage.haskell.org/package/semigroupoids-5.0.0.2
semigroupoids: Semigroupoids: Category sans id Hackage :: [Package] Search  Browse What's new Upload User accounts semigroupoids : Semigroupoids: Category sans id [ bsd2 , comonads , control , library ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] Provides a wide array of (semi)groupoids and operations for working with them. A Semigroupoid is a Category without the requirement of identity arrows for every object in the category. A Category is any Semigroupoid for which the Yoneda lemma holds. When working with comonads you often have the <*> portion of an Applicative , but not the pure . This was captured in Uustalu and Vene's "Essence of Dataflow Programming" in the form of the ComonadZip class in the days before Applicative . Apply provides a weaker invariant, but for the comonads used for data flow programming (found in the streams package), this invariant is preserved. Applicative function composition forms a semigroupoid. Similarly many structures are nearly a comonad, but not quite, for instance lists provide a reasonable extend operation in the form of tails , but do not always contain a value. Ideally the following relationships would hold: Foldable ----> Traversable <--- Functor ------> Alt ---------> Plus Semigroupoid | | | | | v v v v v Foldable1 ---> Traversable1 Apply --------> Applicative -> Alternative Category | | | | v v v v Bind ---------> Monad -------> MonadPlus Arrow Apply, Bind, and Extend (not shown) give rise the Static, Kleisli and Cokleisli semigroupoids respectively. This lets us remove many of the restrictions from various monad transformers as in many cases the binding operation or <*> operation does not require them. Finally, to work with these weaker structures it is beneficial to have containers that can provide stronger guarantees about their contents, so versions of Traversable and Foldable that can be folded with just a Semigroup are added. [ Skip to Readme ] Modules [ Index ] Data Bifunctor Data.Bifunctor.Apply Functor Data.Functor.Alt Data.Functor.Apply Data.Functor.Bind Data.Functor.Bind.Class Data.Functor.Bind.Trans Data.Functor.Extend Data.Functor.Plus Data.Groupoid Data.Isomorphism Semigroup Data.Semigroup.Bifoldable Data.Semigroup.Bitraversable Data.Semigroup.Foldable Data.Semigroup.Foldable.Class Data.Semigroup.Traversable Data.Semigroup.Traversable.Class Data.Semigroupoid Data.Semigroupoid.Dual Data.Semigroupoid.Ob Data.Semigroupoid.Static Traversable Data.Traversable.Instances Flags Manual Flags Name Description Default containers You can disable the use of the containers package using `-f-containers`. Disabing this is an unsupported configuration, but it may be useful for accelerating builds in sandboxes for expert users. Enabled contravariant You can disable the use of the contravariant package using `-f-contravariant`. Disabling this is an unsupported configuration, but it may be useful for accelerating builds in sandboxes for expert users. If disabled we will not supply instances of Contravariant Enabled distributive You can disable the use of the distributive package using `-f-distributive`. Disabling this is an unsupported configuration, but it may be useful for accelerating builds in sandboxes for expert users. If disabled we will not supply instances of Distributive Enabled doctests You can disable testing with doctests using `-f-doctests`. Enabled comonad You can disable the use of the comonad package using `-f-comonad`. Disabling this is an unsupported configuration, but it may be useful for accelerating builds in sandboxes for expert users. If disabled we will not supply instances of Comonad Enabled tagged You can disable the use of the tagged package using `-f-tagged`. Disabling this is an unsupported configuration, but it may be useful for accelerating builds in sandboxes for expert users. Enabled Use -f <flag> to enable a flag, or -f -<flag> to disable that flag. More info Downloads semigroupoids-5.0.0.2.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description ( revised from the package) Note: This package has metadata revisions in the cabal description newer than included in the tarball. To unpack the package including the revisions, use 'cabal get'. Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers EdwardKmett , EricMertens , ryanglscott For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates 5.2.1 Versions [ RSS ] 1.0.0 , 1.1.0 , 1.1.1 , 1.1.2 , 1.1.3 , 1.2.0 , 1.2.1 , 1.2.2 , 1.2.2.1 , 1.2.2.2 , 1.2.2.3 , 1.2.2.4 , 1.2.4 , 1.2.5 , 1.2.6 , 1.2.6.1 , 1.2.6.2 , 1.3 , 1.3.1 , 1.3.1.1 , 1.3.1.2 , 1.3.2 , 1.3.2.1 , 1.3.3 , 1.3.4 , 3.0 , 3.0.0.1 , 3.0.0.2 , 3.0.1 , 3.0.2 , 3.0.3 , 3.1 , 4.0 , 4.0.1 , 4.0.2 , 4.0.2.1 , 4.0.3 , 4.0.4 , 4.2 , 4.3 , 4.5 , 5 , 5.0.0.1 , 5.0.0.2 , 5.0.0.3 , 5.0.0.4 , 5.0.1 , 5.1 , 5.2 , 5.2.1 , 5.2.2 , 5.3 , 5.3.1 , 5.3.2 , 5.3.3 , 5.3.4 , 5.3.5 , 5.3.6 , 5.3.7 , 6 , 6.0.0.1 , 6.0.1 , 6.0.2 ( info ) Change log CHANGELOG.markdown Dependencies base (>=4.5 && <4.11) , base-orphans (>=0.3 && <1) , bifunctors (>=5 && <6) , comonad (>=4.2.6 && <5) , containers (>=0.3 && <0.6) , contravariant (>=0.2.0.1 && <2) , distributive (>=0.2.2 && <1) , semigroups (>=0.8.3.1 && <1) , tagged (>=0.8.5 && <1) , transformers (>=0.2 && <0.6) , transformers-compat (>=0.3 && <0.5) [ details ] Tested with ghc ==7.0.1, ghc ==7.0.4, ghc ==7.2.2, ghc ==7.4.2, ghc ==7.6.3, ghc ==7.8.4, ghc ==7.10.1 License BSD-3-Clause Copyright Copyright (C) 2011-2015 Edward A. Kmett Author Edward A. Kmett Maintainer Edward A. Kmett <ekmett@gmail.com> Uploaded by EdwardKmett at 2015-06-02T10:03:45Z Revised Revision 3 made by ryanglscott at 2019-05-08T13:16:37Z Stability provisional --> Category Control , Comonads Home page http://github.com/ekmett/semigroupoids Bug tracker http://github.com/ekmett/semigroupoids/issues Source repo head: git clone git://github.com/ekmett/semigroupoids.git Distributions Arch: 6.0.1 , Debian: 5.3.4 , Fedora: 6.0.1 , FreeBSD: 5.0.0.3 , LTSHaskell: 6.0.1 , NixOS: 6.0.1 , Stackage: 6.0.2 , openSUSE: 6.0.1 Reverse Dependencies 216 direct, 9047 indirect [ details ] Downloads 309284 total (292 in the last 30 days) Rating 2.5 (votes: 9) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs available [ build log ] Last success reported on 2015-06-03 [ all 1 reports ] Readme for semigroupoids-5.0.0.2 [ back to package description ] semigroupoids A semigroupoid is a Category without id . Contact Information Contributions and bug reports are welcome! Please feel free to contact me through github or on the #haskell IRC channel on irc.freenode.net. -Edward Kmett Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0.
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://alpinelinux.org
index | Alpine Linux About Downloads Releases Community Sponsors Donate docs wiki git issues packages mirrors security Small. Simple. Secure. Alpine Linux is a security-oriented, lightweight Linux distribution based on musl libc and busybox. Alpine News 2025-12-17 Alpine 3.23.2 released 2025-12-03 Alpine 3.23.0 released 2025-10-08 Alpine 3.19.9, 3.20.8, 3.21.5 and 3.22.2 released 2025-10-01 Implementing /usr merge in Alpine 2025-08-30 New Alpine Developers onboarding process 2025-07-15 Alpine 3.19.8, 3.20.7, 3.21.4 and 3.22.1 released 2025-05-30 Alpine 3.22.0 released 2025-02-13 Alpine 3.18.12, 3.19.7, 3.20.6 and 3.21.3 released 2025-02-03 Seeking Support After Equinix Metal Sunsets 2025-01-30 Alpine Linux joins Open Collective Read more Latest development 2026-01-13 main/lua-penlight: upgrade to 1.15.0 2026-01-13 main/perl-uri: upgrade to 5.34 2026-01-13 community/zotero: rebuild against icu 78 2026-01-13 testing/lomiri-system-settings: rebuild against icu 78 2026-01-13 testing/hfst: rebuild against icu 78 2026-01-13 testing/flutter: rebuild against icu 78 2026-01-13 testing/dart: rebuild against icu 78 2026-01-13 testing/sq: rebuild against icu 78 2026-01-13 testing/php82: rebuild against icu 78 2026-01-13 testing/php81: rebuild against icu 78 Read more © Copyright 2026 Alpine Linux Development Team all rights reserved | Privacy Policy
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://tests.reproducible-builds.org/debian/forky/arm64/pkg_set_kde_build-depends.html
kde_build-depends package set for forky/arm64 Debian navigation Change suite/architecture Tested architectures: amd64 arm64 Tested suites: unstable forky trixie bookworm Test results statistics Results for forky/arm64 Unreproducible packages: with notes without notes Other package states: package sets Recently tested packages: last 24h last 48h all tested packages packages with .buildinfo files packages without .buildinfo files Scheduled for arm64 Maintainers of in forky Reproducible Debian overview Development dashboard Past releases dashboard Categorized issues Bugs filed Variations tested Packages with notifications enabled ⚑ Repositories overview Backend related Broken pieces Documentation (eg. on manual scheduling) Performance stats Health monitoring node overview job overview daily graphs weekly graphs monthly graphs yearly graphs The Reproducible Builds project reproducible-builds.org Reproducible Builds - Docs • News Reproducible Builds in Debian - Wiki SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH specification reproduce.debian.net aims for 100% bit-for-bit identical rebuilds of Debian other CI tests kde_build-depends package set for forky/arm64 All tracked package sets for forky/arm64 Debian package sets: essential required important build-essential build-essential-depends popcon_top1337-installed-sources key_packages installed_on_debian.org had_a_DSA cii-census cloud-image cloud-image_build-depends desktop package sets: gnome gnome_build-depends kde kde_build-depends mate mate_build-depends xfce xfce_build-depends Debian distribution package sets: CIP CIP_build-depends debian-edu debian-edu_build-depends freedombox freedombox_build-depends grml grml_build-depends tails tails_build-depends pureos_default_install pureos_default_install_build-depends maintenance team package sets: maint_debian-accessibility maint_debian-boot maint_debian-lua maint_debian-med maint_debian-ocaml maint_debian-on-mobile-maintainers maint_debian-python maint_debian-qa maint_debian-science maint_debian-x maint_pkg-android-tools-devel maint_pkg-erlang-devel maint_pkg-fonts-devel maint_pkg-games-devel maint_pkg-golang-maintainers maint_pkg-grass-devel maint_pkg-haskell-maintainers maint_pkg-java-maintainers maint_pkg-javascript-devel maint_pkg-multimedia-maintainers maint_pkg-perl-maintainers maint_pkg-php-pear maint_pkg-openstack maint_pkg-r maint_pkg-ruby-extras-maintainers maint_pkg-rust-maintainers maint_reproducible-builds The package set kde_build-depends in forky/arm64 consists of 1307 packages: 55 (4.2%) packages failed to build reproducibly: flite yaml-cpp xorg-server fltk1.3 libkolabxml matplotlib dejagnu kcalutils libgravatar kmailtransport akonadi-calendar incidenceeditor mailimporter pimcommon akonadi akonadi-contacts + libkdepim fonts-cantarell spglib python3.13 kpimtextedit libksieve systemtap libtool nss syndication qt6-scxml librsvg qtdeclarative-opensource-src mailcommon node-rollup pstoedit gtk4 libdebian-installer valgrind + qtsensors-opensource-src qt6-multimedia zxing-cpp libcamera libofx pycparser + pam mpich underscore openmpi scons mesa lynx r-base vlc # + kf6-ktexttemplate kf6-syndication libzstd messagelib bluez 42 (3.2%) packages failed to build from source: qtlocation-opensource-src openbabel qtquickcontrols-opensource-src grpc autogen eigen3 lomiri-content-hub abseil qt6-base gnutls28 nghttp2 liblqr qtwebengine-opensource-src qt6-declarative meson kdsoap highlight.js qt6-quick3d kwin wpewebkit nodejs uglify-js qt6-webengine webkit2gtk libtirpc llvm-toolchain-21 kf6-kconfigwidgets vim gcc-15 linux wasi-libc libunwind gem2deb mingw-w64 rustc numpy kf6-kconfig kf6-kcoreaddons onetbb rust-sequoia-sq scim tpm2-tss 5 (0.4%) packages are either in depwait state, blacklisted, not for us, or cannot be downloaded: octave scipy libvpl intel-processor-trace gcc-14 1205 (92.2%) packages successfully build reproducibly: aalib accounts-qml-module acl adwaita-icon-theme adwaita-qt akonadi-import-wizard + akonadi-mime + akonadi-search alkimia alsa-lib analitza aom apache2 # apparmor appmenu-gtk-module appstream apt argon2 aribb24 asciidoc asciidoctor aspell aspell-en assimp astyle at-spi2-core attica-kf5 attr audiofile audit autoconf autoconf2.69 autoconf-archive autoconf-dickey automake autotools-dev avahi avogadrolibs babeltrace baloo-kf5 baloo-widgets base-files bash-completion bc benchmark binutils # bison blt bolt boost-defaults breathe breeze breeze-icons brotli build-helper-maven-plugin byacc bzip2 ca-certificates cairo calendarsupport callaudiod cantor c-ares catch2 cdebconf cdparanoia cfitsio chafa check chemical-mime-data chmlib chromaprint chrpath cjson cln cmake cmake-extras cmark cmark-gfm cmocka codec2 codespell colord corrosion cpdb-libs cpio cppcheck cppunit cpuinfo cracklib2 cron cryptsetup cunit cups # curl cvs cyrus-sasl2 cython + dav1d db-defaults dbus dbus-broker dbus-glib dbus-python dbus-test-runner dconf dctrl-tools ddcutil debhelper desktop-file-utils dh-autoreconf dh-exec dh-linktree dh-ocaml dh-python diffstat directx-headers discount dist djvulibre dlpack docbook docbook2x docbook-to-man docbook-utils docbook-xml docbook-xsl dolphin double-conversion doxygen doxypypy doxyqml dpkg # d-shlibs duktape dwarves dwz e2fsprogs ebook-tools ed edid-decode editorconfig-core egl-wayland elfutils enchant-2 eventviews exec-maven-plugin exempi exiv2 expat exuberant-ctags faad2 facile fakechroot fakeroot faketime farstream-0.2 fcitx fdupes ffmpeg ffms2 fftw3 fig2dev file findlib firebird4.0 flac flatbuffers flatpak flex fluidsynth fmtlib fontconfig fonts-dejavu fonts-noto fonts-noto-color-emoji fonts-urw-base35 fp16 frameworkintegration freecell-solver freeglut freerdp3 freetds freetype frei0r fribidi furo fuse3 futuresql fwupd fxdiv game-music-emu gawk + gcc-defaults gcem gcr gdb gdbm gdk-pixbuf gengetopt gettext ghostscript gi-docgen giflib git gjs gl2ps glew glib2.0 glibc glib-networking glslang gmp gnome-desktop gnome-pkg-tools gnulib gnumach gnupg2 gnuplot gobject-introspection google-auto-value-java googletest gosop gperf gpgme1.0 gpgmepp gphoto2 gpm gpsd gpsim grantlee5 grantleetheme graphene graphite2 graphviz + groff gsettings-qt gsl gst-plugins-base1.0 gst-plugins-good1.0 gstreamer1.0 gtk+2.0 gtk+3.0 gtk-doc gupnp gupnp-igd harfbuzz hdf5 heimdal hello help2man howardhinnant-date hspell html5lib hunspell hwdata i18nspector ibus icecc icu id3lib3.8.3 ijs imagemagick imath imlib2 immer impacket inchi indent indi + intltool iso-codes isort itstool jack-audio-connection-kit jackd2 jansson java-common javatools # jbig2dec jbigkit jemalloc jetring jinja2 jpeg-xl jq jquery-tablesorter json-c json-glib junit4 kaccounts-integration kactivities-kf5 kaddressbook karchive kauth kbookmarks kcalcore kcmutils kcodecs kcolorpicker kcompletion kconfig kconfigwidgets kcontacts kcoreaddons kcrash kdb kdbusaddons kdeclarative kdecoration kded kdegraphics-mobipocket kdesignerplugin kdesu kdevelop kdevelop-pg-qt kdiagram kdiagram2 kdoctools kdsingleapplication kdsoap-ws-discovery-client keyutils kf6-attica kf6-baloo kf6-bluez-qt kf6-breeze-icons kf6-extra-cmake-modules kf6-frameworkintegration kf6-karchive kf6-kauth kf6-kbookmarks kf6-kcalendarcore kf6-kcmutils kf6-kcodecs kf6-kcolorscheme kf6-kcompletion kf6-kcontacts kf6-kcrash kf6-kdav kf6-kdbusaddons kf6-kdeclarative kf6-kded kf6-kdesu kf6-kdnssd kf6-kdoctools kf6-kfilemetadata kf6-kglobalaccel kf6-kguiaddons kf6-kholidays kf6-ki18n kf6-kiconthemes kf6-kidletime kf6-kio kf6-kirigami kf6-kitemmodels kf6-kitemviews kf6-kjobwidgets kf6-knewstuff kf6-knotifications kf6-knotifyconfig kf6-kpackage kf6-kparts kf6-kpeople kf6-kplotting kf6-kpty kf6-kquickcharts kf6-krunner kf6-kservice kf6-kstatusnotifieritem kf6-ksvg kf6-ktexteditor kf6-ktextwidgets kf6-kunitconversion kf6-kuserfeedback kf6-kwallet kf6-kwidgetsaddons kf6-kwindowsystem kf6-kxmlgui kf6-modemmanager-qt kf6-networkmanager-qt kf6-prison kf6-purpose kf6-solid kf6-sonnet kf6-syntax-highlighting kf6-threadweaver kfilemetadata-kf5 kglobalaccel kglobalacceld kguiaddons kholidays khronos-api ki18n kiconthemes kidentitymanagement kidletime kimageannotator kimap kinit kio kirigami2 kirigami-addons kitemmodels kitemviews kitinerary kjobwidgets kldap kmbox kmime kmod knewstuff knighttime knotifications knotifyconfig kontactinterface kopeninghours kosmindoormap kpackage kparts kpipewire kpkpass kplotting kpmcore kproperty kpty kpublictransport kqtquickcharts kquickimageeditor krb5 # kreport krunner ksanecore kscreenlocker kseexpr kservice ksmtp ksyntax-highlighting ktextaddons ktexteditor ktextwidgets ktnef kunifiedpush kvazaar kwallet-kf5 kwayland kwayland-kf5 kweathercore kwidgetsaddons kwindowsystem kxmlgui ladspa-sdk lager lame layer-shell-qt lcms2 lcov lensfun leptonlib lerc less libaccounts-glib libaccounts-qt libaec libaio libao P libappimage libaqbanking libarchive libass libassuan libasyncns libatasmart libatomic-ops libavc1394 libavif libavtp libb2 libblockdev libbluray libbs2b libbsd libcaca libcanberra libcap2 libcap-ng libcddb libcdio libcdio-paranoia libcereal libcerf libcloudproviders libconfig libcsv libcue libdaemon libdatrie libdbusmenu libdbusmenu-qt libdc1394 libdca libde265 libdecor-0 libdeflate libdevel-cover-perl libdisplay-info libdmtx libdrm libdv + libdvbpsi libdvdnav libdvdread libebml libebur128 libedit libei libepoxy libetonyek libev libevdev libevent libexif libfakekey libffado libffi libfontenc libfreeaptx libfyaml libgav1 libgc libgcrypt20 libgd2 libgit2 libglu libglvnd libgpg-error libgphoto2 libgpod libgsm libgudev libgusb + libgwenhywfar libheif libiberty libical3 libice libidn libidn2 libiec61883 libieee1284 libimagequant libimobiledevice libimobiledevice-glue libinih libinput libio-pty-perl libipc-run-perl libixion libjpeg-turbo libjsoncpp libkate libkcddb libkcompactdisc libkdcraw libkdegames libkeduvocdocument libkexiv2 libkgapi libkleo libkmahjongg libkomparediff2 libksane libksba libkscreen libksysguard libktorrent liblastfm liblc3 libldac liblist-moreutils-perl liblocale-gettext-perl liblrdf libltc libmad libmatio libmatroska libmaxminddb libmd libmicrohttpd libmms libmng libmodplug libmodule-build-perl libmpc libmtp libmusicbrainz5 libmygpo-qt libmypaint libmysofa libnfs libnice libnova libnsl libodfgen libofa libogg libonig libopenmpt libopenmpt-modplug liborcus libpaper libpath-tiny-perl libpcap libpciaccess libpfm4 libpgm libphonenumber libplacebo libplasma libplist libpng1.6 libpodofo libpod-pom-view-restructured-perl libproxy libpsl libpthread-stubs libpwquality libqaccessibilityclient libqalculate libqtdbusmock libqtdbustest libquazip1-qt5 libquotient librabbitmq libraw libraw1394 libreoffice-dictionaries libreplaygain librevenge librist libsamplerate libsdl2 libsdl2-image libsdl2-ttf libsdl3 libsdl3-image libsdl3-ttf libseccomp libsecret libselinux libsemanage libsepol libshout libsixel libslf4j-java libsm libsndfile libsodium libsoup3 libsoxr libspatialaudio libspectre libsrtp2 libssh libssh2 libstb libtasn1-6 libtemplate-perl libtest-cmd-perl libtest-deep-perl libtest-minimumversion-perl libtest-perl-critic-perl libtest-pod-coverage-perl libtest-pod-perl libtest-spelling-perl libtest-strict-perl libtest-synopsis-perl libtext-bibtex-perl libtext-trim-perl libtextwrap libthai libtheora libudfread libunibreak libunistring liburing liburi-perl libusb-1.0 libutempter libva libvdpau libverto libvidstab libvisio libvisual libvncserver libvoikko libvorbis libvpx libwacom libwebm libwebp libwpd libwpg libwps libx11 libxau libxaw libxcb libxcomposite libxcrypt libxcursor libxcvt libxdamage libxdmcp libxext libxfce4util libxfixes libxfont libxi libxinerama libxkbcommon libxkbfile libxlsxwriter libxml2 libxmlb libxml-simple-perl libxmu libxnvctrl libxpm libxpresent libxrandr libxrender libxres libxshmfence libxslt libxss libxt libxtst libxv libxxf86dga libxxf86vm libyuv libzip lilv lirc lksctp-tools llvm-defaults lmdb lm-sensors lomiri-api lomiri-app-launch lomiri-url-dispatcher lsb-release-minimal lua5.2 lua5.4 luajit lv2 lvm2 lz4 lzma lzo2 m4 mako marble mariadb markupsafe mathjax maven-antrun-plugin maven-assembly-plugin maven-bundle-plugin maven-compiler-plugin maven-debian-helper maven-jar-plugin maven-javadoc-plugin maven-war-plugin mawk mbedtls md4c mdocml media-types mig milou mimetreeparser mini-soong mir miscfiles mjpegtools mlt mobile-broadband-provider-info mockito modemmanager molequeue moreutils mpclib3 mpfr4 mpg123 mpi-defaults mpv mpvqt ms-gsl mtdev mujs mysql-defaults myst-parser nasm ncompress ncurses neon27 netbase netcdf netpbm-free net-snmp nettle net-tools network-manager newt nghttp3 ngtcp2 ninja-build nlohmann-json3 node-dagre-layout node-glob node-jquery node-rollup-plugin-terser node-terser node-yargs norm npth nspr nss-wrapper numactl nv-codec-headers oath-toolkit ocaml ocaml-ctypes ocl-icd octave-signal okular olm onednn onnx openal-soft openbox opencolorio opencore-amr opencv openexr openh264 openjpeg2 openldap openni2 openssh openssl + openxr-sdk-source opus opusfile orc os-prober p11-kit packagekit packagekit-qt package-notes pandoc pango1.0 parted patch patchelf patchutils pci.ids pciutils pcre2 pcsc-lite perl pexpect phonon php-defaults pigz pillow pipewire pixman pkcs11-helper pkgconf pkg-kde-tools plasma5support plasma-activities plasma-activities-stats plasma-framework plasma-nano plasma-nm plasma-pa plasma-wayland-protocols plasma-workspace plymouth po4a pocketsphinx po-debconf policykit-1 polkit-qt-1 poppler popt portaudio19 postgresql-18 postgresql-common pps-tools process-cpp procps protobuf protobuf-c protozero psimd psmisc pthreadpool publicsuffix pulseaudio pulseaudio-qt pupnp purpose pybind11 pycairo pygobject pyopengl pyproject-metadata pyqt5 pyserial pytest pytest-runner python3-defaults python3-stdlib-extensions python-absl python-attrs python-build python-certifi python-charset-normalizer python-dbusmock python-debian python-distro python-docutils python-flake8 python-glad python-idna python-libevdev python-packaging python-pathspec python-pip python-pkginfo python-tabulate python-urllib3 python-virtualenv pyudev pyyaml qca2 qcoro qgpgme qqc2-breeze-style qqc2-desktop-style qrencode qt6-3d qt6-5compat qt6-charts qt6-connectivity qt6-datavis3d qt6-graphs qt6-grpc qt6-httpserver qt6-imageformats qt6-location qt6-networkauth qt6-positioning qt6-remoteobjects qt6-sensors qt6-serialbus qt6-serialport qt6-shadertools qt6-speech qt6-svg qt6-tools qt6-translations qt6-virtualkeyboard qt6-wayland qt6-webchannel qt6-websockets qt6-webview qtbase-opensource-src # # # qtchooser qtdatavis3d-everywhere-src qtgraphicaleffects-opensource-src qtimageformats-opensource-src qtkeychain qtmultimedia-opensource-src qtquickcontrols2-opensource-src qtscript-opensource-src qtserialport-opensource-src qtspeech-opensource-src qtsvg-opensource-src qttools-opensource-src qtwayland-opensource-src qtwebchannel-opensource-src qtwebsockets-opensource-src qtx11extras-opensource-src qtxmlpatterns-opensource-src quilt qxmpp rapidjson raptor2 rdfind re2 re2c readline readstat recommonmark rename requests roc-toolkit rrdtool rsync rtmpdump rubberband ruby-defaults ruby-ronn ruby-rouge rust-adblock rust-bindgen-cli rust-cargo-c rust-cbindgen rust-cxx rust-cxx-build rust-paste rust-rav1e rust-rsop rust-rustc-hash-2 rust-sequoia-chameleon-gnupg rust-sequoia-sop rust-sequoia-sqv rust-syn safeint samba sane-backends sassc sbc scdoc schroedinger-coordgenlibs schroedinger-maeparser scikit-build scikit-build-core scowl sdl12-compat serd servlet-api setuptools setuptools-scm shaderc shadow shapelib shared-mime-info sharutils shellcheck shine sidplay-libs signond signon-plugin-oauth2 simde sip6 slang2 snapd-glib snappy sndio snowball snowball-data socat solid sonnet sord soundtouch source-highlight sox spandsp spdlog speech-dispatcher speex speexdsp sphinx sphinxcontrib-qthelp sphinx-copybutton + sphinx-design sphinx-rtd-theme spirv-llvm-translator-21 spirv-tools sqlcipher sqlite3 squashfuse sratom srt stellarsolver strip-nondeterminism subversion # svt-av1 swig swtpm symlinks sysprof systemd t1utils taglib tcl8.6 tcltk-defaults tcp-wrappers telepathy-farstream telepathy-glib tesseract tesseract-lang texi2html texinfo texlive-base + texlive-bin + texlive-extra threadweaver tiff time triehash tslib twisted twolame tzdata uchardet umockdev unbound unicode-cldr-core unicode-data unixodbc unzip uriparser ust utfcpp util-linux v4l-utils vala valgrind-if-available vamp-plugin-sdk vc vo-aacenc vo-amrwbenc vulkan-loader w3m wavpack wayland wayland-protocols wcslib webrtc-audio-processing wheel wildmidi wpebackend-fdo wxwidgets3.2 x11-utils x11-xkb-utils x264 x265 xapian-core xauth xbitmaps xcb-proto xcb-util xcb-util-cursor xcb-util-image xcb-util-keysyms xcb-util-renderutil xcb-util-wm xdg-user-dirs xdg-utils-cxx xerces-c xf86-input-wacom xfce4-dev-tools xfonts-utils xft xkeyboard-config xml-core xmlto xmltoman xnnpack xorgproto xorg-sgml-doctools xsd xserver-xorg-input-libinput xsimd xtensor xtl xtrans xutils-dev xvidcore xwayland xxhash xz-utils yajl yasm yaz yui-compressor z3 zbar zeromq3 zimg zita-alsa-pcmi zita-resampler zix zlib zug zvbi A package name displayed with a bold font is an indication that this package has a note. Visited packages are linked in green, those which have not been visited are linked in blue. A # sign after the name of a package indicates that a bug is filed against it. Likewise, a + sign indicates there is a patch available, a P means a pending bug while # indicates a closed bug. In cases of several bugs, the symbol is repeated. This page was built by the jenkins job reproducible_html_pkg_sets which is configured via this git repo . There is more information about jenkins.debian.net and about reproducible builds of Debian available elsewhere. Please send technical feedback about this setup to the Debian jenkins development list , or as a bug report against the jenkins.debian.org package . Feedback about specific job results should go to their respective lists and/or the BTS. The code of jenkins.debian.net is mostly GPL-2 licensed. The weather icons are public domain and were taken from the Tango Icon Library . Copyright 2014-2024 Holger Levsen and many others . Last update: 2026-01-13 06:47 UTC
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://debian.org/blends
Debian Pure Blends Skip Quicknav Blog Micronews Planet Wiki Debian Pure Blends Debian Pure Blends Debian Pure Blends are a solution for groups of people with specific needs. Not only do they provide handy collections (meta-packages) of specific packages, but they also ease installation and configuration for the intended purpose. They cover the interests of different groups of people, who might be children, scientists, gamers, lawyers, medical staff, visually impaired people, etc. Their common goal is to simplify installation and administration of computers for their target audience, and to connect that audience with the people writing or packaging the software they use. You can read more about Debian Pure Blends in the Pure Blends Manual or on the wiki pages . Released Pure Blends "Released" may have different meanings for different blends. In most cases it means that the blend has metapackages or an installer that was released in a stable release of Debian. Blends may also provide installation media or form the basis of a derivative distribution. See the individual blend pages for more information on that particular blend. Blend Description Quick Links Debian Accessibility The goal of Debian Accessibility is to develop Debian into an operating system that is particularly well suited for the requirements of people with disabilities. Metapackages Debian Astro The goal of Debian Astro is to develop a Debian based operating system that fits the requirements of both professional and hobby astronomers. It integrates a large number of software packages covering telescope control, data reduction, presentation and other fields. Metapackages DebiChem The goal of DebiChem is to make Debian a good platform for chemists in their day-to-day work. Metapackages Debian Edu The goal of Debian Edu is to provide a Debian OS system suitable for educational use and in schools. Metapackages Debian Games The goal of Debian Games is to provide games in Debian from arcade and adventure to simulation and strategy. Metapackages Debian GIS The goal of Debian GIS is to develop Debian into the best distribution for Geographical Information System applications and users. Metapackages Derivatives Debian Junior The goal of Debian Junior is to make Debian an OS that children will enjoy using. Metapackages Downloads Debian Med The goal of Debian Med is a complete free and open system for all tasks in medical care and research. To achieve this goal Debian Med integrates related free and open source software for medical imaging, bioinformatics, clinic IT infrastructure, and others within the Debian OS. Metapackages Debian Multimedia The goal of Debian Multimedia is to make Debian a good platform for audio and multimedia work. Metapackages Debian Science The goal of Debian Science is to provide a better experience when using Debian to researchers and scientists. Metapackages FreedomBox The goal of FreedomBox is to develop, design and promote personal servers running free software for private, personal communications. Applications include blogs, wikis, websites, social networks, email, web proxy and a Tor relay on a device that can replace a wireless router so that data stays with the users. Downloads Hamradio The goal of Debian Hamradio is to support the needs of radio amateurs in Debian by providing logging, data mode and packet mode applications and more. Metapackages Back to the Debian Project homepage . This page is also available in the following languages: Select your language dansk español français Italiano Nederlands Português română svenska Русский (Russkij) 中文(简) 中文(HK) 中文(繁) 한국어 (Korean) Ελληνικά (Ellinika) How to set the default document language Home About Social Contract Code of Conduct Free Software Legal Info Help Debian Getting Debian Network install CD/USB ISO images Pure Blends Debian Packages Developers' Corner News Project News Events Documentation Release Info Debian Wiki Support Debian International Security Information Bug reports Mailing Lists Site map Search The Debian Blog Debian Micronews Debian Planet See our contact page to get in touch. Web site source code is available . Last Modified: Sun, Jun 1 16:29:11 UTC 2025   Last Built: Sat, Jan 10 23:27:19 UTC 2026 Copyright © 1997-2025 SPI and others; See license terms Debian is a registered trademark of Software in the Public Interest, Inc.
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://tests.reproducible-builds.org/debian/bookworm/arm64/pkg_set_kde.html
kde package set for bookworm/arm64 Debian navigation Change suite/architecture Tested architectures: amd64 arm64 Tested suites: unstable forky trixie bookworm Test results statistics Results for bookworm/arm64 Unreproducible packages: with notes without notes Other package states: package sets Recently tested packages: last 24h last 48h all tested packages packages with .buildinfo files packages without .buildinfo files Scheduled for arm64 Maintainers of in bookworm Reproducible Debian overview Development dashboard Past releases dashboard Categorized issues Bugs filed Variations tested Packages with notifications enabled ⚑ Repositories overview Backend related Broken pieces Documentation (eg. on manual scheduling) Performance stats Health monitoring node overview job overview daily graphs weekly graphs monthly graphs yearly graphs The Reproducible Builds project reproducible-builds.org Reproducible Builds - Docs • News Reproducible Builds in Debian - Wiki SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH specification reproduce.debian.net aims for 100% bit-for-bit identical rebuilds of Debian other CI tests kde package set for bookworm/arm64 All tracked package sets for bookworm/arm64 Debian package sets: essential required important build-essential build-essential-depends popcon_top1337-installed-sources key_packages installed_on_debian.org had_a_DSA cii-census cloud-image cloud-image_build-depends desktop package sets: gnome gnome_build-depends kde kde_build-depends mate mate_build-depends xfce xfce_build-depends Debian distribution package sets: CIP CIP_build-depends debian-edu debian-edu_build-depends freedombox freedombox_build-depends grml grml_build-depends tails tails_build-depends pureos_default_install pureos_default_install_build-depends maintenance team package sets: maint_debian-accessibility maint_debian-boot maint_debian-lua maint_debian-med maint_debian-ocaml maint_debian-on-mobile-maintainers maint_debian-python maint_debian-qa maint_debian-science maint_debian-x maint_pkg-android-tools-devel maint_pkg-erlang-devel maint_pkg-fonts-devel maint_pkg-games-devel maint_pkg-golang-maintainers maint_pkg-grass-devel maint_pkg-haskell-maintainers maint_pkg-java-maintainers maint_pkg-javascript-devel maint_pkg-multimedia-maintainers maint_pkg-perl-maintainers maint_pkg-php-pear maint_pkg-openstack maint_pkg-r maint_pkg-ruby-extras-maintainers maint_pkg-rust-maintainers maint_reproducible-builds The package set kde in bookworm/arm64 consists of 978 packages: 41 (4.2%) packages failed to build reproducibly: qtserialport-opensource-src qtwebchannel-opensource-src qtsvg-opensource-src libkolabxml qtwebsockets-opensource-src rkward qtquickcontrols-opensource-src qtconnectivity-opensource-src qttools-opensource-src qt3d-opensource-src kdevelop-php qtscxml-everywhere-src qt6-virtualkeyboard qt6-multimedia qt6-quick3d qt6-5compat qtx11extras-opensource-src qtdoc-opensource-src qtquickcontrols2-opensource-src qtcreator oxygen-icons5 kuserfeedback gdb underscore qt6-datavis3d pyside2 qtserialbus-everywhere-src qtwebview-opensource-src qtlocation-opensource-src qtgraphicaleffects-opensource-src mesa qt6-declarative qtdeclarative-opensource-src plasma-workspace nss python3.11 qtbase-opensource-src # # # icu gnupg2 ffmpeg vlc # + 13 (1.3%) packages failed to build from source: kalarm appstream qtpim-opensource-src boost1.74 qtdeclarative-opensource-src-gles ktimetracker llvm-toolchain-15 qtremoteobjects-everywhere-src kitinerary kcmutils kcontacts gst-plugins-good1.0 curl 6 (0.6%) packages are either in depwait state, blacklisted, not for us, or cannot be downloaded: qt6-webengine qtwebengine-opensource-src intel-processor-trace intel-mediasdk gcc-12 calligra 918 (93.9%) packages successfully build reproducibly: aalib abseil accountsservice acl activity-aware-firefox adduser adwaita-icon-theme akonadi akonadi-calendar akonadi-calendar-tools akonadiconsole akonadi-contacts + akonadi-import-wizard + akonadi-mime + akonadi-notes akonadi-search akregator alkimia alsa-lib anacron analitza aom apparmor apt aribb24 ark artikulate at-spi2-core attica-kf5 attr audiocd-kio audit avahi avogadrolibs babeltrace baloo-kf5 baloo-widgets base-files base-passwd bash basket bismuth blinken bluedevil bluez-qt bomber bovo breeze breeze-grub breeze-gtk breeze-icons breeze-plymouth brotli bzip2 cairo calamares-extensions calligraplan cantor cdebconf cdparanoia cervisia cfitsio charmtimetracker chromaprint cjson clazy + codec2 colord colord-kde convertall coreutils ctemplate cups # cyrus-sasl2 dash dav1d db5.3 dbus dbus-glib debconf debconf-kde debian-archive-keyring debianutils diffutils digikam discount dmidecode docbook-xml docbook-xsl dolphin dolphin-plugins double-conversion dpkg # dragon drkonqi duktape e2fsprogs ebook-tools edict editorconfig-core elfutils elisa-player elogind exiv2 expat extra-cmake-modules ffmpegthumbs filelight findutils flac flatpak-kcm fluid-soundfont fluidsynth fontconfig fonts-dustin fonts-ipaexfont fonts-kanjistrokeorders fonts-urw-base35 frameworkintegration freecell-solver freepats freetype fribidi fuse3 game-music-emu gcc-defaults gcompris-qt gconf gdbm gdisk gdk-pixbuf ghostscript ghostwriter giflib glew glibc glib-networking gmp gnutls28 gpgme1.0 gpm gpsd granatier grantlee5 grantlee-editor graphite2 grep gsettings-desktop-schemas gsl gst-plugins-base1.0 gstreamer1.0 gtk2-engines-oxygen gtk+3.0 gwenview gzip harfbuzz hdf5 hicolor-icon-theme highway hostname hwdata hyphen ibus icecc icecc-monitor ijs inchi indi + init-system-helpers isl iso-codes itinerary jack-audio-connection-kit jansson jbig2dec jbigkit jpeg-xl juk k3b kaccounts-integration kaccounts-providers kactivities-kf5 kactivities-stats kactivitymanagerd kaddressbook kaffeine kaidan kajongg kalendar kalgebra kalzium kamera kamoso kanagram kanjidic kapidox kapman kapptemplate karchive kate katomic kauth kbackup kblackbox kblocks kbookmarks kbounce kbreakout kbruch kcachegrind kcalc kcalcore kcalutils kcharselect kchmviewer kcodecs kcollectd kcolorchooser kcolorpicker kcompletion kconfig kconfigwidgets kcoreaddons kcrash kcron kdav kdb kdbusaddons kdebugsettings kdeclarative kde-cli-tools kdeconnect kdecoration kded kde-dev-scripts kde-dev-utils kdeedu-data kdegraphics-mobipocket kdegraphics-thumbnailers kde-gtk-config kdelibs4support kdenetwork-filesharing kdepim-addons kdepim-runtime kdeplasma-addons kdesdk-kioslaves kdesdk-thumbnailers kdesignerplugin kde-spectacle kdesu kdesvn kdevelop kdevelop-pg-qt kdevelop-python kdewebkit kdf kdiagram kdialog kdiamond kdiff3 kdnssd-kf5 kdoctools keditbookmarks kemoticons keurocalc kexi keyutils kf5-messagelib kfilemetadata-kf5 kfind kfloppy kfourinline kgamma5 kgeography kgeotag kget + # kglobalaccel kgoldrunner kgpg kguiaddons khangman khelpcenter kholidays khotkeys khtml ki18n kiconthemes kidentitymanagement kidletime kig kigo kile killbots kimageannotator kimageformats kimagemapeditor kimap kinfocenter kinit kio kio-extras kio-fuse kio-gdrive kio-gopher kipi-plugins kirigami2 kirigami-addons kirigami-gallery kiriki kitemmodels kitemviews kiten kjobwidgets kjots kjs kjsembed kjumpingcube kldap kleopatra klettres klickety klines kmag kmahjongg kmail kmail-account-wizard kmailtransport kmbox kmediaplayer kmenuedit kmime kmines kmix kmod kmousetool kmouth kmplot kmymoney knavalbattle knetwalk knewstuff knights knotes knotifications knotifyconfig kolf kollision kolourpaint kompare kongress konqueror konquest konsole kontact kontactinterface kontrast konversation kookbook kopeninghours korganizer kosmindoormap kpackage kparts kpat kpeople kpeoplevcard kphotoalbum kpimtextedit kpipewire kpkpass kplotting kpmcore kproperty kpty kpublictransport kqtquickcharts kquickcharts kquickimageeditor kraft krb5 # krdc krename kreport kreversi krfb krita + kronometer kross kross-interpreters kruler krunner krusader ksanecore kscreen kscreenlocker kseexpr kservice kshisen ksirk ksmtp ksnakeduel kspaceduel ksquares ksshaskpass kstars ksudoku ksyntax-highlighting ksystemlog ksystemstats kteatime ktechlab ktexteditor ktextwidgets ktikz ktimer ktnef ktorrent ktouch ktp-accounts-kcm ktp-approver ktp-auth-handler ktp-call-ui ktp-common-internals ktp-contact-list ktp-contact-runner ktp-desktop-applets ktp-filetransfer-handler ktp-kded-integration-module ktp-send-file ktp-text-ui ktrip ktuberling kturtle kubrick kunitconversion kvirc kwallet-kf5 kwalletmanager kwallet-pam kwave kwayland kwayland-integration kwidgetsaddons kwin kwindowsystem kwordquiz kwrited kxmlgui kxmlrpcclient kxstitch labplot lame latte-dock layer-shell-qt lcms2 lensfun lerc libaccounts-glib libaccounts-qt libaec libao P libappimage libarchive libassuan libasyncns libatasmart libavc1394 libavif libblockdev libbluray libbsd libcaca libcanberra libcap2 libcap-ng libdatrie libdbusmenu-qt libde265 libdecor-0 libdeflate libdmtx libdrm libdv + libedit libepoxy libevdev libevent libexif libffi libfontenc libgav1 libgcrypt20 libgd2 libglu libglvnd libgpg-error 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2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://tests.reproducible-builds.org/debian/bookworm/amd64/pkg_set_popcon_top1337-installed-sources.html
popcon_top1337-installed-sources package set for bookworm/amd64 Debian navigation Change suite/architecture Tested architectures: amd64 arm64 Tested suites: unstable forky trixie bookworm Test results statistics Results for bookworm/amd64 Unreproducible packages: with notes without notes Other package states: package sets Recently tested packages: last 24h last 48h all tested packages packages with .buildinfo files packages without .buildinfo files Scheduled for amd64 Maintainers of in bookworm Reproducible Debian overview Development dashboard Past releases dashboard Categorized issues Bugs filed Variations tested Packages with notifications enabled ⚑ Repositories overview Backend related Broken pieces Documentation (eg. on manual scheduling) Performance stats Health monitoring node overview job overview daily graphs weekly graphs monthly graphs yearly graphs The Reproducible Builds project reproducible-builds.org Reproducible Builds - Docs • News Reproducible Builds in Debian - Wiki SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH specification reproduce.debian.net aims for 100% bit-for-bit identical rebuilds of Debian other CI tests popcon_top1337-installed-sources package set for bookworm/amd64 All tracked package sets for bookworm/amd64 Debian package sets: essential required important build-essential build-essential-depends popcon_top1337-installed-sources key_packages installed_on_debian.org had_a_DSA cii-census cloud-image cloud-image_build-depends desktop package sets: gnome gnome_build-depends kde kde_build-depends mate mate_build-depends xfce xfce_build-depends Debian distribution package sets: CIP CIP_build-depends debian-edu debian-edu_build-depends freedombox freedombox_build-depends grml grml_build-depends tails tails_build-depends pureos_default_install pureos_default_install_build-depends maintenance team package sets: maint_debian-accessibility maint_debian-boot maint_debian-lua maint_debian-med maint_debian-ocaml maint_debian-on-mobile-maintainers maint_debian-python maint_debian-qa maint_debian-science maint_debian-x maint_pkg-android-tools-devel maint_pkg-erlang-devel maint_pkg-fonts-devel maint_pkg-games-devel maint_pkg-golang-maintainers maint_pkg-grass-devel maint_pkg-haskell-maintainers maint_pkg-java-maintainers maint_pkg-javascript-devel maint_pkg-multimedia-maintainers maint_pkg-perl-maintainers maint_pkg-php-pear maint_pkg-openstack maint_pkg-r maint_pkg-ruby-extras-maintainers maint_pkg-rust-maintainers maint_reproducible-builds The package set popcon_top1337-installed-sources in bookworm/amd64 consists of 1258 packages: 35 (2.8%) packages failed to build reproducibly: libu2f-host codec2 lirc lynx qtx11extras-opensource-src qtsensors-opensource-src qtquickcontrols2-opensource-src qttools-opensource-src qtwayland-opensource-src intel-mediasdk libjcat grub2 + + + + qtquickcontrols-opensource-src qtspeech-opensource-src qtgraphicaleffects-opensource-src libayatana-appindicator underscore qtsvg-opensource-src qtlocation-opensource-src boost1.74 qtwebengine-opensource-src qtdeclarative-opensource-src guile-2.2 bluez graphviz + numpy qtbase-opensource-src # # # icu imagemagick gegl ffmpeg vlc # + xorg-server linux gnupg2 18 (1.4%) packages failed to build from source: pexpect grilo appstream libdazzle suitesparse openldap gjs transmission fakeroot totem nspr autogen espeak-ng rsyslog # curl gst-plugins-base1.0 perl glibc 3 (0.2%) packages are either in depwait state, blacklisted, not for us, or cannot be downloaded: gcc-12 gcc-11 nss 1202 (95.5%) packages successfully build reproducibly: a52dec aalib accountsservice acl acpi acpid acpi-support adduser adwaita-icon-theme aisleriot alsa-lib alsa-plugins alsa-topology-conf alsa-ucm-conf alsa-utils amtk anacron ann aom apache2 # apache-pom apg # + apparmor appstream-glib apr apr-util apt aptitude apt-listchanges argon2 aribb24 aspell aspell-en at atkmm1.6 at-spi2-core attica-kf5 attr audit autoconf automake-1.16 autotools-dev avahi ayatana-ido babl baobab base-files base-passwd bash bash-completion bc beautifulsoup4 bind9 # binutils # bogofilter bolt bouncycastle brasero brltty brotli bsd-mailx bsdmainutils bubblewrap build-essential busybox bzip2 ca-certificates ca-certificates-java cairo cairomm c-ares caribou cdebconf cdparanoia cdrdao cdrkit chardet cheese chromaprint clp clucene-core + clutter-1.0 clutter-gst-3.0 clutter-gtk cogl coinmp coinor-cbc coinor-cgl coinor-osi coinutils colord colord-gtk commons-parent console-setup coreutils cpio cracklib2 cron cryptsetup cups # cups-filters cups-pk-helper cyrus-sasl2 dash dav1d db5.3 dbus dbus-glib dbus-python dconf dctrl-tools debconf debhelper debian-archive-keyring debian-faq debianutils dee desktop-base desktop-file-utils dh-autoreconf dh-python dh-runit dictionaries-common diffutils discover discover-data distro-info distro-info-data djvulibre dkms dmidecode dnsmasq dns-root-data docbook-xml doc-debian dosfstools dotconf double-conversion dpkg # dvd+rw-tools e2fsprogs efibootmgr efivar elfutils emacsen-common enchant-2 endeavour eog ethtool evince evolution evolution-data-server exempi exfatprogs exim4 exiv2 expat faad2 fftw3 file file-roller findutils firefox-esr firmware-free five-or-more flac flashrom flatpak flite fluidsynth folks fontconfig fonts-android fonts-cantarell fonts-dejavu fonts-font-awesome fonts-freefont fonts-lato fonts-liberation fonts-liberation2 fonts-noto fonts-noto-color-emoji fonts-quicksand fonts-urw-base35 four-in-a-row freerdp2 freetype fribidi fstrm fuse fuse3 fuse-exfat fwupd fwupd-amd64-signed game-music-emu gawk + gcab gcc-defaults gcr gdbm gdisk gdk-pixbuf gdk-pixbuf-xlib gdm3 gedit gedit-plugins geoclue-2.0 geocode-glib geoip geoip-database gettext gexiv2 ghostscript giflib gimp git glib2.0 glibmm2.4 glib-networking gmp gnome-2048 gnome-autoar gnome-backgrounds gnome-bluetooth gnome-browser-connector gnome-calculator gnome-calendar gnome-characters gnome-chess gnome-clocks gnome-color-manager gnome-contacts gnome-control-center gnome-desktop gnome-disk-utility gnome-font-viewer gnome-icon-theme gnome-keyring gnome-klotski gnome-logs gnome-mahjongg gnome-maps gnome-menus gnome-mines gnome-music gnome-nibbles gnome-online-accounts gnome-remote-desktop gnome-robots gnome-screenshot gnome-session gnome-settings-daemon gnome-shell gnome-shell-extensions gnome-software gnome-sound-recorder gnome-sudoku gnome-sushi gnome-system-monitor gnome-taquin gnome-terminal gnome-tetravex gnome-themes-extra gnome-tweaks gnome-user-docs gnome-user-share gnome-video-effects gnome-weather gnutls28 gobject-introspection gpgme1.0 gpm graphene graphite2 grep grilo-plugins groff grub-efi-amd64-signed gsasl gsettings-desktop-schemas gsl gsound gspell gssdp gst-libav1.0 gst-plugins-bad1.0 gst-plugins-good1.0 gst-plugins-ugly1.0 gstreamer1.0 gstreamer-editing-services1.0 gtk+2.0 gtk+3.0 gtkmm3.0 gtksourceview3 gtksourceview4 gts gucharmap gupnp gupnp-av gupnp-dlna gupnp-igd gvfs gzip harfbuzz hdparm hicolor-icon-theme hitori hoichess hostname hplip html5lib htop http-parser hunspell hyphen iagno ibus ifupdown iio-sensor-proxy ijs im-config inetutils initramfs-tools init-system-helpers insserv installation-report intel-gmmlib intel-media-driver intel-processor-trace intel-vaapi-driver intltool-debian io-stringy ipp-usb iproute2 iptables iputils isc-dhcp isl iso-codes ispell iucode-tool iw jackd2 jansson java-atk-wrapper java-common javascript-common jbig2dec jbigkit jemalloc jigit jimtcl jq json-c json-glib jxrlib karchive kauth kbd kcodecs kcompletion kconfig kconfigwidgets kcoreaddons kcrash kdbusaddons kded kdoctools keybinder-3.0 keyutils kglobalaccel kguiaddons ki18n kiconthemes kidletime kio kitemviews kjobwidgets klibc kmod knotifications krb5 # kservice ktextwidgets kwallet-kf5 kwayland kwayland-integration kwidgetsaddons kwindowsystem kxmlgui lame lapack laptop-detect lcms2 less libaacs libabw libaio libalgorithm-diff-perl libalgorithm-diff-xs-perl libalgorithm-merge-perl libao P libapt-pkg-perl libarchive libarchive-zip-perl libass libassuan libasyncns libatasmart libauthen-sasl-perl libavc1394 libayatana-indicator libbdplus libb-hooks-endofscope-perl libb-hooks-op-check-perl libblockdev libbluray libbpf libbs2b libbsd libburn libcaca libcacard libcairo-gobject-perl libcairo-perl libcanberra libcap2 libcap-ng libcbor libcddb libcdio libcdio-paranoia libcdr libcgi-fast-perl libcgi-pm-perl libchamplain libclass-accessor-perl libclass-data-inheritable-perl libclass-isa-perl libclass-method-modifiers-perl libclass-xsaccessor-perl libclone-perl libcmis libcommons-logging-java libconfig-inifiles-perl libcue libdaemon libdata-dump-perl libdata-optlist-perl libdatrie libdbd-mysql-perl libdbi-perl libdbusmenu libdbusmenu-qt libdc1394 libdca libde265 libdeflate libdevel-callchecker-perl libdevel-stacktrace-perl libdigest-hmac-perl libdmapsharing libdrm libdv + libdvbpsi libdvdnav libdvdread libdynaloader-functions-perl libebml libe-book libedit libencode-locale-perl libeot libepoxy libept libepubgen liberror-perl libestr libetonyek libevdev libevent libexif libexporter-tiny-perl libexttextcat libextutils-depends-perl libextutils-pkgconfig-perl libfastjson libfcgi libfcgi-perl libffi libfido2 libfile-basedir-perl libfile-desktopentry-perl libfile-fcntllock-perl libfile-listing-perl libfile-mimeinfo-perl libfont-afm-perl libfontenc libfreehand libftdi1 libgc libgcrypt20 libgd2 libgdata libgee-0.8 libgit2 libgit2-glib libglib-object-introspection-perl libglib-perl libglu libglvnd libgnome-games-support libgnomekbd libgom libgpg-error libgphoto2 libgpod libgsf libgsm libgtk3-perl libgtop2 libgudev libgusb + libgxps libhandy-1 libheif libhtml-format-perl libhtml-form-perl libhtml-parser-perl libhtml-tagset-perl libhtml-template-perl libhtml-tree-perl libhttp-cookies-perl libhttp-daemon-perl libhttp-date-perl libhttp-message-perl libhttp-negotiate-perl libical3 libice libid3tag libidn libidn2 libiec61883 libieee1284 libimagequant libimobiledevice libinput libinstpatch libio-html-perl libio-socket-ssl-perl libio-string-perl libipc-system-simple-perl libiptcdata libisofs libjpeg-turbo libkate libksba liblangtag liblist-moreutils-perl liblocale-gettext-perl liblockfile liblognorm liblouis liblouisutdml liblqr libltc liblwp-mediatypes-perl liblwp-protocol-https-perl libmad libmail-sendmail-perl libmailtools-perl libmanette libmatroska libmaxminddb libmbim libmd libmediaart libmms libmng libmnl libmodplug libmodule-implementation-perl libmodule-runtime-perl libmpc libmspack libmspub libmtp libmusicbrainz5 libmwaw libmypaint libmysofa libnamespace-clean-perl libnatpmp libndp libnet-dbus-perl libnetfilter-conntrack libnet-http-perl libnet-smtp-ssl-perl libnet-ssleay-perl libnfnetlink libnfs libnftnl libnice libnl3 libnma libnotify libnsl libnss-nis libnss-nisplus libntlm libnumbertext liboauth libodfgen libofa libogg libonig libopenmpt libopenmpt-modplug liborcus libosinfo libpackage-stash-perl libpackage-stash-xs-perl libpagemaker libpaper libparams-classify-perl libparams-util-perl libpcap libpciaccess libpeas libperl4-corelibs-perl libpgm libphonenumber libpipeline libplist libpng1.6 libproc-processtable-perl libproxy libpsl libpst libpthread-stubs libpwquality libqmi libquvi libquvi-scripts libqxp librabbitmq libraw libraw1394 libreadonly-perl libreoffice # libreoffice-dictionaries librest librevenge librole-tiny-perl librsvg libsamplerate libsdl1.2 libsdl2 libseccomp libsecret libselinux libsemanage libsepol libshout libsidplay libsigc++-2.0 libsigsegv libsm libsmbios libsndfile libsocket6-perl libsodium libsoup2.4 libsoxr libspatialaudio libspectre libsrtp2 libssh libssh2 libstaroffice libsub-exporter-perl libsub-exporter-progressive-perl libsub-identify-perl libsub-install-perl libsub-name-perl libsub-quote-perl libswitch-perl libsys-hostname-long-perl libtasn1-6 libteam libterm-readkey-perl libtext-charwidth-perl libtext-iconv-perl libtext-wrapi18n-perl libthai libtheora libtie-ixhash-perl libtimedate-perl libtirpc libtommath libtool libtry-tiny-perl libudfread libunistring libunity libunwind liburing liburi-perl libusb libusb-1.0 libusbmuxd libutempter libuv1 libva libvariable-magic-perl libvdpau libvdpau-va-gl libvidstab libvisio libvisual libvncserver libvoikko libvorbis libvpx libwacom libwebp libwmf libwnck3 libwpd libwpe libwpg libwps libwww-perl libwww-robotrules-perl libx11 libx11-protocol-perl libxau libxaw libxcb libxcomposite libxcrypt libxcursor libxdamage libxdmcp libxext libxfce4util libxfixes libxfont libxi libxinerama libxkbcommon libxkbfile libxklavier libxml2 libxmlb libxml-commons-resolver1.1-java libxml-libxml-perl libxml-namespacesupport-perl libxml-parser-perl libxml-sax-base-perl libxml-sax-expat-perl libxml-sax-perl libxml-twig-perl libxml-xpathengine-perl libxmu libxnvctrl libxpm libxpresent libxrandr libxrender libxres libxshmfence libxslt libxss libxt libxtst libxv libxvmc libxxf86dga libxxf86vm libyaml libytnef libzip libzmf libzstd lightdm lightdm-gtk-greeter lightsoff lilv linux-base linux-signed-amd64 lmdb lm-sensors logrotate lp-solve lsb lsb-release-minimal lsof lua5.1 lua5.2 lua5.3 lua-bitop lua-expat lua-json lua-lpeg luasocket lvm2 lxml lz4 lzo2 m4 mailcap mailutils make-dfsg mako malcontent man-db manpages mariadb markupsafe mathjax mawk mbedtls mc md4c media-player-info media-types mesa mesa-demos meta-gnome3 metis mhash mime-support miniupnpc minizip mjpegtools mobile-broadband-provider-info mod-dnssd modemmanager mokutil mozjs78 mpclib3 mpeg2dec mpfr4 mpg123 mtdev mutt mutter mysql-defaults mythes nano nas nautilus ncurses neon27 netbase netcat netpbm-free net-snmp nettle net-tools network-manager network-manager-applet newt nfs-utils nftables nghttp2 nmap node-jquery node-normalize.css norm notification-daemon npth nss-mdns ntfs-3g ntpsec numactl ocl-icd olefile openal-soft opencore-amr openexr openjpeg2 openni2 openssh openssl + opus orc orca osinfo-db os-prober ostree # p11-kit p7zip packagekit pam pango1.0 pangomm parted patch pavucontrol pcaudiolib pci.ids pciutils pcre2 pcre3 pcsc-lite perl-openssl-defaults perl-tk phonon phonon-backend-vlc php-defaults pigz pillow pinentry pipewire pixman pkgconf plocate plymouth pocketsphinx po-debconf policykit-1 policykit-1-gnome polkit-qt-1 poppler poppler-data popt popularity-contest portaudio19 postgresql-15 powermgmt-base powertop ppp procmail procps protobuf protobuf-c psmisc ptyprocess publicsuffix pulseaudio pupnp-1.8 pyatspi pycairo pycurl pygments pygobject pyinotify pyopenssl pyparsing pyqt5 pysimplesoap pysmbc python3-defaults python3-stdlib-extensions python-apt python-certifi python-cffi python-cryptography python-cups python-dateutil python-debian python-debianbts python-distro python-httplib2 python-idna python-pip python-requests-toolbelt python-tz python-urllib3 python-webencodings pyxdg pyyaml qpdf qqwing qr-code-generator qrencode qtchooser qtmultimedia-opensource-src qttranslations-opensource-src qtwebchannel-opensource-src qtwebkit-opensource-src quadrapassel rake raptor2 rasqal rdma-core re2 readline realmd redland reportbug requests rhythmbox rpcbind rsync rtkit rtmpdump rubberband ruby-defaults rubygems-integration ruby-minitest ruby-net-telnet ruby-power-assert ruby-test-unit ruby-xmlrpc rygel samba sane-backends sbc scowl screen sdl-image1.2 seahorse sed sensible-utils serd setuptools sg3-utils sgml-base sgml-data shadow shared-mime-info shim shim-helpers-amd64-signed shim-signed shine shotwell sidplay-libs simple-scan six slang2 smartmontools snappy sndio snowball socat software-properties solid sonic sonnet sord sound-icons sound-theme-freedesktop soundtouch soupsieve spandsp speech-dispatcher speex speexdsp sphinx sphinxbase sqlite3 sratom srt sshfs-fuse ssl-cert startup-notification strip-nondeterminism sudo swell-foop switcheroo-control synaptic sysstat system-config-printer systemd sysvinit t1utils taglib tali talloc tar tasksel tcl8.6 tcltk-defaults tcpdump tcp-wrappers tdb tevent texinfo texlive-bin + tiff time timgm6mb-soundfont tk8.6 tokyocabinet totem-pl-parser tpm2-tss tpm-udev traceroute tracker tracker-miners tree ttf-ancient-fonts twolame tzdata ucf uchardet udisks2 unattended-upgrades unbound unixodbc unoconv unzip update-inetd upower usb.ids usb-modeswitch usb-modeswitch-data usbmuxd usbredir usbutils ustr util-linux v4l-utils vim vo-aacenc vo-amrwbenc volume-key vte2.91 vulkan-loader w3m wavpack wayland webkit2gtk webrtc-audio-processing wget wheel whois wildmidi wireless-regdb wireless-tools woff2 wpa wpebackend-fdo x11-apps x11-session-utils x11-utils x11-xkb-utils x11-xserver-utils x264 x265 xapian-core xauth xbitmaps xcb-util xcb-util-image xcb-util-keysyms xcb-util-renderutil xcb-util-wm xdg-dbus-proxy xdg-desktop-portal xdg-desktop-portal-gtk xdg-user-dirs xdg-user-dirs-gtk xdg-utils xerces-c xf86-input-wacom xfconf xfonts-100dpi xfonts-75dpi xfonts-base xfonts-encodings xfonts-scalable xfonts-utils xft xinit xkbset xkeyboard-config xml-commons-external xml-core xmlsec1 xorg xorg-docs xorgproto xorg-sgml-doctools xserver-xorg-input-libinput xserver-xorg-video-amdgpu xserver-xorg-video-ati xserver-xorg-video-fbdev xserver-xorg-video-intel xserver-xorg-video-nouveau xserver-xorg-video-qxl xserver-xorg-video-vesa xserver-xorg-video-vmware xterm xtrans xvidcore xwayland xxhash xz-utils yajl yelp yelp-xsl z3 zbar zenity zeromq3 zip zlib zvbi A package name displayed with a bold font is an indication that this package has a note. 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Last update: 2026-01-13 06:46 UTC
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http://hackage.haskell.org/package/semigroupoids-3.0.0.1
semigroupoids: Haskell 98 semigroupoids: Category sans id Hackage :: [Package] Search  Browse What's new Upload User accounts semigroupoids : Haskell 98 semigroupoids: Category sans id [ bsd2 , comonads , control , library ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] Provides a wide array of semigroupoids and operations for working with semigroupds. A Semigroupoid is a Category without the requirement of identity arrows for every object in the category. When working with comonads you often have the <*> portion of an Applicative , but not the pure . This was captured in Uustalu and Vene's "Essence of Dataflow Programming" in the form of the ComonadZip class in the days before Applicative . Apply provides a weaker invariant, but for the comonads used for data flow programming (found in the streams package), this invariant is preserved. Applicative function composition forms a semigroupoid. Similarly many structures are nearly a comonad, but not quite, for instance lists provide a reasonable extend operation in the form of tails , but do not always contain a value. Ideally the following relationships would hold: Traversable <---- Foldable <--- Functor ------> Alt ---------> Plus Semigroupoid | | | | | v v v v v Traversable1 <--- Foldable1 Apply --------> Applicative -> Alternative Category | | | | v v v v Bind ---------> Monad -------> MonadPlus Arrow Apply, Bind, and Extract give rise the Static, Kleisli and Cokleisli semigroupoids respectively. This lets us remove many of the restrictions from various monad transformers as in many cases the binding operation or <*> operation does not require them. Finally, to work with these weaker structures it is beneficial to have containers that can provide stronger guarantees about their contents, so versions of Traversable and Foldable that can be folded with just a Semigroup are added. Modules [ Index ] Data Functor Data.Functor.Alt Data.Functor.Apply Data.Functor.Bind Data.Functor.Bind.Trans Data.Functor.Extend Data.Functor.Plus Semigroup Data.Semigroup.Foldable Data.Semigroup.Traversable Data.Semigroupoid Data.Semigroupoid.Dual Data.Semigroupoid.Static Traversable Data.Traversable.Instances Downloads semigroupoids-3.0.0.1.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description ( revised from the package) Note: This package has metadata revisions in the cabal description newer than included in the tarball. To unpack the package including the revisions, use 'cabal get'. Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers EdwardKmett , EricMertens , ryanglscott For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates 5.2.1 Versions [ RSS ] 1.0.0 , 1.1.0 , 1.1.1 , 1.1.2 , 1.1.3 , 1.2.0 , 1.2.1 , 1.2.2 , 1.2.2.1 , 1.2.2.2 , 1.2.2.3 , 1.2.2.4 , 1.2.4 , 1.2.5 , 1.2.6 , 1.2.6.1 , 1.2.6.2 , 1.3 , 1.3.1 , 1.3.1.1 , 1.3.1.2 , 1.3.2 , 1.3.2.1 , 1.3.3 , 1.3.4 , 3.0 , 3.0.0.1 , 3.0.0.2 , 3.0.1 , 3.0.2 , 3.0.3 , 3.1 , 4.0 , 4.0.1 , 4.0.2 , 4.0.2.1 , 4.0.3 , 4.0.4 , 4.2 , 4.3 , 4.5 , 5 , 5.0.0.1 , 5.0.0.2 , 5.0.0.3 , 5.0.0.4 , 5.0.1 , 5.1 , 5.2 , 5.2.1 , 5.2.2 , 5.3 , 5.3.1 , 5.3.2 , 5.3.3 , 5.3.4 , 5.3.5 , 5.3.6 , 5.3.7 , 6 , 6.0.0.1 , 6.0.1 , 6.0.2 ( info ) Dependencies base (>=4 && <4.18) , comonad (>=3.0 && <3.1) , containers (>=0.3 && <0.6) , contravariant (>=0.2.0.1 && <0.3) , semigroups (>=0.8.3.1 && <0.9) , transformers (>=0.2 && <0.4) [ details ] License BSD-3-Clause Copyright Copyright (C) 2011 Edward A. Kmett Author Edward A. Kmett Maintainer Edward A. Kmett <ekmett@gmail.com> Uploaded by EdwardKmett at 2012-11-05T15:01:49Z Revised Revision 1 made by ryanglscott at 2023-02-02T15:15:19Z Stability provisional --> Category Control , Comonads Home page http://github.com/ekmett/semigroupoids Bug tracker http://github.com/ekmett/semigroupoids/issues Source repo head: git clone git://github.com/ekmett/semigroupoids.git Distributions Arch: 6.0.1 , Debian: 5.3.4 , Fedora: 6.0.1 , FreeBSD: 5.0.0.3 , LTSHaskell: 6.0.1 , NixOS: 6.0.1 , Stackage: 6.0.2 , openSUSE: 6.0.1 Reverse Dependencies 216 direct, 9047 indirect [ details ] Downloads 309284 total (292 in the last 30 days) Rating 2.5 (votes: 9) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs uploaded by user Build status unknown [ no reports yet ] Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0.
2026-01-13T09:30:27
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.VfPpkd-JGcpL-IdXvz-LkdAo-Bd00G{stroke:rgb(26,115,232)}@media (-ms-high-contrast:active),screen and (forced-colors:active){.b9hyVd .VfPpkd-UdE5de-uDEFge .VfPpkd-JGcpL-uI4vCe-LkdAo,.b9hyVd .VfPpkd-UdE5de-uDEFge .VfPpkd-JGcpL-IdXvz-LkdAo-B
2026-01-13T09:30:27
http://hackage.haskell.org/package/semigroupoids-4.0.2
semigroupoids: Semigroupoids: Category sans id Hackage :: [Package] Search  Browse What's new Upload User accounts semigroupoids : Semigroupoids: Category sans id [ bsd2 , comonads , control , library ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] Provides a wide array of (semi)groupoids and operations for working with them. A Semigroupoid is a Category without the requirement of identity arrows for every object in the category. A Category is any Semigroupoid for which the Yoneda lemma holds. When working with comonads you often have the <*> portion of an Applicative , but not the pure . This was captured in Uustalu and Vene's "Essence of Dataflow Programming" in the form of the ComonadZip class in the days before Applicative . Apply provides a weaker invariant, but for the comonads used for data flow programming (found in the streams package), this invariant is preserved. Applicative function composition forms a semigroupoid. Similarly many structures are nearly a comonad, but not quite, for instance lists provide a reasonable extend operation in the form of tails , but do not always contain a value. Ideally the following relationships would hold: Foldable ----> Traversable <--- Functor ------> Alt ---------> Plus Semigroupoid | | | | | v v v v v Foldable1 ---> Traversable1 Apply --------> Applicative -> Alternative Category | | | | v v v v Bind ---------> Monad -------> MonadPlus Arrow Apply, Bind, and Extend (not shown) give rise the Static, Kleisli and Cokleisli semigroupoids respectively. This lets us remove many of the restrictions from various monad transformers as in many cases the binding operation or <*> operation does not require them. Finally, to work with these weaker structures it is beneficial to have containers that can provide stronger guarantees about their contents, so versions of Traversable and Foldable that can be folded with just a Semigroup are added. Modules [ Index ] Data Functor Data.Functor.Alt Data.Functor.Apply Data.Functor.Bind Data.Functor.Bind.Trans Data.Functor.Extend Data.Functor.Plus Data.Groupoid Data.Isomorphism Data.Semifunctor Data.Semifunctor.Associative Data.Semifunctor.Braided Semigroup Data.Semigroup.Foldable Data.Semigroup.Traversable Data.Semigroupoid Data.Semigroupoid.Coproduct Data.Semigroupoid.Dual Data.Semigroupoid.Ob Data.Semigroupoid.Product Data.Semigroupoid.Static Traversable Data.Traversable.Instances Downloads semigroupoids-4.0.2.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description ( revised from the package) Note: This package has metadata revisions in the cabal description newer than included in the tarball. To unpack the package including the revisions, use 'cabal get'. Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers EdwardKmett , EricMertens , ryanglscott For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates 5.2.1 Versions [ RSS ] 1.0.0 , 1.1.0 , 1.1.1 , 1.1.2 , 1.1.3 , 1.2.0 , 1.2.1 , 1.2.2 , 1.2.2.1 , 1.2.2.2 , 1.2.2.3 , 1.2.2.4 , 1.2.4 , 1.2.5 , 1.2.6 , 1.2.6.1 , 1.2.6.2 , 1.3 , 1.3.1 , 1.3.1.1 , 1.3.1.2 , 1.3.2 , 1.3.2.1 , 1.3.3 , 1.3.4 , 3.0 , 3.0.0.1 , 3.0.0.2 , 3.0.1 , 3.0.2 , 3.0.3 , 3.1 , 4.0 , 4.0.1 , 4.0.2 , 4.0.2.1 , 4.0.3 , 4.0.4 , 4.2 , 4.3 , 4.5 , 5 , 5.0.0.1 , 5.0.0.2 , 5.0.0.3 , 5.0.0.4 , 5.0.1 , 5.1 , 5.2 , 5.2.1 , 5.2.2 , 5.3 , 5.3.1 , 5.3.2 , 5.3.3 , 5.3.4 , 5.3.5 , 5.3.6 , 5.3.7 , 6 , 6.0.0.1 , 6.0.1 , 6.0.2 ( info ) Dependencies base (>=4 && <4.4 || >=4.5 && <5) , comonad (>=4 && <5) , containers (>=0.3 && <0.6) , contravariant (>=0.2.0.1 && <1) , distributive (>=0.2.2 && <1) , semigroups (>=0.8.3.1 && <1) , transformers (>=0.2 && <0.6) [ details ] License BSD-3-Clause Copyright Copyright (C) 2011-2013 Edward A. Kmett Author Edward A. Kmett Maintainer Edward A. Kmett <ekmett@gmail.com> Uploaded by EdwardKmett at 2014-05-05T23:46:42Z Revised Revision 1 made by HerbertValerioRiedel at 2015-01-07T14:09:41Z Stability provisional --> Category Control , Comonads Home page http://github.com/ekmett/semigroupoids Bug tracker http://github.com/ekmett/semigroupoids/issues Source repo head: git clone git://github.com/ekmett/semigroupoids.git Distributions Arch: 6.0.1 , Debian: 5.3.4 , Fedora: 6.0.1 , FreeBSD: 5.0.0.3 , LTSHaskell: 6.0.1 , NixOS: 6.0.1 , Stackage: 6.0.2 , openSUSE: 6.0.1 Reverse Dependencies 216 direct, 9047 indirect [ details ] Downloads 309284 total (292 in the last 30 days) Rating 2.5 (votes: 9) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs available [ build log ] Successful builds reported [ all 1 reports ] Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0.
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://tests.reproducible-builds.org/debian/forky/index_dd-list.html#abdelhakim@qbaich.com
Maintainers of unreproducible packages in forky Debian navigation Change suite/architecture Tested suites: unstable forky trixie bookworm experimental Test results statistics Results for forky/amd64 Unreproducible packages: with notes without notes Other package states: package sets Recently tested packages: last 24h last 48h all tested packages packages with .buildinfo files packages without .buildinfo files Scheduled for amd64 Maintainers of in forky Reproducible Debian overview Development dashboard Past releases dashboard Categorized issues Bugs filed Variations tested Packages with notifications enabled ⚑ Repositories overview Backend related Broken pieces Documentation (eg. on manual scheduling) Performance stats Health monitoring node overview job overview daily graphs weekly graphs monthly graphs yearly graphs The Reproducible Builds project reproducible-builds.org Reproducible Builds - Docs • News Reproducible Builds in Debian - Wiki SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH specification reproduce.debian.net aims for 100% bit-for-bit identical rebuilds of Debian other CI tests Maintainers of unreproducible packages in forky The following maintainers and uploaders are listed for packages in forky which have built unreproducibly. Please note that the while the link always points to the amd64 version, it's possible thatthe unreproducibility is only present in another architecture(s). "Adam C. Powell, IV" <hazelsct@debian.org> ¶ med-fichier (U) mpich (U) mumps (U) petsc (U) slepc (U) spooles (U) A Mennucc1 <mennucc1@debian.org> ¶ mplayer (U) A. Maitland Bottoms <bottoms@debian.org> ¶ gnuradio gpredict (U) gr-dab (U) gr-fosphor gr-limesdr (U) gr-radar libiio uhd Aaron M. Ucko <ucko@debian.org> ¶ fltk1.3 (U) fltk1.4 (U) ncbi-blast+ (U) Abdelhakim Qbaich <abdelhakim@qbaich.com> ¶ gambc Abou Al Montacir <abou.almontacir@sfr.fr> ¶ castle-game-engine (U) fp-units-win (U) Adam Borowski <kilobyte@angband.pl> ¶ cardo (U) valgrind + (U) Adam Majer <adamm@zombino.com> ¶ qtcreator (U) Adrian Vondendriesch <adrian.vondendriesch@credativ.de> ¶ pacemaker (U) Aggelos Avgerinos <evaggelos.avgerinos@gmail.com> ¶ xmobar (U) Agustin Henze <tin@debian.org> ¶ yapsy (U) Ahmad Khalifa <ahmad@khalifa.ws> ¶ openrgb Akira Mitsui <murase.syuka@gmail.com> ¶ mruby (U) Alan M Varghese (NyxTrail) <alan@digistorm.in> ¶ hyprland (U) Alastair McKinstry <mckinstry@debian.org> ¶ cctools cdo (U) eccodes (U) ecflow (U) emoslib # (U) fdb (U) ferret-vis (U) fiat-ecmwf (U) fortran-fpm (U) fortran-jonquil (U) fortran-regex + (U) fortran-testdrive (U) hdf-eos4 (U) hdf-eos5 (U) iirish libtool metkit (U) mpich (U) odc (U) openmpi (U) pnetcdf + (U) pyferret (U) python-escript (U) python-xarray (U) silo-llnl (U) Alberto Garcia <berto@igalia.com> ¶ webkit2gtk (U) wpewebkit (U) Alberto Leiva Popper <ydahhrk@gmail.com> ¶ jool Alberto Luaces Fernández <aluaces@udc.es> ¶ yasnippet (U) Albin Tonnerre <lutin@debian.org> ¶ efl (U) AlcinaSharon <alcinasharon@gmail.com> ¶ go-qrcode (U) Alec Leamas <leamas.alec@gmail.com> ¶ libcxx-serial opencpn Aleksey Kravchenko <rhash.admin@gmail.com> ¶ libpff (U) Alessandro Ghedini <ghedo@debian.org> ¶ ecasound (U) valgrind + Alessio Treglia <alessio@debian.org> ¶ kmetronome (U) libsoxr (U) schism (U) Alex Myczko <tar@debian.org> ¶ 3d-ascii-viewer-c cheesecutter (U) far2l fonts-atarist # (U) fonts-topaz-unicode (U) ftxui (U) furnace (U) lft lie mdnsd netsurf (U) schism (U) shotcut + (U) zytrax (U) Alexander Kjäll <alexander.kjall@gmail.com> ¶ rust-sequoia-keystore-server (U) rust-sequoia-sq (U) Alexander Ponyatykh <lazyranma@gmail.com> ¶ g15daemon paexec Alexander Wirt <formorer@debian.org> ¶ icinga2 (U) Alexandre Dantas <eu@alexdantas.net> ¶ nsnake (U) Alexandre Detiste <tchet@debian.org> ¶ contourpy (U) ftgl (U) m2crypto (U) matplotlib (U) sphinx-panels (U) Alexandre Marie <alexandre.marie@synchrotron-soleil.fr> ¶ jupyter-sphinx (U) Alexandre Mestiashvili <mestia@debian.org> ¶ bibtexparser + (U) Alexandre Viau <aviau@debian.org> ¶ fonts-fork-awesome (U) golang-github-jonas-p-go-shp + (U) golang-github-roaringbitmap-roaring + (U) golang-github-tjfoc-gmsm + (U) Alkis Georgopoulos <alkisg@gmail.com> ¶ ltsp (U) Alois Schlögl <alois.schloegl@gmail.com> ¶ biosig (U) Aloïs Micard <alois@micard.lu> ¶ golang-github-francoispqt-gojay (U) Aloïs Micard <creekorful@debian.org> ¶ aerc (U) golang-github-viant-toolbox + (U) Amin Bandali <bandali@ubuntu.com> ¶ gtk4 (U) Amul Shah <Amul.Shah@fisglobal.com> ¶ fis-gtm (U) Ana Custura <ana@netstat.org.uk> ¶ namecheap + (U) vanguards + (U) Ananthu C V <weepingclown@debian.org> ¶ lazygit (U) Andrea Pappacoda <tachi@debian.org> ¶ mbedtls (U) xbyak Andreas Beckmann <anbe@debian.org> ¶ papi (U) pyopencl (U) Andreas Boll <aboll@debian.org> ¶ mesa (U) Andreas Bombe <aeb@debian.org> ¶ gr-limesdr (U) Andreas Cadhalpun <Andreas.Cadhalpun@googlemail.com> ¶ clamav (U) Andreas Henriksson <andreas@fatal.se> ¶ golang-github-mendersoftware-mender-artifact (U) Andreas Metzler <ametzler@debian.org> ¶ efl (U) enblend-enfuse (U) lynx (U) pfstools (U) Andreas Rönnquist <gusnan@debian.org> ¶ allegro5 # (U) Andreas Tille <tille@debian.org> ¶ altree (U) bedtools (U) biosquid # (U) btllib (U) cardpeek (U) consensuscore (U) crac (U) dicom3tools (U) emboss (U) filtlong (U) fis-gtm (U) freebayes (U) golang-github-apptainer-container-library-client + (U) golang-github-apptainer-sif + (U) golang-github-jung-kurt-gofpdf + (U) golang-github-shenwei356-breader + (U) golang-gonum-v1-plot + (U) hmmer (U) igraph (U) infernal (U) ivar (U) libbrahe (U) libcifpp (U) libgzstream (U) libhmsbeagle (U) liblemon (U) libpll (U) librostlab (U) libsbml (U) libslow5lib (U) macs (U) microbiomeutil + (U) minimap2 (U) ncbi-blast+ (U) node-shiny-server (U) openmm (U) parallel (U) phybin (U) porechop (U) primer3 (U) python-biom-format (U) python-biopython (U) python-ofxhome + (U) python-pysam (U) r-cran-cli (U) r-cran-cliapp (U) r-cran-dbitest (U) r-cran-diagnosismed (U) r-cran-dimred (U) r-cran-emayili (U) r-cran-emmeans (U) r-cran-futile.logger (U) r-cran-gert (U) r-cran-gprofiler2 (U) r-cran-lambda.r (U) r-cran-prophet (U) r-cran-rprojroot (U) r-cran-rstan (U) r-cran-sass (U) r-cran-teachingdemos (U) r-cran-tm (U) r-cran-tmvtnorm (U) r-cran-tweenr (U) r-cran-xfun (U) samtools (U) seer (U) segemehl (U) seqan2 (U) silly (U) siscone (U) tree-puzzle (U) treeview (U) twopaco (U) unicycler (U) velvet (U) virtuoso-opensource (U) virulencefinder + (U) xfishtank (U) Andrei Rozanski <rozanski.andrei@gmail.com> ¶ libamplsolver (U) Andrej Shadura <andrewsh@debian.org> ¶ critcl + (U) fonts-karmilla (U) g15daemon (U) libcamera (U) mk-configure Andrew Lee (李健秋) <ajqlee@debian.org> ¶ nomacs (U) Andrew Ross <ubuntu@rossfamily.co.uk> ¶ libitext5-java (U) Andrey Rakhmatullin <wrar@debian.org> ¶ kvirc (U) Andrius Merkys <merkys@debian.org> ¶ bespokesynth (U) epics-base (U) grammatica (U) ncbi-igblast (U) openmm (U) pdb-tools (U) pycifrw + (U) python-fabio (U) python-pyutil + (U) r-cran-rhub (U) spglib (U) vst3sdk (U) wannier90 (U) Andy Pugh <andy@bodgesoc.org> ¶ linuxcnc (U) Ansgar <ansgar@debian.org> ¶ dune-common (U) dune-functions (U) dune-geometry (U) dune-grid (U) dune-grid-glue (U) dune-istl (U) dune-localfunctions (U) dune-typetree (U) Anthony Fok <foka@debian.org> ¶ autokey (U) go-qrcode (U) golang-1.24 (U) golang-github-akavel-rsrc # (U) golang-github-rogpeppe-go-internal (U) golang-github-ulikunitz-xz + (U) golang-github-yosssi-ace (U) golang-golang-x-net (U) pydoctor (U) Antoine Beaupré <anarcat@debian.org> ¶ magic-wormhole-mailbox-server (U) magic-wormhole-transit-relay + Antoine Le Gonidec <vv221@debian.org> ¶ ogre-1.12 (U) Anton Gladky <gladk@debian.org> ¶ boost1.88 (U) esys-particle (U) gmsh (U) lammps (U) metis (U) minieigen (U) sfepy (U) sumo (U) sundials (U) yade (U) Anton Zinoviev <zinoviev@debian.org> ¶ xfonts-terminus Antoni Villalonga <antoni@friki.cat> ¶ vt + (U) Antonio Terceiro <terceiro@debian.org> ¶ passenger (U) Antonio Valentino <antonio.valentino@tiscali.it> ¶ c-blosc2 (U) metpy (U) numexpr (U) pycoast (U) pysolid (U) python-cartopy (U) python-pint (U) xarray-safe-rcm (U) Anuradha Weeraman <anuradha@debian.org> ¶ ksh93u+m # Apollon Oikonomopoulos <apoikos@debian.org> ¶ xmobar (U) Arnaud Ferraris <aferraris@debian.org> ¶ gnome-metronome (U) plasma-mobile (U) Arnaud Fontaine <arnau@debian.org> ¶ glosstex (U) Arnaud Rebillout <arnaud.rebillout@collabora.com> ¶ efitools (U) Arnaud Rebillout <arnaudr@debian.org> ¶ mirrorbits (U) Arnaud Rebillout <arnaudr@kali.org> ¶ docker.io (U) Arnaud Rebillout <elboulangero@gmail.com> ¶ golang-github-miekg-pkcs11 (U) Arne Morten Kvarving <arne.morten.kvarving@sintef.no> ¶ opm-simulators (U) opm-upscaling (U) Arnout Engelen <arnouten@bzzt.net> ¶ kmetronome (U) Aron Xu <aron@debian.org> ¶ dnf-plugins-core (U) fcitx-libpinyin (U) ibus (U) libpinyin (U) opencc (U) Arthur Diniz <arthurbdiniz@gmail.com> ¶ hey (U) kind (U) kustomize (U) Arun Kumar Pariyar <arun@debian.org> ¶ go-gir-generator (U) Arun Kumar Pariyar <openarungeek@gmail.com> ¶ dde-qt-dbus-factory (U) Asias He <asias@debian.org> ¶ libpinyin (U) opencc (U) Aurelien Jarno <aurel32@debian.org> ¶ med-fichier (U) Aurélien COUDERC <coucouf@debian.org> ¶ kate (U) kdebugsettings (U) kdevelop-php (U) kf6-breeze-icons (U) kf6-extra-cmake-modules (U) kf6-kirigami (U) kf6-ktexttemplate (U) kf6-syndication (U) oxygen-icons (U) plasma-mobile (U) powerdevil (U) syndication (U) tokodon (U) Axel Beckert <abe@debian.org> ¶ dpmb john (U) lynx (U) Aymeric Agon-Rambosson <aymeric.agon@yandex.com> ¶ citar (U) consult-el (U) embark (U) magit (U) marginalia (U) orderless (U) vertico (U) Balasankar C <balasankarc@debian.org> ¶ fonts-smc-anjalioldlipi (U) fonts-smc-dyuthi (U) fonts-smc-karumbi (U) fonts-smc-keraleeyam (U) fonts-smc-meera (U) fonts-smc-rachana (U) fonts-smc-raghumalayalamsans (U) fonts-smc-uroob (U) Balint Reczey <balint@balintreczey.hu> ¶ erlang-cowlib (U) Barak A. Pearlmutter <bap@debian.org> ¶ chezscheme (U) fstrcmp ikarus ivtools latex-coffee-stains libemf magit (U) mit-scheme oaklisp pstoedit yasnippet (U) Barry deFreese <bdefreese@debian.org> ¶ asc (U) blockattack (U) liquidwar (U) netrek-client-cow (U) Bartosz Fenski <fenio@debian.org> ¶ asc (U) Bas Couwenberg <sebastic@debian.org> ¶ grass (U) libosmium (U) nco (U) pyosmium (U) qgis (U) Bas Wijnen <wijnen@debian.org> ¶ openmsx Bas Zoetekouw <bas@debian.org> ¶ blktrace Bastian Blank <waldi@debian.org> ¶ cdebootstrap + libdebian-installer (U) linux (U) Bastian Germann <bage@debian.org> ¶ scalable-cyrfonts Bastian Venthur <venthur@debian.org> ¶ kivy (U) Bastien Roucaries <rouca@debian.org> ¶ node-envinfo (U) Bastien Roucariès <rouca@debian.org> ¶ node-rollup (U) Bdale Garbee <bdale@gag.com> ¶ altos debian-history (U) librnd (U) pforth rocketcea scikit-fmm Ben Hutchings <benh@debian.org> ¶ linux (U) Benda Xu <heroxbd@gentoo.org> ¶ casacore (U) casacore-data-igrf (U) casacore-data-jplde (U) scim (U) Benda Xu <orv@debian.org> ¶ scmutils Benjamin Barenblat <bbaren@debian.org> ¶ coq (U) Benjamin Drung <bdrung@debian.org> ¶ libsoxr (U) vlc # + (U) Benjamin Drung <bdrung@ubuntu.com> ¶ rdma-core Bernd Zeimetz <bzed@debian.org> ¶ collectd (U) gpsbabel (U) Bernhard Miklautz <bernhard.miklautz@shacknet.at> ¶ freerdp3 (U) Bernhard R. Link <brlink@debian.org> ¶ git-dpm bertrand Neron <bneron@pasteur.fr> ¶ macsyfinder (U) Birger Schacht <birger@debian.org> ¶ foot Boian Bonev <bbonev@ipacct.com> ¶ gpsd Boris Pek <tehnick@debian.org> ¶ psi-plus Boyuan Yang <byang@debian.org> ¶ beangulp + (U) dde-qt-dbus-factory (U) fcitx5-bamboo (U) fcitx5-zhuyin (U) font-manager (U) go-gir-generator (U) opencc (U) rime-array (U) rime-cangjie (U) rime-cantonese (U) rime-ipa (U) rime-loengfan (U) rime-luna-pinyin (U) rime-middle-chinese (U) rime-pinyin-simp (U) rime-quick (U) rime-scj (U) rime-soutzoe (U) rime-stroke (U) rime-terra-pinyin (U) rime-wubi (U) rime-wugniu (U) zxing-cpp Brad Chapman <chapmanb@50mail.com> ¶ freebayes (U) Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org> ¶ cappuccino Brian May <bam@debian.org> ¶ celery (U) faker (U) python-django (U) python-mkdocs (U) python-passlib (U) BW Keller <malzraa@gmail.com> ¶ yt (U) Camm Maguire <camm@debian.org> ¶ axiom fricas gcl gcl27 hol88 lam + maxima Carl Keinath <carl.keinath@gmail.com> ¶ hyprland (U) Carl Worth <cworth@debian.org> ¶ notmuch Carlos Zuferri <chals@altorricon.com> ¶ live-manual (U) Carsten Leonhardt <leo@debian.org> ¶ bacula-doc (U) Carsten Schoenert <c.schoenert@t-online.de> ¶ kicad (U) python-graphene + (U) python-mkdocs (U) python-picologging (U) Cesare Falco <c.falco@ubuntu.com> ¶ mame (U) Changwoo Ryu <cwryu@debian.org> ¶ ibus (U) ChangZhuo Chen (陳昌倬) <czchen@debian.org> ¶ fcitx-libpinyin (U) ibus-libzhuyin (U) libpinyin (U) nomacs (U) Charles Plessy <plessy@debian.org> ¶ altree (U) bedtools (U) emboss (U) primer3 (U) python-biopython (U) python-pysam (U) samtools (U) tree-puzzle (U) velvet (U) Chow Loong Jin <hyperair@debian.org> ¶ hyprland (U) Chris Halls <halls@debian.org> ¶ writer2latex (U) Chris Hofstaedtler <zeha@debian.org> ¶ ragel Chris Lamb <lamby@debian.org> ¶ black (U) python-django (U) Christian Bayle <bayle@debian.org> ¶ jfreepdf (U) orson-charts (U) rocm-docs-core (U) rocm-hipamd (U) Christian Ehrhardt <christian.ehrhardt@canonical.com> ¶ dpdk (U) Christian Kastner <ckk@debian.org> ¶ numpy (U) rocm-hipamd (U) rocprim (U) scikit-learn (U) Christian M. Amsüss <chrysn@fsfe.org> ¶ rdflib + (U) Christian Marillat <marillat@debian.org> ¶ libtorrent-rasterbar Christian T. Steigies <cts@debian.org> ¶ gle-graphics-manual (U) Christoph Berg <myon@debian.org> ¶ gpredict (U) gr-limesdr (U) libcm256cc (U) patroni # (U) pgloader (U) prometheus-sql-exporter (U) vip-manager2 (U) Christoph Biedl <debian.axhn@manchmal.in-ulm.de> ¶ gkrellm-leds P Christoph Egger <christoph@debian.org> ¶ buildapp (U) clisp (U) ecl (U) Christoph Martin <chrism@debian.org> ¶ vdr-plugin-markad (U) Christophe Trophime <christophe.trophime@lncmi.cnrs.fr> ¶ getdp (U) gmsh (U) Christopher Baines <mail@cbaines.net> ¶ faker (U) Christopher Hoskin <mans0954@debian.org> ¶ pympress + (U) rust-fslock # (U) Christopher Reichert <creichert07@gmail.com> ¶ haskell-network-conduit-tls (U) ClamAV Team <pkg-clamav-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ clamav Clay Stan <claystan97@gmail.com> ¶ dde-qt-dbus-factory (U) Clint Adams <clint@debian.org> ¶ alex (U) cabal-debian (U) ghc # (U) glirc (U) haskell-aeson (U) haskell-arithmoi (U) haskell-async (U) haskell-attoparsec (U) haskell-base64-bytestring (U) haskell-bimap (U) haskell-binary-instances (U) haskell-bitvec (U) haskell-blaze-markup (U) haskell-bloomfilter (U) haskell-brick (U) haskell-bytestring-to-vector (U) haskell-bz2 (U) haskell-case-insensitive (U) haskell-cassava (U) haskell-cassava-megaparsec (U) haskell-cborg (U) haskell-cereal-conduit (U) haskell-cereal-vector (U) haskell-chimera (U) haskell-cipher-camellia (U) haskell-classy-prelude (U) haskell-classy-prelude-conduit (U) haskell-clientsession (U) haskell-cmark (U) haskell-cmark-gfm (U) haskell-conduit (U) haskell-conduit-extra (U) haskell-cryptohash (U) haskell-cryptohash-md5 (U) haskell-cryptohash-sha1 (U) haskell-cryptohash-sha256 (U) haskell-cryptonite (U) haskell-curve25519 (U) haskell-deepseq-generics (U) haskell-dense-linear-algebra (U) haskell-deriving-aeson (U) haskell-deriving-compat (U) haskell-doctemplates (U) haskell-ed25519 (U) haskell-edit-distance (U) haskell-email-validate (U) haskell-enclosed-exceptions (U) haskell-esqueleto (U) haskell-exception-transformers (U) haskell-expiring-cache-map (U) haskell-fast-logger (U) haskell-fgl-arbitrary (U) haskell-filepattern (U) haskell-filestore (U) haskell-fold-debounce (U) haskell-from-sum (U) haskell-generic-data (U) haskell-generic-random (U) haskell-genvalidity (U) haskell-genvalidity-containers (U) haskell-getopt-generics (U) haskell-ghc-exactprint (U) haskell-ghc-lib-parser-ex (U) haskell-gi-gdk (U) haskell-githash (U) haskell-gridtables (U) haskell-hackage-security (U) haskell-hakyll (U) haskell-haskell-gi (U) haskell-heterocephalus (U) haskell-hgmp (U) haskell-hjsmin (U) haskell-hledger (U) haskell-hledger-ui (U) haskell-hopenpgp (U) haskell-hourglass (U) haskell-hslua-module-text (U) haskell-hspec-api (U) haskell-hspec-megaparsec (U) haskell-hspec-smallcheck (U) haskell-hspec-wai (U) haskell-html-conduit (U) haskell-http-api-data (U) haskell-http-client (U) haskell-http-conduit (U) haskell-infer-license (U) haskell-inline-c (U) haskell-integer-logarithms (U) haskell-integer-roots (U) haskell-interpolate (U) haskell-io-streams-haproxy (U) haskell-irc-core (U) haskell-js-flot (U) haskell-lambdahack (U) haskell-lens (U) haskell-libmpd (U) haskell-load-env (U) haskell-logging-facade (U) haskell-lukko (U) haskell-lzma (U) haskell-markdown (U) haskell-markdown-unlit (U) haskell-memory (U) haskell-microstache (U) haskell-minimorph (U) haskell-miniutter (U) haskell-mockery (U) haskell-monad-loops (U) haskell-monad-memo (U) haskell-mono-traversable (U) haskell-multistate (U) haskell-nanospec (U) haskell-natural-transformation (U) haskell-nettle (U) haskell-numbers (U) haskell-openpgp-asciiarmor (U) haskell-optparse-applicative (U) haskell-ormolu (U) haskell-parsers (U) haskell-path-pieces (U) haskell-pem (U) haskell-persistent (U) haskell-pretty-simple (U) haskell-prettyprinter-ansi-terminal (U) haskell-project-template (U) haskell-quickcheck-classes (U) haskell-quote-quot (U) haskell-rank2classes (U) haskell-raw-strings-qq (U) haskell-readargs (U) haskell-recv (U) haskell-resourcet (U) haskell-safe-exceptions (U) haskell-sandi (U) haskell-say (U) haskell-scanner (U) haskell-scotty (U) haskell-selective (U) haskell-serialise (U) haskell-servant (U) haskell-servant-server (U) haskell-shell-conduit (U) haskell-should-not-typecheck (U) haskell-simple-sendfile (U) haskell-skein (U) haskell-snap (U) haskell-snap-templates (U) haskell-soap (U) haskell-split (U) haskell-streaming-commons (U) haskell-tagstream-conduit (U) haskell-tasty-golden (U) haskell-tasty-hedgehog (U) haskell-termonad (U) haskell-text-icu (U) haskell-text-manipulate (U) haskell-text-metrics (U) haskell-text-show (U) haskell-th-desugar (U) haskell-th-env (U) haskell-th-lift (U) haskell-th-lift-instances (U) haskell-th-utilities (U) haskell-time-parsers (U) haskell-tls (U) haskell-trifecta (U) haskell-typed-process (U) haskell-universe-base (U) haskell-unix-time (U) haskell-uuid (U) haskell-wai (U) haskell-wai-app-static (U) haskell-wai-extra (U) haskell-wai-http2-extra (U) haskell-warp (U) haskell-witch (U) haskell-with-location (U) haskell-wl-pprint-annotated (U) haskell-word-wrap (U) haskell-word8 (U) haskell-x509 (U) haskell-xml-conduit (U) haskell-xml-hamlet (U) haskell-xml-html-qq (U) haskell-xmlhtml (U) haskell-xss-sanitize (U) haskell-yaml (U) haskell-yesod-core (U) haskell-yesod-form (U) haskell-yesod-test (U) mighttpd2 (U) Clément Hermann <nodens@debian.org> ¶ onedrive (U) Colin Watson <cjwatson@debian.org> ¶ groff libdebian-installer (U) yubihsm-connector (U) zope.deferredimport + (U) Collectd Packaging Team <team+collectd@tracker.debian.org> ¶ collectd Compute Library Team <developer-compute@arm.com> ¶ arm-compute-library Cordell Bloor <cgmb@debian.org> ¶ rocdbgapi + (U) rocm-hipamd (U) rocprim (U) Corey Bryant <corey.bryant@canonical.com> ¶ python-glanceclient (U) python-keystoneauth1 (U) Cyril Brulebois <cyril@debamax.com> ¶ crowdsec Cyril Brulebois <kibi@debian.org> ¶ debian-installer # # # (U) Cédric Boutillier <boutil@debian.org> ¶ gfan (U) highlight.js (U) ruby-gnuplot + (U) Cédric Lood <cedric.lood@kuleuven.be> ¶ porechop (U) Damien Raude-Morvan <drazzib@debian.org> ¶ codenarc (U) Damyan Ivanov <dmn@debian.org> ¶ firebird4.0 Danai SAE-HAN (韓達耐) <danai@debian.org> ¶ cjk (U) latex-cjk-chinese-arphic (U) Daniel Baumann <daniel@debian.org> ¶ ck dnsjit Daniel Dehennin <daniel.dehennin@baby-gnu.org> ¶ moarvm (U) raku-readline (U) raku-tap-harness (U) raku-zef (U) rakudo # (U) Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net> ¶ knot (U) rust-gperftools (U) rust-sequoia-sq (U) Daniel Markstedt <daniel@mindani.net> ¶ netatalk (U) Daniel Salzman <daniel.salzman@nic.cz> ¶ knot (U) Daniele Tricoli <eriol@mornie.org> ¶ pywavelets + (U) dann frazier <dannf@debian.org> ¶ makedumpfile (U) Dave Hibberd <hibby@debian.org> ¶ svxlink (U) David Banks <amoebae@gmail.com> ¶ sisc David Bremner <bremner@debian.org> ¶ emacs-jabber (U) notmuch (U) polymake sketch (U) slime (U) David Kalnischkies <donkult@debian.org> ¶ vim-youcompleteme ycmd David Miguel Susano Pinto <carandraug+dev@gmail.com> ¶ ncbi-igblast (U) David Paleino <dapal@debian.org> ¶ openlayers (U) uncertainties (U) underscore (U) David Suárez <david.sephirot@gmail.com> ¶ ruby-re2 (U) David Weinehall <tao@debian.org> ¶ scummvm (U) Davide Viti <zinosat@tiscali.it> ¶ fonts-freefont (U) Dawid Dziurla <dawidd0811@gmail.com> ¶ termshark (U) Dean Serenevy <dean@serenevy.net> ¶ kivy (U) Debian Accessibility Team <pkg-a11y-devel@alioth-lists.debian.net> ¶ flite Debian ACE maintainers <team+ace@tracker.debian.org> ¶ ace Debian ALSA Maintainers <pkg-alsa-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ alsa-utils Debian Astro Maintainers <debian-astro-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ pybdsf Debian Astro Team <debian-astro-maintainers@alioth-lists.debian.net> ¶ casacore-data-igrf casacore-data-jplde Debian Astro Team <debian-astro-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ astroplan astroquery casacore eso-midas gwcs montage ndcube pyregion python-casacore starjava-ttools Debian Astronomy Team <debian-astro-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ c-munipack yt Debian Bacula Team <pkg-bacula-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ bacula-doc Debian Bluetooth Maintainers <team+pkg-bluetooth@tracker.debian.org> ¶ bluez bluez-alsa Debian BOINC Maintainers <pkg-boinc-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ boinc Debian Boost Team <team+boost@tracker.debian.org> ¶ boost1.88 Debian Chinese Team <chinese-developers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ opencc (U) unicon # Debian CLI Applications Team <pkg-cli-apps-team@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ hexbox openmcdf Debian Clojure Maintainers <team+clojure@tracker.debian.org> ¶ clojure core-specs-alpha-clojure leiningen-clojure + spec-alpha-clojure Debian Common Lisp Team <debian-common-lisp@lists.debian.org> ¶ abcl buildapp clisp ecl sbcl slime Debian D Language Group <team+d-team@tracker.debian.org> ¶ dub ldc Debian Deepin Packaging Team <pkg-deepin-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ dde-qt-dbus-factory go-gir-generator Debian Documentation Project <debian-doc@lists.debian.org> ¶ refcard Debian DPDK Maintainers <pkg-dpdk-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ dpdk Debian EFI team <debian-efi@lists.debian.org> ¶ libjcat Debian Electronics Team <pkg-electronics-devel@alioth-lists.debian.net> ¶ kicad Debian Electronics Team <pkg-electronics-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ arduino librnd verilator Debian Emacsen team <debian-emacsen@lists.debian.org> ¶ citar consult-el elpa-transient embark fountain-mode magit magit-forge-el maildir-utils marginalia orderless vertico yasnippet Debian Emacsen Team <debian-emacsen@lists.debian.org> ¶ emacs-jabber ghub-el with-editor Debian Erlang Packagers <pkg-erlang-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ elixir-makeup erlang erlang-cowlib erlang-hex manderlbot rebar rebar3 wings3d yaws Debian FLTK Ecosystem Team <team+fltk@tracker.debian.org> ¶ fltk1.3 fltk1.4 Debian Fonts Task Force <debian-fonts@lists.debian.org> ¶ cardo font-manager fonts-atarist # fonts-cantarell fonts-fantasque-sans fonts-fork-awesome fonts-meera-inimai fonts-smc-anjalioldlipi fonts-smc-dyuthi fonts-smc-karumbi fonts-smc-keraleeyam Debian Fonts Task Force <pkg-fonts-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ fonts-arundina fonts-beteckna fonts-cascadia-code fonts-freefont fonts-karmilla fonts-smc-meera fonts-smc-rachana fonts-smc-raghumalayalamsans fonts-topaz-unicode Debian Games Team <pkg-games-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ 0ad ace-of-penguins allegro5 # asc blockattack bzflag colobot doomsday ftgl gnubg (U) libsfml liquidwar mame netrek-client-cow nsnake ogre-1.12 scummvm silly teeworlds ufoai xfishtank xpenguins Debian GCC Maintainers <debian-gcc@lists.debian.org> ¶ gcc-12-cross gcc-13-cross gcc-13-cross-mipsen gcc-14 gcc-14-cross gcc-14-cross-ports gcc-15 gcc-15-cross gcc-15-cross-ports Debian GDB Team <team+gdb@tracker.debian.org> ¶ dejagnu Debian GIS Project <pkg-grass-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ grass libosmium metpy nco openlayers pycoast pyosmium pysolid python-cartopy 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qt6-virtualkeyboard qt6-wayland qt6-webchannel qt6-websockets qt6-webview qtbase-opensource-src # # # qtbase-opensource-src-gles qtconnectivity-opensource-src qtcreator qtdeclarative-opensource-src qtsensors-opensource-src qtwebchannel-opensource-src qtwebengine-opensource-src syndication tokodon Debian R Packages Maintainers <r-pkg-team@alioth-lists.debian.net> ¶ r-cran-cli r-cran-cliapp r-cran-dbitest r-cran-diagnosismed r-cran-dimred r-cran-emayili r-cran-emmeans r-cran-futile.logger r-cran-gert r-cran-gprofiler2 r-cran-lambda.r r-cran-prophet r-cran-r.devices r-cran-r.rsp r-cran-repr r-cran-rhub r-cran-rprojroot r-cran-rsdmx r-cran-rstan r-cran-sass r-cran-teachingdemos r-cran-tm r-cran-tmvtnorm r-cran-tweenr r-cran-xfun Debian Rakudo Maintainers <pkg-rakudo-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ moarvm prove6 raku-getopt-long raku-hash-merge raku-json-class raku-json-marshal raku-json-name raku-json-unmarshal raku-license-spdx raku-log raku-meta6 raku-readline raku-tap-harness 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apertium-cat-ita apertium-cat-srd apertium-oci-fra apertium-srd-ita gap-scscp giac Debian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ asl bitshuffle (U) bliss bornagain (U) c-blosc2 cdo clhep + coin3 coinor-bonmin coinor-cgl combblas cvc5 dolfin dune-common dune-functions dune-geometry dune-grid dune-grid-glue dune-istl dune-localfunctions dune-typetree dxf2gcode eccodes ecflow emoslib # epics-base esys-particle fdb fenics-dolfinx fenicsx-performance-tests ferret-vis fftw3 fiat-ecmwf fortran-fpm fortran-jonquil fortran-regex + fortran-testdrive freecad freesas (U) g2o gap-design gap-sonata geomview gerris getdp gle-graphics-manual gmsh gtsam guidata hdf-eos4 hdf-eos5 joblib lammps libbrahe libflame librsb # lmfit-py med-fichier metis metkit minieigen mona mpi4py mpich mumps neuron nfft ngspetsc node-shiny-server numexpr odc onetbb open3d opengv openmesh openmpi opm-simulators opm-upscaling pandas # pcl petsc plplot pnetcdf + pyfai P (U) pyferret pynx (U) pytango python-bumps python-escript python-fabio (U) python-hdf5plugin python-pyqtgraph python-xarray ros-dynamic-reconfigure scalapack scikit-learn sfepy silo-llnl simbody siscone sketch skimage slepc spglib spooles statsmodels sumo texmacs tkgate + virtuoso-opensource visp vlfeat wannier90 yade Debian Science Team <debian-science-maintainers@alioth-lists.debian.net> ¶ apertium-arg-cat apertium-br-fr apertium-eng-cat apertium-eng-spa apertium-eo-ca apertium-eo-es apertium-eo-fr apertium-es-gl apertium-eu-es apertium-fr-es apertium-fra-cat apertium-fra-frp apertium-hbs-eng apertium-hbs-mkd apertium-hbs-slv apertium-ind-zlm apertium-isl-swe apertium
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http://rb.zq1.de/images/
Index of /images Index of /images Name Last modified Size Description Parent Directory   -   logo-text.png 2019-12-02 18:53 72K   logo-text.svg 2019-12-02 18:41 7.9K   logo-text.wide.svg 2019-12-02 18:52 7.9K   rb-icons-v1/ 2018-03-27 12:44 -   rbsummit5.gif 2019-12-19 12:22 1.9M   rbsummit5.xcf.gz 2019-12-19 12:54 92M  
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http://rb.zq1.de/pkg/
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https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch01.html
Chapter 1. Introduction Chapter 1. Introduction Prev       Next Chapter 1. Introduction A general purpose operating system like Debian can be the perfect solution for many different problems. Whether you want Debian to work for you in the classroom, as a games machine, or in the office, each problem area has its own unique needs and requires a different subset of packages tailored in a different way. Debian Pure Blends provide support for special user interests. They implement a new approach to cover interests of specialised users, who might be children, lawyers, medical staff, visually impaired people, etc. Of late, several Debian Pure Blends have evolved. The common goal of those is to make installation and administration of computers for their target users as easy as possible, and to serve in the role as the missing link between software developers and users well. To clarify the relation between a Blend and a derivative which is frequently mixed up Ben Armstrong said in a discussion on the Blends mailing list : "While a Blend strives to mainstream with Debian, a derivative strives to differentiate from Debian." Using the object oriented approach as an analogy, if Debian as a whole is an object, a Debian Pure Blend is an instance of this object that inherits all features while providing certain properties. So the Debian project releases the Debian Distribution which includes several Blends. In contrast to this, there might be some other Debian related Projects, either external or non-official, which may create "derivative distributions". But these are not the responsibility of the Debian project. A word of warning: The fact that a Blend covering a certain field of work does exist does not mean that it might be a complete drop in replacement of Free Software solutions for all tasks in this specific field. Some Blends just started to work on this and adopted the technical framework to formalise the work on the project but it might perfectly happen that there is just a lack of available Free Software solutions for certain tasks. Debian can do less about this because we just assemble a set of software which was developed outside the Debian GNU/Linux distribution. So it has to be checked whether a specific Blend is fit for the intended purpose, whether it might cover just some parts of a fields of work or whether it is just a concept to develop some solutions for the future. Prev       Next Debian Pure Blends  Home  Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends?
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https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch02.html#debian
Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Table of Contents 2.1. What is Debian? 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) 2.3. Differences from other distributions 2.4. Debian Pure Blends 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system 2.5.1. Technical 2.5.2. Philosophical 2.6. Further resources about Blends 2.1. What is Debian? The core of an operating system is a piece of software that interacts with the hardware of the computer, and provides basic functionality for several applications. On Linux based systems, the so-called kernel provides this functionality, and the term Linux just means this core without those applications that provide the functionality for users. Other examples are the Hurd, or the flavours of the BSD kernel. Many applications around UNIX-like kernels are provided by the GNU system. That is why Linux based operating systems are described as GNU/Linux systems. The GNU tools around the Linux kernel build a complete operating system. Users do not need only an operating system. They also need certain applications like web servers, or office suites. A distribution is a collection of software packages around the GNU/Linux operating system that satisfies the needs of the target user group. There are general distributions, which try to support all users, and there are several specialised distributions, which each target a special group of users. Distributors are those companies that are building these collections of software around the GNU/Linux operating system. Because it is Free Software, the user who buys a distribution pays for the service that the distributor is providing. These services might be: Preparing a useful collection of software around GNU/Linux. Caring for smooth installation that the target user is able to manage. Providing software updates and security fixes. Writing documentation and translations to enable the user to use the distribution with maximum effect. Selling Boxes with ready to install CDs and printed documentation. Offering training and qualification. Most distributors ship their distribution in binary packages. Two package formats are widely used: RPM (RedHat Package Manager) which is supported by RedHat, SuSE and others. DEB (Debian Package) used by Debian and derived distributions. All GNU/Linux distributions have a certain amount of common ground, and the Linux Standard Base (LSB) is attempting to develop and promote a set of standards that will increase compatibility among Linux distributions, and enable software applications to run on any compliant system. The very essence of any distribution, (whether delivered as RPMs, DEBs, Source tarballs or ports) is the choice of policy statements made (or not made, as the case may be) by the creators of the distribution. Policy statements in this sense are things like "configuration files live in /etc/$package/$package.conf , logfiles go to /var/log/$package/$package.log and the documentation files can be found in /usr/share/doc/$package ." The policy statements are followed by the tool-chains and libraries used to build the software, and the lists of dependencies, which dictate the prerequisites and order in which the software has to be built and installed. (It's easier to ride a bicycle if you put the wheels on first. ;-) ) It is this adherence to policy that causes a distribution to remain consistent within its own bounds. At the same time, this is the reason why packages can not always be safely installed across distribution boundaries. A SuSE package.rpm might not play well with a RedHat package.rpm , although the packages work perfectly well within their own distributions. A similar compatibility problem could also apply to packages from the same distributor, but from a different version or generation of the distribution. AT: The context is somehow missing here. As you will see later in more detail, Debian Pure Blends are just a modified ruleset for producing a modified (specialised) version of Debian GNU/Linux. A package management system is a very strong tool to manage software packages on your computer. A large amount of the work of a distributor is building these software packages. Distributors you might know are RedHat , SuSE , Ubuntu and others. Debian is just one of them. Well, at least this is what people who do not know Debian well might think about it. But, in fact, Debian is a different kind of distribution ... 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) The Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made common cause to create a free operating system. This operating system that we have created is called Debian GNU/Linux , or simply Debian for short. Moreover, work is in progress to provide Debian of kernels other than Linux, primarily for the Hurd. Other possible kernels are the flavours of BSD, and there are even people who think about ports to MS Windows. All members of the Debian project are connected in a web of trust , which is woven by signing GPG keys. One requirement to become a member of the Debian project is to have a GPG key signed by a Debian developer. Every time one Debian developer meets another developer for the first time, they sign each other's keys. In this way, the web of trust is woven. 2.3. Differences from other distributions Debian is not a company, but an organisation. It does not sell anything. Debian members are volunteers. Maintainers are working on the common goal: to build the best operating system they can achieve. Debian maintains the largest collection of ready-to-install Free Software on the Internet. There are two ways to obtain Debian GNU/Linux: Buy it from some other distributor on CD. Perhaps the correct term would be re distributor. Because Debian is free, anybody can build his own distribution based on it, sell CDs, and even add new features, such as printed documentation, more software, support for different installers and more. Download Debian from the web for free. The latter is the common way, and there are really great tools to do it this way. Certainly it is always possible to copy Debian from a friend. 2.4. Debian Pure Blends Debian contains nearly 22.000 binary packages, and this number is constantly increasing. There is no single user who needs all these packages (even if conflicting packages are not considered). The normal user is interested in a subset of these packages. But how does the user find out which packages are really interesting? One solution is provided by the tasksel package. It provides a reasonable selection of quite general tasks that can be accomplished using a set of packages installed on a Debian GNU/Linux system. But this is not really fine grained, and does not address all of the needs of user groups with special interests. Debian Pure Blends - in short Blends if used clearly in the Debian internal context which makes "Pure" and "Debian" obvious - which were formerly known as Custom Debian Distributions (this name was confusing because it left to much room for speculation that this might be something else than Debian) try to provide a solution for special groups of target users with different skills and interests . Not only do they provide handy collections of specific program packages, but they also ease installation and configuration for the intended purpose. Debian Pure Blends are not forks from Debian. As the new name says clearly they are pure Debian and just provide a specific flavour. So if you obtain the complete Debian GNU/Linux distribution, you have all available Debian Pure Blends included. The concept of what is called Blend in Debian is also known in other distributions. For instance in Fedora there are Special Interest Groups (SIGs) even if some SIGs in Fedora are what in Debian is known as internal project because it is focused on technical implementations and not on user-oriented applications. 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system Not necessarily all currently existing Blends are actually providing installation media (live media or installer). The reason for this is that such installation media are not always necessary / wanted. You can just install plain Debian and install some metapackages on top of it. However, the metapackage approach makes the creation of installation media quite simple by using Debian Live . Here are some reasons for this approach compared to a remastering strategy. 2.5.1. Technical The process for creation of a blend involves starting with a Debian or derivative repository and creating an image directly from that (live, install or otherwise) that contains a selection of material from that repository delivered in such a way that it is usable by a particular target user for a particular purpose with a minimum of effort. By contrast, the process of remastering generally involves first downloading an image produced by the parent distro (live, install or otherwise,) then tearing it apart and reassembling it with your customizations applied. 2.5.2. Philosophical The blends philosophy is to work as closely with the parent distro as possible. If possible, the project should be done entirely within the distro as a subproject, containing only material supplied by the parent distro. We call this a "Pure Blend". The remastering philosophy (if it can be called that) seems to be "whatever works" and involves little or no interaction with the parent distro. It's a lazy approach used by people who have newly discovered that they can hack images to make them into custom images to make something uniquely theirs. Probably fine for quick-and-dirty results, but hard to support in the long run. The users of a blend are served better than the users of a remaster because of the following advantages: 2.5.2.1. Technical advantage A new version of a well-crafted blend ought to be able to be produced at any time directly from the repository simply by building it; the user has some assurance that the resulting system remains 'untainted' by hacking it up with scripts that 'damage' the original system by removing files from packages, changing files in packages, etc. something that hurts maintainability / support for such a system. 2.5.2.2. Community advantage A blend project aims to leverage support resources from the existing community to serve some sub-community within it. They accomplish this by not violating Debian packaging policy, producing something that is either pure Debian (a "pure blend") or Debian + additional packages, rather than some frankendistro artlessly stitched together from someone else's distro with scripts that change things everywhere with no regard to policy. Thus, normal support channels can be used with a pure blend since what you end up with is not a derivative at all, but just Debian, set up and ready to go for whatever you wanted to use it for. 2.6. Further resources about Blends Wiki https://wiki.debian.org/DebianPureBlends Mailing list https://lists.debian.org/debian-blends/ IRC #debian-blends irc://irc.debian.org/debian-blends Prev       Next Chapter 1. Introduction  Home  Chapter 3. General ideas
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https://draft.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=8072464059979174136&postID=3141202997732626062&from=pencil
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.VfPpkd-JGcpL-IdXvz-LkdAo-Bd00G{stroke:rgb(26,115,232)}@media (-ms-high-contrast:active),screen and (forced-colors:active){.b9hyVd .VfPpkd-UdE5de-uDEFge .VfPpkd-JGcpL-uI4vCe-LkdAo,.b9hyVd .VfPpkd-UdE5de-uDEFge .VfPpkd-JGcpL-IdXvz-LkdAo-B
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch02.html#difference
Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Table of Contents 2.1. What is Debian? 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) 2.3. Differences from other distributions 2.4. Debian Pure Blends 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system 2.5.1. Technical 2.5.2. Philosophical 2.6. Further resources about Blends 2.1. What is Debian? The core of an operating system is a piece of software that interacts with the hardware of the computer, and provides basic functionality for several applications. On Linux based systems, the so-called kernel provides this functionality, and the term Linux just means this core without those applications that provide the functionality for users. Other examples are the Hurd, or the flavours of the BSD kernel. Many applications around UNIX-like kernels are provided by the GNU system. That is why Linux based operating systems are described as GNU/Linux systems. The GNU tools around the Linux kernel build a complete operating system. Users do not need only an operating system. They also need certain applications like web servers, or office suites. A distribution is a collection of software packages around the GNU/Linux operating system that satisfies the needs of the target user group. There are general distributions, which try to support all users, and there are several specialised distributions, which each target a special group of users. Distributors are those companies that are building these collections of software around the GNU/Linux operating system. Because it is Free Software, the user who buys a distribution pays for the service that the distributor is providing. These services might be: Preparing a useful collection of software around GNU/Linux. Caring for smooth installation that the target user is able to manage. Providing software updates and security fixes. Writing documentation and translations to enable the user to use the distribution with maximum effect. Selling Boxes with ready to install CDs and printed documentation. Offering training and qualification. Most distributors ship their distribution in binary packages. Two package formats are widely used: RPM (RedHat Package Manager) which is supported by RedHat, SuSE and others. DEB (Debian Package) used by Debian and derived distributions. All GNU/Linux distributions have a certain amount of common ground, and the Linux Standard Base (LSB) is attempting to develop and promote a set of standards that will increase compatibility among Linux distributions, and enable software applications to run on any compliant system. The very essence of any distribution, (whether delivered as RPMs, DEBs, Source tarballs or ports) is the choice of policy statements made (or not made, as the case may be) by the creators of the distribution. Policy statements in this sense are things like "configuration files live in /etc/$package/$package.conf , logfiles go to /var/log/$package/$package.log and the documentation files can be found in /usr/share/doc/$package ." The policy statements are followed by the tool-chains and libraries used to build the software, and the lists of dependencies, which dictate the prerequisites and order in which the software has to be built and installed. (It's easier to ride a bicycle if you put the wheels on first. ;-) ) It is this adherence to policy that causes a distribution to remain consistent within its own bounds. At the same time, this is the reason why packages can not always be safely installed across distribution boundaries. A SuSE package.rpm might not play well with a RedHat package.rpm , although the packages work perfectly well within their own distributions. A similar compatibility problem could also apply to packages from the same distributor, but from a different version or generation of the distribution. AT: The context is somehow missing here. As you will see later in more detail, Debian Pure Blends are just a modified ruleset for producing a modified (specialised) version of Debian GNU/Linux. A package management system is a very strong tool to manage software packages on your computer. A large amount of the work of a distributor is building these software packages. Distributors you might know are RedHat , SuSE , Ubuntu and others. Debian is just one of them. Well, at least this is what people who do not know Debian well might think about it. But, in fact, Debian is a different kind of distribution ... 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) The Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made common cause to create a free operating system. This operating system that we have created is called Debian GNU/Linux , or simply Debian for short. Moreover, work is in progress to provide Debian of kernels other than Linux, primarily for the Hurd. Other possible kernels are the flavours of BSD, and there are even people who think about ports to MS Windows. All members of the Debian project are connected in a web of trust , which is woven by signing GPG keys. One requirement to become a member of the Debian project is to have a GPG key signed by a Debian developer. Every time one Debian developer meets another developer for the first time, they sign each other's keys. In this way, the web of trust is woven. 2.3. Differences from other distributions Debian is not a company, but an organisation. It does not sell anything. Debian members are volunteers. Maintainers are working on the common goal: to build the best operating system they can achieve. Debian maintains the largest collection of ready-to-install Free Software on the Internet. There are two ways to obtain Debian GNU/Linux: Buy it from some other distributor on CD. Perhaps the correct term would be re distributor. Because Debian is free, anybody can build his own distribution based on it, sell CDs, and even add new features, such as printed documentation, more software, support for different installers and more. Download Debian from the web for free. The latter is the common way, and there are really great tools to do it this way. Certainly it is always possible to copy Debian from a friend. 2.4. Debian Pure Blends Debian contains nearly 22.000 binary packages, and this number is constantly increasing. There is no single user who needs all these packages (even if conflicting packages are not considered). The normal user is interested in a subset of these packages. But how does the user find out which packages are really interesting? One solution is provided by the tasksel package. It provides a reasonable selection of quite general tasks that can be accomplished using a set of packages installed on a Debian GNU/Linux system. But this is not really fine grained, and does not address all of the needs of user groups with special interests. Debian Pure Blends - in short Blends if used clearly in the Debian internal context which makes "Pure" and "Debian" obvious - which were formerly known as Custom Debian Distributions (this name was confusing because it left to much room for speculation that this might be something else than Debian) try to provide a solution for special groups of target users with different skills and interests . Not only do they provide handy collections of specific program packages, but they also ease installation and configuration for the intended purpose. Debian Pure Blends are not forks from Debian. As the new name says clearly they are pure Debian and just provide a specific flavour. So if you obtain the complete Debian GNU/Linux distribution, you have all available Debian Pure Blends included. The concept of what is called Blend in Debian is also known in other distributions. For instance in Fedora there are Special Interest Groups (SIGs) even if some SIGs in Fedora are what in Debian is known as internal project because it is focused on technical implementations and not on user-oriented applications. 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system Not necessarily all currently existing Blends are actually providing installation media (live media or installer). The reason for this is that such installation media are not always necessary / wanted. You can just install plain Debian and install some metapackages on top of it. However, the metapackage approach makes the creation of installation media quite simple by using Debian Live . Here are some reasons for this approach compared to a remastering strategy. 2.5.1. Technical The process for creation of a blend involves starting with a Debian or derivative repository and creating an image directly from that (live, install or otherwise) that contains a selection of material from that repository delivered in such a way that it is usable by a particular target user for a particular purpose with a minimum of effort. By contrast, the process of remastering generally involves first downloading an image produced by the parent distro (live, install or otherwise,) then tearing it apart and reassembling it with your customizations applied. 2.5.2. Philosophical The blends philosophy is to work as closely with the parent distro as possible. If possible, the project should be done entirely within the distro as a subproject, containing only material supplied by the parent distro. We call this a "Pure Blend". The remastering philosophy (if it can be called that) seems to be "whatever works" and involves little or no interaction with the parent distro. It's a lazy approach used by people who have newly discovered that they can hack images to make them into custom images to make something uniquely theirs. Probably fine for quick-and-dirty results, but hard to support in the long run. The users of a blend are served better than the users of a remaster because of the following advantages: 2.5.2.1. Technical advantage A new version of a well-crafted blend ought to be able to be produced at any time directly from the repository simply by building it; the user has some assurance that the resulting system remains 'untainted' by hacking it up with scripts that 'damage' the original system by removing files from packages, changing files in packages, etc. something that hurts maintainability / support for such a system. 2.5.2.2. Community advantage A blend project aims to leverage support resources from the existing community to serve some sub-community within it. They accomplish this by not violating Debian packaging policy, producing something that is either pure Debian (a "pure blend") or Debian + additional packages, rather than some frankendistro artlessly stitched together from someone else's distro with scripts that change things everywhere with no regard to policy. Thus, normal support channels can be used with a pure blend since what you end up with is not a derivative at all, but just Debian, set up and ready to go for whatever you wanted to use it for. 2.6. Further resources about Blends Wiki https://wiki.debian.org/DebianPureBlends Mailing list https://lists.debian.org/debian-blends/ IRC #debian-blends irc://irc.debian.org/debian-blends Prev       Next Chapter 1. Introduction  Home  Chapter 3. General ideas
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch02.html
Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Table of Contents 2.1. What is Debian? 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) 2.3. Differences from other distributions 2.4. Debian Pure Blends 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system 2.5.1. Technical 2.5.2. Philosophical 2.6. Further resources about Blends 2.1. What is Debian? The core of an operating system is a piece of software that interacts with the hardware of the computer, and provides basic functionality for several applications. On Linux based systems, the so-called kernel provides this functionality, and the term Linux just means this core without those applications that provide the functionality for users. Other examples are the Hurd, or the flavours of the BSD kernel. Many applications around UNIX-like kernels are provided by the GNU system. That is why Linux based operating systems are described as GNU/Linux systems. The GNU tools around the Linux kernel build a complete operating system. Users do not need only an operating system. They also need certain applications like web servers, or office suites. A distribution is a collection of software packages around the GNU/Linux operating system that satisfies the needs of the target user group. There are general distributions, which try to support all users, and there are several specialised distributions, which each target a special group of users. Distributors are those companies that are building these collections of software around the GNU/Linux operating system. Because it is Free Software, the user who buys a distribution pays for the service that the distributor is providing. These services might be: Preparing a useful collection of software around GNU/Linux. Caring for smooth installation that the target user is able to manage. Providing software updates and security fixes. Writing documentation and translations to enable the user to use the distribution with maximum effect. Selling Boxes with ready to install CDs and printed documentation. Offering training and qualification. Most distributors ship their distribution in binary packages. Two package formats are widely used: RPM (RedHat Package Manager) which is supported by RedHat, SuSE and others. DEB (Debian Package) used by Debian and derived distributions. All GNU/Linux distributions have a certain amount of common ground, and the Linux Standard Base (LSB) is attempting to develop and promote a set of standards that will increase compatibility among Linux distributions, and enable software applications to run on any compliant system. The very essence of any distribution, (whether delivered as RPMs, DEBs, Source tarballs or ports) is the choice of policy statements made (or not made, as the case may be) by the creators of the distribution. Policy statements in this sense are things like "configuration files live in /etc/$package/$package.conf , logfiles go to /var/log/$package/$package.log and the documentation files can be found in /usr/share/doc/$package ." The policy statements are followed by the tool-chains and libraries used to build the software, and the lists of dependencies, which dictate the prerequisites and order in which the software has to be built and installed. (It's easier to ride a bicycle if you put the wheels on first. ;-) ) It is this adherence to policy that causes a distribution to remain consistent within its own bounds. At the same time, this is the reason why packages can not always be safely installed across distribution boundaries. A SuSE package.rpm might not play well with a RedHat package.rpm , although the packages work perfectly well within their own distributions. A similar compatibility problem could also apply to packages from the same distributor, but from a different version or generation of the distribution. AT: The context is somehow missing here. As you will see later in more detail, Debian Pure Blends are just a modified ruleset for producing a modified (specialised) version of Debian GNU/Linux. A package management system is a very strong tool to manage software packages on your computer. A large amount of the work of a distributor is building these software packages. Distributors you might know are RedHat , SuSE , Ubuntu and others. Debian is just one of them. Well, at least this is what people who do not know Debian well might think about it. But, in fact, Debian is a different kind of distribution ... 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) The Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made common cause to create a free operating system. This operating system that we have created is called Debian GNU/Linux , or simply Debian for short. Moreover, work is in progress to provide Debian of kernels other than Linux, primarily for the Hurd. Other possible kernels are the flavours of BSD, and there are even people who think about ports to MS Windows. All members of the Debian project are connected in a web of trust , which is woven by signing GPG keys. One requirement to become a member of the Debian project is to have a GPG key signed by a Debian developer. Every time one Debian developer meets another developer for the first time, they sign each other's keys. In this way, the web of trust is woven. 2.3. Differences from other distributions Debian is not a company, but an organisation. It does not sell anything. Debian members are volunteers. Maintainers are working on the common goal: to build the best operating system they can achieve. Debian maintains the largest collection of ready-to-install Free Software on the Internet. There are two ways to obtain Debian GNU/Linux: Buy it from some other distributor on CD. Perhaps the correct term would be re distributor. Because Debian is free, anybody can build his own distribution based on it, sell CDs, and even add new features, such as printed documentation, more software, support for different installers and more. Download Debian from the web for free. The latter is the common way, and there are really great tools to do it this way. Certainly it is always possible to copy Debian from a friend. 2.4. Debian Pure Blends Debian contains nearly 22.000 binary packages, and this number is constantly increasing. There is no single user who needs all these packages (even if conflicting packages are not considered). The normal user is interested in a subset of these packages. But how does the user find out which packages are really interesting? One solution is provided by the tasksel package. It provides a reasonable selection of quite general tasks that can be accomplished using a set of packages installed on a Debian GNU/Linux system. But this is not really fine grained, and does not address all of the needs of user groups with special interests. Debian Pure Blends - in short Blends if used clearly in the Debian internal context which makes "Pure" and "Debian" obvious - which were formerly known as Custom Debian Distributions (this name was confusing because it left to much room for speculation that this might be something else than Debian) try to provide a solution for special groups of target users with different skills and interests . Not only do they provide handy collections of specific program packages, but they also ease installation and configuration for the intended purpose. Debian Pure Blends are not forks from Debian. As the new name says clearly they are pure Debian and just provide a specific flavour. So if you obtain the complete Debian GNU/Linux distribution, you have all available Debian Pure Blends included. The concept of what is called Blend in Debian is also known in other distributions. For instance in Fedora there are Special Interest Groups (SIGs) even if some SIGs in Fedora are what in Debian is known as internal project because it is focused on technical implementations and not on user-oriented applications. 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system Not necessarily all currently existing Blends are actually providing installation media (live media or installer). The reason for this is that such installation media are not always necessary / wanted. You can just install plain Debian and install some metapackages on top of it. However, the metapackage approach makes the creation of installation media quite simple by using Debian Live . Here are some reasons for this approach compared to a remastering strategy. 2.5.1. Technical The process for creation of a blend involves starting with a Debian or derivative repository and creating an image directly from that (live, install or otherwise) that contains a selection of material from that repository delivered in such a way that it is usable by a particular target user for a particular purpose with a minimum of effort. By contrast, the process of remastering generally involves first downloading an image produced by the parent distro (live, install or otherwise,) then tearing it apart and reassembling it with your customizations applied. 2.5.2. Philosophical The blends philosophy is to work as closely with the parent distro as possible. If possible, the project should be done entirely within the distro as a subproject, containing only material supplied by the parent distro. We call this a "Pure Blend". The remastering philosophy (if it can be called that) seems to be "whatever works" and involves little or no interaction with the parent distro. It's a lazy approach used by people who have newly discovered that they can hack images to make them into custom images to make something uniquely theirs. Probably fine for quick-and-dirty results, but hard to support in the long run. The users of a blend are served better than the users of a remaster because of the following advantages: 2.5.2.1. Technical advantage A new version of a well-crafted blend ought to be able to be produced at any time directly from the repository simply by building it; the user has some assurance that the resulting system remains 'untainted' by hacking it up with scripts that 'damage' the original system by removing files from packages, changing files in packages, etc. something that hurts maintainability / support for such a system. 2.5.2.2. Community advantage A blend project aims to leverage support resources from the existing community to serve some sub-community within it. They accomplish this by not violating Debian packaging policy, producing something that is either pure Debian (a "pure blend") or Debian + additional packages, rather than some frankendistro artlessly stitched together from someone else's distro with scripts that change things everywhere with no regard to policy. Thus, normal support channels can be used with a pure blend since what you end up with is not a derivative at all, but just Debian, set up and ready to go for whatever you wanted to use it for. 2.6. Further resources about Blends Wiki https://wiki.debian.org/DebianPureBlends Mailing list https://lists.debian.org/debian-blends/ IRC #debian-blends irc://irc.debian.org/debian-blends Prev       Next Chapter 1. Introduction  Home  Chapter 3. General ideas
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch04.html#debian-astro
Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Prev       Next Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Table of Contents 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 Start beginning of 2000 URL http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-jr Tasks Tasks of Debian Jr. Mailing list debian-jr@lists.debian.org Initiator Ben Armstrong < synrg@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Jr. mailing list Release Debian 3.0 (Woody) Goals To make Debian an OS that children of all ages will want to use, preferring it over the alternatives. To care for those applications in Debian suitable for children, and ensure their quality, to the best of our abilities. To make Debian a playground for children's enjoyment and exploration. The main target is young children. By the time children are teenaged, they should be comfortable with using Debian without any special modifications. Debian Jr. was the first Blend. In fact, at the time this project was created, the idea behind of Debian Pure Blends was born, although then, we used the term "Debian Internal Project". Over time, this name was changed to "Custom Debian Distributions" first because it was too broad, as it was equally descriptive of a number of quite different projects, such as IPv6 and QA. The next change of names became necessary when it was realised that the term "Custom Debian Distribution" was considered as "something else than Debian" by any newcomer. This was so misleading that it effectively blocked a wide propagation of the principle. Debian Jr. not only provides games, but is also concerned about their quality from a child's perspective. Thus, games that are regarded as not well suited to young children are omitted. Moreover, choices are made about which packages are best suited for children to use for various other activities and tasks that interest them. This includes, for example, simple text processing, web browsing and drawing. 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care Start beginning of 2002 URL Debian Med Tasks Tasks of Debian Med Mailing list debian-med@lists.debian.org Initiator Andreas Tille < tille@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Med mailing list Activists on Debian Med developer list Committers to Debian Med VCS Uploaders of Debian Med team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Med packages Release Sarge Goals To build an integrated software environment for all medical tasks. To care especially for the quality of program packages in the field of medicine that are already integrated within Debian. To build and include in Debian packages of medical software that are missing in Debian. To care for a general infrastructure for medical users. To make efforts to increase the quality of third party Free Software in the field of medicine. 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education Start Summer of 2002, since 2003 merged with SkoleLinux, which is now synonymous with Debian Edu URL Debian Edu Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Edu Mailing list debian-edu@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Edu mailing list Responsible Petter Reinholdtsen < pere@hungry.com > Release Sarge Goals To make Debian the best distribution available for educational use. Provide a ready to run classroom installation with free educational software. An automatically installed server provides net-boot services for disk-less thin clients and all necessary applications for educational use. To federate many initiatives around education, which are partly based on forks of Debian. To continue the internationalisation efforts of SkoleLinux. To focus on easy installation in schools. To cooperate with other education-related projects (like Schoolforge , Ofset , KdeEdu ). This project started with the intention to bring back into Debian a fork from Debian that was started by some people in France. Because they had some time constraints, the people who initially started this effort handed over responsibility to the Norwegian Skolelinux , which is currently more or less identical to Debian Edu. 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems Start October 2004 URL DebianGIS Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian GIS Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Francesco P. Lovergine < frankie@debian.org > Goals Geographical Information Systems OpenStreetMap and GPS devices 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers Start March 2014 URL Debian Astro Blends page Tasks Tasks of Debian Astro Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Ole Streicher < olebole@debian.org > Goals Debian Astro is a "Debian Pure Blend" with the aim to develop a Debian based operating system that fits the requirements of both professional and hobby astronomers. It integrates a large number of software packages covering telescope control, data reduction, presentation and other fields. 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry Start October 2004 URL Debichem Alioth page Tasks Tasks of DebiChem Mailing list debichem-users@lists.alioth.debian.org Activity Activists on DebiChem mailing list Committers to DebiChem VCS Uploaders of DebiChem team Team members closing the most bugs in DebiChem packages Initiator Michael Banck < mbanck@debian.org > Goals Chemical applications in Debian 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science Start July 2005 URL Debian Science Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Science Mailing list debian-science@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Science mailing list Activists on Debian Science maintainers list Committers to Debian Science VCS Uploaders of Debian Science team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Science packages Responsible Sylvestre Ledru < sylvestre@debian.org > While there are Debian Pure Blends that care for certain sciences (Debian Med deals in a main part with Biology, DebiChem for Chemistry and Debian GIS for geography) not all sciences are covered by a specific Blend. The main reason is that at the moment not enough people support such an effort for every science. The temporary solution was to build a general Debian Science Blend that makes use of the work of other Blends in case it exists. 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project Debian for blind and visually impaired people Start February 2003 Mailing list debian-accessibility@lists.debian.org URL Debian Accessibility Tasks Tasks of Debian Accessibility Activity Activists on Debian Accessibility mailing list Initiator Mario Lang < mlang@debian.org > Goals To make Debian accessible to people with disabilities. To take special care for: Screen readers; Screen magnification programs; Software speech synthesisers; Speech recognition software; Scanner drivers and OCR software; Specialised software like edbrowse (web-browse in the spirit of line-editors) To make text-mode interfaces available. To provide screen reader functionality during installation. 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server Start May 2010 URL Website Demo Buy Download Disk Images Wiki Manual Tasks Tasks of FreedomBox Contact Get Support Discussion Forum Matrix Mailing List IRC FreedomBox Foundation Report Issues Activity Project page Latest posts on discussion forum Committers to FreedomBox repository Activity on the FreedomBox Salsa project Responsible FreedomBox Team < admin@freedombox.org > FreedomBox is designed to be your own inexpensive server at home. It runs free software and offers an increasing number of services ranging from a calendar or jabber server to a wiki or VPN. A web interface allows you to easily install and configure your apps. Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas  Home  Chapter 5. Distributions inside Debian
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch02.html#whatdebian
Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Table of Contents 2.1. What is Debian? 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) 2.3. Differences from other distributions 2.4. Debian Pure Blends 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system 2.5.1. Technical 2.5.2. Philosophical 2.6. Further resources about Blends 2.1. What is Debian? The core of an operating system is a piece of software that interacts with the hardware of the computer, and provides basic functionality for several applications. On Linux based systems, the so-called kernel provides this functionality, and the term Linux just means this core without those applications that provide the functionality for users. Other examples are the Hurd, or the flavours of the BSD kernel. Many applications around UNIX-like kernels are provided by the GNU system. That is why Linux based operating systems are described as GNU/Linux systems. The GNU tools around the Linux kernel build a complete operating system. Users do not need only an operating system. They also need certain applications like web servers, or office suites. A distribution is a collection of software packages around the GNU/Linux operating system that satisfies the needs of the target user group. There are general distributions, which try to support all users, and there are several specialised distributions, which each target a special group of users. Distributors are those companies that are building these collections of software around the GNU/Linux operating system. Because it is Free Software, the user who buys a distribution pays for the service that the distributor is providing. These services might be: Preparing a useful collection of software around GNU/Linux. Caring for smooth installation that the target user is able to manage. Providing software updates and security fixes. Writing documentation and translations to enable the user to use the distribution with maximum effect. Selling Boxes with ready to install CDs and printed documentation. Offering training and qualification. Most distributors ship their distribution in binary packages. Two package formats are widely used: RPM (RedHat Package Manager) which is supported by RedHat, SuSE and others. DEB (Debian Package) used by Debian and derived distributions. All GNU/Linux distributions have a certain amount of common ground, and the Linux Standard Base (LSB) is attempting to develop and promote a set of standards that will increase compatibility among Linux distributions, and enable software applications to run on any compliant system. The very essence of any distribution, (whether delivered as RPMs, DEBs, Source tarballs or ports) is the choice of policy statements made (or not made, as the case may be) by the creators of the distribution. Policy statements in this sense are things like "configuration files live in /etc/$package/$package.conf , logfiles go to /var/log/$package/$package.log and the documentation files can be found in /usr/share/doc/$package ." The policy statements are followed by the tool-chains and libraries used to build the software, and the lists of dependencies, which dictate the prerequisites and order in which the software has to be built and installed. (It's easier to ride a bicycle if you put the wheels on first. ;-) ) It is this adherence to policy that causes a distribution to remain consistent within its own bounds. At the same time, this is the reason why packages can not always be safely installed across distribution boundaries. A SuSE package.rpm might not play well with a RedHat package.rpm , although the packages work perfectly well within their own distributions. A similar compatibility problem could also apply to packages from the same distributor, but from a different version or generation of the distribution. AT: The context is somehow missing here. As you will see later in more detail, Debian Pure Blends are just a modified ruleset for producing a modified (specialised) version of Debian GNU/Linux. A package management system is a very strong tool to manage software packages on your computer. A large amount of the work of a distributor is building these software packages. Distributors you might know are RedHat , SuSE , Ubuntu and others. Debian is just one of them. Well, at least this is what people who do not know Debian well might think about it. But, in fact, Debian is a different kind of distribution ... 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) The Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made common cause to create a free operating system. This operating system that we have created is called Debian GNU/Linux , or simply Debian for short. Moreover, work is in progress to provide Debian of kernels other than Linux, primarily for the Hurd. Other possible kernels are the flavours of BSD, and there are even people who think about ports to MS Windows. All members of the Debian project are connected in a web of trust , which is woven by signing GPG keys. One requirement to become a member of the Debian project is to have a GPG key signed by a Debian developer. Every time one Debian developer meets another developer for the first time, they sign each other's keys. In this way, the web of trust is woven. 2.3. Differences from other distributions Debian is not a company, but an organisation. It does not sell anything. Debian members are volunteers. Maintainers are working on the common goal: to build the best operating system they can achieve. Debian maintains the largest collection of ready-to-install Free Software on the Internet. There are two ways to obtain Debian GNU/Linux: Buy it from some other distributor on CD. Perhaps the correct term would be re distributor. Because Debian is free, anybody can build his own distribution based on it, sell CDs, and even add new features, such as printed documentation, more software, support for different installers and more. Download Debian from the web for free. The latter is the common way, and there are really great tools to do it this way. Certainly it is always possible to copy Debian from a friend. 2.4. Debian Pure Blends Debian contains nearly 22.000 binary packages, and this number is constantly increasing. There is no single user who needs all these packages (even if conflicting packages are not considered). The normal user is interested in a subset of these packages. But how does the user find out which packages are really interesting? One solution is provided by the tasksel package. It provides a reasonable selection of quite general tasks that can be accomplished using a set of packages installed on a Debian GNU/Linux system. But this is not really fine grained, and does not address all of the needs of user groups with special interests. Debian Pure Blends - in short Blends if used clearly in the Debian internal context which makes "Pure" and "Debian" obvious - which were formerly known as Custom Debian Distributions (this name was confusing because it left to much room for speculation that this might be something else than Debian) try to provide a solution for special groups of target users with different skills and interests . Not only do they provide handy collections of specific program packages, but they also ease installation and configuration for the intended purpose. Debian Pure Blends are not forks from Debian. As the new name says clearly they are pure Debian and just provide a specific flavour. So if you obtain the complete Debian GNU/Linux distribution, you have all available Debian Pure Blends included. The concept of what is called Blend in Debian is also known in other distributions. For instance in Fedora there are Special Interest Groups (SIGs) even if some SIGs in Fedora are what in Debian is known as internal project because it is focused on technical implementations and not on user-oriented applications. 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system Not necessarily all currently existing Blends are actually providing installation media (live media or installer). The reason for this is that such installation media are not always necessary / wanted. You can just install plain Debian and install some metapackages on top of it. However, the metapackage approach makes the creation of installation media quite simple by using Debian Live . Here are some reasons for this approach compared to a remastering strategy. 2.5.1. Technical The process for creation of a blend involves starting with a Debian or derivative repository and creating an image directly from that (live, install or otherwise) that contains a selection of material from that repository delivered in such a way that it is usable by a particular target user for a particular purpose with a minimum of effort. By contrast, the process of remastering generally involves first downloading an image produced by the parent distro (live, install or otherwise,) then tearing it apart and reassembling it with your customizations applied. 2.5.2. Philosophical The blends philosophy is to work as closely with the parent distro as possible. If possible, the project should be done entirely within the distro as a subproject, containing only material supplied by the parent distro. We call this a "Pure Blend". The remastering philosophy (if it can be called that) seems to be "whatever works" and involves little or no interaction with the parent distro. It's a lazy approach used by people who have newly discovered that they can hack images to make them into custom images to make something uniquely theirs. Probably fine for quick-and-dirty results, but hard to support in the long run. The users of a blend are served better than the users of a remaster because of the following advantages: 2.5.2.1. Technical advantage A new version of a well-crafted blend ought to be able to be produced at any time directly from the repository simply by building it; the user has some assurance that the resulting system remains 'untainted' by hacking it up with scripts that 'damage' the original system by removing files from packages, changing files in packages, etc. something that hurts maintainability / support for such a system. 2.5.2.2. Community advantage A blend project aims to leverage support resources from the existing community to serve some sub-community within it. They accomplish this by not violating Debian packaging policy, producing something that is either pure Debian (a "pure blend") or Debian + additional packages, rather than some frankendistro artlessly stitched together from someone else's distro with scripts that change things everywhere with no regard to policy. Thus, normal support channels can be used with a pure blend since what you end up with is not a derivative at all, but just Debian, set up and ready to go for whatever you wanted to use it for. 2.6. Further resources about Blends Wiki https://wiki.debian.org/DebianPureBlends Mailing list https://lists.debian.org/debian-blends/ IRC #debian-blends irc://irc.debian.org/debian-blends Prev       Next Chapter 1. Introduction  Home  Chapter 3. General ideas
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https://blends.debian.org/blends/index.html
Debian Pure Blends Debian Pure Blends       Next Debian Pure Blends Andreas Tille < tille@debian.org > Copyright © 2004 - 2023 Andreas Tille, Ben Armstrong, Emmanouil Kiagias Copyright This manual is Free Software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.0, or (at your option) any later version. This is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but without any warranty ; without even the implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. See the GNU General Public License for more details. A copy of the GNU General Public License is available on the World Wide Web at http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html . You can also obtain it by writing to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110, USA. You can find the source of this article in the Git repository at salsa.debian.org . It is also available as Debian package blends-doc . A printable version in PDF format will be built from time to time. Revision History Revision v1 01 Nov 2023 Abstract This paper is intended for people who are interested in the philosophy of Debian Pure Blends (in short "Blends" if it is used clearly in internal Debian context), and the technique that is used to manage those projects. For those who are familiar with the concept of Custom Debian Distributions: We just found a new name for this concept because the old name just not expressed what actually is done. It is explained in detail why Blends are not forks from Debian, but reside completely inside the Debian GNU/Linux distribution, and which advantages can be enjoyed by taking this approach. The concept of metapackages and user role based menus is explained. In short: This document describes why Debian Pure Blends are important to the vitality and quality of Debian. Table of Contents 1. Introduction 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? 2.1. What is Debian? 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) 2.3. Differences from other distributions 2.4. Debian Pure Blends 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system 2.5.1. Technical 2.5.2. Philosophical 2.6. Further resources about Blends 3. General ideas 3.1. Looking beyond 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software 3.4. General problem 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server 5. Distributions inside Debian 5.1. To fork or not to fork 5.1.1. Commercial forks 5.1.2. Non-commercial forks 5.1.3. Disadvantages of separate distribution 5.1.4. Advantages of integration into Debian 5.1.5. Enhancing Debian 5.2. Adaptation to any purpose 6. Technology 6.1. Metapackages 6.1.1. Metapackage definition 6.1.2. Collection of specific software 6.1.3. Packages showing up in more than one metapackage 6.1.4. Adapted configuration inside metapackages 6.1.5. Documentation packages 6.2. Handling of metapackages 6.2.1. Command line tools 6.2.2. Text user interfaces 6.2.3. Graphical user interfaces 6.2.4. Web interfaces 6.2.5. Future handling of metapackages 6.3. User roles 6.3.1. User menu tools 6.4. Development tools 6.5. Dealing with name space pollution 7. How to start a Debian Pure Blend 7.1. Planning to form a Debian Pure Blend 7.1.1. Leadership 7.1.2. Defining the scope of the Blend 7.1.3. Initial discussion 7.2. Setting up 7.2.1. Mailing list 7.2.2. Web space 7.2.3. Repository 7.2.4. Formal announcement 7.2.5. Explaining the project 7.3. Project structure 7.3.1. Sub-setting Debian 7.3.2. Using tasksel and metapackages 7.3.3. Adding new "normal" packages 7.4. First release 7.4.1. Release announcement 7.4.2. Users of a Debian Pure Blend 8. The web sentinel 8.1. Existing and prospective packages 8.2. Tasks files controlling web sentinel content 8.2.1. Configuring Web Sentinel pages per Blend 8.2.2. Debian Description Translation Project 8.2.3. Features of the web sentinel tasks pages 8.3. Bugs overview 8.4. Versions in stable / testing / unstable / new / VCS upstream 8.5. Quality assurance report 9. To do 9.1. Establishing and using communication platforms 9.2. Enhancing visibility 9.2.1. Debian Pure Blends web pages 9.3. Debian Package Tags 9.4. Enhancing basic technologies regarding Debian Pure Blends 9.5. Building Live CDs of each Debian Pure Blend 9.6. New way to distribute Debian A. Description of development tools A.1. Package blends-dev A.1.1. Blend -tasks.desc A.1.2. debian/control A.1.3. statusdump A.1.4. changelogentry A.1.5. Apt sources.list files in /etc/blends/ A.1.6. Templates in /usr/share/blends/templates A.2. Package blends-common A.2.1. blend-role (8) A.2.2. blend-update-menus (8) A.2.3. blend-user (8) A.2.4. blends.conf (5) A.3. How to develop new normal packages in Pure Blends A.4. Working with the source repository in Git A.5. How to create tasks and bugs pages of web sentinel A.6. Editing static web pages of Blends on blends.debian.org A.7. Description how Blends relevant data are gathered and stored A.7.1. Packages in Debian ftp new queue A.7.2. Machine readable data in Git repositories of Blends and some packaging teams B. Quick intro into building metapackages B.1. Defining dependencies for metapackages B.2. The packaging directory B.3. The common metapackage B.4. The metapackage menus B.5. Menu for any dependency C. Using the Bug Tracking System C.1. How to ask for packages which are not yet included C.2. How to report problems D. FAQ D.1. How can I add a dependency? D.2. What additional information should be provided? D.3. Should I add binary or source packages? D.4. Should I add a library package to a user task? D.5. Can I create a new task if the existing ones do not fit? D.6. Why not simply use a Wiki? D.7. Why not simply using DebTags?       Next      Chapter 1. Introduction
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http://rb.zq1.de/compare.factory-20250731/
Index of /compare.factory-20250731 Index of /compare.factory-20250731 Name Last modified Size Description Parent Directory   -   build-compare-differed-builds-nachbau.txt 2025-07-31 19:03 11K   build-compare-differed-builds.txt 2025-07-31 19:03 2.1K   build-time.txt 2025-07-31 19:04 275K   build-verify-failed.txt 2025-07-31 19:03 11K   checksums.txt 2025-07-31 19:03 29M   differed-builds-nachbau.txt 2025-07-31 19:03 15K   differed-builds.txt 2025-07-31 19:03 3.2K   diffs/ 2025-08-20 12:48 -   failchecklist 2025-07-31 19:03 1.0K   failed-builds.txt 2025-07-31 19:03 1.0K   fast-builds.txt 2018-02-06 21:44 137K   giturls 2022-06-30 19:37 2.0M   giturls.good 2022-07-25 21:50 603K   graph.png 2025-07-31 19:08 11K   j3.swp 2025-03-25 06:49 0   minor-differed-builds.txt 2025-07-31 19:03 1.1K   monthlyurl.txt 2025-07-02 10:21 5.5K   nachbau.swo 2025-01-11 19:20 0   nachbau.swp 2025-01-11 19:20 0   nachbaunew.swp 2025-03-14 20:17 0   oscpr 2025-07-31 10:48 415K   oscpr.failed 2025-07-31 19:03 405   rb-class-a.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 442K   rb-class-dvi.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 860   rb-class-edj.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 2.4K   rb-class-elc.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 26K   rb-class-gem.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 0   rb-class-html.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 17M   rb-class-jar.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 46K   rb-class-javadoc.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 92   rb-class-mono.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 30   rb-class-pdf.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 1.3K   rb-class-png.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 13K   rb-class-ps.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 1.0K   rb-class-pyc.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 6.5K   rb-class-so.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 43K   rb-class-svg.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 1.4K   rb-class-tar.gz.txt 2025-07-31 19:08 0   rbbuild-tried.txt 2024-02-26 21:01 214K   rbplot.csv 2025-07-31 19:07 49K   rbstats.txt 2025-07-31 19:03 358   report-202009.txt 2020-10-01 15:54 1.4K   report-202010.txt 2020-10-30 06:27 1.6K   report-202011.txt 2020-11-28 01:18 1.6K   report-202012.txt 2020-12-31 13:46 1.5K   report-202101.txt 2021-01-29 15:17 1.5K   report-202102.txt 2021-02-27 07:17 1.6K   report-202103.txt 2021-03-28 11:24 1.1K   report-202104.txt 2021-04-29 03:40 2.1K   report-202105.txt 2021-06-01 05:52 1.8K   report-202106.txt 2021-06-30 09:54 1.6K   report-202107.txt 2021-07-30 12:07 1.2K   report-202108.txt 2021-08-30 18:31 1.3K   report-202109.txt 2021-09-30 19:55 1.3K   report-202110.txt 2021-10-31 11:20 1.1K   report-202111.txt 2021-11-30 20:43 1.1K   report-202112.txt 2021-12-31 20:19 1.3K   report-202201.txt 2022-01-31 13:53 1.1K   report-202203.txt 2022-03-31 22:21 1.5K   report-202204.txt 2022-04-28 15:12 2.4K   report-202205.txt 2022-06-01 16:52 2.1K   report-202206.txt 2022-07-04 19:48 1.3K   report-202207.txt 2022-07-31 21:29 5.5K   report-202208.txt 2022-09-01 21:02 4.7K   report-202209.txt 2022-10-05 12:29 4.8K   report-202210.txt 2022-11-03 19:52 4.0K   report-202212.txt 2023-01-09 13:12 12K   report-202301.txt 2023-01-31 09:40 11K   report-202301.txt.in 2023-01-31 09:40 934   report-202302.txt 2023-03-01 15:37 6.4K   report-202302.txt.in 2023-03-01 13:51 52   report-202303.txt 2023-04-02 18:50 5.5K   report-202303.txt.in 2023-04-02 19:32 120   report-202305.txt.in 2023-05-12 09:16 6   report-202306.txt.in 2023-06-30 14:11 402   report-202307.txt.in 2023-07-31 15:12 859   report-202308.txt.in 2023-08-30 09:06 261   report-202401.txt.in 2024-01-31 14:36 82   report-202402.txt.in 2024-02-28 13:31 80   report-202403.txt.in 2024-03-31 18:47 555   report-202404.txt.in 2024-04-30 08:06 874   report-202405.txt.in 2024-05-31 14:33 77   report-202406.txt.in 2024-06-30 21:48 311   report-202407.txt.in 2024-07-31 09:51 2.2K   report-202408.txt.in 2024-09-04 09:07 2.7K   report-202409.txt.in 2024-10-02 12:37 1.5K   report-202410.txt.in 2024-10-30 14:58 816   report-202411.txt 2024-11-29 17:26 11K   report-202411.txt.in 2024-11-29 17:25 493   report-202412.txt.in 2024-12-30 21:03 1.6K   report-202501.txt 2025-01-31 11:34 13K   report-202501.txt.in 2025-01-31 10:24 2.1K   report-202502.txt 2025-02-28 08:39 12K   report-202502.txt.in 2025-02-28 08:39 894   report-202503.txt.in 2025-03-31 21:14 958   report-202504.txt.in 2025-04-30 07:34 243   report-202505.txt.in 2025-05-29 07:59 917   report-202506.txt.in 2025-07-02 09:48 547   report-202507.txt.in 2025-07-31 18:33 232   report.txt 2025-07-31 19:05 9.0K   reproducible.json 2025-07-31 19:04 6.7M   status-FTBFS-builds.txt 2024-02-26 21:01 1.4K   status-notforus-builds.txt 2024-02-26 21:01 3.9K   status-succeeded-builds.txt 2024-02-26 21:01 209K   status-waitdep-builds.txt 2024-02-26 21:01 168   timebombs 2025-07-22 09:13 5.6K   unreproduciblerings.txt 2025-07-31 19:04 412  
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https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch02.html#Blends
Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Table of Contents 2.1. What is Debian? 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) 2.3. Differences from other distributions 2.4. Debian Pure Blends 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system 2.5.1. Technical 2.5.2. Philosophical 2.6. Further resources about Blends 2.1. What is Debian? The core of an operating system is a piece of software that interacts with the hardware of the computer, and provides basic functionality for several applications. On Linux based systems, the so-called kernel provides this functionality, and the term Linux just means this core without those applications that provide the functionality for users. Other examples are the Hurd, or the flavours of the BSD kernel. Many applications around UNIX-like kernels are provided by the GNU system. That is why Linux based operating systems are described as GNU/Linux systems. The GNU tools around the Linux kernel build a complete operating system. Users do not need only an operating system. They also need certain applications like web servers, or office suites. A distribution is a collection of software packages around the GNU/Linux operating system that satisfies the needs of the target user group. There are general distributions, which try to support all users, and there are several specialised distributions, which each target a special group of users. Distributors are those companies that are building these collections of software around the GNU/Linux operating system. Because it is Free Software, the user who buys a distribution pays for the service that the distributor is providing. These services might be: Preparing a useful collection of software around GNU/Linux. Caring for smooth installation that the target user is able to manage. Providing software updates and security fixes. Writing documentation and translations to enable the user to use the distribution with maximum effect. Selling Boxes with ready to install CDs and printed documentation. Offering training and qualification. Most distributors ship their distribution in binary packages. Two package formats are widely used: RPM (RedHat Package Manager) which is supported by RedHat, SuSE and others. DEB (Debian Package) used by Debian and derived distributions. All GNU/Linux distributions have a certain amount of common ground, and the Linux Standard Base (LSB) is attempting to develop and promote a set of standards that will increase compatibility among Linux distributions, and enable software applications to run on any compliant system. The very essence of any distribution, (whether delivered as RPMs, DEBs, Source tarballs or ports) is the choice of policy statements made (or not made, as the case may be) by the creators of the distribution. Policy statements in this sense are things like "configuration files live in /etc/$package/$package.conf , logfiles go to /var/log/$package/$package.log and the documentation files can be found in /usr/share/doc/$package ." The policy statements are followed by the tool-chains and libraries used to build the software, and the lists of dependencies, which dictate the prerequisites and order in which the software has to be built and installed. (It's easier to ride a bicycle if you put the wheels on first. ;-) ) It is this adherence to policy that causes a distribution to remain consistent within its own bounds. At the same time, this is the reason why packages can not always be safely installed across distribution boundaries. A SuSE package.rpm might not play well with a RedHat package.rpm , although the packages work perfectly well within their own distributions. A similar compatibility problem could also apply to packages from the same distributor, but from a different version or generation of the distribution. AT: The context is somehow missing here. As you will see later in more detail, Debian Pure Blends are just a modified ruleset for producing a modified (specialised) version of Debian GNU/Linux. A package management system is a very strong tool to manage software packages on your computer. A large amount of the work of a distributor is building these software packages. Distributors you might know are RedHat , SuSE , Ubuntu and others. Debian is just one of them. Well, at least this is what people who do not know Debian well might think about it. But, in fact, Debian is a different kind of distribution ... 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) The Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made common cause to create a free operating system. This operating system that we have created is called Debian GNU/Linux , or simply Debian for short. Moreover, work is in progress to provide Debian of kernels other than Linux, primarily for the Hurd. Other possible kernels are the flavours of BSD, and there are even people who think about ports to MS Windows. All members of the Debian project are connected in a web of trust , which is woven by signing GPG keys. One requirement to become a member of the Debian project is to have a GPG key signed by a Debian developer. Every time one Debian developer meets another developer for the first time, they sign each other's keys. In this way, the web of trust is woven. 2.3. Differences from other distributions Debian is not a company, but an organisation. It does not sell anything. Debian members are volunteers. Maintainers are working on the common goal: to build the best operating system they can achieve. Debian maintains the largest collection of ready-to-install Free Software on the Internet. There are two ways to obtain Debian GNU/Linux: Buy it from some other distributor on CD. Perhaps the correct term would be re distributor. Because Debian is free, anybody can build his own distribution based on it, sell CDs, and even add new features, such as printed documentation, more software, support for different installers and more. Download Debian from the web for free. The latter is the common way, and there are really great tools to do it this way. Certainly it is always possible to copy Debian from a friend. 2.4. Debian Pure Blends Debian contains nearly 22.000 binary packages, and this number is constantly increasing. There is no single user who needs all these packages (even if conflicting packages are not considered). The normal user is interested in a subset of these packages. But how does the user find out which packages are really interesting? One solution is provided by the tasksel package. It provides a reasonable selection of quite general tasks that can be accomplished using a set of packages installed on a Debian GNU/Linux system. But this is not really fine grained, and does not address all of the needs of user groups with special interests. Debian Pure Blends - in short Blends if used clearly in the Debian internal context which makes "Pure" and "Debian" obvious - which were formerly known as Custom Debian Distributions (this name was confusing because it left to much room for speculation that this might be something else than Debian) try to provide a solution for special groups of target users with different skills and interests . Not only do they provide handy collections of specific program packages, but they also ease installation and configuration for the intended purpose. Debian Pure Blends are not forks from Debian. As the new name says clearly they are pure Debian and just provide a specific flavour. So if you obtain the complete Debian GNU/Linux distribution, you have all available Debian Pure Blends included. The concept of what is called Blend in Debian is also known in other distributions. For instance in Fedora there are Special Interest Groups (SIGs) even if some SIGs in Fedora are what in Debian is known as internal project because it is focused on technical implementations and not on user-oriented applications. 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system Not necessarily all currently existing Blends are actually providing installation media (live media or installer). The reason for this is that such installation media are not always necessary / wanted. You can just install plain Debian and install some metapackages on top of it. However, the metapackage approach makes the creation of installation media quite simple by using Debian Live . Here are some reasons for this approach compared to a remastering strategy. 2.5.1. Technical The process for creation of a blend involves starting with a Debian or derivative repository and creating an image directly from that (live, install or otherwise) that contains a selection of material from that repository delivered in such a way that it is usable by a particular target user for a particular purpose with a minimum of effort. By contrast, the process of remastering generally involves first downloading an image produced by the parent distro (live, install or otherwise,) then tearing it apart and reassembling it with your customizations applied. 2.5.2. Philosophical The blends philosophy is to work as closely with the parent distro as possible. If possible, the project should be done entirely within the distro as a subproject, containing only material supplied by the parent distro. We call this a "Pure Blend". The remastering philosophy (if it can be called that) seems to be "whatever works" and involves little or no interaction with the parent distro. It's a lazy approach used by people who have newly discovered that they can hack images to make them into custom images to make something uniquely theirs. Probably fine for quick-and-dirty results, but hard to support in the long run. The users of a blend are served better than the users of a remaster because of the following advantages: 2.5.2.1. Technical advantage A new version of a well-crafted blend ought to be able to be produced at any time directly from the repository simply by building it; the user has some assurance that the resulting system remains 'untainted' by hacking it up with scripts that 'damage' the original system by removing files from packages, changing files in packages, etc. something that hurts maintainability / support for such a system. 2.5.2.2. Community advantage A blend project aims to leverage support resources from the existing community to serve some sub-community within it. They accomplish this by not violating Debian packaging policy, producing something that is either pure Debian (a "pure blend") or Debian + additional packages, rather than some frankendistro artlessly stitched together from someone else's distro with scripts that change things everywhere with no regard to policy. Thus, normal support channels can be used with a pure blend since what you end up with is not a derivative at all, but just Debian, set up and ready to go for whatever you wanted to use it for. 2.6. Further resources about Blends Wiki https://wiki.debian.org/DebianPureBlends Mailing list https://lists.debian.org/debian-blends/ IRC #debian-blends irc://irc.debian.org/debian-blends Prev       Next Chapter 1. Introduction  Home  Chapter 3. General ideas
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://opensuse.org
openSUSE - Free Linux operating systems for desktops, servers and containers Make your old Windows 10 PC fast and secure again! News Desktop OS Server OS Make your old Windows 10 PC fast and secure again!   News Desktop OS Server OS Change language X العربية Български Català Čeština Dansk Deutsch Ελληνικά English Español Español latinoamericano Eesti فارسی Suomi Français Galego हिन्दी Magyar Indonesia Íslenska Italiano 日本語 Kabyle ខ្មែរ 한국어 Lietuvių Norsk bokmål Nederlands Norwegian nynorsk Polski Português Português Português europeu Română Русский Slovenčina Slovenščina Svenska Türkçe Tiếng Việt ไทย Central atlas tamazight Українська Walloon 简体中文 繁體中文 繁體中文 Embrace the chameleon openSUSE makes open source Linux operating systems for desktops, servers and containers. Lean back while our installer does the work Deep dives into wikis and forums are completely optional. Free to use, with no strings attached Yours to keep with no upsells, ads or mandatory accounts. Available in several different flavors Rolling release? Immutable distro? We've got you covered. Opt-in access to proprietary packages Restricted codecs and drivers are available when needed. Regular international community events Share the joy of openSUSE with fellow users at our meetups . Industry-backed and community-supported We're here to stay, thanks to our sponsors and community. Installer options KDE, GNOME and XFCE Desktop and server configurations Full disk encryption Btrfs with snapshots LVM partitioning Secure Boot Most popular flavors Leap Stable release distro Tumbleweed Rolling release distro Specialized flavors Leap Micro Immutable stable release distro (server-only) Slowroll Experimental Slower paced rolling release MicroOS Immutable rolling release distro (server-only) Kalpa Experimental Immutable rolling release (KDE desktop) Looking for an immutable rolling release GNOME desktop? Check out the Aeon project . Main Main site Software Wiki Documentation Forums Development Build Service Bugzilla GitHub openQA Weblate Kernel Information News Events Logo/Trademark Planet Shop Status Community Code of Conduct IRC Channels Mailing Lists Facebook Group Telegram Group Reddit Other MicroOS Unofficial Guide Mirrors © 2015-2026 openSUSE Contributors Imprint Privacy policy
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://developer.apple.com/programs/enterprise/
Apple Developer Enterprise Program - Apple Developer View in English Global Nav Open Menu Global Nav Close Menu Apple Developer Search Cancel Apple Developer News Discover Design Develop Distribute Support Account Cancel Only search within “ ” Quick Links 5 Quick Links Apple Developer Enterprise Program The Apple Developer Enterprise Program allows large organizations to develop and deploy proprietary, internal-use apps to their employees. This program is for specific use cases that require private distribution directly to employees using secure internal systems or through a Mobile Device Management solution. Eligibility The Apple Developer Enterprise Program is only for the internal use and distribution of proprietary apps in specific use cases that are not adequately addressed with public apps on the App Store, custom apps through Apple Business Manager or Ad Hoc distribution, or beta testing through TestFlight. Your proprietary app must be developed by you for use on Apple platforms. In addition, the following eligibility requirements apply. Your organization must: Have 100 or more employees. Be a legal entity. We do not accept DBAs, fictitious businesses, trade names, or branches. Use the program only to create proprietary, in-house apps for internal use, and to distribute these apps privately and securely to employees within the organization. Have systems in place to ensure only employees can download your internal-use apps, and to protect membership credentials and assets. Participate in and pass Apple’s verification interview and continuous evaluation process. Applying Application As the person applying to the Apple Developer Enterprise Program on behalf of your organization, you must have the legal authority to bind your organization to legal agreements. You must be the organization’s owner/founder, executive team member, senior project lead, or have legal authority granted to you by a senior employee. To start your application, sign in with your Apple Account with two-factor authentication turned on. If you’re already enrolled in the Apple Developer Program for distributing apps on the App Store, or have an iTunes Connect account for distributing another media type (music, TV, movies, or books), you will need to use a different Apple Account. Verification Verification is conducted to authenticate your organization’s information, to validate your intended use of the program, and to ensure that the App Store, Apple Business Manager, Ad Hoc distribution, or TestFlight would not adequately meet your needs. Your organization must have a D-U-N-S Number, which is a unique nine-digit number assigned by Dun & Bradstreet and widely used as a standard business identifier. You can check to see if your organization already has a D-U-N-S Number and request one if necessary. They are free in most jurisdictions. Your organization must also have a publicly available website with a domain name that’s associated with your organization. In addition, we may contact your organization to verify other details and continue to evaluate your use of the program. If you choose to renew your membership, your organization will be verified again. Apple reserves the right to reject your application at its sole discretion. Agreement and Payment If your organization is approved for membership in the Apple Developer Enterprise Program, you will receive the enterprise program license agreement for review and acceptance. The Apple Developer Enterprise Program is 299 USD per membership year or in local currency where available. Getting Started The Apple Developer Program allows you to distribute public apps on the App Store, beta versions of apps through TestFlight, and custom apps to specific businesses, including your organization, through Apple Business Manager or Ad Hoc distribution. The Apple Developer Enterprise Program is only for specific use cases that are not addressed with these options. Before applying, use the drop down below to find out which program is best for you. What types of apps will you distribute? Select an option Apps for the public (including non-custom business apps) Custom apps for specific business clients Proprietary apps for internal use within my organization Please enroll in the Apple Developer Program instead. You’ll get access to resources for public app distribution on the App Store, distribution through Apple Business Manager, Ad Hoc distribution, and beta testing through TestFlight. Learn about the Apple Developer Program Please enroll in the Apple Developer Program instead. You’ll get access to resources for custom app distribution through Apple Business Manager, Ad Hoc distribution, beta testing through TestFlight, and public app distribution. Your customer can use Apple Business Manager or redemption codes to privately distribute custom apps. (Note: If you’re an organization purchasing an app that has been customized for you, simply create an account to access the app on Apple Business Manager. You do not need to join a developer program.) Learn about the Apple Developer Program Please learn about the Apple Developer Program first. The Apple Developer Program is the right option for most organizations that want to distribute proprietary, internal-use apps. It allows you to use Apple Business Manager, Ad Hoc distribution, or redemption codes to privately distribute custom apps to employees, and TestFlight to test beta versions of your apps. The Apple Developer Enterprise Program is only for specific use cases that cannot be addressed using these methods. Before applying for the Apple Developer Enterprise Program, learn more about the Apple Developer Program to see if it addresses your use case. If not, you can start your application. 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2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch02.html#remastered
Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Table of Contents 2.1. What is Debian? 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) 2.3. Differences from other distributions 2.4. Debian Pure Blends 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system 2.5.1. Technical 2.5.2. Philosophical 2.6. Further resources about Blends 2.1. What is Debian? The core of an operating system is a piece of software that interacts with the hardware of the computer, and provides basic functionality for several applications. On Linux based systems, the so-called kernel provides this functionality, and the term Linux just means this core without those applications that provide the functionality for users. Other examples are the Hurd, or the flavours of the BSD kernel. Many applications around UNIX-like kernels are provided by the GNU system. That is why Linux based operating systems are described as GNU/Linux systems. The GNU tools around the Linux kernel build a complete operating system. Users do not need only an operating system. They also need certain applications like web servers, or office suites. A distribution is a collection of software packages around the GNU/Linux operating system that satisfies the needs of the target user group. There are general distributions, which try to support all users, and there are several specialised distributions, which each target a special group of users. Distributors are those companies that are building these collections of software around the GNU/Linux operating system. Because it is Free Software, the user who buys a distribution pays for the service that the distributor is providing. These services might be: Preparing a useful collection of software around GNU/Linux. Caring for smooth installation that the target user is able to manage. Providing software updates and security fixes. Writing documentation and translations to enable the user to use the distribution with maximum effect. Selling Boxes with ready to install CDs and printed documentation. Offering training and qualification. Most distributors ship their distribution in binary packages. Two package formats are widely used: RPM (RedHat Package Manager) which is supported by RedHat, SuSE and others. DEB (Debian Package) used by Debian and derived distributions. All GNU/Linux distributions have a certain amount of common ground, and the Linux Standard Base (LSB) is attempting to develop and promote a set of standards that will increase compatibility among Linux distributions, and enable software applications to run on any compliant system. The very essence of any distribution, (whether delivered as RPMs, DEBs, Source tarballs or ports) is the choice of policy statements made (or not made, as the case may be) by the creators of the distribution. Policy statements in this sense are things like "configuration files live in /etc/$package/$package.conf , logfiles go to /var/log/$package/$package.log and the documentation files can be found in /usr/share/doc/$package ." The policy statements are followed by the tool-chains and libraries used to build the software, and the lists of dependencies, which dictate the prerequisites and order in which the software has to be built and installed. (It's easier to ride a bicycle if you put the wheels on first. ;-) ) It is this adherence to policy that causes a distribution to remain consistent within its own bounds. At the same time, this is the reason why packages can not always be safely installed across distribution boundaries. A SuSE package.rpm might not play well with a RedHat package.rpm , although the packages work perfectly well within their own distributions. A similar compatibility problem could also apply to packages from the same distributor, but from a different version or generation of the distribution. AT: The context is somehow missing here. As you will see later in more detail, Debian Pure Blends are just a modified ruleset for producing a modified (specialised) version of Debian GNU/Linux. A package management system is a very strong tool to manage software packages on your computer. A large amount of the work of a distributor is building these software packages. Distributors you might know are RedHat , SuSE , Ubuntu and others. Debian is just one of them. Well, at least this is what people who do not know Debian well might think about it. But, in fact, Debian is a different kind of distribution ... 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) The Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made common cause to create a free operating system. This operating system that we have created is called Debian GNU/Linux , or simply Debian for short. Moreover, work is in progress to provide Debian of kernels other than Linux, primarily for the Hurd. Other possible kernels are the flavours of BSD, and there are even people who think about ports to MS Windows. All members of the Debian project are connected in a web of trust , which is woven by signing GPG keys. One requirement to become a member of the Debian project is to have a GPG key signed by a Debian developer. Every time one Debian developer meets another developer for the first time, they sign each other's keys. In this way, the web of trust is woven. 2.3. Differences from other distributions Debian is not a company, but an organisation. It does not sell anything. Debian members are volunteers. Maintainers are working on the common goal: to build the best operating system they can achieve. Debian maintains the largest collection of ready-to-install Free Software on the Internet. There are two ways to obtain Debian GNU/Linux: Buy it from some other distributor on CD. Perhaps the correct term would be re distributor. Because Debian is free, anybody can build his own distribution based on it, sell CDs, and even add new features, such as printed documentation, more software, support for different installers and more. Download Debian from the web for free. The latter is the common way, and there are really great tools to do it this way. Certainly it is always possible to copy Debian from a friend. 2.4. Debian Pure Blends Debian contains nearly 22.000 binary packages, and this number is constantly increasing. There is no single user who needs all these packages (even if conflicting packages are not considered). The normal user is interested in a subset of these packages. But how does the user find out which packages are really interesting? One solution is provided by the tasksel package. It provides a reasonable selection of quite general tasks that can be accomplished using a set of packages installed on a Debian GNU/Linux system. But this is not really fine grained, and does not address all of the needs of user groups with special interests. Debian Pure Blends - in short Blends if used clearly in the Debian internal context which makes "Pure" and "Debian" obvious - which were formerly known as Custom Debian Distributions (this name was confusing because it left to much room for speculation that this might be something else than Debian) try to provide a solution for special groups of target users with different skills and interests . Not only do they provide handy collections of specific program packages, but they also ease installation and configuration for the intended purpose. Debian Pure Blends are not forks from Debian. As the new name says clearly they are pure Debian and just provide a specific flavour. So if you obtain the complete Debian GNU/Linux distribution, you have all available Debian Pure Blends included. The concept of what is called Blend in Debian is also known in other distributions. For instance in Fedora there are Special Interest Groups (SIGs) even if some SIGs in Fedora are what in Debian is known as internal project because it is focused on technical implementations and not on user-oriented applications. 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system Not necessarily all currently existing Blends are actually providing installation media (live media or installer). The reason for this is that such installation media are not always necessary / wanted. You can just install plain Debian and install some metapackages on top of it. However, the metapackage approach makes the creation of installation media quite simple by using Debian Live . Here are some reasons for this approach compared to a remastering strategy. 2.5.1. Technical The process for creation of a blend involves starting with a Debian or derivative repository and creating an image directly from that (live, install or otherwise) that contains a selection of material from that repository delivered in such a way that it is usable by a particular target user for a particular purpose with a minimum of effort. By contrast, the process of remastering generally involves first downloading an image produced by the parent distro (live, install or otherwise,) then tearing it apart and reassembling it with your customizations applied. 2.5.2. Philosophical The blends philosophy is to work as closely with the parent distro as possible. If possible, the project should be done entirely within the distro as a subproject, containing only material supplied by the parent distro. We call this a "Pure Blend". The remastering philosophy (if it can be called that) seems to be "whatever works" and involves little or no interaction with the parent distro. It's a lazy approach used by people who have newly discovered that they can hack images to make them into custom images to make something uniquely theirs. Probably fine for quick-and-dirty results, but hard to support in the long run. The users of a blend are served better than the users of a remaster because of the following advantages: 2.5.2.1. Technical advantage A new version of a well-crafted blend ought to be able to be produced at any time directly from the repository simply by building it; the user has some assurance that the resulting system remains 'untainted' by hacking it up with scripts that 'damage' the original system by removing files from packages, changing files in packages, etc. something that hurts maintainability / support for such a system. 2.5.2.2. Community advantage A blend project aims to leverage support resources from the existing community to serve some sub-community within it. They accomplish this by not violating Debian packaging policy, producing something that is either pure Debian (a "pure blend") or Debian + additional packages, rather than some frankendistro artlessly stitched together from someone else's distro with scripts that change things everywhere with no regard to policy. Thus, normal support channels can be used with a pure blend since what you end up with is not a derivative at all, but just Debian, set up and ready to go for whatever you wanted to use it for. 2.6. Further resources about Blends Wiki https://wiki.debian.org/DebianPureBlends Mailing list https://lists.debian.org/debian-blends/ IRC #debian-blends irc://irc.debian.org/debian-blends Prev       Next Chapter 1. Introduction  Home  Chapter 3. General ideas
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch02.html#resources
Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Table of Contents 2.1. What is Debian? 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) 2.3. Differences from other distributions 2.4. Debian Pure Blends 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system 2.5.1. Technical 2.5.2. Philosophical 2.6. Further resources about Blends 2.1. What is Debian? The core of an operating system is a piece of software that interacts with the hardware of the computer, and provides basic functionality for several applications. On Linux based systems, the so-called kernel provides this functionality, and the term Linux just means this core without those applications that provide the functionality for users. Other examples are the Hurd, or the flavours of the BSD kernel. Many applications around UNIX-like kernels are provided by the GNU system. That is why Linux based operating systems are described as GNU/Linux systems. The GNU tools around the Linux kernel build a complete operating system. Users do not need only an operating system. They also need certain applications like web servers, or office suites. A distribution is a collection of software packages around the GNU/Linux operating system that satisfies the needs of the target user group. There are general distributions, which try to support all users, and there are several specialised distributions, which each target a special group of users. Distributors are those companies that are building these collections of software around the GNU/Linux operating system. Because it is Free Software, the user who buys a distribution pays for the service that the distributor is providing. These services might be: Preparing a useful collection of software around GNU/Linux. Caring for smooth installation that the target user is able to manage. Providing software updates and security fixes. Writing documentation and translations to enable the user to use the distribution with maximum effect. Selling Boxes with ready to install CDs and printed documentation. Offering training and qualification. Most distributors ship their distribution in binary packages. Two package formats are widely used: RPM (RedHat Package Manager) which is supported by RedHat, SuSE and others. DEB (Debian Package) used by Debian and derived distributions. All GNU/Linux distributions have a certain amount of common ground, and the Linux Standard Base (LSB) is attempting to develop and promote a set of standards that will increase compatibility among Linux distributions, and enable software applications to run on any compliant system. The very essence of any distribution, (whether delivered as RPMs, DEBs, Source tarballs or ports) is the choice of policy statements made (or not made, as the case may be) by the creators of the distribution. Policy statements in this sense are things like "configuration files live in /etc/$package/$package.conf , logfiles go to /var/log/$package/$package.log and the documentation files can be found in /usr/share/doc/$package ." The policy statements are followed by the tool-chains and libraries used to build the software, and the lists of dependencies, which dictate the prerequisites and order in which the software has to be built and installed. (It's easier to ride a bicycle if you put the wheels on first. ;-) ) It is this adherence to policy that causes a distribution to remain consistent within its own bounds. At the same time, this is the reason why packages can not always be safely installed across distribution boundaries. A SuSE package.rpm might not play well with a RedHat package.rpm , although the packages work perfectly well within their own distributions. A similar compatibility problem could also apply to packages from the same distributor, but from a different version or generation of the distribution. AT: The context is somehow missing here. As you will see later in more detail, Debian Pure Blends are just a modified ruleset for producing a modified (specialised) version of Debian GNU/Linux. A package management system is a very strong tool to manage software packages on your computer. A large amount of the work of a distributor is building these software packages. Distributors you might know are RedHat , SuSE , Ubuntu and others. Debian is just one of them. Well, at least this is what people who do not know Debian well might think about it. But, in fact, Debian is a different kind of distribution ... 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) The Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made common cause to create a free operating system. This operating system that we have created is called Debian GNU/Linux , or simply Debian for short. Moreover, work is in progress to provide Debian of kernels other than Linux, primarily for the Hurd. Other possible kernels are the flavours of BSD, and there are even people who think about ports to MS Windows. All members of the Debian project are connected in a web of trust , which is woven by signing GPG keys. One requirement to become a member of the Debian project is to have a GPG key signed by a Debian developer. Every time one Debian developer meets another developer for the first time, they sign each other's keys. In this way, the web of trust is woven. 2.3. Differences from other distributions Debian is not a company, but an organisation. It does not sell anything. Debian members are volunteers. Maintainers are working on the common goal: to build the best operating system they can achieve. Debian maintains the largest collection of ready-to-install Free Software on the Internet. There are two ways to obtain Debian GNU/Linux: Buy it from some other distributor on CD. Perhaps the correct term would be re distributor. Because Debian is free, anybody can build his own distribution based on it, sell CDs, and even add new features, such as printed documentation, more software, support for different installers and more. Download Debian from the web for free. The latter is the common way, and there are really great tools to do it this way. Certainly it is always possible to copy Debian from a friend. 2.4. Debian Pure Blends Debian contains nearly 22.000 binary packages, and this number is constantly increasing. There is no single user who needs all these packages (even if conflicting packages are not considered). The normal user is interested in a subset of these packages. But how does the user find out which packages are really interesting? One solution is provided by the tasksel package. It provides a reasonable selection of quite general tasks that can be accomplished using a set of packages installed on a Debian GNU/Linux system. But this is not really fine grained, and does not address all of the needs of user groups with special interests. Debian Pure Blends - in short Blends if used clearly in the Debian internal context which makes "Pure" and "Debian" obvious - which were formerly known as Custom Debian Distributions (this name was confusing because it left to much room for speculation that this might be something else than Debian) try to provide a solution for special groups of target users with different skills and interests . Not only do they provide handy collections of specific program packages, but they also ease installation and configuration for the intended purpose. Debian Pure Blends are not forks from Debian. As the new name says clearly they are pure Debian and just provide a specific flavour. So if you obtain the complete Debian GNU/Linux distribution, you have all available Debian Pure Blends included. The concept of what is called Blend in Debian is also known in other distributions. For instance in Fedora there are Special Interest Groups (SIGs) even if some SIGs in Fedora are what in Debian is known as internal project because it is focused on technical implementations and not on user-oriented applications. 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system Not necessarily all currently existing Blends are actually providing installation media (live media or installer). The reason for this is that such installation media are not always necessary / wanted. You can just install plain Debian and install some metapackages on top of it. However, the metapackage approach makes the creation of installation media quite simple by using Debian Live . Here are some reasons for this approach compared to a remastering strategy. 2.5.1. Technical The process for creation of a blend involves starting with a Debian or derivative repository and creating an image directly from that (live, install or otherwise) that contains a selection of material from that repository delivered in such a way that it is usable by a particular target user for a particular purpose with a minimum of effort. By contrast, the process of remastering generally involves first downloading an image produced by the parent distro (live, install or otherwise,) then tearing it apart and reassembling it with your customizations applied. 2.5.2. Philosophical The blends philosophy is to work as closely with the parent distro as possible. If possible, the project should be done entirely within the distro as a subproject, containing only material supplied by the parent distro. We call this a "Pure Blend". The remastering philosophy (if it can be called that) seems to be "whatever works" and involves little or no interaction with the parent distro. It's a lazy approach used by people who have newly discovered that they can hack images to make them into custom images to make something uniquely theirs. Probably fine for quick-and-dirty results, but hard to support in the long run. The users of a blend are served better than the users of a remaster because of the following advantages: 2.5.2.1. Technical advantage A new version of a well-crafted blend ought to be able to be produced at any time directly from the repository simply by building it; the user has some assurance that the resulting system remains 'untainted' by hacking it up with scripts that 'damage' the original system by removing files from packages, changing files in packages, etc. something that hurts maintainability / support for such a system. 2.5.2.2. Community advantage A blend project aims to leverage support resources from the existing community to serve some sub-community within it. They accomplish this by not violating Debian packaging policy, producing something that is either pure Debian (a "pure blend") or Debian + additional packages, rather than some frankendistro artlessly stitched together from someone else's distro with scripts that change things everywhere with no regard to policy. Thus, normal support channels can be used with a pure blend since what you end up with is not a derivative at all, but just Debian, set up and ready to go for whatever you wanted to use it for. 2.6. Further resources about Blends Wiki https://wiki.debian.org/DebianPureBlends Mailing list https://lists.debian.org/debian-blends/ IRC #debian-blends irc://irc.debian.org/debian-blends Prev       Next Chapter 1. Introduction  Home  Chapter 3. General ideas
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://github.com/yarnpkg/berry/edit/master/packages/docusaurus/docs/getting-started/basics/intro.mdx
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2026-01-13T09:30:27
http://heisenbug.blogspot.com/2010/12/zipping-through-it.html
don't count on finding me: Zipping through it skip to main | skip to sidebar don't count on finding me Saturday, December 11, 2010 Zipping through it In my email conversation with Brandon prior to the release of thrist-0.2 , I told him that I did not come around implementing reverse thrists, and I showed how they arise naturally when doing computational passes over thrists: (((a, b), c), d) e (f, (g, (h, i))) . He asked me whether this has anything to do with zippers , which I answered to the affirmative, my previous ideogram being essentially a thrist zipper . As it maneuvers through the data structure it deconstructs the original thrist, places a new element into focus and zips together a left-associative structure behind. Visually it (kind of) corresponds to the zipper on your jacket. This post is dedicated to this versatile tool being applied to thrists to obtain an isomorphic data structure which I call the ThristZipper . As the ideogram demonstrates, this zipper consists of three parts: the left-associate thrist (usually holding the already visited portion), the focus element e , the (right-associative) thrist (usually to be iterated over). So first we have to define LeftThrist (this is how I prefer to call it). data LeftThrist :: (* → * → *) → * → * → * where   LeftNil :: LeftThrist k a a   LeftCons :: LeftThrist k a b → k b c → LeftThrist k a c Again, the types match up. Now we can define  ThristZipper : data ThristZipper :: (* → * → *) → * → * → * where   Focus :: LeftThrist k a b → k b c → Thrist k c d → ThristZipper k a d It remains to define all the operations on  ThristZipper that will make it a versatile tool. We start with zipInto : zipInto :: Thrist k a b → Maybe (ThristZipper k a b) zipInto Nil = Nothing zipInto (Cons e r) = Just (Focus LeftNil e r) We can similarly define  zipLeftInto , advancing , focus manipulation ,  maps , folds and getting out on the right or in the left. These are of course left as an exercise to the reader, but I will define retract (the opposite movement from advance ) here for good measure: retract :: ThristZipper k a b → Maybe (ThristZipper k a b) retract (Focus LeftNil _ _) = Nothing retract (Focus (LeftCons r e') e t) = Just (Focus r e' (Cons e t)) And a lot prettier in Ωmega ( svn HEAD ): retract (Focus []lt _ _) = Nothing retract (Focus [r; e']lt e t) = Just (Focus r e' [e; t]l) PS: I definitely plan to make all this part of thrist-1.0 when it arrives.  Posted by heisenbug at 4:23 AM Labels: haskell , omega , thrist No comments: Post a Comment Newer Post Older Post Home Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom) Blog Archive ►  2022 (1) ►  February (1) ►  2014 (5) ►  November (1) ►  October (1) ►  August (1) ►  July (1) ►  January (1) ►  2013 (5) ►  September (1) ►  August (3) ►  February (1) ►  2012 (2) ►  December (1) ►  September (1) ►  2011 (7) ►  December (1) ►  November (1) ►  October (1) ►  September (1) ►  August (1) ►  February (1) ►  January (1) ▼  2010 (19) ▼  December (5) Recently Implemented Syntax Extensions Singleton Types are the Key to Co-dependency Zipping through it The Sky was the Limit Es taut nicht ►  November (6) ►  October (1) ►  August (1) ►  July (2) ►  June (4) ►  2009 (12) ►  November (2) ►  October (1) ►  August (1) ►  June (1) ►  May (1) ►  March (4) ►  January (2) ►  2008 (22) ►  October (1) ►  September (3) ►  August (6) ►  July (3) ►  June (2) ►  May (1) ►  April (3) ►  March (1) ►  February (1) ►  January (1) ►  2007 (20) ►  December (2) ►  November (1) ►  October (1) ►  September (1) ►  August (1) ►  July (14) About Me heisenbug I am here and there. You may encounter me if you try, but no guarantees. Just a hint: I am mostly with my family. View my complete profile  
2026-01-13T09:30:27
http://rb.zq1.de/?C=M;O=A
Index of / Index of / Name Last modified Size Description README.txt 2017-04-10 22:24 161   robots.txt-20180625 2018-06-25 16:41 26   patches/ 2018-08-08 17:17 -   old/ 2018-09-28 05:45 -   compare.factory-20190113/ 2019-01-25 13:38 -   compare.factory-20190125/ 2019-02-11 09:27 -   compare.factory-20190211/ 2019-02-28 10:57 -   compare.factory-20190228/ 2019-03-14 13:47 -   compare.factory-20190314/ 2019-03-26 13:56 -   compare.factory-20190326/ 2019-04-05 14:03 -   pkg/ 2019-04-11 11:08 -   compare.factory-20190405/ 2019-04-29 12:43 -   compare.factory-20190429/ 2019-05-08 15:15 -   compare.factory-20190508/ 2019-05-28 11:18 -   compare.factory-20190528/ 2019-06-12 13:39 -   compare.factory-20190612/ 2019-06-26 13:43 -   compare.factory-20190626/ 2019-07-13 04:02 -   compare.factory-20190713/ 2019-07-26 10:51 -   compare.factory-20190726/ 2019-08-20 15:49 -   compare.factory-20190824/ 2019-09-26 09:15 -   compare.factory-20190926/ 2019-10-28 14:17 -   compare.factory-20191028/ 2019-11-29 14:45 -   compare.factory-20191129/ 2019-12-23 08:54 -   compare.factory-20191223/ 2020-01-27 10:14 -   images/ 2020-09-07 06:12 -   scripts/ 2021-06-01 05:06 -   compare.factory-2017.tar.zstd 2021-06-11 16:54 1.2G   compare.factory-2018.tar.zstd 2021-06-11 18:09 330M   compare.factory-2019.tar.zstd 2021-06-11 20:39 136M   compare.factory-20210531/ 2021-06-30 09:37 -   compare.factory-20210630/ 2021-07-30 12:09 -   compare.factory-20210328/ 2021-07-31 15:04 -   compare.factory-20210730/ 2021-08-30 17:13 -   compare.factory-20210227/ 2021-09-30 19:41 -   compare.factory-20210830/ 2021-09-30 19:41 -   compare.factory-20210129/ 2021-10-31 19:45 -   compare.factory-20210930/ 2021-10-31 19:45 -   presentation/ 2021-11-09 18:27 -   compare.factory-20220131/ 2022-01-31 14:10 -   compare.factory-20211130/ 2022-03-01 09:07 -   compare.factory-20220301/ 2022-03-01 10:33 -   compare.factory-20211031/ 2022-03-31 21:57 -   compare.factory-20220331/ 2022-04-28 15:51 -   compare.factory-20220428/ 2022-04-28 18:48 -   compare.factory-20220601/ 2022-06-01 16:56 -   compare.factory-20220704/ 2022-07-04 20:07 -   compare.factory-20220731/ 2022-07-31 21:35 -   compare.factory-20221005/ 2022-10-05 12:36 -   compare.factory-20221103/ 2022-11-03 21:42 -   compare.factory-20221212/ 2023-01-09 15:27 -   compare.factory-20230109/ 2023-01-09 15:27 -   compare.factory-20230131/ 2023-02-15 18:10 -   compare.factory-20230301/ 2023-03-01 15:44 -   compare.factory-20230402/ 2023-04-02 19:13 -   compare.factory-20230502/ 2023-04-12 12:06 -   leap/ 2023-06-08 15:11 -   compare.factory-20230602/ 2023-06-30 17:15 -   compare.factory-20230731/ 2023-07-31 16:25 -   compare.factory-20230830/ 2023-12-04 08:54 -   compare.factory-20231208/ 2023-12-08 09:15 -   compare.factory-20231209/ 2023-12-19 12:13 -   compare.factory-20231231/ 2024-01-30 10:59 -   compare.factory-20240131/ 2024-01-31 19:12 -   rbo/ 2024-03-05 12:38 -   compare.factory-2020.tar.zstd 2024-03-09 21:49 428M   compare.factory-20240228/ 2024-03-31 19:04 -   compare.factory-20240331/ 2024-03-31 19:08 -   spec/ 2024-03-31 20:13 -   sle/ 2024-05-23 13:58 -   compare.factory-20240430/ 2024-05-31 14:48 -   compare.factory-20240531/ 2024-05-31 14:51 -   compare.factory-20240731/ 2024-09-04 09:30 -   compare.factory-20240904/ 2024-09-16 15:18 -   compare.factory-20241002/ 2024-10-02 13:50 -   compare.factory-20220901/ 2024-10-30 16:17 -   compare.factory-20240630/ 2024-10-30 16:17 -   compare.factory-20230630/ 2024-10-30 16:17 -   compare.factory-20241030/ 2024-10-30 16:17 -   compare.factory-20241129/ 2024-11-29 17:34 -   rbos/ 2024-12-14 20:55 -   compare.factory-20241231/ 2025-01-30 07:53 -   compare.factory-20250131/ 2025-02-15 15:30 -   compare.factory-20250228/ 2025-03-31 21:29 -   compare.factory-20250331/ 2025-03-31 21:30 -   compare.factory-20250430/ 2025-04-30 11:47 -   compare.factory-20250529/ 2025-05-29 07:56 -   RBOS/ 2025-06-06 16:46 -   compare.factory-20250702/ 2025-07-02 09:48 -   temp/ 2025-07-29 11:53 -   compare.factory-20250731/ 2025-07-31 19:08 -   compare.factory-20250901/ 2025-09-01 15:46 -   compare.factory-20251001/ 2025-10-01 09:02 -   compare.factory-20251103/ 2025-11-03 12:18 -   other/ 2025-11-21 08:52 -   compare.factory-20251129/ 2025-11-29 20:37 -   compare.factory-20211231/ 2025-12-31 15:52 -   compare.factory-20210428/ 2025-12-31 15:52 -   compare.factory-20251231/ 2025-12-31 15:52 -   compare.factory/ 2025-12-31 15:52 -  
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://github.com/yarnpkg/berry/edit/master/packages/docusaurus/docs/features/security.mdx
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2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://tests.reproducible-builds.org/debian/forky/index_dd-list.html#mennucc1@debian.org
Maintainers of unreproducible packages in forky Debian navigation Change suite/architecture Tested suites: unstable forky trixie bookworm experimental Test results statistics Results for forky/amd64 Unreproducible packages: with notes without notes Other package states: package sets Recently tested packages: last 24h last 48h all tested packages packages with .buildinfo files packages without .buildinfo files Scheduled for amd64 Maintainers of in forky Reproducible Debian overview Development dashboard Past releases dashboard Categorized issues Bugs filed Variations tested Packages with notifications enabled ⚑ Repositories overview Backend related Broken pieces Documentation (eg. on manual scheduling) Performance stats Health monitoring node overview job overview daily graphs weekly graphs monthly graphs yearly graphs The Reproducible Builds project reproducible-builds.org Reproducible Builds - Docs • News Reproducible Builds in Debian - Wiki SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH specification reproduce.debian.net aims for 100% bit-for-bit identical rebuilds of Debian other CI tests Maintainers of unreproducible packages in forky The following maintainers and uploaders are listed for packages in forky which have built unreproducibly. Please note that the while the link always points to the amd64 version, it's possible thatthe unreproducibility is only present in another architecture(s). "Adam C. Powell, IV" <hazelsct@debian.org> ¶ med-fichier (U) mpich (U) mumps (U) petsc (U) slepc (U) spooles (U) A Mennucc1 <mennucc1@debian.org> ¶ mplayer (U) A. Maitland Bottoms <bottoms@debian.org> ¶ gnuradio gpredict (U) gr-dab (U) gr-fosphor gr-limesdr (U) gr-radar libiio uhd Aaron M. Ucko <ucko@debian.org> ¶ fltk1.3 (U) fltk1.4 (U) ncbi-blast+ (U) Abdelhakim Qbaich <abdelhakim@qbaich.com> ¶ gambc Abou Al Montacir <abou.almontacir@sfr.fr> ¶ castle-game-engine (U) fp-units-win (U) Adam Borowski <kilobyte@angband.pl> ¶ cardo (U) valgrind + (U) Adam Majer <adamm@zombino.com> ¶ qtcreator (U) Adrian Vondendriesch <adrian.vondendriesch@credativ.de> ¶ pacemaker (U) Aggelos Avgerinos <evaggelos.avgerinos@gmail.com> ¶ xmobar (U) Agustin Henze <tin@debian.org> ¶ yapsy (U) Ahmad Khalifa <ahmad@khalifa.ws> ¶ openrgb Akira Mitsui <murase.syuka@gmail.com> ¶ mruby (U) Alan M Varghese (NyxTrail) <alan@digistorm.in> ¶ hyprland (U) Alastair McKinstry <mckinstry@debian.org> ¶ cctools cdo (U) eccodes (U) ecflow (U) emoslib # (U) fdb (U) ferret-vis (U) fiat-ecmwf (U) fortran-fpm (U) fortran-jonquil (U) fortran-regex + (U) fortran-testdrive (U) hdf-eos4 (U) hdf-eos5 (U) iirish libtool metkit (U) mpich (U) odc (U) openmpi (U) pnetcdf + (U) pyferret (U) python-escript (U) python-xarray (U) silo-llnl (U) Alberto Garcia <berto@igalia.com> ¶ webkit2gtk (U) wpewebkit (U) Alberto Leiva Popper <ydahhrk@gmail.com> ¶ jool Alberto Luaces Fernández <aluaces@udc.es> ¶ yasnippet (U) Albin Tonnerre <lutin@debian.org> ¶ efl (U) AlcinaSharon <alcinasharon@gmail.com> ¶ go-qrcode (U) Alec Leamas <leamas.alec@gmail.com> ¶ libcxx-serial opencpn Aleksey Kravchenko <rhash.admin@gmail.com> ¶ libpff (U) Alessandro Ghedini <ghedo@debian.org> ¶ ecasound (U) valgrind + Alessio Treglia <alessio@debian.org> ¶ kmetronome (U) libsoxr (U) schism (U) Alex Myczko <tar@debian.org> ¶ 3d-ascii-viewer-c cheesecutter (U) far2l fonts-atarist # (U) fonts-topaz-unicode (U) ftxui (U) furnace (U) lft lie mdnsd netsurf (U) schism (U) shotcut + (U) zytrax (U) Alexander Kjäll <alexander.kjall@gmail.com> ¶ rust-sequoia-keystore-server (U) rust-sequoia-sq (U) Alexander Ponyatykh <lazyranma@gmail.com> ¶ g15daemon paexec Alexander Wirt <formorer@debian.org> ¶ icinga2 (U) Alexandre Dantas <eu@alexdantas.net> ¶ nsnake (U) Alexandre Detiste <tchet@debian.org> ¶ contourpy (U) ftgl (U) m2crypto (U) matplotlib (U) sphinx-panels (U) Alexandre Marie <alexandre.marie@synchrotron-soleil.fr> ¶ jupyter-sphinx (U) Alexandre Mestiashvili <mestia@debian.org> ¶ bibtexparser + (U) Alexandre Viau <aviau@debian.org> ¶ fonts-fork-awesome (U) golang-github-jonas-p-go-shp + (U) golang-github-roaringbitmap-roaring + (U) golang-github-tjfoc-gmsm + (U) Alkis Georgopoulos <alkisg@gmail.com> ¶ ltsp (U) Alois Schlögl <alois.schloegl@gmail.com> ¶ biosig (U) Aloïs Micard <alois@micard.lu> ¶ golang-github-francoispqt-gojay (U) Aloïs Micard <creekorful@debian.org> ¶ aerc (U) golang-github-viant-toolbox + (U) Amin Bandali <bandali@ubuntu.com> ¶ gtk4 (U) Amul Shah <Amul.Shah@fisglobal.com> ¶ fis-gtm (U) Ana Custura <ana@netstat.org.uk> ¶ namecheap + (U) vanguards + (U) Ananthu C V <weepingclown@debian.org> ¶ lazygit (U) Andrea Pappacoda <tachi@debian.org> ¶ mbedtls (U) xbyak Andreas Beckmann <anbe@debian.org> ¶ papi (U) pyopencl (U) Andreas Boll <aboll@debian.org> ¶ mesa (U) Andreas Bombe <aeb@debian.org> ¶ gr-limesdr (U) Andreas Cadhalpun <Andreas.Cadhalpun@googlemail.com> ¶ clamav (U) Andreas Henriksson <andreas@fatal.se> ¶ golang-github-mendersoftware-mender-artifact (U) Andreas Metzler <ametzler@debian.org> ¶ efl (U) enblend-enfuse (U) lynx (U) pfstools (U) Andreas Rönnquist <gusnan@debian.org> ¶ allegro5 # (U) Andreas Tille <tille@debian.org> ¶ altree (U) bedtools (U) biosquid # (U) btllib (U) cardpeek (U) consensuscore (U) crac (U) dicom3tools (U) emboss (U) filtlong (U) fis-gtm (U) freebayes (U) golang-github-apptainer-container-library-client + (U) golang-github-apptainer-sif + (U) golang-github-jung-kurt-gofpdf + (U) golang-github-shenwei356-breader + (U) golang-gonum-v1-plot + (U) hmmer (U) igraph (U) infernal (U) ivar (U) libbrahe (U) libcifpp (U) libgzstream (U) libhmsbeagle (U) liblemon (U) libpll (U) librostlab (U) libsbml (U) libslow5lib (U) macs (U) microbiomeutil + (U) minimap2 (U) ncbi-blast+ (U) node-shiny-server (U) openmm (U) parallel (U) phybin (U) porechop (U) primer3 (U) python-biom-format (U) python-biopython (U) python-ofxhome + (U) python-pysam (U) r-cran-cli (U) r-cran-cliapp (U) r-cran-dbitest (U) r-cran-diagnosismed (U) r-cran-dimred (U) r-cran-emayili (U) r-cran-emmeans (U) r-cran-futile.logger (U) r-cran-gert (U) r-cran-gprofiler2 (U) r-cran-lambda.r (U) r-cran-prophet (U) r-cran-rprojroot (U) r-cran-rstan (U) r-cran-sass (U) r-cran-teachingdemos (U) r-cran-tm (U) r-cran-tmvtnorm (U) r-cran-tweenr (U) r-cran-xfun (U) samtools (U) seer (U) segemehl (U) seqan2 (U) silly (U) siscone (U) tree-puzzle (U) treeview (U) twopaco (U) unicycler (U) velvet (U) virtuoso-opensource (U) virulencefinder + (U) xfishtank (U) Andrei Rozanski <rozanski.andrei@gmail.com> ¶ libamplsolver (U) Andrej Shadura <andrewsh@debian.org> ¶ critcl + (U) fonts-karmilla (U) g15daemon (U) libcamera (U) mk-configure Andrew Lee (李健秋) <ajqlee@debian.org> ¶ nomacs (U) Andrew Ross <ubuntu@rossfamily.co.uk> ¶ libitext5-java (U) Andrey Rakhmatullin <wrar@debian.org> ¶ kvirc (U) Andrius Merkys <merkys@debian.org> ¶ bespokesynth (U) epics-base (U) grammatica (U) ncbi-igblast (U) openmm (U) pdb-tools (U) pycifrw + (U) python-fabio (U) python-pyutil + (U) r-cran-rhub (U) spglib (U) vst3sdk (U) wannier90 (U) Andy Pugh <andy@bodgesoc.org> ¶ linuxcnc (U) Ansgar <ansgar@debian.org> ¶ dune-common (U) dune-functions (U) dune-geometry (U) dune-grid (U) dune-grid-glue (U) dune-istl (U) dune-localfunctions (U) dune-typetree (U) Anthony Fok <foka@debian.org> ¶ autokey (U) go-qrcode (U) golang-1.24 (U) golang-github-akavel-rsrc # (U) golang-github-rogpeppe-go-internal (U) golang-github-ulikunitz-xz + (U) golang-github-yosssi-ace (U) golang-golang-x-net (U) pydoctor (U) Antoine Beaupré <anarcat@debian.org> ¶ magic-wormhole-mailbox-server (U) magic-wormhole-transit-relay + Antoine Le Gonidec <vv221@debian.org> ¶ ogre-1.12 (U) Anton Gladky <gladk@debian.org> ¶ boost1.88 (U) esys-particle (U) gmsh (U) lammps (U) metis (U) minieigen (U) sfepy (U) sumo (U) sundials (U) yade (U) Anton Zinoviev <zinoviev@debian.org> ¶ xfonts-terminus Antoni Villalonga <antoni@friki.cat> ¶ vt + (U) Antonio Terceiro <terceiro@debian.org> ¶ passenger (U) Antonio Valentino <antonio.valentino@tiscali.it> ¶ c-blosc2 (U) metpy (U) numexpr (U) pycoast (U) pysolid (U) python-cartopy (U) python-pint (U) xarray-safe-rcm (U) Anuradha Weeraman <anuradha@debian.org> ¶ ksh93u+m # Apollon Oikonomopoulos <apoikos@debian.org> ¶ xmobar (U) Arnaud Ferraris <aferraris@debian.org> ¶ gnome-metronome (U) plasma-mobile (U) Arnaud Fontaine <arnau@debian.org> ¶ glosstex (U) Arnaud Rebillout <arnaud.rebillout@collabora.com> ¶ efitools (U) Arnaud Rebillout <arnaudr@debian.org> ¶ mirrorbits (U) Arnaud Rebillout <arnaudr@kali.org> ¶ docker.io (U) Arnaud Rebillout <elboulangero@gmail.com> ¶ golang-github-miekg-pkcs11 (U) Arne Morten Kvarving <arne.morten.kvarving@sintef.no> ¶ opm-simulators (U) opm-upscaling (U) Arnout Engelen <arnouten@bzzt.net> ¶ kmetronome (U) Aron Xu <aron@debian.org> ¶ dnf-plugins-core (U) fcitx-libpinyin (U) ibus (U) libpinyin (U) opencc (U) Arthur Diniz <arthurbdiniz@gmail.com> ¶ hey (U) kind (U) kustomize (U) Arun Kumar Pariyar <arun@debian.org> ¶ go-gir-generator (U) Arun Kumar Pariyar <openarungeek@gmail.com> ¶ dde-qt-dbus-factory (U) Asias He <asias@debian.org> ¶ libpinyin (U) opencc (U) Aurelien Jarno <aurel32@debian.org> ¶ med-fichier (U) Aurélien COUDERC <coucouf@debian.org> ¶ kate (U) kdebugsettings (U) kdevelop-php (U) kf6-breeze-icons (U) kf6-extra-cmake-modules (U) kf6-kirigami (U) kf6-ktexttemplate (U) kf6-syndication (U) oxygen-icons (U) plasma-mobile (U) powerdevil (U) syndication (U) tokodon (U) Axel Beckert <abe@debian.org> ¶ dpmb john (U) lynx (U) Aymeric Agon-Rambosson <aymeric.agon@yandex.com> ¶ citar (U) consult-el (U) embark (U) magit (U) marginalia (U) orderless (U) vertico (U) Balasankar C <balasankarc@debian.org> ¶ fonts-smc-anjalioldlipi (U) fonts-smc-dyuthi (U) fonts-smc-karumbi (U) fonts-smc-keraleeyam (U) fonts-smc-meera (U) fonts-smc-rachana (U) fonts-smc-raghumalayalamsans (U) fonts-smc-uroob (U) Balint Reczey <balint@balintreczey.hu> ¶ erlang-cowlib (U) Barak A. Pearlmutter <bap@debian.org> ¶ chezscheme (U) fstrcmp ikarus ivtools latex-coffee-stains libemf magit (U) mit-scheme oaklisp pstoedit yasnippet (U) Barry deFreese <bdefreese@debian.org> ¶ asc (U) blockattack (U) liquidwar (U) netrek-client-cow (U) Bartosz Fenski <fenio@debian.org> ¶ asc (U) Bas Couwenberg <sebastic@debian.org> ¶ grass (U) libosmium (U) nco (U) pyosmium (U) qgis (U) Bas Wijnen <wijnen@debian.org> ¶ openmsx Bas Zoetekouw <bas@debian.org> ¶ blktrace Bastian Blank <waldi@debian.org> ¶ cdebootstrap + libdebian-installer (U) linux (U) Bastian Germann <bage@debian.org> ¶ scalable-cyrfonts Bastian Venthur <venthur@debian.org> ¶ kivy (U) Bastien Roucaries <rouca@debian.org> ¶ node-envinfo (U) Bastien Roucariès <rouca@debian.org> ¶ node-rollup (U) Bdale Garbee <bdale@gag.com> ¶ altos debian-history (U) librnd (U) pforth rocketcea scikit-fmm Ben Hutchings <benh@debian.org> ¶ linux (U) Benda Xu <heroxbd@gentoo.org> ¶ casacore (U) casacore-data-igrf (U) casacore-data-jplde (U) scim (U) Benda Xu <orv@debian.org> ¶ scmutils Benjamin Barenblat <bbaren@debian.org> ¶ coq (U) Benjamin Drung <bdrung@debian.org> ¶ libsoxr (U) vlc # + (U) Benjamin Drung <bdrung@ubuntu.com> ¶ rdma-core Bernd Zeimetz <bzed@debian.org> ¶ collectd (U) gpsbabel (U) Bernhard Miklautz <bernhard.miklautz@shacknet.at> ¶ freerdp3 (U) Bernhard R. Link <brlink@debian.org> ¶ git-dpm bertrand Neron <bneron@pasteur.fr> ¶ macsyfinder (U) Birger Schacht <birger@debian.org> ¶ foot Boian Bonev <bbonev@ipacct.com> ¶ gpsd Boris Pek <tehnick@debian.org> ¶ psi-plus Boyuan Yang <byang@debian.org> ¶ beangulp + (U) dde-qt-dbus-factory (U) fcitx5-bamboo (U) fcitx5-zhuyin (U) font-manager (U) go-gir-generator (U) opencc (U) rime-array (U) rime-cangjie (U) rime-cantonese (U) rime-ipa (U) rime-loengfan (U) rime-luna-pinyin (U) rime-middle-chinese (U) rime-pinyin-simp (U) rime-quick (U) rime-scj (U) rime-soutzoe (U) rime-stroke (U) rime-terra-pinyin (U) rime-wubi (U) rime-wugniu (U) zxing-cpp Brad Chapman <chapmanb@50mail.com> ¶ freebayes (U) Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org> ¶ cappuccino Brian May <bam@debian.org> ¶ celery (U) faker (U) python-django (U) python-mkdocs (U) python-passlib (U) BW Keller <malzraa@gmail.com> ¶ yt (U) Camm Maguire <camm@debian.org> ¶ axiom fricas gcl gcl27 hol88 lam + maxima Carl Keinath <carl.keinath@gmail.com> ¶ hyprland (U) Carl Worth <cworth@debian.org> ¶ notmuch Carlos Zuferri <chals@altorricon.com> ¶ live-manual (U) Carsten Leonhardt <leo@debian.org> ¶ bacula-doc (U) Carsten Schoenert <c.schoenert@t-online.de> ¶ kicad (U) python-graphene + (U) python-mkdocs (U) python-picologging (U) Cesare Falco <c.falco@ubuntu.com> ¶ mame (U) Changwoo Ryu <cwryu@debian.org> ¶ ibus (U) ChangZhuo Chen (陳昌倬) <czchen@debian.org> ¶ fcitx-libpinyin (U) ibus-libzhuyin (U) libpinyin (U) nomacs (U) Charles Plessy <plessy@debian.org> ¶ altree (U) bedtools (U) emboss (U) primer3 (U) python-biopython (U) python-pysam (U) samtools (U) tree-puzzle (U) velvet (U) Chow Loong Jin <hyperair@debian.org> ¶ hyprland (U) Chris Halls <halls@debian.org> ¶ writer2latex (U) Chris Hofstaedtler <zeha@debian.org> ¶ ragel Chris Lamb <lamby@debian.org> ¶ black (U) python-django (U) Christian Bayle <bayle@debian.org> ¶ jfreepdf (U) orson-charts (U) rocm-docs-core (U) rocm-hipamd (U) Christian Ehrhardt <christian.ehrhardt@canonical.com> ¶ dpdk (U) Christian Kastner <ckk@debian.org> ¶ numpy (U) rocm-hipamd (U) rocprim (U) scikit-learn (U) Christian M. Amsüss <chrysn@fsfe.org> ¶ rdflib + (U) Christian Marillat <marillat@debian.org> ¶ libtorrent-rasterbar Christian T. Steigies <cts@debian.org> ¶ gle-graphics-manual (U) Christoph Berg <myon@debian.org> ¶ gpredict (U) gr-limesdr (U) libcm256cc (U) patroni # (U) pgloader (U) prometheus-sql-exporter (U) vip-manager2 (U) Christoph Biedl <debian.axhn@manchmal.in-ulm.de> ¶ gkrellm-leds P Christoph Egger <christoph@debian.org> ¶ buildapp (U) clisp (U) ecl (U) Christoph Martin <chrism@debian.org> ¶ vdr-plugin-markad (U) Christophe Trophime <christophe.trophime@lncmi.cnrs.fr> ¶ getdp (U) gmsh (U) Christopher Baines <mail@cbaines.net> ¶ faker (U) Christopher Hoskin <mans0954@debian.org> ¶ pympress + (U) rust-fslock # (U) Christopher Reichert <creichert07@gmail.com> ¶ haskell-network-conduit-tls (U) ClamAV Team <pkg-clamav-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ clamav Clay Stan <claystan97@gmail.com> ¶ dde-qt-dbus-factory (U) Clint Adams <clint@debian.org> ¶ alex (U) cabal-debian (U) ghc # (U) glirc (U) haskell-aeson (U) haskell-arithmoi (U) haskell-async (U) haskell-attoparsec (U) haskell-base64-bytestring (U) haskell-bimap (U) haskell-binary-instances (U) haskell-bitvec (U) haskell-blaze-markup (U) haskell-bloomfilter (U) haskell-brick (U) haskell-bytestring-to-vector (U) haskell-bz2 (U) haskell-case-insensitive (U) haskell-cassava (U) haskell-cassava-megaparsec (U) haskell-cborg (U) haskell-cereal-conduit (U) haskell-cereal-vector (U) haskell-chimera (U) haskell-cipher-camellia (U) haskell-classy-prelude (U) haskell-classy-prelude-conduit (U) haskell-clientsession (U) haskell-cmark (U) haskell-cmark-gfm (U) haskell-conduit (U) haskell-conduit-extra (U) haskell-cryptohash (U) haskell-cryptohash-md5 (U) haskell-cryptohash-sha1 (U) haskell-cryptohash-sha256 (U) haskell-cryptonite (U) haskell-curve25519 (U) haskell-deepseq-generics (U) haskell-dense-linear-algebra (U) haskell-deriving-aeson (U) haskell-deriving-compat (U) haskell-doctemplates (U) haskell-ed25519 (U) haskell-edit-distance (U) haskell-email-validate (U) haskell-enclosed-exceptions (U) haskell-esqueleto (U) haskell-exception-transformers (U) haskell-expiring-cache-map (U) haskell-fast-logger (U) haskell-fgl-arbitrary (U) haskell-filepattern (U) haskell-filestore (U) haskell-fold-debounce (U) haskell-from-sum (U) haskell-generic-data (U) haskell-generic-random (U) haskell-genvalidity (U) haskell-genvalidity-containers (U) haskell-getopt-generics (U) haskell-ghc-exactprint (U) haskell-ghc-lib-parser-ex (U) haskell-gi-gdk (U) haskell-githash (U) haskell-gridtables (U) haskell-hackage-security (U) haskell-hakyll (U) haskell-haskell-gi (U) haskell-heterocephalus (U) haskell-hgmp (U) haskell-hjsmin (U) haskell-hledger (U) haskell-hledger-ui (U) haskell-hopenpgp (U) haskell-hourglass (U) haskell-hslua-module-text (U) haskell-hspec-api (U) haskell-hspec-megaparsec (U) haskell-hspec-smallcheck (U) haskell-hspec-wai (U) haskell-html-conduit (U) haskell-http-api-data (U) haskell-http-client (U) haskell-http-conduit (U) haskell-infer-license (U) haskell-inline-c (U) haskell-integer-logarithms (U) haskell-integer-roots (U) haskell-interpolate (U) haskell-io-streams-haproxy (U) haskell-irc-core (U) haskell-js-flot (U) haskell-lambdahack (U) haskell-lens (U) haskell-libmpd (U) haskell-load-env (U) haskell-logging-facade (U) haskell-lukko (U) haskell-lzma (U) haskell-markdown (U) haskell-markdown-unlit (U) haskell-memory (U) haskell-microstache (U) haskell-minimorph (U) haskell-miniutter (U) haskell-mockery (U) haskell-monad-loops (U) haskell-monad-memo (U) haskell-mono-traversable (U) haskell-multistate (U) haskell-nanospec (U) haskell-natural-transformation (U) haskell-nettle (U) haskell-numbers (U) haskell-openpgp-asciiarmor (U) haskell-optparse-applicative (U) haskell-ormolu (U) haskell-parsers (U) haskell-path-pieces (U) haskell-pem (U) haskell-persistent (U) haskell-pretty-simple (U) haskell-prettyprinter-ansi-terminal (U) haskell-project-template (U) haskell-quickcheck-classes (U) haskell-quote-quot (U) haskell-rank2classes (U) haskell-raw-strings-qq (U) haskell-readargs (U) haskell-recv (U) haskell-resourcet (U) haskell-safe-exceptions (U) haskell-sandi (U) haskell-say (U) haskell-scanner (U) haskell-scotty (U) haskell-selective (U) haskell-serialise (U) haskell-servant (U) haskell-servant-server (U) haskell-shell-conduit (U) haskell-should-not-typecheck (U) haskell-simple-sendfile (U) haskell-skein (U) haskell-snap (U) haskell-snap-templates (U) haskell-soap (U) haskell-split (U) haskell-streaming-commons (U) haskell-tagstream-conduit (U) haskell-tasty-golden (U) haskell-tasty-hedgehog (U) haskell-termonad (U) haskell-text-icu (U) haskell-text-manipulate (U) haskell-text-metrics (U) haskell-text-show (U) haskell-th-desugar (U) haskell-th-env (U) haskell-th-lift (U) haskell-th-lift-instances (U) haskell-th-utilities (U) haskell-time-parsers (U) haskell-tls (U) haskell-trifecta (U) haskell-typed-process (U) haskell-universe-base (U) haskell-unix-time (U) haskell-uuid (U) haskell-wai (U) haskell-wai-app-static (U) haskell-wai-extra (U) haskell-wai-http2-extra (U) haskell-warp (U) haskell-witch (U) haskell-with-location (U) haskell-wl-pprint-annotated (U) haskell-word-wrap (U) haskell-word8 (U) haskell-x509 (U) haskell-xml-conduit (U) haskell-xml-hamlet (U) haskell-xml-html-qq (U) haskell-xmlhtml (U) haskell-xss-sanitize (U) haskell-yaml (U) haskell-yesod-core (U) haskell-yesod-form (U) haskell-yesod-test (U) mighttpd2 (U) Clément Hermann <nodens@debian.org> ¶ onedrive (U) Colin Watson <cjwatson@debian.org> ¶ groff libdebian-installer (U) yubihsm-connector (U) zope.deferredimport + (U) Collectd Packaging Team <team+collectd@tracker.debian.org> ¶ collectd Compute Library Team <developer-compute@arm.com> ¶ arm-compute-library Cordell Bloor <cgmb@debian.org> ¶ rocdbgapi + (U) rocm-hipamd (U) rocprim (U) Corey Bryant <corey.bryant@canonical.com> ¶ python-glanceclient (U) python-keystoneauth1 (U) Cyril Brulebois <cyril@debamax.com> ¶ crowdsec Cyril Brulebois <kibi@debian.org> ¶ debian-installer # # # (U) Cédric Boutillier <boutil@debian.org> ¶ gfan (U) highlight.js (U) ruby-gnuplot + (U) Cédric Lood <cedric.lood@kuleuven.be> ¶ porechop (U) Damien Raude-Morvan <drazzib@debian.org> ¶ codenarc (U) Damyan Ivanov <dmn@debian.org> ¶ firebird4.0 Danai SAE-HAN (韓達耐) <danai@debian.org> ¶ cjk (U) latex-cjk-chinese-arphic (U) Daniel Baumann <daniel@debian.org> ¶ ck dnsjit Daniel Dehennin <daniel.dehennin@baby-gnu.org> ¶ moarvm (U) raku-readline (U) raku-tap-harness (U) raku-zef (U) rakudo # (U) Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net> ¶ knot (U) rust-gperftools (U) rust-sequoia-sq (U) Daniel Markstedt <daniel@mindani.net> ¶ netatalk (U) Daniel Salzman <daniel.salzman@nic.cz> ¶ knot (U) Daniele Tricoli <eriol@mornie.org> ¶ pywavelets + (U) dann frazier <dannf@debian.org> ¶ makedumpfile (U) Dave Hibberd <hibby@debian.org> ¶ svxlink (U) David Banks <amoebae@gmail.com> ¶ sisc David Bremner <bremner@debian.org> ¶ emacs-jabber (U) notmuch (U) polymake sketch (U) slime (U) David Kalnischkies <donkult@debian.org> ¶ vim-youcompleteme ycmd David Miguel Susano Pinto <carandraug+dev@gmail.com> ¶ ncbi-igblast (U) David Paleino <dapal@debian.org> ¶ openlayers (U) uncertainties (U) underscore (U) David Suárez <david.sephirot@gmail.com> ¶ ruby-re2 (U) David Weinehall <tao@debian.org> ¶ scummvm (U) Davide Viti <zinosat@tiscali.it> ¶ fonts-freefont (U) Dawid Dziurla <dawidd0811@gmail.com> ¶ termshark (U) Dean Serenevy <dean@serenevy.net> ¶ kivy (U) Debian Accessibility Team <pkg-a11y-devel@alioth-lists.debian.net> ¶ flite Debian ACE maintainers <team+ace@tracker.debian.org> ¶ ace Debian ALSA Maintainers <pkg-alsa-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ alsa-utils Debian Astro Maintainers <debian-astro-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ pybdsf Debian Astro Team <debian-astro-maintainers@alioth-lists.debian.net> ¶ casacore-data-igrf casacore-data-jplde Debian Astro Team <debian-astro-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ astroplan astroquery casacore eso-midas gwcs montage ndcube pyregion python-casacore starjava-ttools Debian Astronomy Team <debian-astro-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ c-munipack yt Debian Bacula Team <pkg-bacula-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ bacula-doc Debian Bluetooth Maintainers <team+pkg-bluetooth@tracker.debian.org> ¶ bluez bluez-alsa Debian BOINC Maintainers <pkg-boinc-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ boinc Debian Boost Team <team+boost@tracker.debian.org> ¶ boost1.88 Debian Chinese Team <chinese-developers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ opencc (U) unicon # Debian CLI Applications Team <pkg-cli-apps-team@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ hexbox openmcdf Debian Clojure Maintainers <team+clojure@tracker.debian.org> ¶ clojure core-specs-alpha-clojure leiningen-clojure + spec-alpha-clojure Debian Common Lisp Team <debian-common-lisp@lists.debian.org> ¶ abcl buildapp clisp ecl sbcl slime Debian D Language Group <team+d-team@tracker.debian.org> ¶ dub ldc Debian Deepin Packaging Team <pkg-deepin-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ dde-qt-dbus-factory go-gir-generator Debian Documentation Project <debian-doc@lists.debian.org> ¶ refcard Debian DPDK Maintainers <pkg-dpdk-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ dpdk Debian EFI team <debian-efi@lists.debian.org> ¶ libjcat Debian Electronics Team <pkg-electronics-devel@alioth-lists.debian.net> ¶ kicad Debian Electronics Team <pkg-electronics-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ arduino librnd verilator Debian Emacsen team <debian-emacsen@lists.debian.org> ¶ citar consult-el elpa-transient embark fountain-mode magit magit-forge-el maildir-utils marginalia orderless vertico yasnippet Debian Emacsen Team <debian-emacsen@lists.debian.org> ¶ emacs-jabber ghub-el with-editor Debian Erlang Packagers <pkg-erlang-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ elixir-makeup erlang erlang-cowlib erlang-hex manderlbot rebar rebar3 wings3d yaws Debian FLTK Ecosystem Team <team+fltk@tracker.debian.org> ¶ fltk1.3 fltk1.4 Debian Fonts Task Force <debian-fonts@lists.debian.org> ¶ cardo font-manager fonts-atarist # fonts-cantarell fonts-fantasque-sans fonts-fork-awesome fonts-meera-inimai fonts-smc-anjalioldlipi fonts-smc-dyuthi fonts-smc-karumbi fonts-smc-keraleeyam Debian Fonts Task Force <pkg-fonts-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ fonts-arundina fonts-beteckna fonts-cascadia-code fonts-freefont fonts-karmilla fonts-smc-meera fonts-smc-rachana fonts-smc-raghumalayalamsans fonts-topaz-unicode Debian Games Team <pkg-games-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ 0ad ace-of-penguins allegro5 # asc blockattack bzflag colobot doomsday ftgl gnubg (U) libsfml liquidwar mame netrek-client-cow nsnake ogre-1.12 scummvm silly teeworlds ufoai xfishtank xpenguins Debian GCC Maintainers <debian-gcc@lists.debian.org> ¶ gcc-12-cross gcc-13-cross gcc-13-cross-mipsen gcc-14 gcc-14-cross gcc-14-cross-ports gcc-15 gcc-15-cross gcc-15-cross-ports Debian GDB Team <team+gdb@tracker.debian.org> ¶ dejagnu Debian GIS Project <pkg-grass-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ grass libosmium metpy nco openlayers pycoast pyosmium pysolid python-cartopy python-geopandas qgis savi xarray-safe-rcm Debian GNOME Maintainers <pkg-gnome-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ blueprint-compiler bustle fragments gimp glib-d gnome-metronome gtk4 kooha librsvg obfuscate shortwave warp Debian Go Compiler Team <team+go-compiler@tracker.debian.org> ¶ golang-1.24 Debian Go Packaging Team <pkg-go-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ acmetool goiardi golang-github-cloudflare-cfssl golang-github-cznic-ql + golang-github-kr-binarydist + golang-github-yosssi-ace Debian Go Packaging Team <team+pkg-go@tracker.debian.org> ¶ aerc age containerd crowdsec (U) dasel docker.io fscrypt glow go-qrcode go-sendxmpp gobgp golang-github-akavel-rsrc # golang-github-apptainer-container-library-client + golang-github-artyom-mtab + golang-github-containerd-nydus-snapshotter golang-github-dreamitgetit-statuscake + golang-github-emicklei-dot + golang-github-francoispqt-gojay golang-github-gin-gonic-gin + golang-github-go-git-go-git 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<debian-hams@lists.debian.org> ¶ gpredict gr-limesdr libcm256cc svxlink tucnak Debian Haskell Group <debian-haskell@lists.debian.org> ¶ haskell-swish Debian Haskell Group <pkg-haskell-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ alex cabal-debian ghc # glirc happy haskell-active haskell-aeson haskell-aeson-casing haskell-aeson-extra haskell-aeson-qq haskell-ap-normalize haskell-arithmoi haskell-async haskell-atomic-write haskell-attoparsec haskell-barbies haskell-base64-bytestring haskell-bimap haskell-binary-instances haskell-binary-orphans haskell-binary-search haskell-bitvec haskell-bitwise haskell-blaze-html haskell-blaze-markup haskell-bloomfilter haskell-brick haskell-bytestring-to-vector haskell-bz2 haskell-bzlib-conduit haskell-cabal-install-solver haskell-case-insensitive haskell-cassava haskell-cassava-megaparsec haskell-cborg haskell-cereal-conduit haskell-cereal-vector haskell-chimera haskell-cipher-camellia haskell-classy-prelude haskell-classy-prelude-conduit 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https://yarnpkg.com/getting-started#__docusaurus_skipToContent_fallback
Introduction | Yarn Skip to main content Yarn Get Started Features CLI Configuration Advanced Blog API master (4.12.0-dev) master (4.12.0-dev) 3.8.7 1.22.22 Discord GitHub Search Starting with Yarn Introduction Installation Usage Migrating from 1.x / npm Benefits Step-by-step To go further Good to Know Corepack Editor SDKs Questions & Answers Recipes Starting with Yarn Introduction Introduction Yarn is an established open-source package manager used to manage dependencies in JavaScript projects. It assists with the process of installing, updating, configuring, and removing packages dependencies, eventually helping you reach your objectives faster with fewer distractions. Its areas of focus are speed, correctness, security, and developer experience, which we improve along every axis by leveraging a suite of innovative features such as workspaces, offline caching, parallel installs, hardened mode, interactive commands, and more. Given its robust features and stellar track record, Yarn proves to be an indispensable asset to the JavaScript ecosystem, driving efficiency, security, and positive developer experience in projects of any size. info Unlike most other package managers, which typically defer to npm for non-install-related commands, Yarn reimplements all commands, so as to have full control over our developer experience and stability. Edit this page Next Installation Copyright © 2026 Yarn Contributors, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch03.html
Chapter 3. General ideas Chapter 3. General ideas Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas Table of Contents 3.1. Looking beyond 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software 3.4. General problem 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view 3.1. Looking beyond Commercial Linux distributors sell certain products that try to address special user needs. Enterprise solutions Advanced Server - RedHat Enterprise Server - SuSE Small Office and Home Office (SOHO) There are a couple of workstation or home editions, as well as office desktops built by several GNU/Linux distributors. Special task products Mail server SuSE Linux Openexchange Server Firewall SuSE Firewall on CD, ... Content Management System RedHat Portal Server RedHat This is only a small set of examples of commercial GNU/Linux distributors addressing specific user interests with certain products. Debian solves this problem with Debian Pure Blends . 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users The target user of a Blend may be a specialist of a certain profession, (e.g. a doctor or lawyer,) a person who has not (yet) gathered a certain amount of computer knowledge, (e.g. a child,) or a person with disabilities (e.g. a visually or hearing impaired person.) Moreover, the customisation might deal with peculiarities of certain regions where users have needs that differ from Debian as a whole. It is not unusual for these target users to be less technically competent than the stereotypical Linux user. These people are often not interested in the computer for its own sake, but just want it to work for them. Imagine the frustration of a doctor who has to move the focus of interest from the patient to his stupid computer that does not work as expected. Because of limited knowledge or time, the target user is usually unable to install upstream programs. This means that in the first place, they must find out which software packages in their distribution might serve for a certain problem. The next step would be to download and install the packages they choose, perhaps requiring a certain amount of configuration effort. This problem is nearly impossible for a user with limited technical competence and perhaps poor English language comprehension, which prevents the user from understanding the installation manual. The language barrier in this field is an important issue, because we are targeting everyday users who are not compelled to learn English, like Free Software developers are, for everyday communication. So the installation process has to involve the least possible user interaction, and any such interaction has to be internationalised. Furthermore, most target users have no or little interest in administration of their computer. In short, the optimal situation would be that he would not even notice the existence of the computer, but just focus on using the application to accomplish the task at hand. Common to all groups of target users is their interest in a defined subset of available Free Software. None of them would like to spend much time searching for the package that fits his interest. Instead, the target user would prefer to immediately and effortlessly locate and access all material relevant to solving his own problems. There is an absolute need for easy usage of the programs. This is not to say users expect to not have to learn to use the software. Adults generally accept that they must spend a reasonable amount of time in learning how to use a piece of software before they can do something useful and productive with it. But a simple-to-learn environment greatly enhances the value of the software, and if you consider children as target users, they just want to start using it right away without reading any documentation. The more important part of the request for easy usage is a professional design that is functional and effective. To accomplish this, the programmers need expert knowledge, or at least a quick communication channel to experts to learn more about their requirements. One task for Debian Pure Blends is to bring programmers and experts who will use those special programs together. Last, but not least, we find certain requirements beyond just which packages are provided in each target user group. These may differ between different Blends. For instance, while a doctor has to protect his database against snooping by outside attackers, the privacy risk for a child's system are of lesser importance. Thus, the Debian Junior project cares more for ensuring that the user himself does not damage the desktop environment while playing around with it than about remote attacks. So we find a "defined security profile" for each single Blend. 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators In the field that should be covered by Debian Pure Blends, we have to face also some common problems for system administrators. Often they have limited time in which they must serve quite a number of computers, and thus they are happy about each simplification of the administration process. The time required to make special adaptations for the intended purpose has to be reduced to a minimum. So, administrators are looking for timesaving in repetitive tasks. While this is a common issue for each general GNU/Linux distribution, this could have certain consequences in the special fields Debian Pure Blends want to address. Another problem administrators face is that they are often not experts in their clients' special field of work. Thus, they may need some specialist knowledge to explain the use of special programs to their users, or at least need to be able to communicate well with the experts about their special needs, and how the software can be used to address them. 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software Programs like a web server, or a mail user agent are used by many different users. That is why many gifted programmers feel obliged for this kind of Free Software - they just need it for their own. So you normally find a fast, growing community around Free Software packages that have a wide use. This is different for specialised software. In this context, the term "specialised software" refers to the kind of software that is needed by some experts for their job. This might be a practice management system that is used by doctors, a graphical information system (GIS) that is used by geographers, a screen reader that helps blind people to work with the computer, etc. The difference between such software and widely used software like office suites is that the user base is relatively small. This is also true for certain software that supports special localisation issues. Specialist software is used only by a limited set of users (i.e. the specialists). There exists a set of software tools that work perfectly in the environment where they were developed. If the developers catch the idea of Free Software, and just release this software as-is, people in the new, broader user community often run into trouble getting it to work in their environment. This happens because the developers did not really care about a robust installation process that works outside their special environment. As well, installation instructions are often badly written, if they exist at all. But these problem can be easily solved by shipping the software as policy-compliant binary packages, which not only ease installation, but also require documentation to be included. Thus, mere inclusion in Debian benefits the whole user base of any specialised software. The trouble often continues in the maintenance of the installed software. When it comes to the usage of the specialist software, it often happens that it perfectly fits the needs of the developer who wrote it for his own purposes, and who is familiar with its quirks, but in many cases such software does not comply with ergonomic standards of user interfaces. Several existing programs that might be useful for specialists are not really free in the sense of the Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) . Programs that are incompatible with the DFSG cannot be included in Debian. This is possibly a drawback for those programs, because they could profit by spreading widely on the back of Debian over the whole world. A certain number of programs are developed at universities by students or graduates. Once these people leave the university, the programs they developed might be orphaned; i.e. , not actively maintained anymore. If their licenses are too restrictive, it may be impossible for anyone else to take over; sticking to AT: We should find a way to avoid printing the URL in PDF output. DFSG -free licenses avoid that problem. In special fields, often "typical" (not necessarily Intel-based) hardware architectures are used. Debian currently runs on 11 different architectures, and automatic build servers normally compile software packages as necessary. If auto-builders for other architectures show problems, Debian maintainers will normally fix them, and send the original authors a patch. Moreover, users can report run-time problems via the Debian Bug Tracking System . Many programs that are written from scratch use their own non-standard file formats. However, it is often important for programs to be able to share data with each other. Often there are several programs that try to solve identical or similar problems. For instance the Debian Med team faces this in the case of programs claiming to serve as a medical practice management solution. Normally, all these programs take very interesting approaches but all of them have certain drawbacks. So, joining programmers' forces might make sense here. Sometimes the tools or back-ends used in Free Software are not appropriate for such applications. For instance, sometimes database servers that do not use transactions are used to store medical records, which is completely unacceptable. Other programs use web clients as their front-end, which is not really good for quick (mouse-less) usage, a great shortcoming for repetitive tasks. 3.4. General problem Free Software development is a kind of evolutionary process. It needs a critical mass of supporters, who are: programmers and users Because specialised software has a limited set of users, (specialists,) this results in a limited set of programmers. Debian wants to attract both groups to get it working. Debian is the missing link between upstream developers and users. 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view Debian currently grows in several directions: Number of involved people Number of packages Number of architectures Number of bugs Number of users Number of derivatives Time span between releases So several features are changing at different rates their quantity. According to Hegel a change of quantity leads into a change in quality. That means that Debian will change at a certain point in time (or over a certain time span) its quality. "To determine at the right moment the critical point where quantity changes into quality is one of the most important and difficult tasks in all the spheres of knowledge." (Trotski) This might mean that we just passed the point in time when Debian changed its quality. At one point we even observed a change once the package pool system was implemented to cope with the increased number of packages while trying to reduce the time span between releases. Even if the plan to increase the frequencies of releases failed Debian became a new quality. People started using the testing distribution even in production which was not really intended and in a consequence even security in testing was implemented for Sarge. According to Darwin evolution happens through quantitative transformations passing into qualitative. So Debian has to evolve and to cope with the inner changes and outer requirements to survive in the Linux distribution environment. Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends?  Home  Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://classic.yarnpkg.com/en/packages
Yarn packages | Yarn Important: This documentation covers Yarn 1 (Classic). For Yarn 2+ docs and migration guide, see yarnpkg.com. Yarn Getting Started Docs Packages Blog English English Español Français Bahasa Indonesia 日本語 Português (Brasil) Русский Türkçe Українська 中文 繁體中文 Discord Discord Twitter Twitter Facebook Facebook GitHub GitHub Packages Yarn Distributed under BSD License Code of Conduct Edit this page
2026-01-13T09:30:27
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2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch03.html#adminprofile
Chapter 3. General ideas Chapter 3. General ideas Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas Table of Contents 3.1. Looking beyond 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software 3.4. General problem 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view 3.1. Looking beyond Commercial Linux distributors sell certain products that try to address special user needs. Enterprise solutions Advanced Server - RedHat Enterprise Server - SuSE Small Office and Home Office (SOHO) There are a couple of workstation or home editions, as well as office desktops built by several GNU/Linux distributors. Special task products Mail server SuSE Linux Openexchange Server Firewall SuSE Firewall on CD, ... Content Management System RedHat Portal Server RedHat This is only a small set of examples of commercial GNU/Linux distributors addressing specific user interests with certain products. Debian solves this problem with Debian Pure Blends . 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users The target user of a Blend may be a specialist of a certain profession, (e.g. a doctor or lawyer,) a person who has not (yet) gathered a certain amount of computer knowledge, (e.g. a child,) or a person with disabilities (e.g. a visually or hearing impaired person.) Moreover, the customisation might deal with peculiarities of certain regions where users have needs that differ from Debian as a whole. It is not unusual for these target users to be less technically competent than the stereotypical Linux user. These people are often not interested in the computer for its own sake, but just want it to work for them. Imagine the frustration of a doctor who has to move the focus of interest from the patient to his stupid computer that does not work as expected. Because of limited knowledge or time, the target user is usually unable to install upstream programs. This means that in the first place, they must find out which software packages in their distribution might serve for a certain problem. The next step would be to download and install the packages they choose, perhaps requiring a certain amount of configuration effort. This problem is nearly impossible for a user with limited technical competence and perhaps poor English language comprehension, which prevents the user from understanding the installation manual. The language barrier in this field is an important issue, because we are targeting everyday users who are not compelled to learn English, like Free Software developers are, for everyday communication. So the installation process has to involve the least possible user interaction, and any such interaction has to be internationalised. Furthermore, most target users have no or little interest in administration of their computer. In short, the optimal situation would be that he would not even notice the existence of the computer, but just focus on using the application to accomplish the task at hand. Common to all groups of target users is their interest in a defined subset of available Free Software. None of them would like to spend much time searching for the package that fits his interest. Instead, the target user would prefer to immediately and effortlessly locate and access all material relevant to solving his own problems. There is an absolute need for easy usage of the programs. This is not to say users expect to not have to learn to use the software. Adults generally accept that they must spend a reasonable amount of time in learning how to use a piece of software before they can do something useful and productive with it. But a simple-to-learn environment greatly enhances the value of the software, and if you consider children as target users, they just want to start using it right away without reading any documentation. The more important part of the request for easy usage is a professional design that is functional and effective. To accomplish this, the programmers need expert knowledge, or at least a quick communication channel to experts to learn more about their requirements. One task for Debian Pure Blends is to bring programmers and experts who will use those special programs together. Last, but not least, we find certain requirements beyond just which packages are provided in each target user group. These may differ between different Blends. For instance, while a doctor has to protect his database against snooping by outside attackers, the privacy risk for a child's system are of lesser importance. Thus, the Debian Junior project cares more for ensuring that the user himself does not damage the desktop environment while playing around with it than about remote attacks. So we find a "defined security profile" for each single Blend. 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators In the field that should be covered by Debian Pure Blends, we have to face also some common problems for system administrators. Often they have limited time in which they must serve quite a number of computers, and thus they are happy about each simplification of the administration process. The time required to make special adaptations for the intended purpose has to be reduced to a minimum. So, administrators are looking for timesaving in repetitive tasks. While this is a common issue for each general GNU/Linux distribution, this could have certain consequences in the special fields Debian Pure Blends want to address. Another problem administrators face is that they are often not experts in their clients' special field of work. Thus, they may need some specialist knowledge to explain the use of special programs to their users, or at least need to be able to communicate well with the experts about their special needs, and how the software can be used to address them. 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software Programs like a web server, or a mail user agent are used by many different users. That is why many gifted programmers feel obliged for this kind of Free Software - they just need it for their own. So you normally find a fast, growing community around Free Software packages that have a wide use. This is different for specialised software. In this context, the term "specialised software" refers to the kind of software that is needed by some experts for their job. This might be a practice management system that is used by doctors, a graphical information system (GIS) that is used by geographers, a screen reader that helps blind people to work with the computer, etc. The difference between such software and widely used software like office suites is that the user base is relatively small. This is also true for certain software that supports special localisation issues. Specialist software is used only by a limited set of users (i.e. the specialists). There exists a set of software tools that work perfectly in the environment where they were developed. If the developers catch the idea of Free Software, and just release this software as-is, people in the new, broader user community often run into trouble getting it to work in their environment. This happens because the developers did not really care about a robust installation process that works outside their special environment. As well, installation instructions are often badly written, if they exist at all. But these problem can be easily solved by shipping the software as policy-compliant binary packages, which not only ease installation, but also require documentation to be included. Thus, mere inclusion in Debian benefits the whole user base of any specialised software. The trouble often continues in the maintenance of the installed software. When it comes to the usage of the specialist software, it often happens that it perfectly fits the needs of the developer who wrote it for his own purposes, and who is familiar with its quirks, but in many cases such software does not comply with ergonomic standards of user interfaces. Several existing programs that might be useful for specialists are not really free in the sense of the Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) . Programs that are incompatible with the DFSG cannot be included in Debian. This is possibly a drawback for those programs, because they could profit by spreading widely on the back of Debian over the whole world. A certain number of programs are developed at universities by students or graduates. Once these people leave the university, the programs they developed might be orphaned; i.e. , not actively maintained anymore. If their licenses are too restrictive, it may be impossible for anyone else to take over; sticking to AT: We should find a way to avoid printing the URL in PDF output. DFSG -free licenses avoid that problem. In special fields, often "typical" (not necessarily Intel-based) hardware architectures are used. Debian currently runs on 11 different architectures, and automatic build servers normally compile software packages as necessary. If auto-builders for other architectures show problems, Debian maintainers will normally fix them, and send the original authors a patch. Moreover, users can report run-time problems via the Debian Bug Tracking System . Many programs that are written from scratch use their own non-standard file formats. However, it is often important for programs to be able to share data with each other. Often there are several programs that try to solve identical or similar problems. For instance the Debian Med team faces this in the case of programs claiming to serve as a medical practice management solution. Normally, all these programs take very interesting approaches but all of them have certain drawbacks. So, joining programmers' forces might make sense here. Sometimes the tools or back-ends used in Free Software are not appropriate for such applications. For instance, sometimes database servers that do not use transactions are used to store medical records, which is completely unacceptable. Other programs use web clients as their front-end, which is not really good for quick (mouse-less) usage, a great shortcoming for repetitive tasks. 3.4. General problem Free Software development is a kind of evolutionary process. It needs a critical mass of supporters, who are: programmers and users Because specialised software has a limited set of users, (specialists,) this results in a limited set of programmers. Debian wants to attract both groups to get it working. Debian is the missing link between upstream developers and users. 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view Debian currently grows in several directions: Number of involved people Number of packages Number of architectures Number of bugs Number of users Number of derivatives Time span between releases So several features are changing at different rates their quantity. According to Hegel a change of quantity leads into a change in quality. That means that Debian will change at a certain point in time (or over a certain time span) its quality. "To determine at the right moment the critical point where quantity changes into quality is one of the most important and difficult tasks in all the spheres of knowledge." (Trotski) This might mean that we just passed the point in time when Debian changed its quality. At one point we even observed a change once the package pool system was implemented to cope with the increased number of packages while trying to reduce the time span between releases. Even if the plan to increase the frequencies of releases failed Debian became a new quality. People started using the testing distribution even in production which was not really intended and in a consequence even security in testing was implemented for Sarge. According to Darwin evolution happens through quantitative transformations passing into qualitative. So Debian has to evolve and to cope with the inner changes and outer requirements to survive in the Linux distribution environment. Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends?  Home  Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch03.html#motivation
Chapter 3. General ideas Chapter 3. General ideas Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas Table of Contents 3.1. Looking beyond 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software 3.4. General problem 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view 3.1. Looking beyond Commercial Linux distributors sell certain products that try to address special user needs. Enterprise solutions Advanced Server - RedHat Enterprise Server - SuSE Small Office and Home Office (SOHO) There are a couple of workstation or home editions, as well as office desktops built by several GNU/Linux distributors. Special task products Mail server SuSE Linux Openexchange Server Firewall SuSE Firewall on CD, ... Content Management System RedHat Portal Server RedHat This is only a small set of examples of commercial GNU/Linux distributors addressing specific user interests with certain products. Debian solves this problem with Debian Pure Blends . 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users The target user of a Blend may be a specialist of a certain profession, (e.g. a doctor or lawyer,) a person who has not (yet) gathered a certain amount of computer knowledge, (e.g. a child,) or a person with disabilities (e.g. a visually or hearing impaired person.) Moreover, the customisation might deal with peculiarities of certain regions where users have needs that differ from Debian as a whole. It is not unusual for these target users to be less technically competent than the stereotypical Linux user. These people are often not interested in the computer for its own sake, but just want it to work for them. Imagine the frustration of a doctor who has to move the focus of interest from the patient to his stupid computer that does not work as expected. Because of limited knowledge or time, the target user is usually unable to install upstream programs. This means that in the first place, they must find out which software packages in their distribution might serve for a certain problem. The next step would be to download and install the packages they choose, perhaps requiring a certain amount of configuration effort. This problem is nearly impossible for a user with limited technical competence and perhaps poor English language comprehension, which prevents the user from understanding the installation manual. The language barrier in this field is an important issue, because we are targeting everyday users who are not compelled to learn English, like Free Software developers are, for everyday communication. So the installation process has to involve the least possible user interaction, and any such interaction has to be internationalised. Furthermore, most target users have no or little interest in administration of their computer. In short, the optimal situation would be that he would not even notice the existence of the computer, but just focus on using the application to accomplish the task at hand. Common to all groups of target users is their interest in a defined subset of available Free Software. None of them would like to spend much time searching for the package that fits his interest. Instead, the target user would prefer to immediately and effortlessly locate and access all material relevant to solving his own problems. There is an absolute need for easy usage of the programs. This is not to say users expect to not have to learn to use the software. Adults generally accept that they must spend a reasonable amount of time in learning how to use a piece of software before they can do something useful and productive with it. But a simple-to-learn environment greatly enhances the value of the software, and if you consider children as target users, they just want to start using it right away without reading any documentation. The more important part of the request for easy usage is a professional design that is functional and effective. To accomplish this, the programmers need expert knowledge, or at least a quick communication channel to experts to learn more about their requirements. One task for Debian Pure Blends is to bring programmers and experts who will use those special programs together. Last, but not least, we find certain requirements beyond just which packages are provided in each target user group. These may differ between different Blends. For instance, while a doctor has to protect his database against snooping by outside attackers, the privacy risk for a child's system are of lesser importance. Thus, the Debian Junior project cares more for ensuring that the user himself does not damage the desktop environment while playing around with it than about remote attacks. So we find a "defined security profile" for each single Blend. 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators In the field that should be covered by Debian Pure Blends, we have to face also some common problems for system administrators. Often they have limited time in which they must serve quite a number of computers, and thus they are happy about each simplification of the administration process. The time required to make special adaptations for the intended purpose has to be reduced to a minimum. So, administrators are looking for timesaving in repetitive tasks. While this is a common issue for each general GNU/Linux distribution, this could have certain consequences in the special fields Debian Pure Blends want to address. Another problem administrators face is that they are often not experts in their clients' special field of work. Thus, they may need some specialist knowledge to explain the use of special programs to their users, or at least need to be able to communicate well with the experts about their special needs, and how the software can be used to address them. 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software Programs like a web server, or a mail user agent are used by many different users. That is why many gifted programmers feel obliged for this kind of Free Software - they just need it for their own. So you normally find a fast, growing community around Free Software packages that have a wide use. This is different for specialised software. In this context, the term "specialised software" refers to the kind of software that is needed by some experts for their job. This might be a practice management system that is used by doctors, a graphical information system (GIS) that is used by geographers, a screen reader that helps blind people to work with the computer, etc. The difference between such software and widely used software like office suites is that the user base is relatively small. This is also true for certain software that supports special localisation issues. Specialist software is used only by a limited set of users (i.e. the specialists). There exists a set of software tools that work perfectly in the environment where they were developed. If the developers catch the idea of Free Software, and just release this software as-is, people in the new, broader user community often run into trouble getting it to work in their environment. This happens because the developers did not really care about a robust installation process that works outside their special environment. As well, installation instructions are often badly written, if they exist at all. But these problem can be easily solved by shipping the software as policy-compliant binary packages, which not only ease installation, but also require documentation to be included. Thus, mere inclusion in Debian benefits the whole user base of any specialised software. The trouble often continues in the maintenance of the installed software. When it comes to the usage of the specialist software, it often happens that it perfectly fits the needs of the developer who wrote it for his own purposes, and who is familiar with its quirks, but in many cases such software does not comply with ergonomic standards of user interfaces. Several existing programs that might be useful for specialists are not really free in the sense of the Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) . Programs that are incompatible with the DFSG cannot be included in Debian. This is possibly a drawback for those programs, because they could profit by spreading widely on the back of Debian over the whole world. A certain number of programs are developed at universities by students or graduates. Once these people leave the university, the programs they developed might be orphaned; i.e. , not actively maintained anymore. If their licenses are too restrictive, it may be impossible for anyone else to take over; sticking to AT: We should find a way to avoid printing the URL in PDF output. DFSG -free licenses avoid that problem. In special fields, often "typical" (not necessarily Intel-based) hardware architectures are used. Debian currently runs on 11 different architectures, and automatic build servers normally compile software packages as necessary. If auto-builders for other architectures show problems, Debian maintainers will normally fix them, and send the original authors a patch. Moreover, users can report run-time problems via the Debian Bug Tracking System . Many programs that are written from scratch use their own non-standard file formats. However, it is often important for programs to be able to share data with each other. Often there are several programs that try to solve identical or similar problems. For instance the Debian Med team faces this in the case of programs claiming to serve as a medical practice management solution. Normally, all these programs take very interesting approaches but all of them have certain drawbacks. So, joining programmers' forces might make sense here. Sometimes the tools or back-ends used in Free Software are not appropriate for such applications. For instance, sometimes database servers that do not use transactions are used to store medical records, which is completely unacceptable. Other programs use web clients as their front-end, which is not really good for quick (mouse-less) usage, a great shortcoming for repetitive tasks. 3.4. General problem Free Software development is a kind of evolutionary process. It needs a critical mass of supporters, who are: programmers and users Because specialised software has a limited set of users, (specialists,) this results in a limited set of programmers. Debian wants to attract both groups to get it working. Debian is the missing link between upstream developers and users. 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view Debian currently grows in several directions: Number of involved people Number of packages Number of architectures Number of bugs Number of users Number of derivatives Time span between releases So several features are changing at different rates their quantity. According to Hegel a change of quantity leads into a change in quality. That means that Debian will change at a certain point in time (or over a certain time span) its quality. "To determine at the right moment the critical point where quantity changes into quality is one of the most important and difficult tasks in all the spheres of knowledge." (Trotski) This might mean that we just passed the point in time when Debian changed its quality. At one point we even observed a change once the package pool system was implemented to cope with the increased number of packages while trying to reduce the time span between releases. Even if the plan to increase the frequencies of releases failed Debian became a new quality. People started using the testing distribution even in production which was not really intended and in a consequence even security in testing was implemented for Sarge. According to Darwin evolution happens through quantitative transformations passing into qualitative. So Debian has to evolve and to cope with the inner changes and outer requirements to survive in the Linux distribution environment. Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends?  Home  Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch02.html#idm146
Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Table of Contents 2.1. What is Debian? 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) 2.3. Differences from other distributions 2.4. Debian Pure Blends 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system 2.5.1. Technical 2.5.2. Philosophical 2.6. Further resources about Blends 2.1. What is Debian? The core of an operating system is a piece of software that interacts with the hardware of the computer, and provides basic functionality for several applications. On Linux based systems, the so-called kernel provides this functionality, and the term Linux just means this core without those applications that provide the functionality for users. Other examples are the Hurd, or the flavours of the BSD kernel. Many applications around UNIX-like kernels are provided by the GNU system. That is why Linux based operating systems are described as GNU/Linux systems. The GNU tools around the Linux kernel build a complete operating system. Users do not need only an operating system. They also need certain applications like web servers, or office suites. A distribution is a collection of software packages around the GNU/Linux operating system that satisfies the needs of the target user group. There are general distributions, which try to support all users, and there are several specialised distributions, which each target a special group of users. Distributors are those companies that are building these collections of software around the GNU/Linux operating system. Because it is Free Software, the user who buys a distribution pays for the service that the distributor is providing. These services might be: Preparing a useful collection of software around GNU/Linux. Caring for smooth installation that the target user is able to manage. Providing software updates and security fixes. Writing documentation and translations to enable the user to use the distribution with maximum effect. Selling Boxes with ready to install CDs and printed documentation. Offering training and qualification. Most distributors ship their distribution in binary packages. Two package formats are widely used: RPM (RedHat Package Manager) which is supported by RedHat, SuSE and others. DEB (Debian Package) used by Debian and derived distributions. All GNU/Linux distributions have a certain amount of common ground, and the Linux Standard Base (LSB) is attempting to develop and promote a set of standards that will increase compatibility among Linux distributions, and enable software applications to run on any compliant system. The very essence of any distribution, (whether delivered as RPMs, DEBs, Source tarballs or ports) is the choice of policy statements made (or not made, as the case may be) by the creators of the distribution. Policy statements in this sense are things like "configuration files live in /etc/$package/$package.conf , logfiles go to /var/log/$package/$package.log and the documentation files can be found in /usr/share/doc/$package ." The policy statements are followed by the tool-chains and libraries used to build the software, and the lists of dependencies, which dictate the prerequisites and order in which the software has to be built and installed. (It's easier to ride a bicycle if you put the wheels on first. ;-) ) It is this adherence to policy that causes a distribution to remain consistent within its own bounds. At the same time, this is the reason why packages can not always be safely installed across distribution boundaries. A SuSE package.rpm might not play well with a RedHat package.rpm , although the packages work perfectly well within their own distributions. A similar compatibility problem could also apply to packages from the same distributor, but from a different version or generation of the distribution. AT: The context is somehow missing here. As you will see later in more detail, Debian Pure Blends are just a modified ruleset for producing a modified (specialised) version of Debian GNU/Linux. A package management system is a very strong tool to manage software packages on your computer. A large amount of the work of a distributor is building these software packages. Distributors you might know are RedHat , SuSE , Ubuntu and others. Debian is just one of them. Well, at least this is what people who do not know Debian well might think about it. But, in fact, Debian is a different kind of distribution ... 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) The Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made common cause to create a free operating system. This operating system that we have created is called Debian GNU/Linux , or simply Debian for short. Moreover, work is in progress to provide Debian of kernels other than Linux, primarily for the Hurd. Other possible kernels are the flavours of BSD, and there are even people who think about ports to MS Windows. All members of the Debian project are connected in a web of trust , which is woven by signing GPG keys. One requirement to become a member of the Debian project is to have a GPG key signed by a Debian developer. Every time one Debian developer meets another developer for the first time, they sign each other's keys. In this way, the web of trust is woven. 2.3. Differences from other distributions Debian is not a company, but an organisation. It does not sell anything. Debian members are volunteers. Maintainers are working on the common goal: to build the best operating system they can achieve. Debian maintains the largest collection of ready-to-install Free Software on the Internet. There are two ways to obtain Debian GNU/Linux: Buy it from some other distributor on CD. Perhaps the correct term would be re distributor. Because Debian is free, anybody can build his own distribution based on it, sell CDs, and even add new features, such as printed documentation, more software, support for different installers and more. Download Debian from the web for free. The latter is the common way, and there are really great tools to do it this way. Certainly it is always possible to copy Debian from a friend. 2.4. Debian Pure Blends Debian contains nearly 22.000 binary packages, and this number is constantly increasing. There is no single user who needs all these packages (even if conflicting packages are not considered). The normal user is interested in a subset of these packages. But how does the user find out which packages are really interesting? One solution is provided by the tasksel package. It provides a reasonable selection of quite general tasks that can be accomplished using a set of packages installed on a Debian GNU/Linux system. But this is not really fine grained, and does not address all of the needs of user groups with special interests. Debian Pure Blends - in short Blends if used clearly in the Debian internal context which makes "Pure" and "Debian" obvious - which were formerly known as Custom Debian Distributions (this name was confusing because it left to much room for speculation that this might be something else than Debian) try to provide a solution for special groups of target users with different skills and interests . Not only do they provide handy collections of specific program packages, but they also ease installation and configuration for the intended purpose. Debian Pure Blends are not forks from Debian. As the new name says clearly they are pure Debian and just provide a specific flavour. So if you obtain the complete Debian GNU/Linux distribution, you have all available Debian Pure Blends included. The concept of what is called Blend in Debian is also known in other distributions. For instance in Fedora there are Special Interest Groups (SIGs) even if some SIGs in Fedora are what in Debian is known as internal project because it is focused on technical implementations and not on user-oriented applications. 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system Not necessarily all currently existing Blends are actually providing installation media (live media or installer). The reason for this is that such installation media are not always necessary / wanted. You can just install plain Debian and install some metapackages on top of it. However, the metapackage approach makes the creation of installation media quite simple by using Debian Live . Here are some reasons for this approach compared to a remastering strategy. 2.5.1. Technical The process for creation of a blend involves starting with a Debian or derivative repository and creating an image directly from that (live, install or otherwise) that contains a selection of material from that repository delivered in such a way that it is usable by a particular target user for a particular purpose with a minimum of effort. By contrast, the process of remastering generally involves first downloading an image produced by the parent distro (live, install or otherwise,) then tearing it apart and reassembling it with your customizations applied. 2.5.2. Philosophical The blends philosophy is to work as closely with the parent distro as possible. If possible, the project should be done entirely within the distro as a subproject, containing only material supplied by the parent distro. We call this a "Pure Blend". The remastering philosophy (if it can be called that) seems to be "whatever works" and involves little or no interaction with the parent distro. It's a lazy approach used by people who have newly discovered that they can hack images to make them into custom images to make something uniquely theirs. Probably fine for quick-and-dirty results, but hard to support in the long run. The users of a blend are served better than the users of a remaster because of the following advantages: 2.5.2.1. Technical advantage A new version of a well-crafted blend ought to be able to be produced at any time directly from the repository simply by building it; the user has some assurance that the resulting system remains 'untainted' by hacking it up with scripts that 'damage' the original system by removing files from packages, changing files in packages, etc. something that hurts maintainability / support for such a system. 2.5.2.2. Community advantage A blend project aims to leverage support resources from the existing community to serve some sub-community within it. They accomplish this by not violating Debian packaging policy, producing something that is either pure Debian (a "pure blend") or Debian + additional packages, rather than some frankendistro artlessly stitched together from someone else's distro with scripts that change things everywhere with no regard to policy. Thus, normal support channels can be used with a pure blend since what you end up with is not a derivative at all, but just Debian, set up and ready to go for whatever you wanted to use it for. 2.6. Further resources about Blends Wiki https://wiki.debian.org/DebianPureBlends Mailing list https://lists.debian.org/debian-blends/ IRC #debian-blends irc://irc.debian.org/debian-blends Prev       Next Chapter 1. Introduction  Home  Chapter 3. General ideas
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch02.html#idm150
Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends? Table of Contents 2.1. What is Debian? 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) 2.3. Differences from other distributions 2.4. Debian Pure Blends 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system 2.5.1. Technical 2.5.2. Philosophical 2.6. Further resources about Blends 2.1. What is Debian? The core of an operating system is a piece of software that interacts with the hardware of the computer, and provides basic functionality for several applications. On Linux based systems, the so-called kernel provides this functionality, and the term Linux just means this core without those applications that provide the functionality for users. Other examples are the Hurd, or the flavours of the BSD kernel. Many applications around UNIX-like kernels are provided by the GNU system. That is why Linux based operating systems are described as GNU/Linux systems. The GNU tools around the Linux kernel build a complete operating system. Users do not need only an operating system. They also need certain applications like web servers, or office suites. A distribution is a collection of software packages around the GNU/Linux operating system that satisfies the needs of the target user group. There are general distributions, which try to support all users, and there are several specialised distributions, which each target a special group of users. Distributors are those companies that are building these collections of software around the GNU/Linux operating system. Because it is Free Software, the user who buys a distribution pays for the service that the distributor is providing. These services might be: Preparing a useful collection of software around GNU/Linux. Caring for smooth installation that the target user is able to manage. Providing software updates and security fixes. Writing documentation and translations to enable the user to use the distribution with maximum effect. Selling Boxes with ready to install CDs and printed documentation. Offering training and qualification. Most distributors ship their distribution in binary packages. Two package formats are widely used: RPM (RedHat Package Manager) which is supported by RedHat, SuSE and others. DEB (Debian Package) used by Debian and derived distributions. All GNU/Linux distributions have a certain amount of common ground, and the Linux Standard Base (LSB) is attempting to develop and promote a set of standards that will increase compatibility among Linux distributions, and enable software applications to run on any compliant system. The very essence of any distribution, (whether delivered as RPMs, DEBs, Source tarballs or ports) is the choice of policy statements made (or not made, as the case may be) by the creators of the distribution. Policy statements in this sense are things like "configuration files live in /etc/$package/$package.conf , logfiles go to /var/log/$package/$package.log and the documentation files can be found in /usr/share/doc/$package ." The policy statements are followed by the tool-chains and libraries used to build the software, and the lists of dependencies, which dictate the prerequisites and order in which the software has to be built and installed. (It's easier to ride a bicycle if you put the wheels on first. ;-) ) It is this adherence to policy that causes a distribution to remain consistent within its own bounds. At the same time, this is the reason why packages can not always be safely installed across distribution boundaries. A SuSE package.rpm might not play well with a RedHat package.rpm , although the packages work perfectly well within their own distributions. A similar compatibility problem could also apply to packages from the same distributor, but from a different version or generation of the distribution. AT: The context is somehow missing here. As you will see later in more detail, Debian Pure Blends are just a modified ruleset for producing a modified (specialised) version of Debian GNU/Linux. A package management system is a very strong tool to manage software packages on your computer. A large amount of the work of a distributor is building these software packages. Distributors you might know are RedHat , SuSE , Ubuntu and others. Debian is just one of them. Well, at least this is what people who do not know Debian well might think about it. But, in fact, Debian is a different kind of distribution ... 2.2. What is Debian? (next try) The Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made common cause to create a free operating system. This operating system that we have created is called Debian GNU/Linux , or simply Debian for short. Moreover, work is in progress to provide Debian of kernels other than Linux, primarily for the Hurd. Other possible kernels are the flavours of BSD, and there are even people who think about ports to MS Windows. All members of the Debian project are connected in a web of trust , which is woven by signing GPG keys. One requirement to become a member of the Debian project is to have a GPG key signed by a Debian developer. Every time one Debian developer meets another developer for the first time, they sign each other's keys. In this way, the web of trust is woven. 2.3. Differences from other distributions Debian is not a company, but an organisation. It does not sell anything. Debian members are volunteers. Maintainers are working on the common goal: to build the best operating system they can achieve. Debian maintains the largest collection of ready-to-install Free Software on the Internet. There are two ways to obtain Debian GNU/Linux: Buy it from some other distributor on CD. Perhaps the correct term would be re distributor. Because Debian is free, anybody can build his own distribution based on it, sell CDs, and even add new features, such as printed documentation, more software, support for different installers and more. Download Debian from the web for free. The latter is the common way, and there are really great tools to do it this way. Certainly it is always possible to copy Debian from a friend. 2.4. Debian Pure Blends Debian contains nearly 22.000 binary packages, and this number is constantly increasing. There is no single user who needs all these packages (even if conflicting packages are not considered). The normal user is interested in a subset of these packages. But how does the user find out which packages are really interesting? One solution is provided by the tasksel package. It provides a reasonable selection of quite general tasks that can be accomplished using a set of packages installed on a Debian GNU/Linux system. But this is not really fine grained, and does not address all of the needs of user groups with special interests. Debian Pure Blends - in short Blends if used clearly in the Debian internal context which makes "Pure" and "Debian" obvious - which were formerly known as Custom Debian Distributions (this name was confusing because it left to much room for speculation that this might be something else than Debian) try to provide a solution for special groups of target users with different skills and interests . Not only do they provide handy collections of specific program packages, but they also ease installation and configuration for the intended purpose. Debian Pure Blends are not forks from Debian. As the new name says clearly they are pure Debian and just provide a specific flavour. So if you obtain the complete Debian GNU/Linux distribution, you have all available Debian Pure Blends included. The concept of what is called Blend in Debian is also known in other distributions. For instance in Fedora there are Special Interest Groups (SIGs) even if some SIGs in Fedora are what in Debian is known as internal project because it is focused on technical implementations and not on user-oriented applications. 2.5. Difference between a Blend and a remastered system Not necessarily all currently existing Blends are actually providing installation media (live media or installer). The reason for this is that such installation media are not always necessary / wanted. You can just install plain Debian and install some metapackages on top of it. However, the metapackage approach makes the creation of installation media quite simple by using Debian Live . Here are some reasons for this approach compared to a remastering strategy. 2.5.1. Technical The process for creation of a blend involves starting with a Debian or derivative repository and creating an image directly from that (live, install or otherwise) that contains a selection of material from that repository delivered in such a way that it is usable by a particular target user for a particular purpose with a minimum of effort. By contrast, the process of remastering generally involves first downloading an image produced by the parent distro (live, install or otherwise,) then tearing it apart and reassembling it with your customizations applied. 2.5.2. Philosophical The blends philosophy is to work as closely with the parent distro as possible. If possible, the project should be done entirely within the distro as a subproject, containing only material supplied by the parent distro. We call this a "Pure Blend". The remastering philosophy (if it can be called that) seems to be "whatever works" and involves little or no interaction with the parent distro. It's a lazy approach used by people who have newly discovered that they can hack images to make them into custom images to make something uniquely theirs. Probably fine for quick-and-dirty results, but hard to support in the long run. The users of a blend are served better than the users of a remaster because of the following advantages: 2.5.2.1. Technical advantage A new version of a well-crafted blend ought to be able to be produced at any time directly from the repository simply by building it; the user has some assurance that the resulting system remains 'untainted' by hacking it up with scripts that 'damage' the original system by removing files from packages, changing files in packages, etc. something that hurts maintainability / support for such a system. 2.5.2.2. Community advantage A blend project aims to leverage support resources from the existing community to serve some sub-community within it. They accomplish this by not violating Debian packaging policy, producing something that is either pure Debian (a "pure blend") or Debian + additional packages, rather than some frankendistro artlessly stitched together from someone else's distro with scripts that change things everywhere with no regard to policy. Thus, normal support channels can be used with a pure blend since what you end up with is not a derivative at all, but just Debian, set up and ready to go for whatever you wanted to use it for. 2.6. Further resources about Blends Wiki https://wiki.debian.org/DebianPureBlends Mailing list https://lists.debian.org/debian-blends/ IRC #debian-blends irc://irc.debian.org/debian-blends Prev       Next Chapter 1. Introduction  Home  Chapter 3. General ideas
2026-01-13T09:30:27
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch03.html#general_problem
Chapter 3. General ideas Chapter 3. General ideas Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas Table of Contents 3.1. Looking beyond 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software 3.4. General problem 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view 3.1. Looking beyond Commercial Linux distributors sell certain products that try to address special user needs. Enterprise solutions Advanced Server - RedHat Enterprise Server - SuSE Small Office and Home Office (SOHO) There are a couple of workstation or home editions, as well as office desktops built by several GNU/Linux distributors. Special task products Mail server SuSE Linux Openexchange Server Firewall SuSE Firewall on CD, ... Content Management System RedHat Portal Server RedHat This is only a small set of examples of commercial GNU/Linux distributors addressing specific user interests with certain products. Debian solves this problem with Debian Pure Blends . 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users The target user of a Blend may be a specialist of a certain profession, (e.g. a doctor or lawyer,) a person who has not (yet) gathered a certain amount of computer knowledge, (e.g. a child,) or a person with disabilities (e.g. a visually or hearing impaired person.) Moreover, the customisation might deal with peculiarities of certain regions where users have needs that differ from Debian as a whole. It is not unusual for these target users to be less technically competent than the stereotypical Linux user. These people are often not interested in the computer for its own sake, but just want it to work for them. Imagine the frustration of a doctor who has to move the focus of interest from the patient to his stupid computer that does not work as expected. Because of limited knowledge or time, the target user is usually unable to install upstream programs. This means that in the first place, they must find out which software packages in their distribution might serve for a certain problem. The next step would be to download and install the packages they choose, perhaps requiring a certain amount of configuration effort. This problem is nearly impossible for a user with limited technical competence and perhaps poor English language comprehension, which prevents the user from understanding the installation manual. The language barrier in this field is an important issue, because we are targeting everyday users who are not compelled to learn English, like Free Software developers are, for everyday communication. So the installation process has to involve the least possible user interaction, and any such interaction has to be internationalised. Furthermore, most target users have no or little interest in administration of their computer. In short, the optimal situation would be that he would not even notice the existence of the computer, but just focus on using the application to accomplish the task at hand. Common to all groups of target users is their interest in a defined subset of available Free Software. None of them would like to spend much time searching for the package that fits his interest. Instead, the target user would prefer to immediately and effortlessly locate and access all material relevant to solving his own problems. There is an absolute need for easy usage of the programs. This is not to say users expect to not have to learn to use the software. Adults generally accept that they must spend a reasonable amount of time in learning how to use a piece of software before they can do something useful and productive with it. But a simple-to-learn environment greatly enhances the value of the software, and if you consider children as target users, they just want to start using it right away without reading any documentation. The more important part of the request for easy usage is a professional design that is functional and effective. To accomplish this, the programmers need expert knowledge, or at least a quick communication channel to experts to learn more about their requirements. One task for Debian Pure Blends is to bring programmers and experts who will use those special programs together. Last, but not least, we find certain requirements beyond just which packages are provided in each target user group. These may differ between different Blends. For instance, while a doctor has to protect his database against snooping by outside attackers, the privacy risk for a child's system are of lesser importance. Thus, the Debian Junior project cares more for ensuring that the user himself does not damage the desktop environment while playing around with it than about remote attacks. So we find a "defined security profile" for each single Blend. 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators In the field that should be covered by Debian Pure Blends, we have to face also some common problems for system administrators. Often they have limited time in which they must serve quite a number of computers, and thus they are happy about each simplification of the administration process. The time required to make special adaptations for the intended purpose has to be reduced to a minimum. So, administrators are looking for timesaving in repetitive tasks. While this is a common issue for each general GNU/Linux distribution, this could have certain consequences in the special fields Debian Pure Blends want to address. Another problem administrators face is that they are often not experts in their clients' special field of work. Thus, they may need some specialist knowledge to explain the use of special programs to their users, or at least need to be able to communicate well with the experts about their special needs, and how the software can be used to address them. 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software Programs like a web server, or a mail user agent are used by many different users. That is why many gifted programmers feel obliged for this kind of Free Software - they just need it for their own. So you normally find a fast, growing community around Free Software packages that have a wide use. This is different for specialised software. In this context, the term "specialised software" refers to the kind of software that is needed by some experts for their job. This might be a practice management system that is used by doctors, a graphical information system (GIS) that is used by geographers, a screen reader that helps blind people to work with the computer, etc. The difference between such software and widely used software like office suites is that the user base is relatively small. This is also true for certain software that supports special localisation issues. Specialist software is used only by a limited set of users (i.e. the specialists). There exists a set of software tools that work perfectly in the environment where they were developed. If the developers catch the idea of Free Software, and just release this software as-is, people in the new, broader user community often run into trouble getting it to work in their environment. This happens because the developers did not really care about a robust installation process that works outside their special environment. As well, installation instructions are often badly written, if they exist at all. But these problem can be easily solved by shipping the software as policy-compliant binary packages, which not only ease installation, but also require documentation to be included. Thus, mere inclusion in Debian benefits the whole user base of any specialised software. The trouble often continues in the maintenance of the installed software. When it comes to the usage of the specialist software, it often happens that it perfectly fits the needs of the developer who wrote it for his own purposes, and who is familiar with its quirks, but in many cases such software does not comply with ergonomic standards of user interfaces. Several existing programs that might be useful for specialists are not really free in the sense of the Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) . Programs that are incompatible with the DFSG cannot be included in Debian. This is possibly a drawback for those programs, because they could profit by spreading widely on the back of Debian over the whole world. A certain number of programs are developed at universities by students or graduates. Once these people leave the university, the programs they developed might be orphaned; i.e. , not actively maintained anymore. If their licenses are too restrictive, it may be impossible for anyone else to take over; sticking to AT: We should find a way to avoid printing the URL in PDF output. DFSG -free licenses avoid that problem. In special fields, often "typical" (not necessarily Intel-based) hardware architectures are used. Debian currently runs on 11 different architectures, and automatic build servers normally compile software packages as necessary. If auto-builders for other architectures show problems, Debian maintainers will normally fix them, and send the original authors a patch. Moreover, users can report run-time problems via the Debian Bug Tracking System . Many programs that are written from scratch use their own non-standard file formats. However, it is often important for programs to be able to share data with each other. Often there are several programs that try to solve identical or similar problems. For instance the Debian Med team faces this in the case of programs claiming to serve as a medical practice management solution. Normally, all these programs take very interesting approaches but all of them have certain drawbacks. So, joining programmers' forces might make sense here. Sometimes the tools or back-ends used in Free Software are not appropriate for such applications. For instance, sometimes database servers that do not use transactions are used to store medical records, which is completely unacceptable. Other programs use web clients as their front-end, which is not really good for quick (mouse-less) usage, a great shortcoming for repetitive tasks. 3.4. General problem Free Software development is a kind of evolutionary process. It needs a critical mass of supporters, who are: programmers and users Because specialised software has a limited set of users, (specialists,) this results in a limited set of programmers. Debian wants to attract both groups to get it working. Debian is the missing link between upstream developers and users. 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view Debian currently grows in several directions: Number of involved people Number of packages Number of architectures Number of bugs Number of users Number of derivatives Time span between releases So several features are changing at different rates their quantity. According to Hegel a change of quantity leads into a change in quality. That means that Debian will change at a certain point in time (or over a certain time span) its quality. "To determine at the right moment the critical point where quantity changes into quality is one of the most important and difficult tasks in all the spheres of knowledge." (Trotski) This might mean that we just passed the point in time when Debian changed its quality. At one point we even observed a change once the package pool system was implemented to cope with the increased number of packages while trying to reduce the time span between releases. Even if the plan to increase the frequencies of releases failed Debian became a new quality. People started using the testing distribution even in production which was not really intended and in a consequence even security in testing was implemented for Sarge. According to Darwin evolution happens through quantitative transformations passing into qualitative. So Debian has to evolve and to cope with the inner changes and outer requirements to survive in the Linux distribution environment. Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends?  Home  Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch04.html#debian-jr
Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Prev       Next Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Table of Contents 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 Start beginning of 2000 URL http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-jr Tasks Tasks of Debian Jr. Mailing list debian-jr@lists.debian.org Initiator Ben Armstrong < synrg@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Jr. mailing list Release Debian 3.0 (Woody) Goals To make Debian an OS that children of all ages will want to use, preferring it over the alternatives. To care for those applications in Debian suitable for children, and ensure their quality, to the best of our abilities. To make Debian a playground for children's enjoyment and exploration. The main target is young children. By the time children are teenaged, they should be comfortable with using Debian without any special modifications. Debian Jr. was the first Blend. In fact, at the time this project was created, the idea behind of Debian Pure Blends was born, although then, we used the term "Debian Internal Project". Over time, this name was changed to "Custom Debian Distributions" first because it was too broad, as it was equally descriptive of a number of quite different projects, such as IPv6 and QA. The next change of names became necessary when it was realised that the term "Custom Debian Distribution" was considered as "something else than Debian" by any newcomer. This was so misleading that it effectively blocked a wide propagation of the principle. Debian Jr. not only provides games, but is also concerned about their quality from a child's perspective. Thus, games that are regarded as not well suited to young children are omitted. Moreover, choices are made about which packages are best suited for children to use for various other activities and tasks that interest them. This includes, for example, simple text processing, web browsing and drawing. 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care Start beginning of 2002 URL Debian Med Tasks Tasks of Debian Med Mailing list debian-med@lists.debian.org Initiator Andreas Tille < tille@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Med mailing list Activists on Debian Med developer list Committers to Debian Med VCS Uploaders of Debian Med team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Med packages Release Sarge Goals To build an integrated software environment for all medical tasks. To care especially for the quality of program packages in the field of medicine that are already integrated within Debian. To build and include in Debian packages of medical software that are missing in Debian. To care for a general infrastructure for medical users. To make efforts to increase the quality of third party Free Software in the field of medicine. 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education Start Summer of 2002, since 2003 merged with SkoleLinux, which is now synonymous with Debian Edu URL Debian Edu Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Edu Mailing list debian-edu@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Edu mailing list Responsible Petter Reinholdtsen < pere@hungry.com > Release Sarge Goals To make Debian the best distribution available for educational use. Provide a ready to run classroom installation with free educational software. An automatically installed server provides net-boot services for disk-less thin clients and all necessary applications for educational use. To federate many initiatives around education, which are partly based on forks of Debian. To continue the internationalisation efforts of SkoleLinux. To focus on easy installation in schools. To cooperate with other education-related projects (like Schoolforge , Ofset , KdeEdu ). This project started with the intention to bring back into Debian a fork from Debian that was started by some people in France. Because they had some time constraints, the people who initially started this effort handed over responsibility to the Norwegian Skolelinux , which is currently more or less identical to Debian Edu. 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems Start October 2004 URL DebianGIS Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian GIS Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Francesco P. Lovergine < frankie@debian.org > Goals Geographical Information Systems OpenStreetMap and GPS devices 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers Start March 2014 URL Debian Astro Blends page Tasks Tasks of Debian Astro Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Ole Streicher < olebole@debian.org > Goals Debian Astro is a "Debian Pure Blend" with the aim to develop a Debian based operating system that fits the requirements of both professional and hobby astronomers. It integrates a large number of software packages covering telescope control, data reduction, presentation and other fields. 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry Start October 2004 URL Debichem Alioth page Tasks Tasks of DebiChem Mailing list debichem-users@lists.alioth.debian.org Activity Activists on DebiChem mailing list Committers to DebiChem VCS Uploaders of DebiChem team Team members closing the most bugs in DebiChem packages Initiator Michael Banck < mbanck@debian.org > Goals Chemical applications in Debian 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science Start July 2005 URL Debian Science Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Science Mailing list debian-science@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Science mailing list Activists on Debian Science maintainers list Committers to Debian Science VCS Uploaders of Debian Science team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Science packages Responsible Sylvestre Ledru < sylvestre@debian.org > While there are Debian Pure Blends that care for certain sciences (Debian Med deals in a main part with Biology, DebiChem for Chemistry and Debian GIS for geography) not all sciences are covered by a specific Blend. The main reason is that at the moment not enough people support such an effort for every science. The temporary solution was to build a general Debian Science Blend that makes use of the work of other Blends in case it exists. 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project Debian for blind and visually impaired people Start February 2003 Mailing list debian-accessibility@lists.debian.org URL Debian Accessibility Tasks Tasks of Debian Accessibility Activity Activists on Debian Accessibility mailing list Initiator Mario Lang < mlang@debian.org > Goals To make Debian accessible to people with disabilities. To take special care for: Screen readers; Screen magnification programs; Software speech synthesisers; Speech recognition software; Scanner drivers and OCR software; Specialised software like edbrowse (web-browse in the spirit of line-editors) To make text-mode interfaces available. To provide screen reader functionality during installation. 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server Start May 2010 URL Website Demo Buy Download Disk Images Wiki Manual Tasks Tasks of FreedomBox Contact Get Support Discussion Forum Matrix Mailing List IRC FreedomBox Foundation Report Issues Activity Project page Latest posts on discussion forum Committers to FreedomBox repository Activity on the FreedomBox Salsa project Responsible FreedomBox Team < admin@freedombox.org > FreedomBox is designed to be your own inexpensive server at home. It runs free software and offers an increasing number of services ranging from a calendar or jabber server to a wiki or VPN. A web interface allows you to easily install and configure your apps. Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas  Home  Chapter 5. Distributions inside Debian
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://blends.debian.org/astro/
Debian Astro Pure Blend Pure Blend Debian Astro Packages Contact Contribute Debian Pure Blends / Debian Astro Debian Astro Debian Astro is a "Debian Pure Blend" with the aim to develop a Debian based operating system that fits the requirements of both professional and hobby astronomers. It integrates a large number of software packages covering telescope control, data reduction, presentation and other fields. Installation On an existing Debian Buster installation, you can get the Debian Astro Pure Blend just by installing its metapackages . To get a comprehensive selection of packages, you also may install the package astro-all with the command sudo apt install astro-all . The Debian Astro logo was created by Maria Hammerstrøm and is under the license LGPL-3 or CC BY-SA 3.0 by your choice.
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch03.html#status
Chapter 3. General ideas Chapter 3. General ideas Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas Table of Contents 3.1. Looking beyond 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software 3.4. General problem 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view 3.1. Looking beyond Commercial Linux distributors sell certain products that try to address special user needs. Enterprise solutions Advanced Server - RedHat Enterprise Server - SuSE Small Office and Home Office (SOHO) There are a couple of workstation or home editions, as well as office desktops built by several GNU/Linux distributors. Special task products Mail server SuSE Linux Openexchange Server Firewall SuSE Firewall on CD, ... Content Management System RedHat Portal Server RedHat This is only a small set of examples of commercial GNU/Linux distributors addressing specific user interests with certain products. Debian solves this problem with Debian Pure Blends . 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users The target user of a Blend may be a specialist of a certain profession, (e.g. a doctor or lawyer,) a person who has not (yet) gathered a certain amount of computer knowledge, (e.g. a child,) or a person with disabilities (e.g. a visually or hearing impaired person.) Moreover, the customisation might deal with peculiarities of certain regions where users have needs that differ from Debian as a whole. It is not unusual for these target users to be less technically competent than the stereotypical Linux user. These people are often not interested in the computer for its own sake, but just want it to work for them. Imagine the frustration of a doctor who has to move the focus of interest from the patient to his stupid computer that does not work as expected. Because of limited knowledge or time, the target user is usually unable to install upstream programs. This means that in the first place, they must find out which software packages in their distribution might serve for a certain problem. The next step would be to download and install the packages they choose, perhaps requiring a certain amount of configuration effort. This problem is nearly impossible for a user with limited technical competence and perhaps poor English language comprehension, which prevents the user from understanding the installation manual. The language barrier in this field is an important issue, because we are targeting everyday users who are not compelled to learn English, like Free Software developers are, for everyday communication. So the installation process has to involve the least possible user interaction, and any such interaction has to be internationalised. Furthermore, most target users have no or little interest in administration of their computer. In short, the optimal situation would be that he would not even notice the existence of the computer, but just focus on using the application to accomplish the task at hand. Common to all groups of target users is their interest in a defined subset of available Free Software. None of them would like to spend much time searching for the package that fits his interest. Instead, the target user would prefer to immediately and effortlessly locate and access all material relevant to solving his own problems. There is an absolute need for easy usage of the programs. This is not to say users expect to not have to learn to use the software. Adults generally accept that they must spend a reasonable amount of time in learning how to use a piece of software before they can do something useful and productive with it. But a simple-to-learn environment greatly enhances the value of the software, and if you consider children as target users, they just want to start using it right away without reading any documentation. The more important part of the request for easy usage is a professional design that is functional and effective. To accomplish this, the programmers need expert knowledge, or at least a quick communication channel to experts to learn more about their requirements. One task for Debian Pure Blends is to bring programmers and experts who will use those special programs together. Last, but not least, we find certain requirements beyond just which packages are provided in each target user group. These may differ between different Blends. For instance, while a doctor has to protect his database against snooping by outside attackers, the privacy risk for a child's system are of lesser importance. Thus, the Debian Junior project cares more for ensuring that the user himself does not damage the desktop environment while playing around with it than about remote attacks. So we find a "defined security profile" for each single Blend. 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators In the field that should be covered by Debian Pure Blends, we have to face also some common problems for system administrators. Often they have limited time in which they must serve quite a number of computers, and thus they are happy about each simplification of the administration process. The time required to make special adaptations for the intended purpose has to be reduced to a minimum. So, administrators are looking for timesaving in repetitive tasks. While this is a common issue for each general GNU/Linux distribution, this could have certain consequences in the special fields Debian Pure Blends want to address. Another problem administrators face is that they are often not experts in their clients' special field of work. Thus, they may need some specialist knowledge to explain the use of special programs to their users, or at least need to be able to communicate well with the experts about their special needs, and how the software can be used to address them. 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software Programs like a web server, or a mail user agent are used by many different users. That is why many gifted programmers feel obliged for this kind of Free Software - they just need it for their own. So you normally find a fast, growing community around Free Software packages that have a wide use. This is different for specialised software. In this context, the term "specialised software" refers to the kind of software that is needed by some experts for their job. This might be a practice management system that is used by doctors, a graphical information system (GIS) that is used by geographers, a screen reader that helps blind people to work with the computer, etc. The difference between such software and widely used software like office suites is that the user base is relatively small. This is also true for certain software that supports special localisation issues. Specialist software is used only by a limited set of users (i.e. the specialists). There exists a set of software tools that work perfectly in the environment where they were developed. If the developers catch the idea of Free Software, and just release this software as-is, people in the new, broader user community often run into trouble getting it to work in their environment. This happens because the developers did not really care about a robust installation process that works outside their special environment. As well, installation instructions are often badly written, if they exist at all. But these problem can be easily solved by shipping the software as policy-compliant binary packages, which not only ease installation, but also require documentation to be included. Thus, mere inclusion in Debian benefits the whole user base of any specialised software. The trouble often continues in the maintenance of the installed software. When it comes to the usage of the specialist software, it often happens that it perfectly fits the needs of the developer who wrote it for his own purposes, and who is familiar with its quirks, but in many cases such software does not comply with ergonomic standards of user interfaces. Several existing programs that might be useful for specialists are not really free in the sense of the Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) . Programs that are incompatible with the DFSG cannot be included in Debian. This is possibly a drawback for those programs, because they could profit by spreading widely on the back of Debian over the whole world. A certain number of programs are developed at universities by students or graduates. Once these people leave the university, the programs they developed might be orphaned; i.e. , not actively maintained anymore. If their licenses are too restrictive, it may be impossible for anyone else to take over; sticking to AT: We should find a way to avoid printing the URL in PDF output. DFSG -free licenses avoid that problem. In special fields, often "typical" (not necessarily Intel-based) hardware architectures are used. Debian currently runs on 11 different architectures, and automatic build servers normally compile software packages as necessary. If auto-builders for other architectures show problems, Debian maintainers will normally fix them, and send the original authors a patch. Moreover, users can report run-time problems via the Debian Bug Tracking System . Many programs that are written from scratch use their own non-standard file formats. However, it is often important for programs to be able to share data with each other. Often there are several programs that try to solve identical or similar problems. For instance the Debian Med team faces this in the case of programs claiming to serve as a medical practice management solution. Normally, all these programs take very interesting approaches but all of them have certain drawbacks. So, joining programmers' forces might make sense here. Sometimes the tools or back-ends used in Free Software are not appropriate for such applications. For instance, sometimes database servers that do not use transactions are used to store medical records, which is completely unacceptable. Other programs use web clients as their front-end, which is not really good for quick (mouse-less) usage, a great shortcoming for repetitive tasks. 3.4. General problem Free Software development is a kind of evolutionary process. It needs a critical mass of supporters, who are: programmers and users Because specialised software has a limited set of users, (specialists,) this results in a limited set of programmers. Debian wants to attract both groups to get it working. Debian is the missing link between upstream developers and users. 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view Debian currently grows in several directions: Number of involved people Number of packages Number of architectures Number of bugs Number of users Number of derivatives Time span between releases So several features are changing at different rates their quantity. According to Hegel a change of quantity leads into a change in quality. That means that Debian will change at a certain point in time (or over a certain time span) its quality. "To determine at the right moment the critical point where quantity changes into quality is one of the most important and difficult tasks in all the spheres of knowledge." (Trotski) This might mean that we just passed the point in time when Debian changed its quality. At one point we even observed a change once the package pool system was implemented to cope with the increased number of packages while trying to reduce the time span between releases. Even if the plan to increase the frequencies of releases failed Debian became a new quality. People started using the testing distribution even in production which was not really intended and in a consequence even security in testing was implemented for Sarge. According to Darwin evolution happens through quantitative transformations passing into qualitative. So Debian has to evolve and to cope with the inner changes and outer requirements to survive in the Linux distribution environment. Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends?  Home  Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://classic.yarnpkg.com/en/docs#main
Documentation | Yarn Important: This documentation covers Yarn 1 (Classic). For Yarn 2+ docs and migration guide, see yarnpkg.com. Yarn Getting Started Docs Packages Blog English English Español Français Bahasa Indonesia 日本語 Português (Brasil) Русский Türkçe Українська 中文 繁體中文 Discord Discord Twitter Twitter Facebook Facebook GitHub GitHub Documentation Search documentation Getting Started Never used a package manager before or just new to Yarn? Let's get you up and running in just a couple of minutes. Read more The Yarn Workflow How do I use Yarn? There are basic workflows for both creating and consuming Yarn packages that will help you get productive quickly. Read more CLI Commands Yarn is executed through a rich set of commands allowing package installation, administration, publishing, and more. Read more Migrating from npm client Yarn interops directly with many features of npm, including its package metadata format, allowing for a painless migration. Read more Creating a Package Creating and publishing a yarn package can be done with just a few commands and configuration settings, leaving you to focus on your actual code. Read more Dependencies & Versions Using Yarn you'll be working with dependencies all the time. Let's go through the different types and versions of dependencies. Read more Configuration Learn how to use package.json to configure your packages and dependencies. Read more Offline Mirror Maintain offline copies of your packages for more repeatable and reliable builds. Read more Workspaces Link together your projects for easier maintenance. Read more Plug'n'Play Install your projects in a safer and faster way. Read more Yarn Organization The Yarn organization is a collaboration of many companies and individuals dedicated to improving your package management experience. Read more Yarn Distributed under BSD License Code of Conduct Edit this page
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch03.html#userprofile
Chapter 3. General ideas Chapter 3. General ideas Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas Table of Contents 3.1. Looking beyond 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software 3.4. General problem 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view 3.1. Looking beyond Commercial Linux distributors sell certain products that try to address special user needs. Enterprise solutions Advanced Server - RedHat Enterprise Server - SuSE Small Office and Home Office (SOHO) There are a couple of workstation or home editions, as well as office desktops built by several GNU/Linux distributors. Special task products Mail server SuSE Linux Openexchange Server Firewall SuSE Firewall on CD, ... Content Management System RedHat Portal Server RedHat This is only a small set of examples of commercial GNU/Linux distributors addressing specific user interests with certain products. Debian solves this problem with Debian Pure Blends . 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users The target user of a Blend may be a specialist of a certain profession, (e.g. a doctor or lawyer,) a person who has not (yet) gathered a certain amount of computer knowledge, (e.g. a child,) or a person with disabilities (e.g. a visually or hearing impaired person.) Moreover, the customisation might deal with peculiarities of certain regions where users have needs that differ from Debian as a whole. It is not unusual for these target users to be less technically competent than the stereotypical Linux user. These people are often not interested in the computer for its own sake, but just want it to work for them. Imagine the frustration of a doctor who has to move the focus of interest from the patient to his stupid computer that does not work as expected. Because of limited knowledge or time, the target user is usually unable to install upstream programs. This means that in the first place, they must find out which software packages in their distribution might serve for a certain problem. The next step would be to download and install the packages they choose, perhaps requiring a certain amount of configuration effort. This problem is nearly impossible for a user with limited technical competence and perhaps poor English language comprehension, which prevents the user from understanding the installation manual. The language barrier in this field is an important issue, because we are targeting everyday users who are not compelled to learn English, like Free Software developers are, for everyday communication. So the installation process has to involve the least possible user interaction, and any such interaction has to be internationalised. Furthermore, most target users have no or little interest in administration of their computer. In short, the optimal situation would be that he would not even notice the existence of the computer, but just focus on using the application to accomplish the task at hand. Common to all groups of target users is their interest in a defined subset of available Free Software. None of them would like to spend much time searching for the package that fits his interest. Instead, the target user would prefer to immediately and effortlessly locate and access all material relevant to solving his own problems. There is an absolute need for easy usage of the programs. This is not to say users expect to not have to learn to use the software. Adults generally accept that they must spend a reasonable amount of time in learning how to use a piece of software before they can do something useful and productive with it. But a simple-to-learn environment greatly enhances the value of the software, and if you consider children as target users, they just want to start using it right away without reading any documentation. The more important part of the request for easy usage is a professional design that is functional and effective. To accomplish this, the programmers need expert knowledge, or at least a quick communication channel to experts to learn more about their requirements. One task for Debian Pure Blends is to bring programmers and experts who will use those special programs together. Last, but not least, we find certain requirements beyond just which packages are provided in each target user group. These may differ between different Blends. For instance, while a doctor has to protect his database against snooping by outside attackers, the privacy risk for a child's system are of lesser importance. Thus, the Debian Junior project cares more for ensuring that the user himself does not damage the desktop environment while playing around with it than about remote attacks. So we find a "defined security profile" for each single Blend. 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators In the field that should be covered by Debian Pure Blends, we have to face also some common problems for system administrators. Often they have limited time in which they must serve quite a number of computers, and thus they are happy about each simplification of the administration process. The time required to make special adaptations for the intended purpose has to be reduced to a minimum. So, administrators are looking for timesaving in repetitive tasks. While this is a common issue for each general GNU/Linux distribution, this could have certain consequences in the special fields Debian Pure Blends want to address. Another problem administrators face is that they are often not experts in their clients' special field of work. Thus, they may need some specialist knowledge to explain the use of special programs to their users, or at least need to be able to communicate well with the experts about their special needs, and how the software can be used to address them. 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software Programs like a web server, or a mail user agent are used by many different users. That is why many gifted programmers feel obliged for this kind of Free Software - they just need it for their own. So you normally find a fast, growing community around Free Software packages that have a wide use. This is different for specialised software. In this context, the term "specialised software" refers to the kind of software that is needed by some experts for their job. This might be a practice management system that is used by doctors, a graphical information system (GIS) that is used by geographers, a screen reader that helps blind people to work with the computer, etc. The difference between such software and widely used software like office suites is that the user base is relatively small. This is also true for certain software that supports special localisation issues. Specialist software is used only by a limited set of users (i.e. the specialists). There exists a set of software tools that work perfectly in the environment where they were developed. If the developers catch the idea of Free Software, and just release this software as-is, people in the new, broader user community often run into trouble getting it to work in their environment. This happens because the developers did not really care about a robust installation process that works outside their special environment. As well, installation instructions are often badly written, if they exist at all. But these problem can be easily solved by shipping the software as policy-compliant binary packages, which not only ease installation, but also require documentation to be included. Thus, mere inclusion in Debian benefits the whole user base of any specialised software. The trouble often continues in the maintenance of the installed software. When it comes to the usage of the specialist software, it often happens that it perfectly fits the needs of the developer who wrote it for his own purposes, and who is familiar with its quirks, but in many cases such software does not comply with ergonomic standards of user interfaces. Several existing programs that might be useful for specialists are not really free in the sense of the Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) . Programs that are incompatible with the DFSG cannot be included in Debian. This is possibly a drawback for those programs, because they could profit by spreading widely on the back of Debian over the whole world. A certain number of programs are developed at universities by students or graduates. Once these people leave the university, the programs they developed might be orphaned; i.e. , not actively maintained anymore. If their licenses are too restrictive, it may be impossible for anyone else to take over; sticking to AT: We should find a way to avoid printing the URL in PDF output. DFSG -free licenses avoid that problem. In special fields, often "typical" (not necessarily Intel-based) hardware architectures are used. Debian currently runs on 11 different architectures, and automatic build servers normally compile software packages as necessary. If auto-builders for other architectures show problems, Debian maintainers will normally fix them, and send the original authors a patch. Moreover, users can report run-time problems via the Debian Bug Tracking System . Many programs that are written from scratch use their own non-standard file formats. However, it is often important for programs to be able to share data with each other. Often there are several programs that try to solve identical or similar problems. For instance the Debian Med team faces this in the case of programs claiming to serve as a medical practice management solution. Normally, all these programs take very interesting approaches but all of them have certain drawbacks. So, joining programmers' forces might make sense here. Sometimes the tools or back-ends used in Free Software are not appropriate for such applications. For instance, sometimes database servers that do not use transactions are used to store medical records, which is completely unacceptable. Other programs use web clients as their front-end, which is not really good for quick (mouse-less) usage, a great shortcoming for repetitive tasks. 3.4. General problem Free Software development is a kind of evolutionary process. It needs a critical mass of supporters, who are: programmers and users Because specialised software has a limited set of users, (specialists,) this results in a limited set of programmers. Debian wants to attract both groups to get it working. Debian is the missing link between upstream developers and users. 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view Debian currently grows in several directions: Number of involved people Number of packages Number of architectures Number of bugs Number of users Number of derivatives Time span between releases So several features are changing at different rates their quantity. According to Hegel a change of quantity leads into a change in quality. That means that Debian will change at a certain point in time (or over a certain time span) its quality. "To determine at the right moment the critical point where quantity changes into quality is one of the most important and difficult tasks in all the spheres of knowledge." (Trotski) This might mean that we just passed the point in time when Debian changed its quality. At one point we even observed a change once the package pool system was implemented to cope with the increased number of packages while trying to reduce the time span between releases. Even if the plan to increase the frequencies of releases failed Debian became a new quality. People started using the testing distribution even in production which was not really intended and in a consequence even security in testing was implemented for Sarge. According to Darwin evolution happens through quantitative transformations passing into qualitative. So Debian has to evolve and to cope with the inner changes and outer requirements to survive in the Linux distribution environment. Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends?  Home  Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://classic.yarnpkg.com/en/
Yarn Important: This documentation covers Yarn 1 (Classic). For Yarn 2+ docs and migration guide, see yarnpkg.com. Yarn Getting Started Docs Packages Blog English English Español Français Bahasa Indonesia 日本語 Português (Brasil) Русский Türkçe Українська 中文 繁體中文 Discord Discord Twitter Twitter Facebook Facebook GitHub GitHub Fast, reliable, and secure dependency management. Get Started Install Yarn Migrate to Yarn 2+ Classic Stable: v1.22.22 Node: ^4.8.0 || ^5.7.0 || ^6.2.2 || >=8.0.0 Ultra Fast. Yarn caches every package it downloads so it never needs to download it again. It also parallelizes operations to maximize resource utilization so install times are faster than ever. Mega Secure. Yarn uses checksums to verify the integrity of every installed package before its code is executed. Super Reliable. Using a detailed, but concise, lockfile format, and a deterministic algorithm for installs, Yarn is able to guarantee that an install that worked on one system will work exactly the same way on any other system. What are you waiting for? Get Started Offline Mode If you've installed a package before, you can install it again without any internet connection. Deterministic The same dependencies will be installed the same exact way across every machine regardless of install order. Network Performance Yarn efficiently queues up requests and avoids request waterfalls in order to maximize network utilization. Same Packages Install any package from npm and keep your package workflow the same. Network Resilience A single request failing won't cause an install to fail. Requests are retried upon failure. Flat Mode Resolve mismatching versions of dependencies to a single version to avoid creating duplicates. Yarn Distributed under BSD License Code of Conduct Artwork by Shitty Watercolour Edit this page
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch03.html#lookbeyond
Chapter 3. General ideas Chapter 3. General ideas Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas Table of Contents 3.1. Looking beyond 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software 3.4. General problem 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view 3.1. Looking beyond Commercial Linux distributors sell certain products that try to address special user needs. Enterprise solutions Advanced Server - RedHat Enterprise Server - SuSE Small Office and Home Office (SOHO) There are a couple of workstation or home editions, as well as office desktops built by several GNU/Linux distributors. Special task products Mail server SuSE Linux Openexchange Server Firewall SuSE Firewall on CD, ... Content Management System RedHat Portal Server RedHat This is only a small set of examples of commercial GNU/Linux distributors addressing specific user interests with certain products. Debian solves this problem with Debian Pure Blends . 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users The target user of a Blend may be a specialist of a certain profession, (e.g. a doctor or lawyer,) a person who has not (yet) gathered a certain amount of computer knowledge, (e.g. a child,) or a person with disabilities (e.g. a visually or hearing impaired person.) Moreover, the customisation might deal with peculiarities of certain regions where users have needs that differ from Debian as a whole. It is not unusual for these target users to be less technically competent than the stereotypical Linux user. These people are often not interested in the computer for its own sake, but just want it to work for them. Imagine the frustration of a doctor who has to move the focus of interest from the patient to his stupid computer that does not work as expected. Because of limited knowledge or time, the target user is usually unable to install upstream programs. This means that in the first place, they must find out which software packages in their distribution might serve for a certain problem. The next step would be to download and install the packages they choose, perhaps requiring a certain amount of configuration effort. This problem is nearly impossible for a user with limited technical competence and perhaps poor English language comprehension, which prevents the user from understanding the installation manual. The language barrier in this field is an important issue, because we are targeting everyday users who are not compelled to learn English, like Free Software developers are, for everyday communication. So the installation process has to involve the least possible user interaction, and any such interaction has to be internationalised. Furthermore, most target users have no or little interest in administration of their computer. In short, the optimal situation would be that he would not even notice the existence of the computer, but just focus on using the application to accomplish the task at hand. Common to all groups of target users is their interest in a defined subset of available Free Software. None of them would like to spend much time searching for the package that fits his interest. Instead, the target user would prefer to immediately and effortlessly locate and access all material relevant to solving his own problems. There is an absolute need for easy usage of the programs. This is not to say users expect to not have to learn to use the software. Adults generally accept that they must spend a reasonable amount of time in learning how to use a piece of software before they can do something useful and productive with it. But a simple-to-learn environment greatly enhances the value of the software, and if you consider children as target users, they just want to start using it right away without reading any documentation. The more important part of the request for easy usage is a professional design that is functional and effective. To accomplish this, the programmers need expert knowledge, or at least a quick communication channel to experts to learn more about their requirements. One task for Debian Pure Blends is to bring programmers and experts who will use those special programs together. Last, but not least, we find certain requirements beyond just which packages are provided in each target user group. These may differ between different Blends. For instance, while a doctor has to protect his database against snooping by outside attackers, the privacy risk for a child's system are of lesser importance. Thus, the Debian Junior project cares more for ensuring that the user himself does not damage the desktop environment while playing around with it than about remote attacks. So we find a "defined security profile" for each single Blend. 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators In the field that should be covered by Debian Pure Blends, we have to face also some common problems for system administrators. Often they have limited time in which they must serve quite a number of computers, and thus they are happy about each simplification of the administration process. The time required to make special adaptations for the intended purpose has to be reduced to a minimum. So, administrators are looking for timesaving in repetitive tasks. While this is a common issue for each general GNU/Linux distribution, this could have certain consequences in the special fields Debian Pure Blends want to address. Another problem administrators face is that they are often not experts in their clients' special field of work. Thus, they may need some specialist knowledge to explain the use of special programs to their users, or at least need to be able to communicate well with the experts about their special needs, and how the software can be used to address them. 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software Programs like a web server, or a mail user agent are used by many different users. That is why many gifted programmers feel obliged for this kind of Free Software - they just need it for their own. So you normally find a fast, growing community around Free Software packages that have a wide use. This is different for specialised software. In this context, the term "specialised software" refers to the kind of software that is needed by some experts for their job. This might be a practice management system that is used by doctors, a graphical information system (GIS) that is used by geographers, a screen reader that helps blind people to work with the computer, etc. The difference between such software and widely used software like office suites is that the user base is relatively small. This is also true for certain software that supports special localisation issues. Specialist software is used only by a limited set of users (i.e. the specialists). There exists a set of software tools that work perfectly in the environment where they were developed. If the developers catch the idea of Free Software, and just release this software as-is, people in the new, broader user community often run into trouble getting it to work in their environment. This happens because the developers did not really care about a robust installation process that works outside their special environment. As well, installation instructions are often badly written, if they exist at all. But these problem can be easily solved by shipping the software as policy-compliant binary packages, which not only ease installation, but also require documentation to be included. Thus, mere inclusion in Debian benefits the whole user base of any specialised software. The trouble often continues in the maintenance of the installed software. When it comes to the usage of the specialist software, it often happens that it perfectly fits the needs of the developer who wrote it for his own purposes, and who is familiar with its quirks, but in many cases such software does not comply with ergonomic standards of user interfaces. Several existing programs that might be useful for specialists are not really free in the sense of the Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) . Programs that are incompatible with the DFSG cannot be included in Debian. This is possibly a drawback for those programs, because they could profit by spreading widely on the back of Debian over the whole world. A certain number of programs are developed at universities by students or graduates. Once these people leave the university, the programs they developed might be orphaned; i.e. , not actively maintained anymore. If their licenses are too restrictive, it may be impossible for anyone else to take over; sticking to AT: We should find a way to avoid printing the URL in PDF output. DFSG -free licenses avoid that problem. In special fields, often "typical" (not necessarily Intel-based) hardware architectures are used. Debian currently runs on 11 different architectures, and automatic build servers normally compile software packages as necessary. If auto-builders for other architectures show problems, Debian maintainers will normally fix them, and send the original authors a patch. Moreover, users can report run-time problems via the Debian Bug Tracking System . Many programs that are written from scratch use their own non-standard file formats. However, it is often important for programs to be able to share data with each other. Often there are several programs that try to solve identical or similar problems. For instance the Debian Med team faces this in the case of programs claiming to serve as a medical practice management solution. Normally, all these programs take very interesting approaches but all of them have certain drawbacks. So, joining programmers' forces might make sense here. Sometimes the tools or back-ends used in Free Software are not appropriate for such applications. For instance, sometimes database servers that do not use transactions are used to store medical records, which is completely unacceptable. Other programs use web clients as their front-end, which is not really good for quick (mouse-less) usage, a great shortcoming for repetitive tasks. 3.4. General problem Free Software development is a kind of evolutionary process. It needs a critical mass of supporters, who are: programmers and users Because specialised software has a limited set of users, (specialists,) this results in a limited set of programmers. Debian wants to attract both groups to get it working. Debian is the missing link between upstream developers and users. 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view Debian currently grows in several directions: Number of involved people Number of packages Number of architectures Number of bugs Number of users Number of derivatives Time span between releases So several features are changing at different rates their quantity. According to Hegel a change of quantity leads into a change in quality. That means that Debian will change at a certain point in time (or over a certain time span) its quality. "To determine at the right moment the critical point where quantity changes into quality is one of the most important and difficult tasks in all the spheres of knowledge." (Trotski) This might mean that we just passed the point in time when Debian changed its quality. At one point we even observed a change once the package pool system was implemented to cope with the increased number of packages while trying to reduce the time span between releases. Even if the plan to increase the frequencies of releases failed Debian became a new quality. People started using the testing distribution even in production which was not really intended and in a consequence even security in testing was implemented for Sarge. According to Darwin evolution happens through quantitative transformations passing into qualitative. So Debian has to evolve and to cope with the inner changes and outer requirements to survive in the Linux distribution environment. Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends?  Home  Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch03.html#philosophy
Chapter 3. General ideas Chapter 3. General ideas Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas Table of Contents 3.1. Looking beyond 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software 3.4. General problem 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view 3.1. Looking beyond Commercial Linux distributors sell certain products that try to address special user needs. Enterprise solutions Advanced Server - RedHat Enterprise Server - SuSE Small Office and Home Office (SOHO) There are a couple of workstation or home editions, as well as office desktops built by several GNU/Linux distributors. Special task products Mail server SuSE Linux Openexchange Server Firewall SuSE Firewall on CD, ... Content Management System RedHat Portal Server RedHat This is only a small set of examples of commercial GNU/Linux distributors addressing specific user interests with certain products. Debian solves this problem with Debian Pure Blends . 3.2. Motivation 3.2.1. Profile of target users The target user of a Blend may be a specialist of a certain profession, (e.g. a doctor or lawyer,) a person who has not (yet) gathered a certain amount of computer knowledge, (e.g. a child,) or a person with disabilities (e.g. a visually or hearing impaired person.) Moreover, the customisation might deal with peculiarities of certain regions where users have needs that differ from Debian as a whole. It is not unusual for these target users to be less technically competent than the stereotypical Linux user. These people are often not interested in the computer for its own sake, but just want it to work for them. Imagine the frustration of a doctor who has to move the focus of interest from the patient to his stupid computer that does not work as expected. Because of limited knowledge or time, the target user is usually unable to install upstream programs. This means that in the first place, they must find out which software packages in their distribution might serve for a certain problem. The next step would be to download and install the packages they choose, perhaps requiring a certain amount of configuration effort. This problem is nearly impossible for a user with limited technical competence and perhaps poor English language comprehension, which prevents the user from understanding the installation manual. The language barrier in this field is an important issue, because we are targeting everyday users who are not compelled to learn English, like Free Software developers are, for everyday communication. So the installation process has to involve the least possible user interaction, and any such interaction has to be internationalised. Furthermore, most target users have no or little interest in administration of their computer. In short, the optimal situation would be that he would not even notice the existence of the computer, but just focus on using the application to accomplish the task at hand. Common to all groups of target users is their interest in a defined subset of available Free Software. None of them would like to spend much time searching for the package that fits his interest. Instead, the target user would prefer to immediately and effortlessly locate and access all material relevant to solving his own problems. There is an absolute need for easy usage of the programs. This is not to say users expect to not have to learn to use the software. Adults generally accept that they must spend a reasonable amount of time in learning how to use a piece of software before they can do something useful and productive with it. But a simple-to-learn environment greatly enhances the value of the software, and if you consider children as target users, they just want to start using it right away without reading any documentation. The more important part of the request for easy usage is a professional design that is functional and effective. To accomplish this, the programmers need expert knowledge, or at least a quick communication channel to experts to learn more about their requirements. One task for Debian Pure Blends is to bring programmers and experts who will use those special programs together. Last, but not least, we find certain requirements beyond just which packages are provided in each target user group. These may differ between different Blends. For instance, while a doctor has to protect his database against snooping by outside attackers, the privacy risk for a child's system are of lesser importance. Thus, the Debian Junior project cares more for ensuring that the user himself does not damage the desktop environment while playing around with it than about remote attacks. So we find a "defined security profile" for each single Blend. 3.2.2. Profile of target administrators In the field that should be covered by Debian Pure Blends, we have to face also some common problems for system administrators. Often they have limited time in which they must serve quite a number of computers, and thus they are happy about each simplification of the administration process. The time required to make special adaptations for the intended purpose has to be reduced to a minimum. So, administrators are looking for timesaving in repetitive tasks. While this is a common issue for each general GNU/Linux distribution, this could have certain consequences in the special fields Debian Pure Blends want to address. Another problem administrators face is that they are often not experts in their clients' special field of work. Thus, they may need some specialist knowledge to explain the use of special programs to their users, or at least need to be able to communicate well with the experts about their special needs, and how the software can be used to address them. 3.3. Status of specialised Free Software Programs like a web server, or a mail user agent are used by many different users. That is why many gifted programmers feel obliged for this kind of Free Software - they just need it for their own. So you normally find a fast, growing community around Free Software packages that have a wide use. This is different for specialised software. In this context, the term "specialised software" refers to the kind of software that is needed by some experts for their job. This might be a practice management system that is used by doctors, a graphical information system (GIS) that is used by geographers, a screen reader that helps blind people to work with the computer, etc. The difference between such software and widely used software like office suites is that the user base is relatively small. This is also true for certain software that supports special localisation issues. Specialist software is used only by a limited set of users (i.e. the specialists). There exists a set of software tools that work perfectly in the environment where they were developed. If the developers catch the idea of Free Software, and just release this software as-is, people in the new, broader user community often run into trouble getting it to work in their environment. This happens because the developers did not really care about a robust installation process that works outside their special environment. As well, installation instructions are often badly written, if they exist at all. But these problem can be easily solved by shipping the software as policy-compliant binary packages, which not only ease installation, but also require documentation to be included. Thus, mere inclusion in Debian benefits the whole user base of any specialised software. The trouble often continues in the maintenance of the installed software. When it comes to the usage of the specialist software, it often happens that it perfectly fits the needs of the developer who wrote it for his own purposes, and who is familiar with its quirks, but in many cases such software does not comply with ergonomic standards of user interfaces. Several existing programs that might be useful for specialists are not really free in the sense of the Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) . Programs that are incompatible with the DFSG cannot be included in Debian. This is possibly a drawback for those programs, because they could profit by spreading widely on the back of Debian over the whole world. A certain number of programs are developed at universities by students or graduates. Once these people leave the university, the programs they developed might be orphaned; i.e. , not actively maintained anymore. If their licenses are too restrictive, it may be impossible for anyone else to take over; sticking to AT: We should find a way to avoid printing the URL in PDF output. DFSG -free licenses avoid that problem. In special fields, often "typical" (not necessarily Intel-based) hardware architectures are used. Debian currently runs on 11 different architectures, and automatic build servers normally compile software packages as necessary. If auto-builders for other architectures show problems, Debian maintainers will normally fix them, and send the original authors a patch. Moreover, users can report run-time problems via the Debian Bug Tracking System . Many programs that are written from scratch use their own non-standard file formats. However, it is often important for programs to be able to share data with each other. Often there are several programs that try to solve identical or similar problems. For instance the Debian Med team faces this in the case of programs claiming to serve as a medical practice management solution. Normally, all these programs take very interesting approaches but all of them have certain drawbacks. So, joining programmers' forces might make sense here. Sometimes the tools or back-ends used in Free Software are not appropriate for such applications. For instance, sometimes database servers that do not use transactions are used to store medical records, which is completely unacceptable. Other programs use web clients as their front-end, which is not really good for quick (mouse-less) usage, a great shortcoming for repetitive tasks. 3.4. General problem Free Software development is a kind of evolutionary process. It needs a critical mass of supporters, who are: programmers and users Because specialised software has a limited set of users, (specialists,) this results in a limited set of programmers. Debian wants to attract both groups to get it working. Debian is the missing link between upstream developers and users. 3.5. Debian Pure Blends from philosophical point of view Debian currently grows in several directions: Number of involved people Number of packages Number of architectures Number of bugs Number of users Number of derivatives Time span between releases So several features are changing at different rates their quantity. According to Hegel a change of quantity leads into a change in quality. That means that Debian will change at a certain point in time (or over a certain time span) its quality. "To determine at the right moment the critical point where quantity changes into quality is one of the most important and difficult tasks in all the spheres of knowledge." (Trotski) This might mean that we just passed the point in time when Debian changed its quality. At one point we even observed a change once the package pool system was implemented to cope with the increased number of packages while trying to reduce the time span between releases. Even if the plan to increase the frequencies of releases failed Debian became a new quality. People started using the testing distribution even in production which was not really intended and in a consequence even security in testing was implemented for Sarge. According to Darwin evolution happens through quantitative transformations passing into qualitative. So Debian has to evolve and to cope with the inner changes and outer requirements to survive in the Linux distribution environment. Prev       Next Chapter 2. What are Debian Pure Blends?  Home  Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch04.html#debian-science
Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Prev       Next Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Table of Contents 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 Start beginning of 2000 URL http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-jr Tasks Tasks of Debian Jr. Mailing list debian-jr@lists.debian.org Initiator Ben Armstrong < synrg@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Jr. mailing list Release Debian 3.0 (Woody) Goals To make Debian an OS that children of all ages will want to use, preferring it over the alternatives. To care for those applications in Debian suitable for children, and ensure their quality, to the best of our abilities. To make Debian a playground for children's enjoyment and exploration. The main target is young children. By the time children are teenaged, they should be comfortable with using Debian without any special modifications. Debian Jr. was the first Blend. In fact, at the time this project was created, the idea behind of Debian Pure Blends was born, although then, we used the term "Debian Internal Project". Over time, this name was changed to "Custom Debian Distributions" first because it was too broad, as it was equally descriptive of a number of quite different projects, such as IPv6 and QA. The next change of names became necessary when it was realised that the term "Custom Debian Distribution" was considered as "something else than Debian" by any newcomer. This was so misleading that it effectively blocked a wide propagation of the principle. Debian Jr. not only provides games, but is also concerned about their quality from a child's perspective. Thus, games that are regarded as not well suited to young children are omitted. Moreover, choices are made about which packages are best suited for children to use for various other activities and tasks that interest them. This includes, for example, simple text processing, web browsing and drawing. 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care Start beginning of 2002 URL Debian Med Tasks Tasks of Debian Med Mailing list debian-med@lists.debian.org Initiator Andreas Tille < tille@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Med mailing list Activists on Debian Med developer list Committers to Debian Med VCS Uploaders of Debian Med team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Med packages Release Sarge Goals To build an integrated software environment for all medical tasks. To care especially for the quality of program packages in the field of medicine that are already integrated within Debian. To build and include in Debian packages of medical software that are missing in Debian. To care for a general infrastructure for medical users. To make efforts to increase the quality of third party Free Software in the field of medicine. 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education Start Summer of 2002, since 2003 merged with SkoleLinux, which is now synonymous with Debian Edu URL Debian Edu Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Edu Mailing list debian-edu@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Edu mailing list Responsible Petter Reinholdtsen < pere@hungry.com > Release Sarge Goals To make Debian the best distribution available for educational use. Provide a ready to run classroom installation with free educational software. An automatically installed server provides net-boot services for disk-less thin clients and all necessary applications for educational use. To federate many initiatives around education, which are partly based on forks of Debian. To continue the internationalisation efforts of SkoleLinux. To focus on easy installation in schools. To cooperate with other education-related projects (like Schoolforge , Ofset , KdeEdu ). This project started with the intention to bring back into Debian a fork from Debian that was started by some people in France. Because they had some time constraints, the people who initially started this effort handed over responsibility to the Norwegian Skolelinux , which is currently more or less identical to Debian Edu. 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems Start October 2004 URL DebianGIS Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian GIS Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Francesco P. Lovergine < frankie@debian.org > Goals Geographical Information Systems OpenStreetMap and GPS devices 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers Start March 2014 URL Debian Astro Blends page Tasks Tasks of Debian Astro Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Ole Streicher < olebole@debian.org > Goals Debian Astro is a "Debian Pure Blend" with the aim to develop a Debian based operating system that fits the requirements of both professional and hobby astronomers. It integrates a large number of software packages covering telescope control, data reduction, presentation and other fields. 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry Start October 2004 URL Debichem Alioth page Tasks Tasks of DebiChem Mailing list debichem-users@lists.alioth.debian.org Activity Activists on DebiChem mailing list Committers to DebiChem VCS Uploaders of DebiChem team Team members closing the most bugs in DebiChem packages Initiator Michael Banck < mbanck@debian.org > Goals Chemical applications in Debian 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science Start July 2005 URL Debian Science Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Science Mailing list debian-science@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Science mailing list Activists on Debian Science maintainers list Committers to Debian Science VCS Uploaders of Debian Science team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Science packages Responsible Sylvestre Ledru < sylvestre@debian.org > While there are Debian Pure Blends that care for certain sciences (Debian Med deals in a main part with Biology, DebiChem for Chemistry and Debian GIS for geography) not all sciences are covered by a specific Blend. The main reason is that at the moment not enough people support such an effort for every science. The temporary solution was to build a general Debian Science Blend that makes use of the work of other Blends in case it exists. 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project Debian for blind and visually impaired people Start February 2003 Mailing list debian-accessibility@lists.debian.org URL Debian Accessibility Tasks Tasks of Debian Accessibility Activity Activists on Debian Accessibility mailing list Initiator Mario Lang < mlang@debian.org > Goals To make Debian accessible to people with disabilities. To take special care for: Screen readers; Screen magnification programs; Software speech synthesisers; Speech recognition software; Scanner drivers and OCR software; Specialised software like edbrowse (web-browse in the spirit of line-editors) To make text-mode interfaces available. To provide screen reader functionality during installation. 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server Start May 2010 URL Website Demo Buy Download Disk Images Wiki Manual Tasks Tasks of FreedomBox Contact Get Support Discussion Forum Matrix Mailing List IRC FreedomBox Foundation Report Issues Activity Project page Latest posts on discussion forum Committers to FreedomBox repository Activity on the FreedomBox Salsa project Responsible FreedomBox Team < admin@freedombox.org > FreedomBox is designed to be your own inexpensive server at home. It runs free software and offers an increasing number of services ranging from a calendar or jabber server to a wiki or VPN. A web interface allows you to easily install and configure your apps. Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas  Home  Chapter 5. Distributions inside Debian
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch04.html
Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Prev       Next Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Table of Contents 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 Start beginning of 2000 URL http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-jr Tasks Tasks of Debian Jr. Mailing list debian-jr@lists.debian.org Initiator Ben Armstrong < synrg@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Jr. mailing list Release Debian 3.0 (Woody) Goals To make Debian an OS that children of all ages will want to use, preferring it over the alternatives. To care for those applications in Debian suitable for children, and ensure their quality, to the best of our abilities. To make Debian a playground for children's enjoyment and exploration. The main target is young children. By the time children are teenaged, they should be comfortable with using Debian without any special modifications. Debian Jr. was the first Blend. In fact, at the time this project was created, the idea behind of Debian Pure Blends was born, although then, we used the term "Debian Internal Project". Over time, this name was changed to "Custom Debian Distributions" first because it was too broad, as it was equally descriptive of a number of quite different projects, such as IPv6 and QA. The next change of names became necessary when it was realised that the term "Custom Debian Distribution" was considered as "something else than Debian" by any newcomer. This was so misleading that it effectively blocked a wide propagation of the principle. Debian Jr. not only provides games, but is also concerned about their quality from a child's perspective. Thus, games that are regarded as not well suited to young children are omitted. Moreover, choices are made about which packages are best suited for children to use for various other activities and tasks that interest them. This includes, for example, simple text processing, web browsing and drawing. 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care Start beginning of 2002 URL Debian Med Tasks Tasks of Debian Med Mailing list debian-med@lists.debian.org Initiator Andreas Tille < tille@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Med mailing list Activists on Debian Med developer list Committers to Debian Med VCS Uploaders of Debian Med team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Med packages Release Sarge Goals To build an integrated software environment for all medical tasks. To care especially for the quality of program packages in the field of medicine that are already integrated within Debian. To build and include in Debian packages of medical software that are missing in Debian. To care for a general infrastructure for medical users. To make efforts to increase the quality of third party Free Software in the field of medicine. 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education Start Summer of 2002, since 2003 merged with SkoleLinux, which is now synonymous with Debian Edu URL Debian Edu Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Edu Mailing list debian-edu@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Edu mailing list Responsible Petter Reinholdtsen < pere@hungry.com > Release Sarge Goals To make Debian the best distribution available for educational use. Provide a ready to run classroom installation with free educational software. An automatically installed server provides net-boot services for disk-less thin clients and all necessary applications for educational use. To federate many initiatives around education, which are partly based on forks of Debian. To continue the internationalisation efforts of SkoleLinux. To focus on easy installation in schools. To cooperate with other education-related projects (like Schoolforge , Ofset , KdeEdu ). This project started with the intention to bring back into Debian a fork from Debian that was started by some people in France. Because they had some time constraints, the people who initially started this effort handed over responsibility to the Norwegian Skolelinux , which is currently more or less identical to Debian Edu. 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems Start October 2004 URL DebianGIS Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian GIS Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Francesco P. Lovergine < frankie@debian.org > Goals Geographical Information Systems OpenStreetMap and GPS devices 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers Start March 2014 URL Debian Astro Blends page Tasks Tasks of Debian Astro Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Ole Streicher < olebole@debian.org > Goals Debian Astro is a "Debian Pure Blend" with the aim to develop a Debian based operating system that fits the requirements of both professional and hobby astronomers. It integrates a large number of software packages covering telescope control, data reduction, presentation and other fields. 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry Start October 2004 URL Debichem Alioth page Tasks Tasks of DebiChem Mailing list debichem-users@lists.alioth.debian.org Activity Activists on DebiChem mailing list Committers to DebiChem VCS Uploaders of DebiChem team Team members closing the most bugs in DebiChem packages Initiator Michael Banck < mbanck@debian.org > Goals Chemical applications in Debian 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science Start July 2005 URL Debian Science Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Science Mailing list debian-science@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Science mailing list Activists on Debian Science maintainers list Committers to Debian Science VCS Uploaders of Debian Science team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Science packages Responsible Sylvestre Ledru < sylvestre@debian.org > While there are Debian Pure Blends that care for certain sciences (Debian Med deals in a main part with Biology, DebiChem for Chemistry and Debian GIS for geography) not all sciences are covered by a specific Blend. The main reason is that at the moment not enough people support such an effort for every science. The temporary solution was to build a general Debian Science Blend that makes use of the work of other Blends in case it exists. 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project Debian for blind and visually impaired people Start February 2003 Mailing list debian-accessibility@lists.debian.org URL Debian Accessibility Tasks Tasks of Debian Accessibility Activity Activists on Debian Accessibility mailing list Initiator Mario Lang < mlang@debian.org > Goals To make Debian accessible to people with disabilities. To take special care for: Screen readers; Screen magnification programs; Software speech synthesisers; Speech recognition software; Scanner drivers and OCR software; Specialised software like edbrowse (web-browse in the spirit of line-editors) To make text-mode interfaces available. To provide screen reader functionality during installation. 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server Start May 2010 URL Website Demo Buy Download Disk Images Wiki Manual Tasks Tasks of FreedomBox Contact Get Support Discussion Forum Matrix Mailing List IRC FreedomBox Foundation Report Issues Activity Project page Latest posts on discussion forum Committers to FreedomBox repository Activity on the FreedomBox Salsa project Responsible FreedomBox Team < admin@freedombox.org > FreedomBox is designed to be your own inexpensive server at home. It runs free software and offers an increasing number of services ranging from a calendar or jabber server to a wiki or VPN. A web interface allows you to easily install and configure your apps. Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas  Home  Chapter 5. Distributions inside Debian
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch04.html#debian-edu
Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Prev       Next Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Table of Contents 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 Start beginning of 2000 URL http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-jr Tasks Tasks of Debian Jr. Mailing list debian-jr@lists.debian.org Initiator Ben Armstrong < synrg@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Jr. mailing list Release Debian 3.0 (Woody) Goals To make Debian an OS that children of all ages will want to use, preferring it over the alternatives. To care for those applications in Debian suitable for children, and ensure their quality, to the best of our abilities. To make Debian a playground for children's enjoyment and exploration. The main target is young children. By the time children are teenaged, they should be comfortable with using Debian without any special modifications. Debian Jr. was the first Blend. In fact, at the time this project was created, the idea behind of Debian Pure Blends was born, although then, we used the term "Debian Internal Project". Over time, this name was changed to "Custom Debian Distributions" first because it was too broad, as it was equally descriptive of a number of quite different projects, such as IPv6 and QA. The next change of names became necessary when it was realised that the term "Custom Debian Distribution" was considered as "something else than Debian" by any newcomer. This was so misleading that it effectively blocked a wide propagation of the principle. Debian Jr. not only provides games, but is also concerned about their quality from a child's perspective. Thus, games that are regarded as not well suited to young children are omitted. Moreover, choices are made about which packages are best suited for children to use for various other activities and tasks that interest them. This includes, for example, simple text processing, web browsing and drawing. 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care Start beginning of 2002 URL Debian Med Tasks Tasks of Debian Med Mailing list debian-med@lists.debian.org Initiator Andreas Tille < tille@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Med mailing list Activists on Debian Med developer list Committers to Debian Med VCS Uploaders of Debian Med team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Med packages Release Sarge Goals To build an integrated software environment for all medical tasks. To care especially for the quality of program packages in the field of medicine that are already integrated within Debian. To build and include in Debian packages of medical software that are missing in Debian. To care for a general infrastructure for medical users. To make efforts to increase the quality of third party Free Software in the field of medicine. 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education Start Summer of 2002, since 2003 merged with SkoleLinux, which is now synonymous with Debian Edu URL Debian Edu Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Edu Mailing list debian-edu@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Edu mailing list Responsible Petter Reinholdtsen < pere@hungry.com > Release Sarge Goals To make Debian the best distribution available for educational use. Provide a ready to run classroom installation with free educational software. An automatically installed server provides net-boot services for disk-less thin clients and all necessary applications for educational use. To federate many initiatives around education, which are partly based on forks of Debian. To continue the internationalisation efforts of SkoleLinux. To focus on easy installation in schools. To cooperate with other education-related projects (like Schoolforge , Ofset , KdeEdu ). This project started with the intention to bring back into Debian a fork from Debian that was started by some people in France. Because they had some time constraints, the people who initially started this effort handed over responsibility to the Norwegian Skolelinux , which is currently more or less identical to Debian Edu. 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems Start October 2004 URL DebianGIS Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian GIS Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Francesco P. Lovergine < frankie@debian.org > Goals Geographical Information Systems OpenStreetMap and GPS devices 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers Start March 2014 URL Debian Astro Blends page Tasks Tasks of Debian Astro Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Ole Streicher < olebole@debian.org > Goals Debian Astro is a "Debian Pure Blend" with the aim to develop a Debian based operating system that fits the requirements of both professional and hobby astronomers. It integrates a large number of software packages covering telescope control, data reduction, presentation and other fields. 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry Start October 2004 URL Debichem Alioth page Tasks Tasks of DebiChem Mailing list debichem-users@lists.alioth.debian.org Activity Activists on DebiChem mailing list Committers to DebiChem VCS Uploaders of DebiChem team Team members closing the most bugs in DebiChem packages Initiator Michael Banck < mbanck@debian.org > Goals Chemical applications in Debian 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science Start July 2005 URL Debian Science Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Science Mailing list debian-science@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Science mailing list Activists on Debian Science maintainers list Committers to Debian Science VCS Uploaders of Debian Science team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Science packages Responsible Sylvestre Ledru < sylvestre@debian.org > While there are Debian Pure Blends that care for certain sciences (Debian Med deals in a main part with Biology, DebiChem for Chemistry and Debian GIS for geography) not all sciences are covered by a specific Blend. The main reason is that at the moment not enough people support such an effort for every science. The temporary solution was to build a general Debian Science Blend that makes use of the work of other Blends in case it exists. 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project Debian for blind and visually impaired people Start February 2003 Mailing list debian-accessibility@lists.debian.org URL Debian Accessibility Tasks Tasks of Debian Accessibility Activity Activists on Debian Accessibility mailing list Initiator Mario Lang < mlang@debian.org > Goals To make Debian accessible to people with disabilities. To take special care for: Screen readers; Screen magnification programs; Software speech synthesisers; Speech recognition software; Scanner drivers and OCR software; Specialised software like edbrowse (web-browse in the spirit of line-editors) To make text-mode interfaces available. To provide screen reader functionality during installation. 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server Start May 2010 URL Website Demo Buy Download Disk Images Wiki Manual Tasks Tasks of FreedomBox Contact Get Support Discussion Forum Matrix Mailing List IRC FreedomBox Foundation Report Issues Activity Project page Latest posts on discussion forum Committers to FreedomBox repository Activity on the FreedomBox Salsa project Responsible FreedomBox Team < admin@freedombox.org > FreedomBox is designed to be your own inexpensive server at home. It runs free software and offers an increasing number of services ranging from a calendar or jabber server to a wiki or VPN. A web interface allows you to easily install and configure your apps. Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas  Home  Chapter 5. Distributions inside Debian
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch04.html#debichem
Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Prev       Next Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Table of Contents 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 Start beginning of 2000 URL http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-jr Tasks Tasks of Debian Jr. Mailing list debian-jr@lists.debian.org Initiator Ben Armstrong < synrg@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Jr. mailing list Release Debian 3.0 (Woody) Goals To make Debian an OS that children of all ages will want to use, preferring it over the alternatives. To care for those applications in Debian suitable for children, and ensure their quality, to the best of our abilities. To make Debian a playground for children's enjoyment and exploration. The main target is young children. By the time children are teenaged, they should be comfortable with using Debian without any special modifications. Debian Jr. was the first Blend. In fact, at the time this project was created, the idea behind of Debian Pure Blends was born, although then, we used the term "Debian Internal Project". Over time, this name was changed to "Custom Debian Distributions" first because it was too broad, as it was equally descriptive of a number of quite different projects, such as IPv6 and QA. The next change of names became necessary when it was realised that the term "Custom Debian Distribution" was considered as "something else than Debian" by any newcomer. This was so misleading that it effectively blocked a wide propagation of the principle. Debian Jr. not only provides games, but is also concerned about their quality from a child's perspective. Thus, games that are regarded as not well suited to young children are omitted. Moreover, choices are made about which packages are best suited for children to use for various other activities and tasks that interest them. This includes, for example, simple text processing, web browsing and drawing. 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care Start beginning of 2002 URL Debian Med Tasks Tasks of Debian Med Mailing list debian-med@lists.debian.org Initiator Andreas Tille < tille@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Med mailing list Activists on Debian Med developer list Committers to Debian Med VCS Uploaders of Debian Med team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Med packages Release Sarge Goals To build an integrated software environment for all medical tasks. To care especially for the quality of program packages in the field of medicine that are already integrated within Debian. To build and include in Debian packages of medical software that are missing in Debian. To care for a general infrastructure for medical users. To make efforts to increase the quality of third party Free Software in the field of medicine. 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education Start Summer of 2002, since 2003 merged with SkoleLinux, which is now synonymous with Debian Edu URL Debian Edu Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Edu Mailing list debian-edu@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Edu mailing list Responsible Petter Reinholdtsen < pere@hungry.com > Release Sarge Goals To make Debian the best distribution available for educational use. Provide a ready to run classroom installation with free educational software. An automatically installed server provides net-boot services for disk-less thin clients and all necessary applications for educational use. To federate many initiatives around education, which are partly based on forks of Debian. To continue the internationalisation efforts of SkoleLinux. To focus on easy installation in schools. To cooperate with other education-related projects (like Schoolforge , Ofset , KdeEdu ). This project started with the intention to bring back into Debian a fork from Debian that was started by some people in France. Because they had some time constraints, the people who initially started this effort handed over responsibility to the Norwegian Skolelinux , which is currently more or less identical to Debian Edu. 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems Start October 2004 URL DebianGIS Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian GIS Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Francesco P. Lovergine < frankie@debian.org > Goals Geographical Information Systems OpenStreetMap and GPS devices 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers Start March 2014 URL Debian Astro Blends page Tasks Tasks of Debian Astro Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Ole Streicher < olebole@debian.org > Goals Debian Astro is a "Debian Pure Blend" with the aim to develop a Debian based operating system that fits the requirements of both professional and hobby astronomers. It integrates a large number of software packages covering telescope control, data reduction, presentation and other fields. 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry Start October 2004 URL Debichem Alioth page Tasks Tasks of DebiChem Mailing list debichem-users@lists.alioth.debian.org Activity Activists on DebiChem mailing list Committers to DebiChem VCS Uploaders of DebiChem team Team members closing the most bugs in DebiChem packages Initiator Michael Banck < mbanck@debian.org > Goals Chemical applications in Debian 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science Start July 2005 URL Debian Science Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Science Mailing list debian-science@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Science mailing list Activists on Debian Science maintainers list Committers to Debian Science VCS Uploaders of Debian Science team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Science packages Responsible Sylvestre Ledru < sylvestre@debian.org > While there are Debian Pure Blends that care for certain sciences (Debian Med deals in a main part with Biology, DebiChem for Chemistry and Debian GIS for geography) not all sciences are covered by a specific Blend. The main reason is that at the moment not enough people support such an effort for every science. The temporary solution was to build a general Debian Science Blend that makes use of the work of other Blends in case it exists. 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project Debian for blind and visually impaired people Start February 2003 Mailing list debian-accessibility@lists.debian.org URL Debian Accessibility Tasks Tasks of Debian Accessibility Activity Activists on Debian Accessibility mailing list Initiator Mario Lang < mlang@debian.org > Goals To make Debian accessible to people with disabilities. To take special care for: Screen readers; Screen magnification programs; Software speech synthesisers; Speech recognition software; Scanner drivers and OCR software; Specialised software like edbrowse (web-browse in the spirit of line-editors) To make text-mode interfaces available. To provide screen reader functionality during installation. 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server Start May 2010 URL Website Demo Buy Download Disk Images Wiki Manual Tasks Tasks of FreedomBox Contact Get Support Discussion Forum Matrix Mailing List IRC FreedomBox Foundation Report Issues Activity Project page Latest posts on discussion forum Committers to FreedomBox repository Activity on the FreedomBox Salsa project Responsible FreedomBox Team < admin@freedombox.org > FreedomBox is designed to be your own inexpensive server at home. It runs free software and offers an increasing number of services ranging from a calendar or jabber server to a wiki or VPN. A web interface allows you to easily install and configure your apps. Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas  Home  Chapter 5. Distributions inside Debian
2026-01-13T09:30:28
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2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://yarnpkg.com/migration/guide
Step-by-step | Yarn Skip to main content Yarn Get Started Features CLI Configuration Advanced Blog API master (4.12.0-dev) master (4.12.0-dev) 3.8.7 1.22.22 Discord GitHub Search Starting with Yarn Introduction Installation Usage Migrating from 1.x / npm Benefits Step-by-step To go further Good to Know Corepack Editor SDKs Questions & Answers Recipes Migrating from 1.x / npm Step-by-step On this page Step-by-step tip You may have heard about Yarn Plug'n'Play and be worried that your project isn't compatible yet. Don't worry! This migration will let you keep your node_modules folder . It's only once we're done that you'll have to decide whether you want to spend time migrating to Yarn PnP. Whether you do it or stay on node_modules , migrating to Yarn Modern will have many benefits . info Note that those commands only need to be run once for the whole project and will automatically take effect for all your contributors as soon as they pull the branch, as long as they have Corepack enabled. Migration steps ​ Make sure you're using Node 18+ Run corepack enable to activate Corepack Go into your project directory Run yarn set version berry Convert your .npmrc and .yarnrc files into .yarnrc.yml (details here ) Run yarn install to migrate the lockfile Commit all changes Good, you should now have a working Yarn install! Some things might still require some adjustments in your CI scripts (for example the deprecation of arbitrary pre/post -scripts , or the renaming of --frozen-lockfile into -- immutable ), but at least we have a working project. Breaking changes ​ Update your configuration to the new settings ​ Modern uses a different style of configuration files than Classic. While mostly invisible for the lockfile (because we convert them on the fly), it might cause issues if you rely on .npmrc or .yarnrc files. Yarn Modern now uses .yarnrc.yml . Any other file is now ignored - this includes .npmrc . As evidenced by the new file extension, the Yarnrc files are now to be written in YAML . Most configuration keys have also been renamed to be more consistent. The comprehensive list of available settings can be found on the .yarnrc.yml dedicated documentation , but here are some important ones: Custom registries are now configured via npmRegistryServer . Registry authentication tokens are now configured via npmAuthToken . Explicitly call the pre and post scripts ​ Some changes were made to how lifecycle scripts work in order to clarify their purpose and remove confusing behaviors. One such change is that custom pre and post scripts are no longer supported. As a result, rewrite: { "scripts" : { "prestart" : "do-something" , "start" : "http-server" } } Into: { "scripts" : { "prestart" : "do-something" , "start" : "yarn prestart && http-server" } } note This only applies to user scripts, such as start & friends. It's still fine to use any of preinstall , install , and postinstall . Consult the script documentation for more information. Use yarn dlx instead of yarn global ​ Yarn focuses on project management , and managing system-wide packages was deemed to be outside of our scope. As a result, yarn global got removed and needs to be replaced by yarn dlx to run one off scripts. Don't use bundleDependencies ​ The bundleDependencies field (or bundledDependencies ) is an artifact of the past that used to let you define a set of packages that would be stored as-is within the package archive, node_modules and all. This feature has many problems: It uses node_modules , which doesn't exist under Plug'n'Play installs. It encodes the hoisting inside the package, messing with the hoisting from other packages. So how to replace them? There are different ways: If you need to patch a package, just fork it or reference it through the file: protocol (it's perfectly fine even for transitive dependencies to use this protocol). The portal: and patch: protocols are also options, although they'll only work for Yarn consumers. If you need to ship a package to your customers as a standalone (no dependencies), bundle it yourself using Esbuild, Webpack, Rollup, or similar tools. Replace nohoist by nmHoistingLimits ​ The nohoist setting from Yarn Classic was built for React Native in order to support workspaces, but the way it worked (through glob patterns) was causing a lot of bugs and confusion, no one being really sure which patterns needed to be set. As a result, we've simplified this feature in order to only support three identified patterns. If you were using nohoist , we recommend you remove it from your manifest configuration and instead set nmHoistingLimits in your .yarnrc.yml file: nmHoistingLimits : workspaces CLI changes ​ Renamed commands ​ Yarn Classic (1.x) Yarn Modern yarn audit yarn npm audit yarn create yarn dlx create-NAME yarn global yarn dlx ( Read more ) yarn info yarn npm info yarn list yarn info - A R ( -- json ?) yarn login yarn npm login yarn logout yarn npm logout yarn outdated yarn upgrade-interactive ( Read more ) yarn publish yarn npm publish yarn upgrade yarn up (note: updates all workspaces) yarn install -- production yarn workspaces focus -- all -- production Removed commands ​ Yarn Classic (1.x) Notes yarn check Cache integrity is now checked on regular installs - Read more yarn import First import to Classic, then migrate to Yarn Modern yarn licenses Perfect use case for plugins - Read more yarn versions Use yarn --version and node -p process.versions Not implemented yet ​ Those features simply haven't been implemented yet. Help welcome! Yarn Classic (1.x) Notes yarn owner Will eventually be available as yarn npm owner yarn team Will eventually be available as yarn npm team Edit this page Previous Benefits Next To go further Migration steps Breaking changes Update your configuration to the new settings Explicitly call the pre and post scripts Use yarn dlx instead of yarn global Don't use bundleDependencies Replace nohoist by nmHoistingLimits CLI changes Renamed commands Removed commands Not implemented yet Copyright © 2026 Yarn Contributors, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://yarnpkg.com/migration/overview
Benefits | Yarn Skip to main content Yarn Get Started Features CLI Configuration Advanced Blog API master (4.12.0-dev) master (4.12.0-dev) 3.8.7 1.22.22 Discord GitHub Search Starting with Yarn Introduction Installation Usage Migrating from 1.x / npm Benefits Step-by-step To go further Good to Know Corepack Editor SDKs Questions & Answers Recipes Migrating from 1.x / npm Benefits Benefits While the Yarn Classic line (1.x) remains a pillar of the JavaScript ecosystem, we recommend upgrading if possible. Why's that? Stability: Yarn Modern came after years of experience with maintaining Classic; its design was informed by the shortcomings we saw, and as a result the software is much more stable than it ever was. New features: Yarn Modern provides many new features that didn't exist in Yarn 1.x - or any other package managers for that matter. As an example, Constraints are exclusive to Yarn Modern. Flexibility: Yarn Modern supports all three installation strategies: Yarn PnP, node_modules , and via a pnpm-like content-addressed cache. No matter which one you prefer, you have it at your disposal. Extensibility: Yarn Modern's architecture allows you to build your own features as you need it. No need to wait for us to implement this feature you hope for - you can now implement it yourself, according to your own specs, and use it straight away! Focused workspaces, custom installs, project validation, ... Future proof: Yarn Modern was built after we started to see how difficult it was to build new features on Yarn Classic, with most changes having unpredictable consequences. This plateau has been solved, as evidenced by the slate of features that we released in the past few major releases. Edit this page Previous Usage Next Step-by-step Copyright © 2026 Yarn Contributors, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch04.html#debian-gis
Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Prev       Next Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Table of Contents 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 Start beginning of 2000 URL http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-jr Tasks Tasks of Debian Jr. Mailing list debian-jr@lists.debian.org Initiator Ben Armstrong < synrg@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Jr. mailing list Release Debian 3.0 (Woody) Goals To make Debian an OS that children of all ages will want to use, preferring it over the alternatives. To care for those applications in Debian suitable for children, and ensure their quality, to the best of our abilities. To make Debian a playground for children's enjoyment and exploration. The main target is young children. By the time children are teenaged, they should be comfortable with using Debian without any special modifications. Debian Jr. was the first Blend. In fact, at the time this project was created, the idea behind of Debian Pure Blends was born, although then, we used the term "Debian Internal Project". Over time, this name was changed to "Custom Debian Distributions" first because it was too broad, as it was equally descriptive of a number of quite different projects, such as IPv6 and QA. The next change of names became necessary when it was realised that the term "Custom Debian Distribution" was considered as "something else than Debian" by any newcomer. This was so misleading that it effectively blocked a wide propagation of the principle. Debian Jr. not only provides games, but is also concerned about their quality from a child's perspective. Thus, games that are regarded as not well suited to young children are omitted. Moreover, choices are made about which packages are best suited for children to use for various other activities and tasks that interest them. This includes, for example, simple text processing, web browsing and drawing. 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care Start beginning of 2002 URL Debian Med Tasks Tasks of Debian Med Mailing list debian-med@lists.debian.org Initiator Andreas Tille < tille@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Med mailing list Activists on Debian Med developer list Committers to Debian Med VCS Uploaders of Debian Med team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Med packages Release Sarge Goals To build an integrated software environment for all medical tasks. To care especially for the quality of program packages in the field of medicine that are already integrated within Debian. To build and include in Debian packages of medical software that are missing in Debian. To care for a general infrastructure for medical users. To make efforts to increase the quality of third party Free Software in the field of medicine. 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education Start Summer of 2002, since 2003 merged with SkoleLinux, which is now synonymous with Debian Edu URL Debian Edu Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Edu Mailing list debian-edu@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Edu mailing list Responsible Petter Reinholdtsen < pere@hungry.com > Release Sarge Goals To make Debian the best distribution available for educational use. Provide a ready to run classroom installation with free educational software. An automatically installed server provides net-boot services for disk-less thin clients and all necessary applications for educational use. To federate many initiatives around education, which are partly based on forks of Debian. To continue the internationalisation efforts of SkoleLinux. To focus on easy installation in schools. To cooperate with other education-related projects (like Schoolforge , Ofset , KdeEdu ). This project started with the intention to bring back into Debian a fork from Debian that was started by some people in France. Because they had some time constraints, the people who initially started this effort handed over responsibility to the Norwegian Skolelinux , which is currently more or less identical to Debian Edu. 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems Start October 2004 URL DebianGIS Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian GIS Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Francesco P. Lovergine < frankie@debian.org > Goals Geographical Information Systems OpenStreetMap and GPS devices 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers Start March 2014 URL Debian Astro Blends page Tasks Tasks of Debian Astro Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Ole Streicher < olebole@debian.org > Goals Debian Astro is a "Debian Pure Blend" with the aim to develop a Debian based operating system that fits the requirements of both professional and hobby astronomers. It integrates a large number of software packages covering telescope control, data reduction, presentation and other fields. 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry Start October 2004 URL Debichem Alioth page Tasks Tasks of DebiChem Mailing list debichem-users@lists.alioth.debian.org Activity Activists on DebiChem mailing list Committers to DebiChem VCS Uploaders of DebiChem team Team members closing the most bugs in DebiChem packages Initiator Michael Banck < mbanck@debian.org > Goals Chemical applications in Debian 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science Start July 2005 URL Debian Science Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Science Mailing list debian-science@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Science mailing list Activists on Debian Science maintainers list Committers to Debian Science VCS Uploaders of Debian Science team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Science packages Responsible Sylvestre Ledru < sylvestre@debian.org > While there are Debian Pure Blends that care for certain sciences (Debian Med deals in a main part with Biology, DebiChem for Chemistry and Debian GIS for geography) not all sciences are covered by a specific Blend. The main reason is that at the moment not enough people support such an effort for every science. The temporary solution was to build a general Debian Science Blend that makes use of the work of other Blends in case it exists. 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project Debian for blind and visually impaired people Start February 2003 Mailing list debian-accessibility@lists.debian.org URL Debian Accessibility Tasks Tasks of Debian Accessibility Activity Activists on Debian Accessibility mailing list Initiator Mario Lang < mlang@debian.org > Goals To make Debian accessible to people with disabilities. To take special care for: Screen readers; Screen magnification programs; Software speech synthesisers; Speech recognition software; Scanner drivers and OCR software; Specialised software like edbrowse (web-browse in the spirit of line-editors) To make text-mode interfaces available. To provide screen reader functionality during installation. 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server Start May 2010 URL Website Demo Buy Download Disk Images Wiki Manual Tasks Tasks of FreedomBox Contact Get Support Discussion Forum Matrix Mailing List IRC FreedomBox Foundation Report Issues Activity Project page Latest posts on discussion forum Committers to FreedomBox repository Activity on the FreedomBox Salsa project Responsible FreedomBox Team < admin@freedombox.org > FreedomBox is designed to be your own inexpensive server at home. It runs free software and offers an increasing number of services ranging from a calendar or jabber server to a wiki or VPN. A web interface allows you to easily install and configure your apps. Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas  Home  Chapter 5. Distributions inside Debian
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://yarnpkg.com/getting-started/usage
Usage | Yarn Skip to main content Yarn Get Started Features CLI Configuration Advanced Blog API master (4.12.0-dev) master (4.12.0-dev) 3.8.7 1.22.22 Discord GitHub Search Starting with Yarn Introduction Installation Usage Migrating from 1.x / npm Benefits Step-by-step To go further Good to Know Corepack Editor SDKs Questions & Answers Recipes Starting with Yarn Usage Usage If you're coming from npm, the main changes are: Running yarn is enough to run an install! It's an alias to yarn install . Adding or updating a dependency to a single package is done with yarn add . Upgrading a dependency across the whole project is done with yarn up . Your scripts are aliased. Calling yarn build is the same as yarn run build ! Most registry-related commands are moved behind yarn npm (ex: yarn npm audit ). To see the full list of commands, check the CLI reference . Edit this page Previous Installation Next Benefits Copyright © 2026 Yarn Contributors, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch04.html#debian-med
Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Prev       Next Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Table of Contents 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 Start beginning of 2000 URL http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-jr Tasks Tasks of Debian Jr. Mailing list debian-jr@lists.debian.org Initiator Ben Armstrong < synrg@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Jr. mailing list Release Debian 3.0 (Woody) Goals To make Debian an OS that children of all ages will want to use, preferring it over the alternatives. To care for those applications in Debian suitable for children, and ensure their quality, to the best of our abilities. To make Debian a playground for children's enjoyment and exploration. The main target is young children. By the time children are teenaged, they should be comfortable with using Debian without any special modifications. Debian Jr. was the first Blend. In fact, at the time this project was created, the idea behind of Debian Pure Blends was born, although then, we used the term "Debian Internal Project". Over time, this name was changed to "Custom Debian Distributions" first because it was too broad, as it was equally descriptive of a number of quite different projects, such as IPv6 and QA. The next change of names became necessary when it was realised that the term "Custom Debian Distribution" was considered as "something else than Debian" by any newcomer. This was so misleading that it effectively blocked a wide propagation of the principle. Debian Jr. not only provides games, but is also concerned about their quality from a child's perspective. Thus, games that are regarded as not well suited to young children are omitted. Moreover, choices are made about which packages are best suited for children to use for various other activities and tasks that interest them. This includes, for example, simple text processing, web browsing and drawing. 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care Start beginning of 2002 URL Debian Med Tasks Tasks of Debian Med Mailing list debian-med@lists.debian.org Initiator Andreas Tille < tille@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Med mailing list Activists on Debian Med developer list Committers to Debian Med VCS Uploaders of Debian Med team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Med packages Release Sarge Goals To build an integrated software environment for all medical tasks. To care especially for the quality of program packages in the field of medicine that are already integrated within Debian. To build and include in Debian packages of medical software that are missing in Debian. To care for a general infrastructure for medical users. To make efforts to increase the quality of third party Free Software in the field of medicine. 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education Start Summer of 2002, since 2003 merged with SkoleLinux, which is now synonymous with Debian Edu URL Debian Edu Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Edu Mailing list debian-edu@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Edu mailing list Responsible Petter Reinholdtsen < pere@hungry.com > Release Sarge Goals To make Debian the best distribution available for educational use. Provide a ready to run classroom installation with free educational software. An automatically installed server provides net-boot services for disk-less thin clients and all necessary applications for educational use. To federate many initiatives around education, which are partly based on forks of Debian. To continue the internationalisation efforts of SkoleLinux. To focus on easy installation in schools. To cooperate with other education-related projects (like Schoolforge , Ofset , KdeEdu ). This project started with the intention to bring back into Debian a fork from Debian that was started by some people in France. Because they had some time constraints, the people who initially started this effort handed over responsibility to the Norwegian Skolelinux , which is currently more or less identical to Debian Edu. 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems Start October 2004 URL DebianGIS Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian GIS Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Francesco P. Lovergine < frankie@debian.org > Goals Geographical Information Systems OpenStreetMap and GPS devices 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers Start March 2014 URL Debian Astro Blends page Tasks Tasks of Debian Astro Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Ole Streicher < olebole@debian.org > Goals Debian Astro is a "Debian Pure Blend" with the aim to develop a Debian based operating system that fits the requirements of both professional and hobby astronomers. It integrates a large number of software packages covering telescope control, data reduction, presentation and other fields. 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry Start October 2004 URL Debichem Alioth page Tasks Tasks of DebiChem Mailing list debichem-users@lists.alioth.debian.org Activity Activists on DebiChem mailing list Committers to DebiChem VCS Uploaders of DebiChem team Team members closing the most bugs in DebiChem packages Initiator Michael Banck < mbanck@debian.org > Goals Chemical applications in Debian 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science Start July 2005 URL Debian Science Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Science Mailing list debian-science@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Science mailing list Activists on Debian Science maintainers list Committers to Debian Science VCS Uploaders of Debian Science team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Science packages Responsible Sylvestre Ledru < sylvestre@debian.org > While there are Debian Pure Blends that care for certain sciences (Debian Med deals in a main part with Biology, DebiChem for Chemistry and Debian GIS for geography) not all sciences are covered by a specific Blend. The main reason is that at the moment not enough people support such an effort for every science. The temporary solution was to build a general Debian Science Blend that makes use of the work of other Blends in case it exists. 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project Debian for blind and visually impaired people Start February 2003 Mailing list debian-accessibility@lists.debian.org URL Debian Accessibility Tasks Tasks of Debian Accessibility Activity Activists on Debian Accessibility mailing list Initiator Mario Lang < mlang@debian.org > Goals To make Debian accessible to people with disabilities. To take special care for: Screen readers; Screen magnification programs; Software speech synthesisers; Speech recognition software; Scanner drivers and OCR software; Specialised software like edbrowse (web-browse in the spirit of line-editors) To make text-mode interfaces available. To provide screen reader functionality during installation. 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server Start May 2010 URL Website Demo Buy Download Disk Images Wiki Manual Tasks Tasks of FreedomBox Contact Get Support Discussion Forum Matrix Mailing List IRC FreedomBox Foundation Report Issues Activity Project page Latest posts on discussion forum Committers to FreedomBox repository Activity on the FreedomBox Salsa project Responsible FreedomBox Team < admin@freedombox.org > FreedomBox is designed to be your own inexpensive server at home. It runs free software and offers an increasing number of services ranging from a calendar or jabber server to a wiki or VPN. A web interface allows you to easily install and configure your apps. Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas  Home  Chapter 5. Distributions inside Debian
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://classic.yarnpkg.com/lang/en/docs/
Documentation | Yarn Important: This documentation covers Yarn 1 (Classic). For Yarn 2+ docs and migration guide, see yarnpkg.com. Yarn Getting Started Docs Packages Blog English English Español Français Bahasa Indonesia 日本語 Português (Brasil) Русский Türkçe Українська 中文 繁體中文 Discord Discord Twitter Twitter Facebook Facebook GitHub GitHub Documentation Search documentation Getting Started Never used a package manager before or just new to Yarn? Let's get you up and running in just a couple of minutes. Read more The Yarn Workflow How do I use Yarn? There are basic workflows for both creating and consuming Yarn packages that will help you get productive quickly. Read more CLI Commands Yarn is executed through a rich set of commands allowing package installation, administration, publishing, and more. Read more Migrating from npm client Yarn interops directly with many features of npm, including its package metadata format, allowing for a painless migration. Read more Creating a Package Creating and publishing a yarn package can be done with just a few commands and configuration settings, leaving you to focus on your actual code. Read more Dependencies & Versions Using Yarn you'll be working with dependencies all the time. Let's go through the different types and versions of dependencies. Read more Configuration Learn how to use package.json to configure your packages and dependencies. Read more Offline Mirror Maintain offline copies of your packages for more repeatable and reliable builds. Read more Workspaces Link together your projects for easier maintenance. Read more Plug'n'Play Install your projects in a safer and faster way. Read more Yarn Organization The Yarn organization is a collaboration of many companies and individuals dedicated to improving your package management experience. Read more Yarn Distributed under BSD License Code of Conduct Edit this page
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://yarnpkg.com/getting-started/editor-sdks
Editor SDKs | Yarn Skip to main content Yarn Get Started Features CLI Configuration Advanced Blog API master (4.12.0-dev) master (4.12.0-dev) 3.8.7 1.22.22 Discord GitHub Search Starting with Yarn Introduction Installation Usage Migrating from 1.x / npm Benefits Step-by-step To go further Good to Know Corepack Editor SDKs Questions & Answers Recipes Good to Know Editor SDKs On this page Editor SDKs Smart IDEs (such as VSCode or IntelliJ) require special configuration for TypeScript to work when using Plug'n'Play installs . This page is a collection of settings for each editor we've looked into. The editor SDKs and settings can be generated using yarn dlx @yarnpkg/sdks . Its detailed documentation can be found on the dedicated page . info Why are SDKs needed with Yarn PnP? Yarn PnP works by generating a Node.js loader , which has to be injected within the Node.js runtime. Many IDE extensions execute the packages they wrap (Prettier, TypeScript, ...) without consideration for loaders. The SDKs workaround that by generating indirection packages. When required, these indirection automatically setup the loader before forwarding the require calls to the real packages. Usage ​ Generate both the base SDK and the editor settings: yarn dlx @yarnpkg/sdks vscode vim ... Generate the base SDK, but no editor settings: yarn dlx @yarnpkg/sdks base Update all installed SDKs & editor settings: yarn dlx @yarnpkg/sdks Tools currently supported ​ warning The yarn dlx @yarnpkg/sdks command will look at the content of your root package.json to figure out the SDKs you need - it won't look at the dependencies from any other workspaces. Supported extension Enabled if ... is found in your package.json dependencies Builtin VSCode TypeScript Server typescript astro-vscode astro vscode-eslint eslint prettier-vscode prettier relay relay If you'd like to contribute more, take a look here! Editor setup ​ CoC nvim ​ Install vim-rzip Run the following command, which will generate a .vim/coc-settings.json file: yarn dlx @yarnpkg/sdks vim Emacs ​ The SDK comes with a typescript-language-server wrapper which enables you to use the ts-ls LSP client. Run the following command, which will generate a new directory called .yarn/sdks : yarn dlx @yarnpkg/sdks base Create a .dir-locals.el with the following content to enable Flycheck and LSP support, and make sure LSP is loaded after local variables are applied to trigger the eval-after-load : ((typescript-mode . ((eval . (let ((project-directory (car (dir-locals-find-file default-directory)))) (setq lsp-clients-typescript-server-args `("--tsserver-path" ,(concat project-directory ".yarn/sdks/typescript/bin/tsserver") "--stdio"))))))) Neovim Native LSP ​ Install vim-rzip Run the following command, which will generate a new directory called .yarn/sdks : yarn dlx @yarnpkg/sdks base TypeScript support should then work out of the box with nvim-lspconfig and theia-ide/typescript-language-server . VSCode ​ Install the ZipFS extension, which is maintained by the Yarn team. Run the following command, which will generate a .vscode/settings.json file: yarn dlx @yarnpkg/sdks vscode For safety reason VSCode requires you to explicitly activate the custom TS settings: Press ctrl+shift+p in a TypeScript file Choose "Select TypeScript Version" Pick "Use Workspace Version" Your VSCode project is now configured to use the exact same version of TypeScript as the one you usually use, except that it will be able to properly resolve the type definitions. Edit this page Previous Corepack Next Questions & Answers Usage Tools currently supported Editor setup CoC nvim Emacs Neovim Native LSP VSCode Copyright © 2026 Yarn Contributors, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://tests.reproducible-builds.org/debian/forky/index_dd-list.html#bottoms@debian.org
Maintainers of unreproducible packages in forky Debian navigation Change suite/architecture Tested suites: unstable forky trixie bookworm experimental Test results statistics Results for forky/amd64 Unreproducible packages: with notes without notes Other package states: package sets Recently tested packages: last 24h last 48h all tested packages packages with .buildinfo files packages without .buildinfo files Scheduled for amd64 Maintainers of in forky Reproducible Debian overview Development dashboard Past releases dashboard Categorized issues Bugs filed Variations tested Packages with notifications enabled ⚑ Repositories overview Backend related Broken pieces Documentation (eg. on manual scheduling) Performance stats Health monitoring node overview job overview daily graphs weekly graphs monthly graphs yearly graphs The Reproducible Builds project reproducible-builds.org Reproducible Builds - Docs • News Reproducible Builds in Debian - Wiki SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH specification reproduce.debian.net aims for 100% bit-for-bit identical rebuilds of Debian other CI tests Maintainers of unreproducible packages in forky The following maintainers and uploaders are listed for packages in forky which have built unreproducibly. Please note that the while the link always points to the amd64 version, it's possible thatthe unreproducibility is only present in another architecture(s). "Adam C. Powell, IV" <hazelsct@debian.org> ¶ med-fichier (U) mpich (U) mumps (U) petsc (U) slepc (U) spooles (U) A Mennucc1 <mennucc1@debian.org> ¶ mplayer (U) A. Maitland Bottoms <bottoms@debian.org> ¶ gnuradio gpredict (U) gr-dab (U) gr-fosphor gr-limesdr (U) gr-radar libiio uhd Aaron M. Ucko <ucko@debian.org> ¶ fltk1.3 (U) fltk1.4 (U) ncbi-blast+ (U) Abdelhakim Qbaich <abdelhakim@qbaich.com> ¶ gambc Abou Al Montacir <abou.almontacir@sfr.fr> ¶ castle-game-engine (U) fp-units-win (U) Adam Borowski <kilobyte@angband.pl> ¶ cardo (U) valgrind + (U) Adam Majer <adamm@zombino.com> ¶ qtcreator (U) Adrian Vondendriesch <adrian.vondendriesch@credativ.de> ¶ pacemaker (U) Aggelos Avgerinos <evaggelos.avgerinos@gmail.com> ¶ xmobar (U) Agustin Henze <tin@debian.org> ¶ yapsy (U) Ahmad Khalifa <ahmad@khalifa.ws> ¶ openrgb Akira Mitsui <murase.syuka@gmail.com> ¶ mruby (U) Alan M Varghese (NyxTrail) <alan@digistorm.in> ¶ hyprland (U) Alastair McKinstry <mckinstry@debian.org> ¶ cctools cdo (U) eccodes (U) ecflow (U) emoslib # (U) fdb (U) ferret-vis (U) fiat-ecmwf (U) fortran-fpm (U) fortran-jonquil (U) fortran-regex + (U) fortran-testdrive (U) hdf-eos4 (U) hdf-eos5 (U) iirish libtool metkit (U) mpich (U) odc (U) openmpi (U) pnetcdf + (U) pyferret (U) python-escript (U) python-xarray (U) silo-llnl (U) Alberto Garcia <berto@igalia.com> ¶ webkit2gtk (U) wpewebkit (U) Alberto Leiva Popper <ydahhrk@gmail.com> ¶ jool Alberto Luaces Fernández <aluaces@udc.es> ¶ yasnippet (U) Albin Tonnerre <lutin@debian.org> ¶ efl (U) AlcinaSharon <alcinasharon@gmail.com> ¶ go-qrcode (U) Alec Leamas <leamas.alec@gmail.com> ¶ libcxx-serial opencpn Aleksey Kravchenko <rhash.admin@gmail.com> ¶ libpff (U) Alessandro Ghedini <ghedo@debian.org> ¶ ecasound (U) valgrind + Alessio Treglia <alessio@debian.org> ¶ kmetronome (U) libsoxr (U) schism (U) Alex Myczko <tar@debian.org> ¶ 3d-ascii-viewer-c cheesecutter (U) far2l fonts-atarist # (U) fonts-topaz-unicode (U) ftxui (U) furnace (U) lft lie mdnsd netsurf (U) schism (U) shotcut + (U) zytrax (U) Alexander Kjäll <alexander.kjall@gmail.com> ¶ rust-sequoia-keystore-server (U) rust-sequoia-sq (U) Alexander Ponyatykh <lazyranma@gmail.com> ¶ g15daemon paexec Alexander Wirt <formorer@debian.org> ¶ icinga2 (U) Alexandre Dantas <eu@alexdantas.net> ¶ nsnake (U) Alexandre Detiste <tchet@debian.org> ¶ contourpy (U) ftgl (U) m2crypto (U) matplotlib (U) sphinx-panels (U) Alexandre Marie <alexandre.marie@synchrotron-soleil.fr> ¶ jupyter-sphinx (U) Alexandre Mestiashvili <mestia@debian.org> ¶ bibtexparser + (U) Alexandre Viau <aviau@debian.org> ¶ fonts-fork-awesome (U) golang-github-jonas-p-go-shp + (U) golang-github-roaringbitmap-roaring + (U) golang-github-tjfoc-gmsm + (U) Alkis Georgopoulos <alkisg@gmail.com> ¶ ltsp (U) Alois Schlögl <alois.schloegl@gmail.com> ¶ biosig (U) Aloïs Micard <alois@micard.lu> ¶ golang-github-francoispqt-gojay (U) Aloïs Micard <creekorful@debian.org> ¶ aerc (U) golang-github-viant-toolbox + (U) Amin Bandali <bandali@ubuntu.com> ¶ gtk4 (U) Amul Shah <Amul.Shah@fisglobal.com> ¶ fis-gtm (U) Ana Custura <ana@netstat.org.uk> ¶ namecheap + (U) vanguards + (U) Ananthu C V <weepingclown@debian.org> ¶ lazygit (U) Andrea Pappacoda <tachi@debian.org> ¶ mbedtls (U) xbyak Andreas Beckmann <anbe@debian.org> ¶ papi (U) pyopencl (U) Andreas Boll <aboll@debian.org> ¶ mesa (U) Andreas Bombe <aeb@debian.org> ¶ gr-limesdr (U) Andreas Cadhalpun <Andreas.Cadhalpun@googlemail.com> ¶ clamav (U) Andreas Henriksson <andreas@fatal.se> ¶ golang-github-mendersoftware-mender-artifact (U) Andreas Metzler <ametzler@debian.org> ¶ efl (U) enblend-enfuse (U) lynx (U) pfstools (U) Andreas Rönnquist <gusnan@debian.org> ¶ allegro5 # (U) Andreas Tille <tille@debian.org> ¶ altree (U) bedtools (U) biosquid # (U) btllib (U) cardpeek (U) consensuscore (U) crac (U) dicom3tools (U) emboss (U) filtlong (U) fis-gtm (U) freebayes (U) golang-github-apptainer-container-library-client + (U) golang-github-apptainer-sif + (U) golang-github-jung-kurt-gofpdf + (U) golang-github-shenwei356-breader + (U) golang-gonum-v1-plot + (U) hmmer (U) igraph (U) infernal (U) ivar (U) libbrahe (U) libcifpp (U) libgzstream (U) libhmsbeagle (U) liblemon (U) libpll (U) librostlab (U) libsbml (U) libslow5lib (U) macs (U) microbiomeutil + (U) minimap2 (U) ncbi-blast+ (U) node-shiny-server (U) openmm (U) parallel (U) phybin (U) porechop (U) primer3 (U) python-biom-format (U) python-biopython (U) python-ofxhome + (U) python-pysam (U) r-cran-cli (U) r-cran-cliapp (U) r-cran-dbitest (U) r-cran-diagnosismed (U) r-cran-dimred (U) r-cran-emayili (U) r-cran-emmeans (U) r-cran-futile.logger (U) r-cran-gert (U) r-cran-gprofiler2 (U) r-cran-lambda.r (U) r-cran-prophet (U) r-cran-rprojroot (U) r-cran-rstan (U) r-cran-sass (U) r-cran-teachingdemos (U) r-cran-tm (U) r-cran-tmvtnorm (U) r-cran-tweenr (U) r-cran-xfun (U) samtools (U) seer (U) segemehl (U) seqan2 (U) silly (U) siscone (U) tree-puzzle (U) treeview (U) twopaco (U) unicycler (U) velvet (U) virtuoso-opensource (U) virulencefinder + (U) xfishtank (U) Andrei Rozanski <rozanski.andrei@gmail.com> ¶ libamplsolver (U) Andrej Shadura <andrewsh@debian.org> ¶ critcl + (U) fonts-karmilla (U) g15daemon (U) libcamera (U) mk-configure Andrew Lee (李健秋) <ajqlee@debian.org> ¶ nomacs (U) Andrew Ross <ubuntu@rossfamily.co.uk> ¶ libitext5-java (U) Andrey Rakhmatullin <wrar@debian.org> ¶ kvirc (U) Andrius Merkys <merkys@debian.org> ¶ bespokesynth (U) epics-base (U) grammatica (U) ncbi-igblast (U) openmm (U) pdb-tools (U) pycifrw + (U) python-fabio (U) python-pyutil + (U) r-cran-rhub (U) spglib (U) vst3sdk (U) wannier90 (U) Andy Pugh <andy@bodgesoc.org> ¶ linuxcnc (U) Ansgar <ansgar@debian.org> ¶ dune-common (U) dune-functions (U) dune-geometry (U) dune-grid (U) dune-grid-glue (U) dune-istl (U) dune-localfunctions (U) dune-typetree (U) Anthony Fok <foka@debian.org> ¶ autokey (U) go-qrcode (U) golang-1.24 (U) golang-github-akavel-rsrc # (U) golang-github-rogpeppe-go-internal (U) golang-github-ulikunitz-xz + (U) golang-github-yosssi-ace (U) golang-golang-x-net (U) pydoctor (U) Antoine Beaupré <anarcat@debian.org> ¶ magic-wormhole-mailbox-server (U) magic-wormhole-transit-relay + Antoine Le Gonidec <vv221@debian.org> ¶ ogre-1.12 (U) Anton Gladky <gladk@debian.org> ¶ boost1.88 (U) esys-particle (U) gmsh (U) lammps (U) metis (U) minieigen (U) sfepy (U) sumo (U) sundials (U) yade (U) Anton Zinoviev <zinoviev@debian.org> ¶ xfonts-terminus Antoni Villalonga <antoni@friki.cat> ¶ vt + (U) Antonio Terceiro <terceiro@debian.org> ¶ passenger (U) Antonio Valentino <antonio.valentino@tiscali.it> ¶ c-blosc2 (U) metpy (U) numexpr (U) pycoast (U) pysolid (U) python-cartopy (U) python-pint (U) xarray-safe-rcm (U) Anuradha Weeraman <anuradha@debian.org> ¶ ksh93u+m # Apollon Oikonomopoulos <apoikos@debian.org> ¶ xmobar (U) Arnaud Ferraris <aferraris@debian.org> ¶ gnome-metronome (U) plasma-mobile (U) Arnaud Fontaine <arnau@debian.org> ¶ glosstex (U) Arnaud Rebillout <arnaud.rebillout@collabora.com> ¶ efitools (U) Arnaud Rebillout <arnaudr@debian.org> ¶ mirrorbits (U) Arnaud Rebillout <arnaudr@kali.org> ¶ docker.io (U) Arnaud Rebillout <elboulangero@gmail.com> ¶ golang-github-miekg-pkcs11 (U) Arne Morten Kvarving <arne.morten.kvarving@sintef.no> ¶ opm-simulators (U) opm-upscaling (U) Arnout Engelen <arnouten@bzzt.net> ¶ kmetronome (U) Aron Xu <aron@debian.org> ¶ dnf-plugins-core (U) fcitx-libpinyin (U) ibus (U) libpinyin (U) opencc (U) Arthur Diniz <arthurbdiniz@gmail.com> ¶ hey (U) kind (U) kustomize (U) Arun Kumar Pariyar <arun@debian.org> ¶ go-gir-generator (U) Arun Kumar Pariyar <openarungeek@gmail.com> ¶ dde-qt-dbus-factory (U) Asias He <asias@debian.org> ¶ libpinyin (U) opencc (U) Aurelien Jarno <aurel32@debian.org> ¶ med-fichier (U) Aurélien COUDERC <coucouf@debian.org> ¶ kate (U) kdebugsettings (U) kdevelop-php (U) kf6-breeze-icons (U) kf6-extra-cmake-modules (U) kf6-kirigami (U) kf6-ktexttemplate (U) kf6-syndication (U) oxygen-icons (U) plasma-mobile (U) powerdevil (U) syndication (U) tokodon (U) Axel Beckert <abe@debian.org> ¶ dpmb john (U) lynx (U) Aymeric Agon-Rambosson <aymeric.agon@yandex.com> ¶ citar (U) consult-el (U) embark (U) magit (U) marginalia (U) orderless (U) vertico (U) Balasankar C <balasankarc@debian.org> ¶ fonts-smc-anjalioldlipi (U) fonts-smc-dyuthi (U) fonts-smc-karumbi (U) fonts-smc-keraleeyam (U) fonts-smc-meera (U) fonts-smc-rachana (U) fonts-smc-raghumalayalamsans (U) fonts-smc-uroob (U) Balint Reczey <balint@balintreczey.hu> ¶ erlang-cowlib (U) Barak A. Pearlmutter <bap@debian.org> ¶ chezscheme (U) fstrcmp ikarus ivtools latex-coffee-stains libemf magit (U) mit-scheme oaklisp pstoedit yasnippet (U) Barry deFreese <bdefreese@debian.org> ¶ asc (U) blockattack (U) liquidwar (U) netrek-client-cow (U) Bartosz Fenski <fenio@debian.org> ¶ asc (U) Bas Couwenberg <sebastic@debian.org> ¶ grass (U) libosmium (U) nco (U) pyosmium (U) qgis (U) Bas Wijnen <wijnen@debian.org> ¶ openmsx Bas Zoetekouw <bas@debian.org> ¶ blktrace Bastian Blank <waldi@debian.org> ¶ cdebootstrap + libdebian-installer (U) linux (U) Bastian Germann <bage@debian.org> ¶ scalable-cyrfonts Bastian Venthur <venthur@debian.org> ¶ kivy (U) Bastien Roucaries <rouca@debian.org> ¶ node-envinfo (U) Bastien Roucariès <rouca@debian.org> ¶ node-rollup (U) Bdale Garbee <bdale@gag.com> ¶ altos debian-history (U) librnd (U) pforth rocketcea scikit-fmm Ben Hutchings <benh@debian.org> ¶ linux (U) Benda Xu <heroxbd@gentoo.org> ¶ casacore (U) casacore-data-igrf (U) casacore-data-jplde (U) scim (U) Benda Xu <orv@debian.org> ¶ scmutils Benjamin Barenblat <bbaren@debian.org> ¶ coq (U) Benjamin Drung <bdrung@debian.org> ¶ libsoxr (U) vlc # + (U) Benjamin Drung <bdrung@ubuntu.com> ¶ rdma-core Bernd Zeimetz <bzed@debian.org> ¶ collectd (U) gpsbabel (U) Bernhard Miklautz <bernhard.miklautz@shacknet.at> ¶ freerdp3 (U) Bernhard R. Link <brlink@debian.org> ¶ git-dpm bertrand Neron <bneron@pasteur.fr> ¶ macsyfinder (U) Birger Schacht <birger@debian.org> ¶ foot Boian Bonev <bbonev@ipacct.com> ¶ gpsd Boris Pek <tehnick@debian.org> ¶ psi-plus Boyuan Yang <byang@debian.org> ¶ beangulp + (U) dde-qt-dbus-factory (U) fcitx5-bamboo (U) fcitx5-zhuyin (U) font-manager (U) go-gir-generator (U) opencc (U) rime-array (U) rime-cangjie (U) rime-cantonese (U) rime-ipa (U) rime-loengfan (U) rime-luna-pinyin (U) rime-middle-chinese (U) rime-pinyin-simp (U) rime-quick (U) rime-scj (U) rime-soutzoe (U) rime-stroke (U) rime-terra-pinyin (U) rime-wubi (U) rime-wugniu (U) zxing-cpp Brad Chapman <chapmanb@50mail.com> ¶ freebayes (U) Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org> ¶ cappuccino Brian May <bam@debian.org> ¶ celery (U) faker (U) python-django (U) python-mkdocs (U) python-passlib (U) BW Keller <malzraa@gmail.com> ¶ yt (U) Camm Maguire <camm@debian.org> ¶ axiom fricas gcl gcl27 hol88 lam + maxima Carl Keinath <carl.keinath@gmail.com> ¶ hyprland (U) Carl Worth <cworth@debian.org> ¶ notmuch Carlos Zuferri <chals@altorricon.com> ¶ live-manual (U) Carsten Leonhardt <leo@debian.org> ¶ bacula-doc (U) Carsten Schoenert <c.schoenert@t-online.de> ¶ kicad (U) python-graphene + (U) python-mkdocs (U) python-picologging (U) Cesare Falco <c.falco@ubuntu.com> ¶ mame (U) Changwoo Ryu <cwryu@debian.org> ¶ ibus (U) ChangZhuo Chen (陳昌倬) <czchen@debian.org> ¶ fcitx-libpinyin (U) ibus-libzhuyin (U) libpinyin (U) nomacs (U) Charles Plessy <plessy@debian.org> ¶ altree (U) bedtools (U) emboss (U) primer3 (U) python-biopython (U) python-pysam (U) samtools (U) tree-puzzle (U) velvet (U) Chow Loong Jin <hyperair@debian.org> ¶ hyprland (U) Chris Halls <halls@debian.org> ¶ writer2latex (U) Chris Hofstaedtler <zeha@debian.org> ¶ ragel Chris Lamb <lamby@debian.org> ¶ black (U) python-django (U) Christian Bayle <bayle@debian.org> ¶ jfreepdf (U) orson-charts (U) rocm-docs-core (U) rocm-hipamd (U) Christian Ehrhardt <christian.ehrhardt@canonical.com> ¶ dpdk (U) Christian Kastner <ckk@debian.org> ¶ numpy (U) rocm-hipamd (U) rocprim (U) scikit-learn (U) Christian M. Amsüss <chrysn@fsfe.org> ¶ rdflib + (U) Christian Marillat <marillat@debian.org> ¶ libtorrent-rasterbar Christian T. Steigies <cts@debian.org> ¶ gle-graphics-manual (U) Christoph Berg <myon@debian.org> ¶ gpredict (U) gr-limesdr (U) libcm256cc (U) patroni # (U) pgloader (U) prometheus-sql-exporter (U) vip-manager2 (U) Christoph Biedl <debian.axhn@manchmal.in-ulm.de> ¶ gkrellm-leds P Christoph Egger <christoph@debian.org> ¶ buildapp (U) clisp (U) ecl (U) Christoph Martin <chrism@debian.org> ¶ vdr-plugin-markad (U) Christophe Trophime <christophe.trophime@lncmi.cnrs.fr> ¶ getdp (U) gmsh (U) Christopher Baines <mail@cbaines.net> ¶ faker (U) Christopher Hoskin <mans0954@debian.org> ¶ pympress + (U) rust-fslock # (U) Christopher Reichert <creichert07@gmail.com> ¶ haskell-network-conduit-tls (U) ClamAV Team <pkg-clamav-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ clamav Clay Stan <claystan97@gmail.com> ¶ dde-qt-dbus-factory (U) Clint Adams <clint@debian.org> ¶ alex (U) cabal-debian (U) ghc # (U) glirc (U) haskell-aeson (U) haskell-arithmoi (U) haskell-async (U) haskell-attoparsec (U) haskell-base64-bytestring (U) haskell-bimap (U) haskell-binary-instances (U) haskell-bitvec (U) haskell-blaze-markup (U) haskell-bloomfilter (U) haskell-brick (U) haskell-bytestring-to-vector (U) haskell-bz2 (U) haskell-case-insensitive (U) haskell-cassava (U) haskell-cassava-megaparsec (U) haskell-cborg (U) haskell-cereal-conduit (U) haskell-cereal-vector (U) haskell-chimera (U) haskell-cipher-camellia (U) haskell-classy-prelude (U) haskell-classy-prelude-conduit (U) haskell-clientsession (U) haskell-cmark (U) haskell-cmark-gfm (U) haskell-conduit (U) haskell-conduit-extra (U) haskell-cryptohash (U) haskell-cryptohash-md5 (U) haskell-cryptohash-sha1 (U) haskell-cryptohash-sha256 (U) haskell-cryptonite (U) haskell-curve25519 (U) haskell-deepseq-generics (U) haskell-dense-linear-algebra (U) haskell-deriving-aeson (U) haskell-deriving-compat (U) haskell-doctemplates (U) haskell-ed25519 (U) haskell-edit-distance (U) haskell-email-validate (U) haskell-enclosed-exceptions (U) haskell-esqueleto (U) haskell-exception-transformers (U) haskell-expiring-cache-map (U) haskell-fast-logger (U) haskell-fgl-arbitrary (U) haskell-filepattern (U) haskell-filestore (U) haskell-fold-debounce (U) haskell-from-sum (U) haskell-generic-data (U) haskell-generic-random (U) haskell-genvalidity (U) haskell-genvalidity-containers (U) haskell-getopt-generics (U) haskell-ghc-exactprint (U) haskell-ghc-lib-parser-ex (U) haskell-gi-gdk (U) haskell-githash (U) haskell-gridtables (U) haskell-hackage-security (U) haskell-hakyll (U) haskell-haskell-gi (U) haskell-heterocephalus (U) haskell-hgmp (U) haskell-hjsmin (U) haskell-hledger (U) haskell-hledger-ui (U) haskell-hopenpgp (U) haskell-hourglass (U) haskell-hslua-module-text (U) haskell-hspec-api (U) haskell-hspec-megaparsec (U) haskell-hspec-smallcheck (U) haskell-hspec-wai (U) haskell-html-conduit (U) haskell-http-api-data (U) haskell-http-client (U) haskell-http-conduit (U) haskell-infer-license (U) haskell-inline-c (U) haskell-integer-logarithms (U) haskell-integer-roots (U) haskell-interpolate (U) haskell-io-streams-haproxy (U) haskell-irc-core (U) haskell-js-flot (U) haskell-lambdahack (U) haskell-lens (U) haskell-libmpd (U) haskell-load-env (U) haskell-logging-facade (U) haskell-lukko (U) haskell-lzma (U) haskell-markdown (U) haskell-markdown-unlit (U) haskell-memory (U) haskell-microstache (U) haskell-minimorph (U) haskell-miniutter (U) haskell-mockery (U) haskell-monad-loops (U) haskell-monad-memo (U) haskell-mono-traversable (U) haskell-multistate (U) haskell-nanospec (U) haskell-natural-transformation (U) haskell-nettle (U) haskell-numbers (U) haskell-openpgp-asciiarmor (U) haskell-optparse-applicative (U) haskell-ormolu (U) haskell-parsers (U) haskell-path-pieces (U) haskell-pem (U) haskell-persistent (U) haskell-pretty-simple (U) haskell-prettyprinter-ansi-terminal (U) haskell-project-template (U) haskell-quickcheck-classes (U) haskell-quote-quot (U) haskell-rank2classes (U) haskell-raw-strings-qq (U) haskell-readargs (U) haskell-recv (U) haskell-resourcet (U) haskell-safe-exceptions (U) haskell-sandi (U) haskell-say (U) haskell-scanner (U) haskell-scotty (U) haskell-selective (U) haskell-serialise (U) haskell-servant (U) haskell-servant-server (U) haskell-shell-conduit (U) haskell-should-not-typecheck (U) haskell-simple-sendfile (U) haskell-skein (U) haskell-snap (U) haskell-snap-templates (U) haskell-soap (U) haskell-split (U) haskell-streaming-commons (U) haskell-tagstream-conduit (U) haskell-tasty-golden (U) haskell-tasty-hedgehog (U) haskell-termonad (U) haskell-text-icu (U) haskell-text-manipulate (U) haskell-text-metrics (U) haskell-text-show (U) haskell-th-desugar (U) haskell-th-env (U) haskell-th-lift (U) haskell-th-lift-instances (U) haskell-th-utilities (U) haskell-time-parsers (U) haskell-tls (U) haskell-trifecta (U) haskell-typed-process (U) haskell-universe-base (U) haskell-unix-time (U) haskell-uuid (U) haskell-wai (U) haskell-wai-app-static (U) haskell-wai-extra (U) haskell-wai-http2-extra (U) haskell-warp (U) haskell-witch (U) haskell-with-location (U) haskell-wl-pprint-annotated (U) haskell-word-wrap (U) haskell-word8 (U) haskell-x509 (U) haskell-xml-conduit (U) haskell-xml-hamlet (U) haskell-xml-html-qq (U) haskell-xmlhtml (U) haskell-xss-sanitize (U) haskell-yaml (U) haskell-yesod-core (U) haskell-yesod-form (U) haskell-yesod-test (U) mighttpd2 (U) Clément Hermann <nodens@debian.org> ¶ onedrive (U) Colin Watson <cjwatson@debian.org> ¶ groff libdebian-installer (U) yubihsm-connector (U) zope.deferredimport + (U) Collectd Packaging Team <team+collectd@tracker.debian.org> ¶ collectd Compute Library Team <developer-compute@arm.com> ¶ arm-compute-library Cordell Bloor <cgmb@debian.org> ¶ rocdbgapi + (U) rocm-hipamd (U) rocprim (U) Corey Bryant <corey.bryant@canonical.com> ¶ python-glanceclient (U) python-keystoneauth1 (U) Cyril Brulebois <cyril@debamax.com> ¶ crowdsec Cyril Brulebois <kibi@debian.org> ¶ debian-installer # # # (U) Cédric Boutillier <boutil@debian.org> ¶ gfan (U) highlight.js (U) ruby-gnuplot + (U) Cédric Lood <cedric.lood@kuleuven.be> ¶ porechop (U) Damien Raude-Morvan <drazzib@debian.org> ¶ codenarc (U) Damyan Ivanov <dmn@debian.org> ¶ firebird4.0 Danai SAE-HAN (韓達耐) <danai@debian.org> ¶ cjk (U) latex-cjk-chinese-arphic (U) Daniel Baumann <daniel@debian.org> ¶ ck dnsjit Daniel Dehennin <daniel.dehennin@baby-gnu.org> ¶ moarvm (U) raku-readline (U) raku-tap-harness (U) raku-zef (U) rakudo # (U) Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net> ¶ knot (U) rust-gperftools (U) rust-sequoia-sq (U) Daniel Markstedt <daniel@mindani.net> ¶ netatalk (U) Daniel Salzman <daniel.salzman@nic.cz> ¶ knot (U) Daniele Tricoli <eriol@mornie.org> ¶ pywavelets + (U) dann frazier <dannf@debian.org> ¶ makedumpfile (U) Dave Hibberd <hibby@debian.org> ¶ svxlink (U) David Banks <amoebae@gmail.com> ¶ sisc David Bremner <bremner@debian.org> ¶ emacs-jabber (U) notmuch (U) polymake sketch (U) slime (U) David Kalnischkies <donkult@debian.org> ¶ vim-youcompleteme ycmd David Miguel Susano Pinto <carandraug+dev@gmail.com> ¶ ncbi-igblast (U) David Paleino <dapal@debian.org> ¶ openlayers (U) uncertainties (U) underscore (U) David Suárez <david.sephirot@gmail.com> ¶ ruby-re2 (U) David Weinehall <tao@debian.org> ¶ scummvm (U) Davide Viti <zinosat@tiscali.it> ¶ fonts-freefont (U) Dawid Dziurla <dawidd0811@gmail.com> ¶ termshark (U) Dean Serenevy <dean@serenevy.net> ¶ kivy (U) Debian Accessibility Team <pkg-a11y-devel@alioth-lists.debian.net> ¶ flite Debian ACE maintainers <team+ace@tracker.debian.org> ¶ ace Debian ALSA Maintainers <pkg-alsa-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ alsa-utils Debian Astro Maintainers <debian-astro-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ pybdsf Debian Astro Team <debian-astro-maintainers@alioth-lists.debian.net> ¶ casacore-data-igrf casacore-data-jplde Debian Astro Team <debian-astro-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ astroplan astroquery casacore eso-midas gwcs montage ndcube pyregion python-casacore starjava-ttools Debian Astronomy Team <debian-astro-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ c-munipack yt Debian Bacula Team <pkg-bacula-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ bacula-doc Debian Bluetooth Maintainers <team+pkg-bluetooth@tracker.debian.org> ¶ bluez bluez-alsa Debian BOINC Maintainers <pkg-boinc-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ boinc Debian Boost Team <team+boost@tracker.debian.org> ¶ boost1.88 Debian Chinese Team <chinese-developers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ opencc (U) unicon # Debian CLI Applications Team <pkg-cli-apps-team@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ hexbox openmcdf Debian Clojure Maintainers <team+clojure@tracker.debian.org> ¶ clojure core-specs-alpha-clojure leiningen-clojure + spec-alpha-clojure Debian Common Lisp Team <debian-common-lisp@lists.debian.org> ¶ abcl buildapp clisp ecl sbcl slime Debian D Language Group <team+d-team@tracker.debian.org> ¶ dub ldc Debian Deepin Packaging Team <pkg-deepin-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ dde-qt-dbus-factory go-gir-generator 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python-inline-snapshot python-laspy python-laszip python-levenshtein python-lupa + python-mcstasscript + python-mkdocs python-moderngl-window python-msgspec python-mt-940 + python-ofxhome + python-openstep-plist + python-oracledb python-passlib python-picologging python-pint python-propcache python-pydash python-pytest-shell-utilities + python-pyutil + python-qtconsole python-rcon python-schema-salad python-slimmer + python-spdx-tools # python-tld + python-tomli python-xlrd pywavelets + pyzmq rapidfuzz rdflib + scikit-misc slidge slixmpp sphinx-gallery sphinx-panels sphinxcontrib-googleanalytics taskflow ueberzug uncertainties whipper + wxmplot + xonsh # xyzservices yapsy yarl (U) zope.deferredimport + Debian QA Group <packages@qa.debian.org> ¶ aspic buddy + closure-compiler codelite coinor-dylp epm esnacc fte gnubg golang-github-go-macaron-toolbox + golang-github-issue9-identicon + haskell98-report kst libapreq2 libforms lifelines madlib naspro-core openclipart posixtestsuite propellor seyon systemtap terminaltables ucspi-proxy Debian QEMU Team <pkg-qemu-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ qemu Debian Qt/KDE Maintainers <debian-qt-kde@lists.debian.org> ¶ akonadi akonadi-calendar akonadi-contacts + incidenceeditor kate kcalutils kdebugsettings kdepim-addons kdevelop-php kf6-breeze-icons kf6-extra-cmake-modules kf6-kirigami kf6-ktexttemplate kf6-syndication kmail kmailtransport kpimtextedit libgravatar libkdepim libksieve mailcommon mailimporter messagelib oxygen-icons pim-data-exporter pim-sieve-editor pimcommon plasma-mobile powerdevil pyside2 pyside6 qt6-3d qt6-5compat qt6-base qt6-charts qt6-connectivity qt6-datavis3d qt6-declarative qt6-graphs qt6-grpc qt6-httpserver qt6-imageformats qt6-languageserver qt6-location qt6-lottie qt6-multimedia qt6-networkauth qt6-positioning qt6-quick3d qt6-quick3dphysics qt6-quickeffectmaker qt6-quicktimeline qt6-remoteobjects qt6-scxml qt6-sensors qt6-serialbus qt6-serialport qt6-shadertools qt6-speech qt6-svg qt6-tools qt6-virtualkeyboard qt6-wayland qt6-webchannel qt6-websockets qt6-webview qtbase-opensource-src # # # qtbase-opensource-src-gles qtconnectivity-opensource-src qtcreator qtdeclarative-opensource-src qtsensors-opensource-src qtwebchannel-opensource-src qtwebengine-opensource-src syndication tokodon Debian R Packages Maintainers <r-pkg-team@alioth-lists.debian.net> ¶ r-cran-cli r-cran-cliapp r-cran-dbitest r-cran-diagnosismed r-cran-dimred r-cran-emayili r-cran-emmeans r-cran-futile.logger r-cran-gert r-cran-gprofiler2 r-cran-lambda.r r-cran-prophet r-cran-r.devices r-cran-r.rsp r-cran-repr r-cran-rhub r-cran-rprojroot r-cran-rsdmx r-cran-rstan r-cran-sass r-cran-teachingdemos r-cran-tm r-cran-tmvtnorm r-cran-tweenr r-cran-xfun Debian Rakudo Maintainers <pkg-rakudo-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ moarvm prove6 raku-getopt-long raku-hash-merge raku-json-class raku-json-marshal raku-json-name raku-json-unmarshal raku-license-spdx raku-log raku-meta6 raku-readline raku-tap-harness raku-test-meta raku-uri raku-zef rakudo # Debian Reform Team <team+reform@tracker.debian.org> ¶ reform-handbook Debian Remote Maintainers <debian-remote@lists.debian.org> ¶ freerdp3 python-x2go P remmina x2goserver Debian Robotics Team <team+robotics@tracker.debian.org> ¶ fastdds iceoryx ros2-osrf-testing-tools-cpp ros2-rosidl Debian ROCm Team <debian-ai@lists.debian.org> ¶ rocdbgapi + rocm-docs-core rocm-hipamd rocprim Debian rsbackup maintainers <rsbackup-maint@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ rsbackup Debian Ruby Team <pkg-ruby-extras-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ passenger ruby-gnuplot + ruby-otr-activerecord ruby-pygments.rb ruby-re2 Debian Rust Maintainers <pkg-rust-maintainers@alioth-lists.debian.net> ¶ rust-fslock # rust-gperftools rust-laurel rust-rustpython-parser + rust-sequoia-keystore-server rust-sequoia-sq rust-xdg # rustc Debian Scheme Team <debian-scheme@lists.debian.org> ¶ guile-fibers Debian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@alioth-lists.debian.net> ¶ apertium-cat-ita apertium-cat-srd apertium-oci-fra apertium-srd-ita gap-scscp giac Debian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> ¶ asl bitshuffle (U) bliss bornagain (U) c-blosc2 cdo clhep + coin3 coinor-bonmin coinor-cgl combblas cvc5 dolfin dune-common dune-functions dune-geometry dune-grid dune-grid-glue dune-istl dune-localfunctions dune-typetree dxf2gcode eccodes ecflow emoslib # epics-base esys-particle fdb fenics-dolfinx fenicsx-performance-tests ferret-vis fftw3 fiat-ecmwf fortran-fpm fortran-jonquil fortran-regex + fortran-testdrive freecad freesas (U) g2o gap-design gap-sonata geomview gerris getdp gle-graphics-manual gmsh gtsam guidata hdf-eos4 hdf-eos5 joblib lammps libbrahe libflame librsb # lmfit-py med-fichier metis metkit minieigen mona mpi4py mpich mumps neuron nfft ngspetsc node-shiny-server numexpr odc onetbb open3d opengv openmesh openmpi opm-simulators opm-upscaling pandas # pcl petsc plplot pnetcdf + pyfai P (U) pyferret pynx (U) pytango python-bumps python-escript python-fabio (U) python-hdf5plugin python-pyqtgraph python-xarray ros-dynamic-reconfigure scalapack scikit-learn sfepy silo-llnl simbody siscone sketch skimage slepc spglib spooles statsmodels sumo texmacs tkgate + virtuoso-opensource visp vlfeat wannier90 yade Debian Science Team <debian-science-maintainers@alioth-lists.debian.net> ¶ apertium-arg-cat apertium-br-fr apertium-eng-cat apertium-eng-spa apertium-eo-ca apertium-eo-es apertium-eo-fr apertium-es-gl apertium-eu-es apertium-fr-es apertium-fra-cat apertium-fra-frp apertium-hbs-eng apertium-hbs-mkd apertium-hbs-slv apertium-ind-zlm apertium-isl-swe apertium
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://tests.reproducible-builds.org/debian/bookworm/amd64/pkg_set_build-essential-depends.html
build-essential-depends package set for bookworm/amd64 Debian navigation Change suite/architecture Tested architectures: amd64 arm64 Tested suites: unstable forky trixie bookworm Test results statistics Results for bookworm/amd64 Unreproducible packages: with notes without notes Other package states: package sets Recently tested packages: last 24h last 48h all tested packages packages with .buildinfo files packages without .buildinfo files Scheduled for amd64 Maintainers of in bookworm Reproducible Debian overview Development dashboard Past releases dashboard Categorized issues Bugs filed Variations tested Packages with notifications enabled ⚑ Repositories overview Backend related Broken pieces Documentation (eg. on manual scheduling) Performance stats Health monitoring node overview job overview daily graphs weekly graphs monthly graphs yearly graphs The Reproducible Builds project reproducible-builds.org Reproducible Builds - Docs • News Reproducible Builds in Debian - Wiki SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH specification reproduce.debian.net aims for 100% bit-for-bit identical rebuilds of Debian other CI tests build-essential-depends package set for bookworm/amd64 All tracked package sets for bookworm/amd64 Debian package sets: essential required important build-essential build-essential-depends popcon_top1337-installed-sources key_packages installed_on_debian.org had_a_DSA cii-census cloud-image cloud-image_build-depends desktop package sets: gnome gnome_build-depends kde kde_build-depends mate mate_build-depends xfce xfce_build-depends Debian distribution package sets: CIP CIP_build-depends debian-edu debian-edu_build-depends freedombox freedombox_build-depends grml grml_build-depends tails tails_build-depends pureos_default_install pureos_default_install_build-depends maintenance team package sets: maint_debian-accessibility maint_debian-boot maint_debian-lua maint_debian-med maint_debian-ocaml maint_debian-on-mobile-maintainers maint_debian-python maint_debian-qa maint_debian-science maint_debian-x maint_pkg-android-tools-devel maint_pkg-erlang-devel maint_pkg-fonts-devel maint_pkg-games-devel maint_pkg-golang-maintainers maint_pkg-grass-devel maint_pkg-haskell-maintainers maint_pkg-java-maintainers maint_pkg-javascript-devel maint_pkg-multimedia-maintainers maint_pkg-perl-maintainers maint_pkg-php-pear maint_pkg-openstack maint_pkg-r maint_pkg-ruby-extras-maintainers maint_pkg-rust-maintainers maint_reproducible-builds The package set build-essential-depends in bookworm/amd64 consists of 4635 packages: 104 (2.2%) packages failed to build reproducibly: shaderc efl automake1.11 bnd codenarc cxxtest gtk-sharp2 javaparser mm-common mono-tools guile-3.0 mrmpi nunit pstoedit systemtap lucene4.10 gmetrics emoslib # codec2 scons infinipath-psm ruby-pygments.rb groovy nbsphinx lirc python-graphviz lynx dask qtx11extras-opensource-src doxygen qtsensors-opensource-src h2database fltk1.3 ldc qttools-opensource-src dejagnu auctex freetds qtwayland-opensource-src intel-mediasdk qt6-5compat qt6-multimedia qt6-quick3d eckit qtserialport-opensource-src qtspeech-opensource-src linux86 mpich python-jsonschema secilc oxygen-icons5 eccodes parallel valgrind + libadwaita-1 black underscore python-xarray qtwebsockets-opensource-src qtconnectivity-opensource-src qtsvg-opensource-src qtlocation-opensource-src libcamera gdcm r-base mypy qt6-declarative boost1.74 lucene8 gdb statsmodels python-mkdocs nbconvert petsc qtdeclarative-opensource-src fish lombok odc node-mocha ipyparallel fop bluez gcc-12-cross graphviz + numpy twisted emacs qtbase-opensource-src # # # python3.11 tomcat10 twitter-bootstrap3 commons-vfs php8.2 commons-beanutils icu sphinx-gallery libcommons-lang3-java imagemagick qemu ffmpeg vlc # + xorg-server linux gnupg2 52 (1.1%) packages failed to build from source: ruby-stackprof python-watchgod node-grunt-webpack ruby-fakefs ruby-rest-client ruby-haml strace haskell-unordered-containers freezegun haskell-unicode-collation haskell-citeproc haskell-lpeg python-babel tqdm python-argcomplete ruby-pry-byebug pexpect node-v8flags node-performance-now node-sinon node-webassemblyjs suitesparse node-p-limit haskell-doclayout openldap uglify-js munge node-bl haskell-basement gjs node-flagged-respawn node-tar gtk4 node-css-tree libgweather4 ghc # nspr qtremoteobjects-everywhere-src jupyter-notebook autogen ruby3.1 uvloop devscripts node-rollup-plugin-node-polyfills python-asyncssh espeak-ng yarl nodejs curl gst-plugins-base1.0 perl glibc 18 (0.4%) packages are either in depwait state, blacklisted, not for us, or cannot be downloaded: cross-toolchain-base cross-toolchain-base-ports python-eventlet ceph gcc-12 mono magics++ octave trilinos openblas gcc-11 vtk9 wpewebkit ocaml-dune scipy gcc-12-cross-ports openjfx nss 4461 (96.2%) packages successfully build reproducibly: a52dec aalib abego-treelayout abi-compliance-checker abseil acl acorn acpica-unix adduser adwaita-icon-theme afdko aglfn aiofiles aioredis aiosignal alabaster alex alglib alsa-lib amdgcn-tools animal-sniffer ann ant ant-contrib anthy antlr antlr3 antlr4 antlr-maven-plugin aom apache2 # apache-log4j1.2 apache-log4j2 apache-pom apiguardian apipkg apparmor appconfig appdirs apr apr-util apt argon2 args4j aribb24 armadillo arpack asciidoc asciidoctor asm aspell aspell-en aspell-he assertj-core assimp astroid atf atinject-jsr330 atkmm1.6 at-spi2-core attica-kf5 attr audit autoconf autoconf2.13 autoconf2.69 autoconf-archive autoconf-dickey autodep8 automake-1.16 automat autopkgtest autotools-dev avahi avalon-framework babel-minify babeltrace backbone base-files base-passwd bash bash-completion batik bats bc bcel beautifulsoup4 benchmark biber bignumber.js bindex binfmt-support binutils # binutils-mingw-w64 bison blinker blockdiag blt boost-defaults boot bottleneck bouncycastle box2d breathe brltty brotli bsdmainutils bsh bubblewrap build-essential build-helper-maven-plugin byacc byacc-j byte-buddy bzip2 c3p0 ca-certificates ca-certificates-java cached-property cachy cairo cairocffi cairomm camlbz2 camlp-streams camlzip capstone c-ares cargo castxml catch c-blosc # ccache cdbs cdebconf cdi-api cdparanoia cffsubr cfgrib cfitsio cfortran cftime cgif cglib chafa chardet charls check checkpolicy cherrypy3 chromaprint chrpath cjson classmate classycle cli-common clikit cloudpickle clp clucene-core + cluster cluster-glue clutter-1.0 clutter-imcontext cmake cmark-gfm cmdliner cmdreader cmdtest cme cmocka cm-super codemirror-js coderay codetools coffeescript cogl coinmp coinor-cbc coinor-cgl coinor-osi coinutils colord colors.js colorspacious combblas commonmark commons-configuration commons-csv commons-exec commons-httpclient commons-io commons-math3 commons-parent commons-pool commons-text compreffor compress-lzf constantly contourpy conversant-disruptor # coreutils corosync cpio cppo cppunit cppy cracklib2 crashtest cron cryptsetup cscope cssmin cucumber cudf cunit cup cups # curvesapi cvs cvsps cvxopt cyrus-sasl2 cython + d3 d3-format darts dash dask-sphinx-theme datefudge dav1d db5.3 db-defaults dblatex dbus dbus-broker dbus-c++ dbus-glib dbus-python dconf dctrl-tools dd-plist debconf debhelper debian-archive-keyring debianutils debugedit debugpy deepdiff defcon defusedxml desktop-file-utils device-tree-compiler dh-autoreconf dh-buildinfo dh-cargo dh-elpa dh-exec dh-fortran-mod dh-golang dh-linktree dh-lisp dh-lua dh-make-perl dh-nss dh-ocaml dh-octave dh-python dh-r dh-runit dh-vim-addon dictionaries-common dietlibc diffstat diffutils dill directfb directx-headers discount disruptor dist distlib distro-info distro-info-data djvulibre dlm dnspython docbook docbook2x docbook5-xml docbook-dsssl docbook-to-man docbook-utils docbook-xml docbook-xsl docopt doctest dom4j dos2unix dose3 dot2tex dotconf double-conversion doxia doxia-sitetools dpkg # dpkg-awk draco dragonbox dsdp d-shlibs dtd-parser duktape dulwich dvipng dvisvgm dwarves dwz dxflib e2fsprogs easymock ecbuild eccodes-python eclipse-debian-helper eclipse-emf eclipse-equinox eclipse-jdt-core eclipse-jdt-debug eclipse-jdt-ui eclipse-platform-debug eclipse-platform-resources eclipse-platform-runtime eclipse-platform-team eclipse-platform-text eclipse-platform-ua eclipse-platform-ui ecmwflibs ed ehcache eigen3 el-api elementpath elfutils ell emacsen-common enchant-2 ent entrypoints epstool equinox-p2 error-prone-java eslint evolution-data-server excalibur-logkit exec-maven-plugin execnet exempi expat expect extlib extra-cmake-modules exuberant-ctags faad2 fakechroot faketime fastinfoset fastjar fcitx fdupes feedparser felix-bundlerepository felix-framework felix-gogo-runtime felix-osgi-obr felix-resolver felix-shell felix-utils fest-assert fest-test fest-util ffms2 fftw3 fig2dev file findbugs findlib findlibs findutils fiona firebird3.0 firewalld flac flake8-polyfill flask flex flit flite flit-scm fluidsynth flute fmtlib fontconfig fontforge fontmake fontmath fontparts fontpens fonts-cantarell fonts-crosextra-carlito fonts-dejavu fonts-font-awesome fonts-freefont fonts-gfs-baskerville fonts-gfs-porson fonts-inconsolata fonts-inter fonts-kacst fonts-lato fonts-liberation fonts-liberation2 fonts-linuxlibertine fonts-noto fonts-noto-cjk fonts-noto-color-emoji fonts-open-sans fonts-roboto-slab fonts-urw-base35 fonts-wqy-zenhei fonttools foreign freeglut freeipmi freerdp2 freetype freexl frei0r fribidi frozenlist fsspec ftgl funcparserlib furo fuse fuse3 fyba galera-4 game-music-emu ganymed-ssh2 gavl gawk + gcc-defaults gcc-defaults-ports gcc-mingw-w64 gcovr gcr gdal gdbm gdk-pixbuf gdk-pixbuf-xlib gdl gdmd gem2deb gengetopt genshi geocode-glib geos geronimo-annotation-1.3-spec geronimo-interceptor-3.0-spec geronimo-jacc-1.1-spec geronimo-jms-1.1-spec geronimo-jpa-2.0-spec geronimo-jta-1.2-spec geronimo-osgi-support geronimo-validation-1.1-spec gettext gf-complete gflags ghostscript ghp-import gi-docgen giflib gist git gl2ps glade glew glib2.0 glibmm2.4 glib-networking glm glpk glslang glusterfs glyphsinfo glyphslib gmp gnome-common gnome-desktop gnome-online-accounts gnome-pkg-tools gnu-efi gnulib gnuplot gnustep-base gnustep-make gnutls28 gnu-which gobject-introspection golang-1.19 golang-defaults golang-github-evanw-esbuild golang-golang-x-sys google-glog google-perftools # googletest gperf gpgme1.0 gpm gradle gradle-debian-helper graphene graphicsmagick graphite2 grep groff grpc grunt gsettings-desktop-schemas gsl gspell gssdp gst-plugins-bad1.0 gst-plugins-good1.0 gstreamer1.0 gtk+2.0 gtk+3.0 gtk-doc gtkmm2.4 gtkmm3.0 gtkspell3 gts guava-libraries guice gumbo-parser gunicorn gupnp gupnp-igd guzzle-sphinx-theme gyp gzip h5py happy harfbuzz haskell-aeson haskell-aeson-pretty haskell-aeson-qq haskell-ansi-terminal haskell-ansi-wl-pprint haskell-appar haskell-asn1-encoding haskell-asn1-parse haskell-asn1-types haskell-assoc haskell-async haskell-attoparsec haskell-base16-bytestring haskell-base64-bytestring haskell-base-compat haskell-base-compat-batteries haskell-base-orphans haskell-bifunctors haskell-blaze-builder haskell-blaze-html haskell-blaze-markup haskell-boring haskell-byteorder haskell-cabal-doctest haskell-cabal-install haskell-call-stack haskell-case-insensitive haskell-cereal haskell-chasingbottoms haskell-clock haskell-cmdargs haskell-code-page haskell-colour haskell-commonmark haskell-commonmark-extensions haskell-commonmark-pandoc haskell-comonad haskell-conduit haskell-conduit-extra haskell-connection haskell-contravariant haskell-cookie haskell-cryptohash-sha256 haskell-cryptonite haskell-data-default haskell-data-default-class haskell-data-default-instances-containers haskell-data-default-instances-dlist haskell-data-default-instances-old-locale haskell-data-fix haskell-dec haskell-devscripts haskell-diff haskell-digest haskell-distributive haskell-dlist haskell-doctemplates haskell-doctest haskell-echo haskell-ed25519 haskell-edit-distance haskell-either haskell-emojis haskell-extensible-exceptions haskell-extra haskell-fgl haskell-file-embed haskell-filemanip haskell-filepattern haskell-foldl haskell-foundation haskell-generic-deriving haskell-ghc-paths haskell-glob haskell-hackage-security haskell-haddock-library haskell-hashable haskell-heaps haskell-hostname haskell-hourglass haskell-hslua haskell-hslua-aeson haskell-hslua-classes haskell-hslua-core haskell-hslua-marshalling haskell-hslua-module-path haskell-hslua-module-system haskell-hslua-module-text haskell-hslua-module-version haskell-hslua-objectorientation haskell-hslua-packaging haskell-hspec haskell-hspec-core haskell-hspec-discover haskell-hspec-expectations haskell-hsyaml haskell-http haskell-http-client haskell-http-client-tls haskell-http-types haskell-hunit haskell-indexed-traversable haskell-indexed-traversable-instances haskell-integer-logarithms haskell-iproute haskell-ipynb haskell-jira-wiki-markup haskell-js-dgtable haskell-js-flot haskell-js-jquery haskell-juicypixels haskell-language-python haskell-lexer haskell-libyaml haskell-logging-facade haskell-logict haskell-lua haskell-lua-arbitrary haskell-lukko haskell-memory haskell-mime-types haskell-mockery haskell-monad-control haskell-monads-tf haskell-mono-traversable haskell-network haskell-network-uri haskell-old-locale haskell-old-time haskell-onetuple haskell-optparse-applicative haskell-pandoc-lua-marshal haskell-pandoc-types haskell-pem haskell-pretty-show haskell-primitive haskell-profunctors haskell-quickcheck haskell-quickcheck-instances haskell-quickcheck-io haskell-quickcheck-unicode haskell-random haskell-raw-strings-qq haskell-regex-base haskell-regex-posix haskell-regex-tdfa haskell-resolv haskell-resourcet haskell-safe haskell-scientific haskell-semialign haskell-semigroupoids haskell-semigroups haskell-setenv haskell-sha haskell-shake haskell-silently haskell-singleton-bool haskell-skylighting haskell-skylighting-core haskell-smallcheck haskell-socks haskell-some haskell-split haskell-splitmix haskell-src-exts haskell-src-meta haskell-statevar haskell-streaming-commons haskell-strict haskell-syb haskell-tagged haskell-tagsoup haskell-tar haskell-tasty haskell-tasty-expected-failure haskell-tasty-golden haskell-tasty-hunit haskell-tasty-kat haskell-tasty-lua haskell-tasty-quickcheck haskell-tasty-smallcheck haskell-temporary haskell-test-framework haskell-test-framework-hunit haskell-test-framework-quickcheck2 haskell-texmath haskell-text-conversions haskell-text-short haskell-tf-random haskell-th-abstraction haskell-th-compat haskell-these haskell-th-expand-syns haskell-th-lift haskell-th-lift-instances haskell-th-orphans haskell-th-reify-many haskell-time-compat haskell-timeit haskell-tls haskell-transformers-base haskell-transformers-compat haskell-typed-process haskell-unbounded-delays haskell-unicode-data haskell-unicode-transforms haskell-uniplate haskell-unix-compat haskell-unliftio haskell-unliftio-core haskell-utf8-string haskell-uuid-types haskell-vector haskell-vector-algorithms haskell-wcwidth haskell-witherable haskell-x509 haskell-x509-store haskell-x509-system haskell-x509-validation haskell-xcb-types haskell-xml haskell-xml-conduit haskell-xml-types haskell-yaml haskell-zip-archive haskell-zlib hatchling hatch-vcs hawtjni hdf5 heimdal help2man hfst-ospell hicolor-icon-theme highlight.js highway hiredis hostname hpsockd hscolour hspell hsqldb hsqldb1.8.0 html2text html5lib html-xml-utils httpbin httpcomponents-client httpcomponents-core httpcore http-parser httpx hunspell hwloc hypercorn hyperlink hyphen hypre ibus icoutils icu4j igerman98 ijs imath imlib2 impacket incremental indent iniparser init-system-helpers inkscape intellij-annotations intel-processor-trace intltool intltool-debian io-stringy iproute2 iptables iputils ipykernel ipython ipython-genutils ipywidgets isl iso-codes isorelax isort ispell istack-commons itstool ivy ivy-debian-helper ivyplusplus jackd2 jackrabbit jackson-annotations jackson-core jackson-databind jackson-dataformat-xml jackson-dataformat-yaml jackson-module-jaxb-annotations jakarta-activation jakarta-mail jakarta-servlet-api janest-ocaml-compiler-libs janino jansi jansi1 jansi-native jansson jaraco.classes jaraco.collections jaraco.context jaraco.text jargs jarjar jarjar-maven-plugin jatl javabeans-activation-framework javacc javacc5 javacc-maven-plugin java-comment-preprocessor java-common javahelp2 javamail javascript-common javassist javatools # java-wrappers jaxb jaxb-api jaxrpc-api jaxrs-api jbig2dec jbigkit jboss-bridger jboss-jdeparser2 jboss-logging jboss-logging-tools jboss-logmanager jboss-modules jcifs jcommander jctools jdcal jdependency jdupes jeepney jemalloc jerasure jeromq jetring jetty9 jffi jflex jformatstring jgit jinja2 jlex jline jline2 jline3 jmock jmock2 jnr-constants jnr-enxio jnr-ffi jnr-posix jnr-unixsocket jnr-x86asm joblib joda-convert jpeg-xl jq jquery-goodies jquery-tablesorter jquery-throttle-debounce jquery-typeahead.js jqueryui jquery-ui-themes jsbundle-web-interfaces jsch jsch-agent-proxy json-c json-glib jsonpickle json-schema-test-suite json-simple jsoup jsp-api jtb jtharness jtidy jtreg6 jts judy junit junit4 junit5 junixsocket jupyter-client jupyter-console jupyter-core jupyterlab-pygments jupyter-packaging jzlib karchive kauth kbookmarks kcodecs kcompletion kconfig kconfigwidgets kcoreaddons kcrash kdbusaddons kded kdoctools kernel-wedge kernsmooth keyutils kglobalaccel kguiaddons khronos-opencl-clhpp khronos-opencl-headers ki18n kiconthemes kio kitemviews kiwisolver kjobwidgets kmod knopflerfish-osgi knotifications krb5 # kronosnet kservice ktextwidgets kwallet-kf5 kwidgetsaddons kwindowsystem kxml2 kxmlgui kyua ladspa-sdk lame lapack latex2html latexmk lattice lazy-object-proxy lbfgsb lcdf-typetools lcms2 lcov leptonlib lerc less less.js leveldb lib2geom libabw libaec libaio libalgorithm-c3-perl libalgorithm-diff-perl libaliased-perl libao P libaopalliance-java libapache-poi-java libapp-cmd-perl libapp-fatpacker-perl libapt-pkg-perl libarchive libarchive-zip-perl libarray-intspan-perl libarray-unique-perl libarray-utils-perl libass libassuan libasyncns libautovivification-perl libavc1394 libavif libb2 libb64 libbase libb-cow-perl libb-debug-perl libberkeleydb-perl libb-hooks-endofscope-perl libb-hooks-op-check-perl libb-keywords-perl libbluray libboolean-perl libbpf libbs2b libbsd libbsf-java libbtm-java libbusiness-isbn-data-perl libbusiness-isbn-perl libbusiness-ismn-perl libbusiness-issn-perl libcaca libcacard libcanary-stability-perl libcanberra libcap2 libcap-ng libcapture-tiny-perl libcarp-assert-more-perl libcbor libcddb libcdio libcdio-paranoia libcdr libcgi-pm-perl libclass-accessor-perl libclass-c3-perl libclass-data-inheritable-perl libclass-inspector-perl libclass-load-perl libclass-load-xs-perl libclass-method-modifiers-perl libclass-singleton-perl libclass-tiny-perl libclass-xsaccessor-perl libclone-choose-perl libclone-perl libcloudproviders libcommons-cli-java libcommons-codec-java libcommons-collections3-java libcommons-collections4-java libcommons-compress-java libcommons-dbcp-java libcommons-digester-java libcommon-sense-perl libcommons-fileupload-java libcommons-jexl2-java libcommons-jxpath-java libcommons-lang-java libcommons-logging-java libcommons-net-java libcommons-validator-java # libconfig libconfig-autoconf-perl libconfig-auto-perl libconfig-inifiles-perl libconfig-model-backend-yaml-perl libconfig-model-dpkg-perl libconfig-model-perl libconfig-tiny-perl libconfuse libconst-fast-perl libcontextual-return-perl libconvert-binhex-perl libcpanel-json-xs-perl libcpan-meta-check-perl libcrypto++ libcue libdaemon libdata-compare-perl libdata-dpath-perl libdata-dump-perl libdata-messagepack-perl libdata-optlist-perl libdata-section-perl libdata-section-simple-perl libdata-uniqid-perl libdata-validate-domain-perl libdata-validate-ip-perl libdata-validate-uri-perl libdata-visitor-perl libdate-simple-perl libdatetime-calendar-julian-perl libdatetime-format-builder-perl libdatetime-format-mysql-perl libdatetime-format-strptime-perl libdatetime-locale-perl libdatetime-perl libdatetime-timezone-perl libdatrie libdbd-sqlite3-perl libdbi libdbi-perl libdbm-deep-perl libdbusmenu-qt libdc1394 libdca libde265 libdebian-copyright-perl libdebian-installer libdecor-0 libdeflate libdevel-callchecker-perl libdevel-checkbin-perl libdevel-checkcompiler-perl libdevel-checklib-perl libdevel-confess-perl libdevel-cover-perl libdevel-cycle-perl libdevel-declare-perl libdevel-globaldestruction-perl libdevel-mat-dumper-perl libdevel-overloadinfo-perl libdevel-partialdump-perl libdevel-size-perl libdevel-stacktrace-perl libdevel-symdump-perl libdist-checkconflicts-perl libdrm libdumbtts libdv + libdvbpsi libdvdnav libdvdread libdynaloader-functions-perl libebml libe-book libedit libemail-address-xs-perl libemf libencode-eucjpascii-perl libencode-eucjpms-perl libencode-hanextra-perl libencode-jis2k-perl libencode-locale-perl libencode-perl libeot libepoxy libepubgen liberror-perl libetonyek libev libeval-closure-perl libevdev libevent libexception-class-perl libexecs libexif libexporter-lite-perl libexporter-tiny-perl libexttextcat libextutils-cchecker-perl libextutils-config-perl libextutils-cppguess-perl libextutils-depends-perl libextutils-helpers-perl libextutils-installpaths-perl libextutils-libbuilder-perl libextutils-pkgconfig-perl libfabric libfcgi libfeature-compat-class-perl libfeature-compat-try-perl libffado libffi libfido2 libfile-basedir-perl libfile-chdir-perl libfile-copy-recursive-perl libfile-desktopentry-perl libfile-dirlist-perl libfile-find-rule-perl libfile-find-rule-perl-perl libfile-homedir-perl libfile-libmagic-perl libfile-listing-perl libfile-pushd-perl libfile-remove-perl libfile-sharedir-perl libfile-slurper-perl libfile-slurp-perl libfile-touch-perl libfile-which-perl libfixmath libfontenc libfonts-java libfont-ttf-perl libformula libfreeaptx libfreehand libftdi1 libfuture-asyncawait-perl libfuture-perl libgav1 libgc libgcrypt20 libgd2 libgdiplus libgeotiff libgetopt-argvfile-perl libgetopt-long-descriptive-perl libgit2 libgitlab-api-v4-perl libgit-wrapper-perl libglade2 libglu libglvnd libgoogle-gson-java libgpg-error libgphoto2 libgraph-perl libgsf libgsm libgtop2 libgudev libgusb + libgzstream libhamcrest-java libharu libhash-defhash-perl libhash-merge-perl libhdf4 libheap-perl libheif libhibernate3-java libhibernate-commons-annotations-java libhibernate-validator-java libhtml-form-perl libhtml-html5-entities-perl libhtml-parser-perl libhtml-tagset-perl libhtml-tokeparser-simple-perl libhtml-tree-perl libhttp-cookies-perl libhttp-date-perl libhttp-message-perl libhttp-negotiate-perl libhttp-tiny-multipart-perl libiberty libical3 libice libid3tag libidn libidn2 libiec61883 libieee1284 libimage-exiftool-perl libimagequant libimobiledevice libimporter-perl libimport-into-perl libindirect-perl libinih libinput libinstpatch libio-async-perl libiodbc2 libio-html-perl libio-interactive-perl libio-prompter-perl libio-prompt-tiny-perl libio-pty-perl libio-socket-ssl-perl libio-string-perl libio-tiecombine-perl libipc-run3-perl libipc-run-perl libipc-system-simple-perl libiptcdata libiscsi libiterator-perl libiterator-util-perl libitext1-java libitext-java libixion libjavaewah-java libjaxen-java libjaxp1.3-java libjcip-annotations-java libjcommon-java libjdepend-java libjdom1-java libjdom2-java libjettison-java libjgroups-java libjna-java libjoda-time-java libjpeg-turbo libjs-jquery-hotkeys libjs-jquery-isonscreen libjs-jquery-timeago libjsoncpp libjson-maybexs-perl libjson-perl libjsonp-java libjson-xs-perl libjs-qunit libjsr305-java libjs-requirejs-text libjtype-java libjuniversalchardet-java libjwt libjxl-testdata libkate libkml libkryo-java libksba liblangtag liblayout liblc3 libldac liblingua-en-inflect-perl liblingua-translit-perl liblist-allutils-perl liblist-compare-perl liblist-moreutils-perl liblist-moreutils-xs-perl liblist-someutils-perl liblist-utilsby-perl libloader liblocale-gettext-perl liblocale-us-perl liblockfile liblog-any-adapter-screen-perl liblog-any-perl liblog-log4perl-perl liblouis liblqr liblrdf libltc liblwp-mediatypes-perl liblwp-protocol-https-perl liblzf libmad libmailtools-perl libmanette libmath-base85-perl libmatio libmatroska libmbim libmce-perl libmd libmetrics-any-perl libmicrohttpd libmime-charset-perl libmime-tools-perl libminlog-java libmixin-linewise-perl libmldbm-perl libmnl libmodplug libmodule-build-perl libmodule-build-tiny-perl libmodule-build-xsutil-perl libmodule-implementation-perl libmodule-install-perl libmodule-pluggable-perl libmodule-refresh-perl libmodule-runtime-conflicts-perl libmodule-runtime-perl libmodule-scandeps-perl libmojolicious-perl libmoo-perl libmoose-perl libmoox-aliases-perl libmouse-perl libmousex-nativetraits-perl libmousex-strictconstructor-perl libmpc libmpeg3 libmro-compat-perl libmspub libmtp libmwaw libmysofa libnamespace-autoclean-perl libnamespace-clean-perl libnative-platform-java libndp libnetaddr-ip-perl libnet-domain-tld-perl libnetfilter-conntrack libnet-http-perl libnet-ipv6addr-perl libnet-netmask-perl libnet-smtp-ssl-perl libnet-ssleay-perl libnfnetlink libnfs libnftnl libnice libnl3 libnotify libnsl libnumber-compare-perl libnumbertext liboauth libobject-pad-perl libodfgen libogg liboggz libomxil-bellagio libonig libopencsd libopenmpt liborcus liboro-java libotf libpackage-deprecationmanager-perl libpackage-stash-perl libpackage-stash-xs-perl libpadwalker-perl libpagemaker libpaper libparams-classify-perl libparams-coerce-perl libparams-util-perl libparams-validate-perl libparams-validationcompiler-perl libparanamer-java libparse-debcontrol-perl libparse-recdescent-perl libparse-yapp-perl libpath-class-perl libpath-iterator-rule-perl libpath-tiny-perl libpcap libpciaccess libpdf-api2-perl libpdfbox2-java libpdfbox-java libpdfrenderer-java libperl4-corelibs-perl libperl-critic-community-perl libperl-critic-perl libperl-critic-policy-variables-prohibitlooponhash-perl libperl-critic-pulp-perl libperlio-gzip-perl libperlio-utf8-strict-perl libperl-minimumversion-perl libpfm4 libpgm libphonenumber libpipeline libpixie-java libplacebo libplist libpng1.6 libpod-constants-perl libpod-coverage-perl libpod-coverage-trustpod-perl libpod-eventual-perl libpod-minimumversion-perl libpod-parser-perl libpod-pom-perl libpod-pom-view-restructured-perl libpod-spell-perl libppi-perl libppix-quotelike-perl libppix-regexp-perl libppix-utilities-perl libppix-utils-perl libproc-processtable-perl libproxool-java libproxy libpsl libpsm2 libpthread-stubs libqb libqmi libqrtr-glib libqxp librabbitmq libraw libraw1394 libreadonly-perl libre-engine-re2-perl libreflectasm-java libref-util-perl libregexp-common-perl libregexp-ipv6-perl libregexp-java libregexp-pattern-defhash-perl libregexp-pattern-license-perl libregexp-pattern-perl libregexp-wildcards-perl librelaxng-datatype-java libreoffice # libreplaygain librepository librest librevenge librist librole-tiny-perl librsvg librsync librttopo libsamplerate libsass libsass-python libsaxon-java libscope-guard-perl libsdl2 libseccomp libsecret libselinux libsemanage libsepol libsereal-decoder-perl libsereal-encoder-perl libsereal-perl libserializer libset-intspan-perl libset-object-perl libset-scalar-perl libsgmls-perl libshout libsigc++-2.0 libsigsegv libslf4j-java libslirp libsm libsndfile libsocket6-perl libsodium libsoftware-licensemoreutils-perl libsoftware-license-perl libsort-key-perl libsort-versions-perl libsoup2.4 libsoup3 libsoxr libspatialaudio libspecio-perl libspectre libspiro libspring-java libsrtp2 libssh libssh2 libstaroffice libstatgrab libstax2-api-java libstax-java libstb libstrictures-perl libstring-copyright-perl libstring-escape-perl libstring-format-perl libstring-license-perl libstring-rewriteprefix-perl libstring-shellquote-perl libstring-trim-more-perl libstruct-dumb-perl libsub-exporter-perl libsub-exporter-progressive-perl libsub-identify-perl libsub-info-perl libsub-install-perl libsub-name-perl libsub-override-perl libsub-quote-perl libsub-uplevel-perl libsuper-perl libsvm libswarmcache-java libswitch-perl libsyntax-keyword-dynamically-perl libsyntax-keyword-match-perl libsyntax-keyword-multisub-perl libsyntax-keyword-try-perl libtaint-runtime-perl libtask-weaken-perl libtasn1-6 libteam libtemplate-perl libterm-readkey-perl libterm-table-perl libterralib libtest2-suite-perl libtest2-tools-command-perl libtest-cleannamespaces-perl libtest-cpan-meta-perl libtest-deep-perl libtest-differences-perl libtest-exception-perl libtest-failwarnings-perl libtest-fatal-perl libtest-filename-perl libtest-leaktrace-perl libtest-longstring-perl libtest-memory-cycle-perl libtest-metrics-any-perl libtest-minimumversion-perl libtest-mockrandom-perl libtest-needs-perl libtest-number-delta-perl libtest-output-perl libtest-perl-critic-perl libtest-pod-coverage-perl libtest-pod-perl libtest-refcount-perl libtest-regexp-pattern-perl libtest-requires-perl libtest-spelling-perl libtest-strict-perl libtest-synopsis-perl libtest-taint-perl libtest-warnings-perl libtest-warn-perl libtest-without-module-perl libtext-autoformat-perl libtext-bibtex-perl libtext-charwidth-perl libtext-csv-perl libtext-csv-xs-perl libtext-diff-perl libtext-glob-perl libtext-hogan-perl libtext-iconv-perl libtext-levenshtein-damerau-perl libtext-levenshteinxs-perl libtext-markdown-discount-perl libtext-reform-perl libtext-roman-perl libtext-template-perl libtext-trim-perl libtext-unidecode-perl libtextwrap libtext-wrapi18n-perl libtext-xslate-perl libthai libtheora libtie-cycle-perl libtie-ixhash-perl libtie-toobject-perl libtimedate-perl libtime-duration-perl libtime-moment-perl libtirpc libtoml-tiny-perl libtommath libtool libtraceevent libtracefs libtruth-java libtry-tiny-perl libtypes-serialiser-perl libtype-tiny-perl libudfread libunicode-linebreak-perl libunicode-utf8-perl libunistring libunwind liburcu liburing liburi-perl libusb libusb-1.0 libusbmuxd libutempter libuv1 libva libvariable-magic-perl libvdpau libverto libvidstab libvisio libvisual libvncserver libvoikko libvorbis libvpx libwacom libwant-perl libwebp libwmf libwnck3 libwoodstox-java libwpd libwpe libwpg libwps libwww-curl-perl libwww-curl-simple-perl libwww-mechanize-perl libwww-perl libwww-robotrules-perl libx11 libxalan2-java libxau libxaw libxbean-java libxcb libxcomposite libxcrypt libxcursor libxcvt libxdamage libxdmcp libxerces2-java libxext libxfce4ui libxfce4util libxfixes libxfont libxi libxinerama libxkbcommon libxkbfile libxml2 libxml++2.6 libxml-commons-resolver1.1-java libxml-dom-perl libxml-java libxml-libxml-perl libxml-libxml-simple-perl libxml-libxslt-perl libxml-namespacesupport-perl libxml-parser-perl libxml-perl libxml-regexp-perl libxml-sax-base-perl libxml-sax-expat-perl libxml-sax-perl libxml-security-java libxml-simple-perl libxmltok libxml-writer-perl libxmu libxpm libxpp2-java libxpp3-java libxpresent libxrandr libxrender libxres libxshmfence libxslt libxs-parse-keyword-perl libxs-parse-sublike-perl libxss libxstream-java libxstring-perl libxt libxtst libxv libxxf86vm libyaml libyaml-libyaml-perl libyaml-perl libyaml-pp-perl libyaml-tiny-perl libyuv libzip libzmf libzstd licensecheck lightcouch lilv linkify-it-py links2 lintian linux-atm linux-base linuxdoc-tools litehtml lksctp-tools llvm-defaults llvm-toolchain-13 llvm-toolchain-14 llvm-toolchain-15 lmdb lmodern lm-sensors localehelper locket log4shib logback logilab-common lombok-patcher lp-solve lsb-release-minimal lsof ltrace lua5.1 lua5.2 lua5.3 lua5.4 lua-bitop lua-cjson lumino lutok lv2 lvm2 lwt lxml lyx lz4 lzlib lzo2 lzop m17n-db m17n-lib m4 mailcap mako man2html man-db mariadb marisa markdown markdown-it-py markupsafe mat2 mathjax matplotlib matplotlib-inline maven maven-ant-helper maven-antrun-plugin maven-archiver maven-artifact-transfer maven-assembly-plugin maven-bundle-plugin maven-clean-plugin maven-common-artifact-filters maven-compiler-plugin maven-debian-helper maven-dependency-analyzer maven-dependency-plugin maven-dependency-tree maven-deploy-plugin maven-doxia-tools maven-enforcer maven-file-management maven-filtering maven-install-plugin maven-invoker maven-invoker-plugin maven-jar-plugin maven-javadoc-plugin maven-jaxb2-plugin maven-mapping maven-parent maven-plugin-testing maven-plugin-tools maven-processor-plugin maven-replacer-plugin maven-repo-helper maven-reporting-api maven-reporting-exec maven-reporting-impl maven-repository-builder maven-resolver maven-resources-plugin maven-scm maven-script-interpreter maven-shade-plugin maven-shared-incremental maven-shared-io maven-shared-utils maven-site-plugin maven-source-plugin maven-war-plugin mawk mbedtls md4c mdds mdit-py-plugins mdocml mdurl media-types memcached mercurial mergedeep mesa meson meson-python metis mgcv mhash mime-support mingw-w64 mini-soong minizip miscfiles mistune mitmproxy mjpegtools mkdocs-nature mockito modello modello-maven-plugin modemmanager modernizr mojo-executor mongo-java-driver more-itertools motif mozilla-devscripts mozjs102 mpack mpclib3 mpeg2dec mpfr4 mpg123 mpi4py mpi-defaults mpmath msgpack-c msgpack-cxx msv mtdev mumps munge-maven-plugin mustache.js mutagen mutatormath mysql-defaults myst-parser mythes nas nasm nbclient + nbformat ncurses ndctl nekohtml neon27 netbase netcat-openbsd netcdf netcdf4-python netcdf-cxx-legacy netpbm-free net-snmp nettle net-tools netty netty-tcnative network-manager newt nftables nghttp2 ninja-build nlme nlohmann-json3 nltk node-abab node-abbrev node-abstract-leveldown node-accepts node-after node-agent-base node-ajv node-ajv-keywords node-ampproject-remapping node-ansi-colors node-ansi-escapes node-ansi-font node-ansi-regex node-ansi-styles node-anymatch node-any-promise node-aproba node-archy node-are-we-there-yet node-arg node-argparse node-array-differ node-array-find-index node-array-flatten node-array-from node-array-union node-array-uniq node-arr-diff node-arr-flatten node-arrify node-arr-union node-asap node-asn1.js node-assert node-assertion-error node-assume node-ast-types node-async node-async-each node-asynckit node-auto-bind node-autoprefixer node-ava node-axios node-babel7 node-babel-loader node-babel-plugin-add-module-exports node-babel-plugin-lodash node-babel-polyfills node-babylon node-balanced-match node-base node-base64-js node-basic-auth node-basic-auth-parser node-big.js node-binary-extensions node-bindings node-bluebird node-blueimp-md5 node-bn.js node-body-parser node-boolbase node-bootstrap-tour node-brace-expansion node-braces node-brfs node-brorand node-browserify node-browserify-aes node-browserify-cipher node-browserify-des node-browserify-lite node-browserify-rsa node-browserify-sign node-browserify-zlib node-browser-pack node-browser-resolve node-browserslist node-browser-stdout node-browser-unpack node-buble node-buf-compare node-buffer node-buffer-equal node-bufferjs node-buffer-xor node-builtin-modules node-builtins node-builtin-status-codes node-busboy node-bytes node-cacache node-cache-base node-cached-path-relative node-callback-stream node-caller node-camelcase node-caniuse-db node-caniuse-lite node-cbor node-chai node-chai-as-promised node-chainsaw node-chalk node-check-error node-cheerio node-chokidar node-chownr node-chrome-trace-event node-ci-info node-cipher-base node-cjs-module-lexer node-cjson node-clean-css node-clean-yaml-object node-cli-boxes node-cli-cursor node-clipboard node-cli-spinners node-cli-table node-cli-truncate node-cliui node-cli-width node-clone node-cloneable-readable node-clone-buffer node-clone-deep node-clone-stats node-co node-coffeeify node-collection-visit node-color-convert node-color-name node-columnify node-combined-stream node-combine-source-map # node-commander node-commondir node-compare-versions node-component-emitter node-concat-stream node-concat-with-sourcemaps node-concordance node-config-chain node-console-browserify node-console-control-strings node-console-group node-consolidate node-constants-browserify node-content-disposition node-content-type node-convert-source-map + node-cookie node-cookiejar node-cookie-parser node-cookies node-cookie-signature node-copy-concurrently node-core-js node-core-util-is node-cosmiconfig node-coveralls node-create-ecdh node-create-hash node-create-hmac node-create-require node-crypto-browserify node-crypto-random-string node-css node-css-loader node-cssom node-css-select node-css-selector-tokenizer node-cssstyle node-csstype node-css-what node-currently-unhandled node-cyclist node-d node-d3-queue node-data-uri-to-buffer node-dateformat node-date-time node-debbundle-es-to-primitive node-debbundle-insert-module-globals node-debug node-debug-fabulous node-decamelize node-decompress-response node-deep-eql node-deep-equal node-deep-for-each node-deep-is node-deepmerge node-defaults node-defined node-define-properties node-define-property node-del node-delayed-stream node-delegates node-depd node-deps-sort node-des.js node-detect-file node-detective node-detect-newline node-diff node-doctrine node-domain-browser node-domelementtype node-domhandler node-domino node-dom-serializer node-domutils node-dot node-dot-prop node-duplexer node-duplexer3 node-duplexify node-ebnf-parser node-ejs node-electron-to-chromium node-elliptic node-emittery node-emojis-list node-encodeurl node-encoding node-end-of-stream node-enhanced-resolve node-entities node-err-code node-errno node-error-ex node-es5-ext node-es6-error node-es6-iterator node-es6-map node-es6-promise node-es6-set node-es6-shim node-es6-symbol node-es6-weak-map node-es-abstract node-escape-html node-escape-string-regexp node-escodegen node-escope node-eslint-plugin-es node-eslint-plugin-eslint-plugin node-eslint-plugin-node node-eslint-scope node-eslint-utils node-eslint-visitor-keys node-es-module-lexer node-espree node-esprima node-esprima-fb node-esquery node-esrecurse node-estraverse node-estree-walker node-esutils # node-etag node-event-emitter node-eventemitter2 node-eventemitter3 node-events node-everything.js node-evp-bytestokey node-execa node-exit node-expand-tilde node-expect.js node-express node-extend node-extend-shallow node-external-editor node-falafel node-fancy-log node-fast-deep-equal node-fast-levenshtein node-fast-safe-stringify node-fbjs node-fetch node-file-entry-cache node-file-loader node-filesize node-file-sync-cmp node-fill-range node-finalhandler node-find-cache-dir node-find-up node-findup-sync node-fined node-flatted node-flow-remove-types node-flush-write-stream node-fn-name node-follow-redirects node-foreground-child node-for-in node-form-data node-formidable node-for-own node-fresh node-from2 node-fs-exists-sync node-fs-extra node-fs-readdir-recursive node-fs.realpath node-fs-write-stream-atomic node-functional-red-black-tree node-function-bind + node-gauge node-get-caller-file 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node-is-windows node-jake node-jasmine node-jed node-jest node-jison node-jison-lex node-jju node-jquery node-jquery-mousewheel node-js-beautify node-jschardet node-jsdom node-jsesc node-json5 # node-json-buffer node-jsonfile node-jsonify node-jsonparse node-json-parse-better-errors node-json-parse-helpfulerror node-json-schema node-json-schema-traverse node-jsonselect node-json-stable-stringify node-jsonstream node-json-stringify-safe node-js-tokens node-js-yaml node-kew node-keygrip node-kind-of node-klaw node-labeled-stream-splicer node-lazystream node-lcov-parse node-leveldown node-leven node-levn node-lex-parser node-libs-browser node-lie node-liftoff node-livescript node-loader-runner node-loader-utils node-load-grunt-tasks node-load-json-file node-locate-character node-locate-path node-lodash node-log4js node-log-driver node-loose-envify node-lowercase-keys node-lru-cache node-lunr node-magic-string node-make-dir node-make-error node-map-cache node-map-visit node-marked node-marked-man node-matcher node-md5-hex node-md5.js node-md5-o-matic node-mdn-browser-compat-data node-mdn-data node-media-typer node-mem node-memfs node-memory-fs node-merge-descriptors node-merge-stream node-methods node-micromatch node-mime node-mime-types node-mimic-fn node-mimic-response node-minimalistic-crypto-utils node-minimatch node-minimist node-minipass node-mississippi node-mixin-deep node-mkdirp node-mkdirp-classic node-module-deps node-moment node-morgan node-move-concurrently node-ms node-multimatch node-mutate-fs node-mute-stream node-mysticatea-eslint-plugin node-mz node-n3 node-nan node-ncp node-negotiator node-neo-async node-nock node-nodeunit node-nomnom node-nopt node-normalize.css node-normalize-package-data node-normalize-path node-normalize-range node-npm-bundled node-npmlog node-npm-package-arg node-npm-run-path node-nth-check node-object-assign node-object-inspect node-object-path node-object-visit node-once node-on-finished node-on-headers node-opener node-optimist node-optionator node-ordered-read-streams node-os-browserify node-osenv node-os-tmpdir node-output-file-sync node-package-preamble node-pako node-parallel-transform node-parents node-parse5 node-parse-asn1 node-parse-base64vlq-mappings node-parse-filepath node-parse-json node-parse-ms node-parseurl node-pascalcase node-path-browserify node-path-dirname node-path-exists node-path-is-absolute node-path-is-inside node-path-root node-path-root-regex node-path-to-regexp node-path-type node-pathval node-pbkdf2 node-p-cancelable node-pend node-p-finally node-picocolors node-pify node-pinkie node-pinkie-promise node-p-is-promise node-pkg-dir node-pkg-up node-p-locate node-plugin-error node-plur node-p-map node-po2json node-postcss node-postcss-cli node-postcss-load-config node-postcss-modules-extract-imports node-postcss-modules-values node-postcss-reporter node-postcss-value-parser node-prelude-ls node-pretty-bytes node-pretty-hrtime node-pretty-ms node-private node-process node-process-nextick-args node-progress node-promise node-promise-inflight node-promise-retry node-prompts node-promzard node-propagate node-propget node-prop-types node-proto-list node-proxy node-proxy-addr node-proxy-from-env node-proxyquire node-prr node-pruddy-error node-pseudorandombytes node-p-timeout node-public-encrypt node-pump node-pumpify node-punycode node-q node-qs node-querystring node-querystring-es3 node-quick-lru node-quote-stream node-ramda node-random-bytes node-randombytes node-randomfill node-range-parser node-raw-body node-react node-read node-readable-stream node-readdirp node-read-only-stream node-read-package-json node-read-pkg node-read-pkg-up node-recast node-rechoir node-regenerate node-regenerate-unicode-properties node-regenerator node-regex-not node-regexpp node-regexpu-core node-regjsgen node-regjsparser # node-remove-trailing-separator node-repeat-string node-replace-ext node-require-dir node-require-directory node-require-inject node-requires-port node-resolve node-resolve-cwd node-resolve-dir node-resolve-from node-resolve-pkg node-restore-cursor node-resumer node-retape node-retry node-rimraf node-ripemd160 node-rollup node-rollup-plugin-alias node-rollup-plugin-babel node-rollup-plugin-buble node-rollup-plugin-commonjs node-rollup-plugin-inject node-rollup-plugin-json node-rollup-plugin-node-resolve node-rollup-plugin-replace node-rollup-plugin-sourcemaps node-rollup-plugin-string node-rollup-plugin-terser node-rollup-plugin-typescript node-rollup-plugin-typescript2 node-rollup-pluginutils node-run-async node-run-queue node-rx node-safe-buffer node-sane node-schema-utils node-seedrandom node-sellside-emitter node-semver node-send node-seq node-serialize-javascript node-serve-static node-set-blocking node-setimmediate node-set-immediate-shim node-setprototypeof node-set-value node-sha.js node-shasum node-shebang-command node-shebang-regex node-shelljs node-shell-quote node-sigmund node-signal-exit node-sinclair-typebox node-sinon-chai node-slash node-slice-ansi node-socket.io-parser node-source-list-map node-source-map node-sourcemap-codec node-source-map-resolve node-source-map-support node-sparkles node-spdx-correct node-spdx-exceptions node-spdx-expression-parse node-spdx-license-ids node-split node-split2 node-split-string node-sprintf-js node-ssri node-stack-trace node-stack-utils node-static-eval node-static-module node-statuses node-stealthy-require node-stream-array node-stream-assert node-stream-browserify node-stream-combiner2 node-stream-each node-stream-http node-stream-shift node-stream-splicer node-string-decoder node-string-width node-strip-ansi node-strip-bom node-strip-eof node-strip-json-comments node-style-loader node-subarg node-superagent node-supertest # node-supports-color node-syntax-error node-tacks node-tap node-tapable node-tape node-tap-mocha-reporter node-tap-parser node-tar-fs node-tar-stream node-temp node-terser node-test node-text-encoding node-text-table node-thenby node-thenify node-thenify-all node-through node-through2 node-through2-filter node-timers-browserify node-time-stamp node-time-zone node-tinycolor node-tmatch node-tmp node-to-absolute-glob node-to-arraybuffer node-to-fast-properties node-toidentifier node-to-regex node-to-regex-range node-tough-cookie node-traverse node-ts-jest node-tslib node-tty-browserify node-turbolinks node-turndown node-type-check node-typedarray node-typedarray-to-buffer node-type-detect node-type-is node-typescript node-ua-parser-js node-uid-safe node-umd node-unc-path-regex node-undici node-unicode-canonical-property-names-ecmascript node-unicode-data node-unicode-loose-match node-unicode-match-property-ecmascript node-unicode-match-property-value-ecmascript node-unicode-property-aliases node-unicode-property-aliases-ecmascript node-unicode-property-value-aliases node-unicode-property-value-aliases-ecmascript node-union-value node-unique-filename node-unique-stream node-unique-string node-universalify node-unpipe node-unset-value node-uri-js node-uri-path node-url node-url-loader node-util node-util-deprecate node-utils-merge node-uuid node-uvu node-v8-compile-cache node-validate-npm-package-license node-validate-npm-package-name node-vary node-vhost node-vinyl node-vinyl-fs node-vinyl-sourcemaps-apply node-vlq node-vm-browserify node-watchpack node-wcwidth.js node-webpack node-webpack-merge node-webpack-sources node-whatwg-fetch node-when node-which node-wide-align node-widest-line node-wordwrap node-wrap-ansi node-wrappy node-write-file-atomic node-write-file-promise node-ws node-ws-iconv node-xml2js node-xtend node-xterm node-y18n node-yallist node-yaml node-yargs node-yargs-parser node-yarn-tool-resolve-package node-yn node-zx norm nose nose2 nototools npm npth nss-pem nss-wrapper numactl numexpr numpydoc nv-codec-headers nvptx-tools oath-toolkit objenesis objgraph ocaml ocaml-astring ocaml-base64 ocaml-bigarray-compat ocamlbuild ocaml-csexp ocaml-ctypes ocaml-fmt ocaml-fpath ocamlgraph ocaml-graphics ocaml-integers ocaml-mccs ocaml-migrate-parsetree ocaml-mmap ocaml-odoc ocaml-odoc-parser ocaml-re ocaml-result ocaml-sexplib0 ocaml-topkg ocl-icd ocplib-endian octave-control octave-signal ogdi-dfsg olefile onetbb opam opam-file-format openal-soft opencc opencore-amr opencv openexr openh264 openhpi openipmi openjade openjdk-17 openjpeg2 openmpi openni2 openpyxl opensc openslide opensp openssh openssl + openstack-pkg-tools opentest4j opentest4j-reporting optipng opus orc oscache osgi-annotation osgi-compendium osgi-core osgi-foundation-ee ounit p11-kit pacemaker package-notes pam pandas # pandoc pango1.0 pangomm papyrus paramiko parmap parso partd paste pastedeploy pastel patch patchelf patchutils path.py patsy pcapy pcaudiolib pci.ids pciutils pcre2 pcre3 pcsc-lite pegjs pentaho-reporting-flow-engine pep517 pep8 pep8-naming perl-openssl-defaults perltidy phonon php-defaults php-pear pickleshare picocli pigz pikepdf pillow pipewire pixman pkgconf pkg-js-tools pkg-kde-tools pkg-php-tools plasma-wayland-protocols platformdirs plexus-ant-factory plexus-archiver plexus-bsh-factory plexus-build-api plexus-cipher plexus-classworlds plexus-cli plexus-compiler plexus-containers plexus-i18n plexus-interactivity-api plexus-interpolation plexus-io plexus-languages ple
2026-01-13T09:30:28
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2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://tests.reproducible-builds.org/debian/bookworm/amd64/pkg_set_cloud-image_build-depends.html
cloud-image_build-depends package set for bookworm/amd64 Debian navigation Change suite/architecture Tested architectures: amd64 arm64 Tested suites: unstable forky trixie bookworm Test results statistics Results for bookworm/amd64 Unreproducible packages: with notes without notes Other package states: package sets Recently tested packages: last 24h last 48h all tested packages packages with .buildinfo files packages without .buildinfo files Scheduled for amd64 Maintainers of in bookworm Reproducible Debian overview Development dashboard Past releases dashboard Categorized issues Bugs filed Variations tested Packages with notifications enabled ⚑ Repositories overview Backend related Broken pieces Documentation (eg. on manual scheduling) Performance stats Health monitoring node overview job overview daily graphs weekly graphs monthly graphs yearly graphs The Reproducible Builds project reproducible-builds.org Reproducible Builds - Docs • News Reproducible Builds in Debian - Wiki SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH specification reproduce.debian.net aims for 100% bit-for-bit identical rebuilds of Debian other CI tests cloud-image_build-depends package set for bookworm/amd64 All tracked package sets for bookworm/amd64 Debian package sets: essential required important build-essential build-essential-depends popcon_top1337-installed-sources key_packages installed_on_debian.org had_a_DSA cii-census cloud-image cloud-image_build-depends desktop package sets: gnome gnome_build-depends kde kde_build-depends mate mate_build-depends xfce xfce_build-depends Debian distribution package sets: CIP CIP_build-depends debian-edu debian-edu_build-depends freedombox freedombox_build-depends grml grml_build-depends tails tails_build-depends pureos_default_install pureos_default_install_build-depends maintenance team package sets: maint_debian-accessibility maint_debian-boot maint_debian-lua maint_debian-med maint_debian-ocaml maint_debian-on-mobile-maintainers maint_debian-python maint_debian-qa maint_debian-science maint_debian-x maint_pkg-android-tools-devel maint_pkg-erlang-devel maint_pkg-fonts-devel maint_pkg-games-devel maint_pkg-golang-maintainers maint_pkg-grass-devel maint_pkg-haskell-maintainers maint_pkg-java-maintainers maint_pkg-javascript-devel maint_pkg-multimedia-maintainers maint_pkg-perl-maintainers maint_pkg-php-pear maint_pkg-openstack maint_pkg-r maint_pkg-ruby-extras-maintainers maint_pkg-rust-maintainers maint_reproducible-builds The package set cloud-image_build-depends in bookworm/amd64 consists of 521 packages: 19 (3.6%) packages failed to build reproducibly: guile-3.0 systemtap lynx doxygen dejagnu grub2 + + + + secilc black mypy bluez openvswitch graphviz + numpy python3.11 icu qemu xorg-server linux gnupg2 8 (1.5%) packages failed to build from source: python-babel openldap fakeroot ruby3.1 python-asyncssh curl perl glibc 2 (0.4%) packages are either in depwait state, blacklisted, not for us, or cannot be downloaded: gcc-12 nss 492 (94.4%) packages successfully build reproducibly: acl alabaster alsa-lib apache2 # apparmor apt argon2 asciidoc asciidoctor aspell aspell-en at-spi2-core attr audit autoconf autoconf2.69 autoconf-archive autoconf-dickey automake-1.16 autopkgtest autotools-dev avahi bash bash-completion bats bc binutils # bison blinker blt brotli bsdmainutils byacc bzip2 ca-certificates cairo c-ares cargo cdbs cdebconf chafa chardet check chrpath cmake cmocka codespell colord commonmark coreutils cpio cppcheck cron cryptsetup cscope cunit cups # cvs cyrus-sasl2 cython + czmq datefudge db-defaults dbus dbus-broker dbus-glib dbus-python debhelper dh-autoreconf dh-buildinfo dh-exec dh-golang dh-python dh-runit dietlibc dist distro-info-data docbook2x docbook-to-man docbook-utils docbook-xml docbook-xsl dos2unix dosfstools dpkg # d-shlibs dwz e2fsprogs efivar elfutils elogind equivs expat fakechroot faketime file flex flit fontconfig fonts-cantarell fonts-dejavu fonts-noto fonts-noto-color-emoji fonts-urw-base35 freeglut freetype fribidi fstrm furo fuse gawk + gcc-defaults gdbm gdisk gdk-pixbuf gem2deb gengetopt gettext ghostscript gi-docgen giflib git glib2.0 gmp gnome-pkg-tools gnu-efi gnulib gnumach gnutls28 gobject-introspection golang-defaults golang-github-go-ini-ini golang-github-golang-groupcache golang-github-golang-protobuf-1-3 golang-github-googlecloudplatform-guest-logging-go golang-github-kardianos-service golang-github-tarm-serial golang-google-cloud golang-google-grpc googletest gperf gpm graphite2 groff gsettings-desktop-schemas gstreamer1.0 gtk+2.0 gtk+3.0 gtk-doc harfbuzz haskell-shake hatchling heimdal help2man hiredis i18nspector indent intltool iproute2 iptables isort itstool jansson java-common javatools # jbigkit jemalloc jetring jq json-c json-glib keyutils kmod krb5 # lcms2 lcov lerc less libaio libatomic-ops libbpf libbsd libcanberra libcap2 libcap-ng libcbor libdaemon libdatrie libdebian-installer libdeflate libdevel-cover-perl libedit libepoxy libestr libev libevent libfastjson libffi libfido2 libfile-copy-recursive-perl libfile-slurp-perl libfile-which-perl libgcrypt20 libglu libglvnd libgpg-error libgudev libgusb + libice libidn2 libipc-run3-perl libipc-system-simple-perl libisoburn libjpeg-turbo liblocale-gettext-perl liblognorm libmaxminddb libmd libmicrohttpd libmnl libmodule-build-perl libnetfilter-conntrack libnfnetlink libnftnl libnsl libogg libonig libpaper libpcap libpipeline libpng1.6 libpod-pom-view-restructured-perl libpsl libpthread-stubs librdkafka librelp libsdl1.2 libseccomp libselinux libsemanage libsepol libsm libsodium libssh libssh2 libtasn1-6 libtest-deep-perl libtest-minimumversion-perl libtest-output-perl libtest-perl-critic-perl libtest-pod-coverage-perl libtest-pod-perl libtest-spelling-perl libtest-strict-perl libtest-synopsis-perl libtext-glob-perl libtext-hogan-perl libtextwrap libthai libtirpc libtool libunistring libusb-1.0 libutempter libuv1 libverto libvorbis libwebp libx11 libxau libxaw libxcb libxcrypt libxdmcp libxext libxfixes libxi libxml2 libxml-parser-perl libxmu libxrender libxslt libxt libxtst libyaml libzstd linux-atm linux-base lmdb logrotate lowdown lsb-release-minimal lsof lua5.2 lvm2 lz4 lzma lzo2 m4 markdown-it-py markupsafe maven-repo-helper mawk mdocml mdurl media-types mesa meson mig mime-support mistune mongo-c-driver motif mtools mysql-defaults myst-parser nasm ncurses netbase netifaces netpbm-free net-snmp nettle net-tools newt nghttp2 ninja-build nss-wrapper numactl openssh openssl + openstack-pkg-tools p11-kit package-notes pam pandoc parted patch patchutils pci.ids pcre2 pep8 pesign pixman pkgconf pkg-kde-tools po4a po-debconf poetry-core policykit-1 poppler popt postgresql-15 pps-tools procps protobuf protobuf-c psutils pulseaudio pycodestyle pycparser + pyflakes pygments pygobject pyjwt pylint pyparsing pysimplesoap pytest pytest-httpbin pytest-mock pytest-regressions pytest-runner python3-defaults python3-stdlib-extensions python-apt python-attrs python-certifi python-cffi python-coverage python-cryptography python-cryptography-vectors python-distro python-distutils-extra python-docutils python-exceptiongroup python-flake8 python-hypothesis python-idna python-iso8601 python-markdown python-mistletoe python-mock python-pallets-sphinx-themes python-pip python-pretend python-psutil python-py python-pytest-benchmark python-pytest-cov python-pytest-subtests python-pytest-timeout python-setuptools-rust python-socksipy python-sphinx-issues python-tomli python-tornado python-trustme python-typing-extensions python-tz python-urllib3 python-virtualenv pyyaml qrencode quilt rake rdfind readline rich rtmpdump ruby-defaults rubygems ruby-minitest ruby-rspec ruby-test-unit ruby-webrick rust-indoc rust-paste sane-backends sbsigntool scowl setuptools setuptools-scm shared-mime-info sharutils shellcheck shim shunit2 six slang2 socat sphinx sphinx-notfound-page sphinx-reredirects sphinx-rtd-theme sqlite3 strip-nondeterminism swig symlinks systemd tap.py tcl8.6 tcltk-defaults tcp-wrappers tdb tex-common texi2html texinfo tiff time tpm2-tss triehash typeshed uchardet unbound unicode-data unifont util-linux vala valgrind-if-available vim w3m wayland wayland-protocols wcwidth wheel x11-xkb-utils xauth xcb-proto xft xkeyboard-config xml-core xmlto xmltoman xorgproto xorg-sgml-doctools xtrans xutils-dev xxhash xz-utils zlib zope.interface A package name displayed with a bold font is an indication that this package has a note. Visited packages are linked in green, those which have not been visited are linked in blue. A # sign after the name of a package indicates that a bug is filed against it. Likewise, a + sign indicates there is a patch available, a P means a pending bug while # indicates a closed bug. In cases of several bugs, the symbol is repeated. This page was built by the jenkins job reproducible_html_pkg_sets which is configured via this git repo . There is more information about jenkins.debian.net and about reproducible builds of Debian available elsewhere. Please send technical feedback about this setup to the Debian jenkins development list , or as a bug report against the jenkins.debian.org package . Feedback about specific job results should go to their respective lists and/or the BTS. The code of jenkins.debian.net is mostly GPL-2 licensed. The weather icons are public domain and were taken from the Tango Icon Library . Copyright 2014-2024 Holger Levsen and many others . Last update: 2026-01-13 06:46 UTC
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://blends.debian.org/blends/ch04.html#accessibility
Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Prev       Next Chapter 4. Existing Debian Pure Blends Table of Contents 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server 4.1. Debian Junior: Debian for children from 1 to 99 Start beginning of 2000 URL http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-jr Tasks Tasks of Debian Jr. Mailing list debian-jr@lists.debian.org Initiator Ben Armstrong < synrg@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Jr. mailing list Release Debian 3.0 (Woody) Goals To make Debian an OS that children of all ages will want to use, preferring it over the alternatives. To care for those applications in Debian suitable for children, and ensure their quality, to the best of our abilities. To make Debian a playground for children's enjoyment and exploration. The main target is young children. By the time children are teenaged, they should be comfortable with using Debian without any special modifications. Debian Jr. was the first Blend. In fact, at the time this project was created, the idea behind of Debian Pure Blends was born, although then, we used the term "Debian Internal Project". Over time, this name was changed to "Custom Debian Distributions" first because it was too broad, as it was equally descriptive of a number of quite different projects, such as IPv6 and QA. The next change of names became necessary when it was realised that the term "Custom Debian Distribution" was considered as "something else than Debian" by any newcomer. This was so misleading that it effectively blocked a wide propagation of the principle. Debian Jr. not only provides games, but is also concerned about their quality from a child's perspective. Thus, games that are regarded as not well suited to young children are omitted. Moreover, choices are made about which packages are best suited for children to use for various other activities and tasks that interest them. This includes, for example, simple text processing, web browsing and drawing. 4.2. Debian Med: Debian in Health Care Start beginning of 2002 URL Debian Med Tasks Tasks of Debian Med Mailing list debian-med@lists.debian.org Initiator Andreas Tille < tille@debian.org > Activity Activists on Debian Med mailing list Activists on Debian Med developer list Committers to Debian Med VCS Uploaders of Debian Med team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Med packages Release Sarge Goals To build an integrated software environment for all medical tasks. To care especially for the quality of program packages in the field of medicine that are already integrated within Debian. To build and include in Debian packages of medical software that are missing in Debian. To care for a general infrastructure for medical users. To make efforts to increase the quality of third party Free Software in the field of medicine. 4.3. Debian Edu: Debian for Education Start Summer of 2002, since 2003 merged with SkoleLinux, which is now synonymous with Debian Edu URL Debian Edu Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Edu Mailing list debian-edu@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Edu mailing list Responsible Petter Reinholdtsen < pere@hungry.com > Release Sarge Goals To make Debian the best distribution available for educational use. Provide a ready to run classroom installation with free educational software. An automatically installed server provides net-boot services for disk-less thin clients and all necessary applications for educational use. To federate many initiatives around education, which are partly based on forks of Debian. To continue the internationalisation efforts of SkoleLinux. To focus on easy installation in schools. To cooperate with other education-related projects (like Schoolforge , Ofset , KdeEdu ). This project started with the intention to bring back into Debian a fork from Debian that was started by some people in France. Because they had some time constraints, the people who initially started this effort handed over responsibility to the Norwegian Skolelinux , which is currently more or less identical to Debian Edu. 4.4. Debian GIS: Geographical Information Systems Start October 2004 URL DebianGIS Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian GIS Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Francesco P. Lovergine < frankie@debian.org > Goals Geographical Information Systems OpenStreetMap and GPS devices 4.5. Debian Astro: professional and hobby astronomers Start March 2014 URL Debian Astro Blends page Tasks Tasks of Debian Astro Mailing list user and developer list Activity Activists on Debian GIS mailing list Initiator Ole Streicher < olebole@debian.org > Goals Debian Astro is a "Debian Pure Blend" with the aim to develop a Debian based operating system that fits the requirements of both professional and hobby astronomers. It integrates a large number of software packages covering telescope control, data reduction, presentation and other fields. 4.6. DebiChem: Debian for Chemistry Start October 2004 URL Debichem Alioth page Tasks Tasks of DebiChem Mailing list debichem-users@lists.alioth.debian.org Activity Activists on DebiChem mailing list Committers to DebiChem VCS Uploaders of DebiChem team Team members closing the most bugs in DebiChem packages Initiator Michael Banck < mbanck@debian.org > Goals Chemical applications in Debian 4.7. Debian Science: Debian for science Start July 2005 URL Debian Science Wiki Tasks Tasks of Debian Science Mailing list debian-science@lists.debian.org Activity Activists on Debian Science mailing list Activists on Debian Science maintainers list Committers to Debian Science VCS Uploaders of Debian Science team Team members closing the most bugs in Debian Science packages Responsible Sylvestre Ledru < sylvestre@debian.org > While there are Debian Pure Blends that care for certain sciences (Debian Med deals in a main part with Biology, DebiChem for Chemistry and Debian GIS for geography) not all sciences are covered by a specific Blend. The main reason is that at the moment not enough people support such an effort for every science. The temporary solution was to build a general Debian Science Blend that makes use of the work of other Blends in case it exists. 4.8. Debian Accessibility Project Debian for blind and visually impaired people Start February 2003 Mailing list debian-accessibility@lists.debian.org URL Debian Accessibility Tasks Tasks of Debian Accessibility Activity Activists on Debian Accessibility mailing list Initiator Mario Lang < mlang@debian.org > Goals To make Debian accessible to people with disabilities. To take special care for: Screen readers; Screen magnification programs; Software speech synthesisers; Speech recognition software; Scanner drivers and OCR software; Specialised software like edbrowse (web-browse in the spirit of line-editors) To make text-mode interfaces available. To provide screen reader functionality during installation. 4.9. FreedomBox: Easy to manage, privacy oriented home server Start May 2010 URL Website Demo Buy Download Disk Images Wiki Manual Tasks Tasks of FreedomBox Contact Get Support Discussion Forum Matrix Mailing List IRC FreedomBox Foundation Report Issues Activity Project page Latest posts on discussion forum Committers to FreedomBox repository Activity on the FreedomBox Salsa project Responsible FreedomBox Team < admin@freedombox.org > FreedomBox is designed to be your own inexpensive server at home. It runs free software and offers an increasing number of services ranging from a calendar or jabber server to a wiki or VPN. A web interface allows you to easily install and configure your apps. Prev       Next Chapter 3. General ideas  Home  Chapter 5. Distributions inside Debian
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://instapaper.com
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2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://yarnpkg.com/configuration/manifest#bin
Manifest (package.json) | Yarn Skip to main content Yarn Get Started Features CLI Configuration Advanced Blog API master (4.12.0-dev) master (4.12.0-dev) 3.8.7 1.22.22 Discord GitHub Search Manifest (package.json) Settings (.yarnrc.yml) Manifest (package.json) Manifest (package.json) Manifest files (also called package.json because of their name) contain everything needed to describe the settings unique to one particular package. Project will contain multiple such manifests if they use the workspace feature, as each workspace is described through its own manifest. Note that defaults for these fields can be set via the initFields settings. name Name of the package. Used to identify it across the application, especially amongst multiple workspaces. The first part of the name (here @scope/ ) is optional and is used as a namespace). name : "@scope/name" , version Version of the package. Usually doesn't have any impact on your project, except when it is a workspace - then its version must match the specified ranges for the workspace to be selected as resolution candidate. version : "1.2.3" , packageManager Define the package manager that should be used when working on this project. This field is used by Corepack and similar tools to detect the Yarn version in use in a project - in a sense, it has the same purpose as your lockfile, but only for Yarn itself. Yarn will automatically set this value when running yarn set version . packageManager : "yarn@4.0.0" , type Define how should be interpreted .js files. A Node.js v13.x option . Possible values are commonjs (the default) and module . Yarn 3+ will generate a .pnp.cjs file when using PnP regardless of this option. type : "commonjs" | "module" , private Define whether the package is meant to be published. If true, the package is considered private and Yarn will refuse to publish it regardless of the circumstances. private : true , license SPDX identifier defining the license under which the package is distributed. license : "MIT" , os Set of platforms on which this package works. The value of process.platform() will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. os : [ "linux" , "darwin" , "win32" , ] , cpu Set of CPU architectures on which this package works. The value of process.arch() will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. cpu : [ "x64" , "ia32" , "arm64" , ] , libc Set of C standard libraries on which this package depends. The host standard library will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. libc : [ "glibc" , "musl" , ] , main Path of the file that should be resolved when requiring the package via a bare identifier. This field can be modified at publish-time through the use of the publishConfig.main field. main : "./sources/index.js" , module Path of the file that should be resolved when requiring the package via a bare identifier in an ES6-compatible bundler environment. This field should be considered deprecated, with exports being its official replacement. module : "./sources/index.mjs" , languageName Arbitrary value selecting the linker to use when installing the dependency. This is an internal package setting that shouldn't be touched unless you really know what you're doing. languageName : "node" , bin Set of files to expose via yarn run bin-name and the shell environment. If set to a string, the binary value will be the package name (not including its scope part). bin : { my-bin : "./dist/my-bin.js" , } , scripts Set of scripts to expose via yarn run script-name , or as lifecycle hooks. Scripts in Yarn are executed by a POSIX-like shell which implements most features you would want to use in one-liner scripts. For example you can assign environment variables using the POSIX syntax, and Yarn will make it work across both Linux, OSX, and Windows. scripts : { test : "NODE_OPTIONS='--max-old-space-size=2048' jest" , build : "webpack-cli --config ./webpack.config.js" , count-words : "echo \"$@\" | wc -w" , } , dependencies Set of dependencies that must be made available to the current package in order for it to work properly. Consult the protocol documentation for more information. dependencies : { webpack : "^5.0.0" , } , optionalDependencies Set of dependencies that Yarn should only try to install if the os/cpu/libc fields match those of the host platform. Unlike regular dependencies, those listed in optionalDependencies are allowed to have a failing postinstall step - in fact, they won't even be installed at all if the os/cpu/libc filters don't cover the host platform. Note that optionalDependencies only cares about whether the package should install/build or not - it should still be resolvable, as otherwise it's impossible to tell whether a failure to retrieve the package metadata is intentional or not. optionalDependencies : { fsevents : "^5.0.0" , } , devDependencies Set of dependencies that must be made available to the current package in order for it to work properly as a workspace. Unlike regular dependencies, those listed in devDependencies will only be required when the package is installed as part of a workspace project - usually by cloning the project repository then running yarn install inside it. devDependencies : { webpack : "^5.0.0" , } , peerDependencies Set of dependencies that the package must inherit from its ancestor in the dependency tree. The semantic of peer dependencies guarantee that when the package require the dependency, it will be returned the exact same object instance as the one that would be returned to the package's ancestor. This mechanism makes peer dependencies the best way to share singleton states across multiple packages. As an extension, Yarn supports "peer dependencies with default": dependencies listed in both the dependencies and a peerDependencies fields will try to solve the peer dependency first, but will fallback to the regular dependency if it can't be satisfied otherwise. peerDependencies : { react : "*" , react-dom : "*" , } , workspaces Array of folder glob patterns referencing the workspaces of the project. Workspaces are an optional feature used by monorepos to split a large project into semi-independent subprojects, each one listing their own set of dependencies. The workspaces field is a list of glob patterns that match all directories that should become workspaces of your application. Consult the workspaces documentation for more information. workspaces : [ "packages/*" , ] , dependenciesMeta Extra settings affecting how the dependencies and devDependencies fields are interpreted. In the context of a workspaced project most of these settings will affect all workspaces and as such must be specified at the root of the project. Unless noted otherwise, the dependenciesMeta field will be ignored if found within a workspace. dependenciesMeta : { fsevents : { dependenciesMeta.built Define whether to run the postinstall script or not. If false, the package will never be built (deny-list). This behavior is reversed when the enableScripts yarnrc setting is toggled off - when that happens, only packages with built explicitly set to true will be built (allow-list); as for those with built explicitly set to false , they will simply see their build script warnings downgraded into simple notices. built : false , dependenciesMeta.optional Define whether the dependency is optional or not. Unlike most other settings in dependenciesMeta , optional is allowed anywhere in the dependency tree. It has the exact same effect as optionalDependencies - in fact, that's internally what optionalDependencies compiles down to. optional : false , dependenciesMeta.unplugged Define whether the package must be unplugged or not. If true, the specified package will be automatically unplugged at install time. This should only be needed for packages that contain scripts in other languages than Javascript (for example nan contains C++ headers). unplugged : true , } , } , peerDependenciesMeta Extra settings affecting how the peerDependencies field is interpreted. Unlike dependenciesMeta , peerDependenciesMeta is allowed in any parts of the dependency tree. peerDependenciesMeta : { react-dom : { peerDependenciesMeta.optional Define whether to log a warning when the peer dependency can't be satisfied. If true, the selected peer dependency will be marked as optional by the package manager, silencing any warning we would otherwise emit. optional : true , } , } , resolutions Override the resolutions of specific dependencies. This field allows you to instruct Yarn to use a specific resolution (specific package version) instead of anything the resolver would normally pick. This is useful to enforce all your packages to use a single version of a dependency, or backport a fix. The syntax for the resolution key accepts one level of specificity, so all the following examples are correct. Note: When a path is relative, like it can be with the file: and portal: protocols, it is resolved relative to the path of the project. Note: The resolutions field can only be set at the root of the project, and will generate a warning if used in any other workspace. resolutions : { relay-compiler : "3.0.0" , webpack/memory-fs : "0.4.1" , @babel/core/json5 : "2.1.0" , @babel/core/@babel/generator : "7.3.4" , @babel/core@npm:7.0.0/@babel/generator : "7.3.4" , } , preferUnplugged Define whether the package must be unplugged or not. While Yarn attempts to reference and load packages directly from their zip archives, it may not always be possible. A heuristic tries to detect cases where zip-loading would be problematic and unpack the files on disk instead but, being just a heuristic, it may report incorrect results. The preferUnplugged field lets you define yourself, as a package author, whether your package works or not when stored as an archive. If set, it will override the default heuristic. preferUnplugged : false , files Array of file glob patterns that will be included within the published tarball. File patterns follow a similar syntax to .gitignore , but reversed: including a file, directory, or glob pattern ( * , **/* , and such) will make it so that file is included in the tarball when it’s packed. Omitting the field will make it default to ["*"] , which means it will include all files. If this field is missing, Yarn will use the project's .gitignore to generate the pack list, or the .npmignore file instead if available. Some special files and directories are also included or excluded regardless of whether they exist in the files array. files : [ "dist/**/*" , "lib/**/*" , ] , publishConfig Extra settings affecting how the package is published. publishConfig : { publishConfig.access Define the access to use when publishing the package. Valid values are public and restricted , but restricted usually requires to register for a paid plan (this is up to the registry you use). access : "public" | "restricted" , publishConfig.bin Replacement of the package's bin field, used in the published tarball over the main one. bin : "./build/bin.js" , publishConfig.browser Replacement of the package's browser field, used in the published tarball over the main one. browser : "./build/browser.js" , publishConfig.executableFiles Set of files that must be marked as executable (+x) in the published tarball. executableFiles : [ "./dist/shim.js" , ] , publishConfig.main Replacement of the package's main field, used in the published tarball over the main one. main : "./build/index.js" , publishConfig.module Replacement of the package's module field, used in the published tarball over the main one. module : "./build/index.mjs" , publishConfig.provenance Define whether to produce a provenance statement for the package when publishing. Overrides all other provenance settings. provenance : true , publishConfig.registry If present, will replace whatever registry is defined in the configuration when the package is about to be pushed to a remote location. registry : "https://npm.pkg.github.com" , publishConfig.type Replacement of the package's type field, used in the published tarball over the main one. type : "./build/index.d.ts" , } , installConfig Extra settings affecting how the package is installed. installConfig : { installConfig.hoistingLimits Defines the highest point where packages can be hoisted. See nmHoistingLimits for more information. hoistingLimits : "workspaces" | "dependencies" | "none" , installConfig.selfReferences Defines whether workspaces are allowed to require themselves. See nmSelfReferences for more information. selfReferences : true , } , Edit this page Next Settings (.yarnrc.yml) Copyright © 2026 Yarn Contributors, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.
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https://classic.yarnpkg.com/en/docs/getting-started
Getting Started | Yarn Important: This documentation covers Yarn 1 (Classic). For Yarn 2+ docs and migration guide, see yarnpkg.com. Yarn Getting Started Docs Packages Blog English English Español Français Bahasa Indonesia 日本語 Português (Brasil) Русский Türkçe Українська 中文 繁體中文 Discord Discord Twitter Twitter Facebook Facebook GitHub GitHub Getting Started Yarn is a package manager for your code. It allows you to use and share (e.g. JavaScript) code with other developers from around the world. Yarn does this quickly, securely, and reliably so you don’t ever have to worry. Yarn allows you to use other developers’ solutions to different problems, making it easier for you to develop your software. If you have problems, you can report issues or contribute back, and when the problem is fixed, you can use Yarn to keep it all up to date. Code is shared through something called a package (sometimes referred to as a module ). A package contains all the code being shared as well as a package.json file which describes the package. Installation → Getting Started Installation Usage Yarn Distributed under BSD License Code of Conduct Edit this page
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http://web.comlab.ox.ac.uk/
--> --> but *after* the CSS files --> Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford Skip to main content University of Oxford Department of Computer Science Search for Website People --> in Website People --> Search Covid-19 Information Toggle Main Menu Home (current) Study with us Research News Events About Us Student Space Partner with us Disabled --> Welcome to the Department of Computer Science The Department of Computer Science is consistently recognised as the internationally leading centre of research and teaching across a broad spectrum of computer science, ranging from foundational discoveries to interdisciplinary work with significant real-world impact. We are proud of our history as one of the longest-established computer science departments in the country, as we continue to provide first-rate undergraduate and postgraduate teaching to some of the world's brightest minds. We enjoy close links with other University departments and Oxford research groups and institutes. Discover More Book Now The Strachey Lectures in Computing Science The Strachey Lectures are a series of termly computer science lectures named after Christopher Strachey, the first Professor of Computation at the University of Oxford. Find out more OUR WORLD-CLASS RESEARCH Our world-class research spans the broad spectrum of computer science, and 81% of our research activity is ranked as world-leading, with the rest ranked as internationally excellent (REF 2021) FIND OUT MORE Find out more Study with us We offer a range of courses: from our undergraduate degrees (Computer Science, Maths and Computer Science, and Computer Science and Philosophy) and full-time Masters degrees (MSc in Advanced Computer Science and MSc in Mathematics and Foundations of Computer Science), to part-time graduate programmes for professionals (MSc in Software Engineering and MSc in Software and Systems Security). Find out more Meet our people Our greatest asset is our people. We consistently attract the best staff and students and, thanks to them, we have been ranked as the world's leading university for computer sciences for seven years in a row by the Times Higher Education . All News News All Events Events Work for us Find our latest vacancies here. Find out more Back to Top Calendars Internal RSS Feeds Sitemap Privacy & Cookies Accessibility Statement Legal --> © University of Oxford /index.html
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https://yarnpkg.com/getting-started/migration
Benefits | Yarn Skip to main content Yarn Get Started Features CLI Configuration Advanced Blog API master (4.12.0-dev) master (4.12.0-dev) 3.8.7 1.22.22 Discord GitHub Search Starting with Yarn Introduction Installation Usage Migrating from 1.x / npm Benefits Step-by-step To go further Good to Know Corepack Editor SDKs Questions & Answers Recipes Migrating from 1.x / npm Benefits Benefits While the Yarn Classic line (1.x) remains a pillar of the JavaScript ecosystem, we recommend upgrading if possible. Why's that? Stability: Yarn Modern came after years of experience with maintaining Classic; its design was informed by the shortcomings we saw, and as a result the software is much more stable than it ever was. New features: Yarn Modern provides many new features that didn't exist in Yarn 1.x - or any other package managers for that matter. As an example, Constraints are exclusive to Yarn Modern. Flexibility: Yarn Modern supports all three installation strategies: Yarn PnP, node_modules , and via a pnpm-like content-addressed cache. No matter which one you prefer, you have it at your disposal. Extensibility: Yarn Modern's architecture allows you to build your own features as you need it. No need to wait for us to implement this feature you hope for - you can now implement it yourself, according to your own specs, and use it straight away! Focused workspaces, custom installs, project validation, ... Future proof: Yarn Modern was built after we started to see how difficult it was to build new features on Yarn Classic, with most changes having unpredictable consequences. This plateau has been solved, as evidenced by the slate of features that we released in the past few major releases. Edit this page Previous Usage Next Step-by-step Copyright © 2026 Yarn Contributors, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.
2026-01-13T09:30:28
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Facebook Facebook Adresse e-mail ou téléphone Mot de passe Informations de compte oubliées ? Créer un compte Cette fonction est temporairement bloquée Cette fonction est temporairement bloquée Il semble que vous ayez abusé de cette fonctionnalité en l’utilisant trop vite. Vous n’êtes plus autorisé à l’utiliser. Back Français (France) 한국어 English (US) Tiếng Việt Bahasa Indonesia ภาษาไทย Español 中文(简体) 日本語 Português (Brasil) Deutsch S’inscrire Se connecter Messenger Facebook Lite Vidéo Meta Pay Boutique Meta Meta Quest Ray-Ban Meta Meta AI Plus de contenu Meta AI Instagram Threads Centre d’information sur les élections Politique de confidentialité Centre de confidentialité À propos Créer une publicité Créer une Page Développeurs Emplois Cookies Choisir sa publicité Conditions générales Aide Importation des contacts et non-utilisateurs Paramètres Historique d’activité Meta © 2026
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://yarnpkg.com/features/security#hardened-mode
Security | Yarn Skip to main content Yarn Get Started Features CLI Configuration Advanced Blog API master (4.12.0-dev) master (4.12.0-dev) 3.8.7 1.22.22 Discord GitHub Search Cache strategies Catalogs Constraints Extensibility Install modes Package patching Performances Plug'n'Play Release Workflow Scripting Security Workspaces Security On this page Security Audits ​ Yarn doesn't run audits by default when running yarn install , as this should rather be performed in a cron task. You can however perform audits whenever you want by running yarn npm audit . info Our implementation has a couple of differences with the npm one. Like most other Yarn commands, yarn npm audit , by default, only applies on the direct dependencies from the current workspace. To get a report on the whole project, use the -A,--all and/or -R,--recursive flags. tip You can exclude your devDependencies (and their transitive dependencies) from the report by running the command with --environment production . Hardened mode ​ The hardened mode can be set (or disabled) using either the enableHardenedMode setting or by defining YARN_ENABLE_HARDENED_MODE=1|0 in your environment variables, but in most cases you won't even have to think about it - the hardened mode is enabled by default when Yarn detects it runs in a pull request from a public GitHub repository. Under this mode, Yarn will automatically enable the --check-resolutions and --refresh-lockfile flags when running yarn install , which should protect you against most attacks caused by lockfile poisoning , at the cost of a little bit of install speed. danger The hardened mode makes installs significantly slower as Yarn has to query the registry to make sure the information contained in the lockfile are accurate. If your CI pipeline runs multiple jobs, we recommend disabling the hardened mode in all but one of them so as to limit the performance impact. Edit this page Previous Scripting Next Workspaces Audits Hardened mode Copyright © 2026 Yarn Contributors, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.
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Facebook Facebook 이메일 또는 휴대폰 비밀번호 계정을 잊으셨나요? 새 계정 만들기 일시적으로 차단됨 일시적으로 차단됨 회원님의 이 기능 사용 속도가 너무 빠른 것 같습니다. 이 기능 사용에서 일시적으로 차단되었습니다. Back 한국어 English (US) Tiếng Việt Bahasa Indonesia ภาษาไทย Español 中文(简体) 日本語 Português (Brasil) Français (France) Deutsch 가입하기 로그인 Messenger Facebook Lite 동영상 Meta Pay Meta 스토어 Meta Quest Ray-Ban Meta Meta AI Meta AI 콘텐츠 더 보기 Instagram Threads 투표 정보 센터 개인정보처리방침 개인정보 보호 센터 정보 광고 만들기 페이지 만들기 개발자 채용 정보 쿠키 AdChoices 이용 약관 고객 센터 연락처 업로드 및 비사용자 설정 활동 로그 Meta © 2026
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://yarnpkg.com/configuration/manifest#module
Manifest (package.json) | Yarn Skip to main content Yarn Get Started Features CLI Configuration Advanced Blog API master (4.12.0-dev) master (4.12.0-dev) 3.8.7 1.22.22 Discord GitHub Search Manifest (package.json) Settings (.yarnrc.yml) Manifest (package.json) Manifest (package.json) Manifest files (also called package.json because of their name) contain everything needed to describe the settings unique to one particular package. Project will contain multiple such manifests if they use the workspace feature, as each workspace is described through its own manifest. Note that defaults for these fields can be set via the initFields settings. name Name of the package. Used to identify it across the application, especially amongst multiple workspaces. The first part of the name (here @scope/ ) is optional and is used as a namespace). name : "@scope/name" , version Version of the package. Usually doesn't have any impact on your project, except when it is a workspace - then its version must match the specified ranges for the workspace to be selected as resolution candidate. version : "1.2.3" , packageManager Define the package manager that should be used when working on this project. This field is used by Corepack and similar tools to detect the Yarn version in use in a project - in a sense, it has the same purpose as your lockfile, but only for Yarn itself. Yarn will automatically set this value when running yarn set version . packageManager : "yarn@4.0.0" , type Define how should be interpreted .js files. A Node.js v13.x option . Possible values are commonjs (the default) and module . Yarn 3+ will generate a .pnp.cjs file when using PnP regardless of this option. type : "commonjs" | "module" , private Define whether the package is meant to be published. If true, the package is considered private and Yarn will refuse to publish it regardless of the circumstances. private : true , license SPDX identifier defining the license under which the package is distributed. license : "MIT" , os Set of platforms on which this package works. The value of process.platform() will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. os : [ "linux" , "darwin" , "win32" , ] , cpu Set of CPU architectures on which this package works. The value of process.arch() will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. cpu : [ "x64" , "ia32" , "arm64" , ] , libc Set of C standard libraries on which this package depends. The host standard library will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. libc : [ "glibc" , "musl" , ] , main Path of the file that should be resolved when requiring the package via a bare identifier. This field can be modified at publish-time through the use of the publishConfig.main field. main : "./sources/index.js" , module Path of the file that should be resolved when requiring the package via a bare identifier in an ES6-compatible bundler environment. This field should be considered deprecated, with exports being its official replacement. module : "./sources/index.mjs" , languageName Arbitrary value selecting the linker to use when installing the dependency. This is an internal package setting that shouldn't be touched unless you really know what you're doing. languageName : "node" , bin Set of files to expose via yarn run bin-name and the shell environment. If set to a string, the binary value will be the package name (not including its scope part). bin : { my-bin : "./dist/my-bin.js" , } , scripts Set of scripts to expose via yarn run script-name , or as lifecycle hooks. Scripts in Yarn are executed by a POSIX-like shell which implements most features you would want to use in one-liner scripts. For example you can assign environment variables using the POSIX syntax, and Yarn will make it work across both Linux, OSX, and Windows. scripts : { test : "NODE_OPTIONS='--max-old-space-size=2048' jest" , build : "webpack-cli --config ./webpack.config.js" , count-words : "echo \"$@\" | wc -w" , } , dependencies Set of dependencies that must be made available to the current package in order for it to work properly. Consult the protocol documentation for more information. dependencies : { webpack : "^5.0.0" , } , optionalDependencies Set of dependencies that Yarn should only try to install if the os/cpu/libc fields match those of the host platform. Unlike regular dependencies, those listed in optionalDependencies are allowed to have a failing postinstall step - in fact, they won't even be installed at all if the os/cpu/libc filters don't cover the host platform. Note that optionalDependencies only cares about whether the package should install/build or not - it should still be resolvable, as otherwise it's impossible to tell whether a failure to retrieve the package metadata is intentional or not. optionalDependencies : { fsevents : "^5.0.0" , } , devDependencies Set of dependencies that must be made available to the current package in order for it to work properly as a workspace. Unlike regular dependencies, those listed in devDependencies will only be required when the package is installed as part of a workspace project - usually by cloning the project repository then running yarn install inside it. devDependencies : { webpack : "^5.0.0" , } , peerDependencies Set of dependencies that the package must inherit from its ancestor in the dependency tree. The semantic of peer dependencies guarantee that when the package require the dependency, it will be returned the exact same object instance as the one that would be returned to the package's ancestor. This mechanism makes peer dependencies the best way to share singleton states across multiple packages. As an extension, Yarn supports "peer dependencies with default": dependencies listed in both the dependencies and a peerDependencies fields will try to solve the peer dependency first, but will fallback to the regular dependency if it can't be satisfied otherwise. peerDependencies : { react : "*" , react-dom : "*" , } , workspaces Array of folder glob patterns referencing the workspaces of the project. Workspaces are an optional feature used by monorepos to split a large project into semi-independent subprojects, each one listing their own set of dependencies. The workspaces field is a list of glob patterns that match all directories that should become workspaces of your application. Consult the workspaces documentation for more information. workspaces : [ "packages/*" , ] , dependenciesMeta Extra settings affecting how the dependencies and devDependencies fields are interpreted. In the context of a workspaced project most of these settings will affect all workspaces and as such must be specified at the root of the project. Unless noted otherwise, the dependenciesMeta field will be ignored if found within a workspace. dependenciesMeta : { fsevents : { dependenciesMeta.built Define whether to run the postinstall script or not. If false, the package will never be built (deny-list). This behavior is reversed when the enableScripts yarnrc setting is toggled off - when that happens, only packages with built explicitly set to true will be built (allow-list); as for those with built explicitly set to false , they will simply see their build script warnings downgraded into simple notices. built : false , dependenciesMeta.optional Define whether the dependency is optional or not. Unlike most other settings in dependenciesMeta , optional is allowed anywhere in the dependency tree. It has the exact same effect as optionalDependencies - in fact, that's internally what optionalDependencies compiles down to. optional : false , dependenciesMeta.unplugged Define whether the package must be unplugged or not. If true, the specified package will be automatically unplugged at install time. This should only be needed for packages that contain scripts in other languages than Javascript (for example nan contains C++ headers). unplugged : true , } , } , peerDependenciesMeta Extra settings affecting how the peerDependencies field is interpreted. Unlike dependenciesMeta , peerDependenciesMeta is allowed in any parts of the dependency tree. peerDependenciesMeta : { react-dom : { peerDependenciesMeta.optional Define whether to log a warning when the peer dependency can't be satisfied. If true, the selected peer dependency will be marked as optional by the package manager, silencing any warning we would otherwise emit. optional : true , } , } , resolutions Override the resolutions of specific dependencies. This field allows you to instruct Yarn to use a specific resolution (specific package version) instead of anything the resolver would normally pick. This is useful to enforce all your packages to use a single version of a dependency, or backport a fix. The syntax for the resolution key accepts one level of specificity, so all the following examples are correct. Note: When a path is relative, like it can be with the file: and portal: protocols, it is resolved relative to the path of the project. Note: The resolutions field can only be set at the root of the project, and will generate a warning if used in any other workspace. resolutions : { relay-compiler : "3.0.0" , webpack/memory-fs : "0.4.1" , @babel/core/json5 : "2.1.0" , @babel/core/@babel/generator : "7.3.4" , @babel/core@npm:7.0.0/@babel/generator : "7.3.4" , } , preferUnplugged Define whether the package must be unplugged or not. While Yarn attempts to reference and load packages directly from their zip archives, it may not always be possible. A heuristic tries to detect cases where zip-loading would be problematic and unpack the files on disk instead but, being just a heuristic, it may report incorrect results. The preferUnplugged field lets you define yourself, as a package author, whether your package works or not when stored as an archive. If set, it will override the default heuristic. preferUnplugged : false , files Array of file glob patterns that will be included within the published tarball. File patterns follow a similar syntax to .gitignore , but reversed: including a file, directory, or glob pattern ( * , **/* , and such) will make it so that file is included in the tarball when it’s packed. Omitting the field will make it default to ["*"] , which means it will include all files. If this field is missing, Yarn will use the project's .gitignore to generate the pack list, or the .npmignore file instead if available. Some special files and directories are also included or excluded regardless of whether they exist in the files array. files : [ "dist/**/*" , "lib/**/*" , ] , publishConfig Extra settings affecting how the package is published. publishConfig : { publishConfig.access Define the access to use when publishing the package. Valid values are public and restricted , but restricted usually requires to register for a paid plan (this is up to the registry you use). access : "public" | "restricted" , publishConfig.bin Replacement of the package's bin field, used in the published tarball over the main one. bin : "./build/bin.js" , publishConfig.browser Replacement of the package's browser field, used in the published tarball over the main one. browser : "./build/browser.js" , publishConfig.executableFiles Set of files that must be marked as executable (+x) in the published tarball. executableFiles : [ "./dist/shim.js" , ] , publishConfig.main Replacement of the package's main field, used in the published tarball over the main one. main : "./build/index.js" , publishConfig.module Replacement of the package's module field, used in the published tarball over the main one. module : "./build/index.mjs" , publishConfig.provenance Define whether to produce a provenance statement for the package when publishing. Overrides all other provenance settings. provenance : true , publishConfig.registry If present, will replace whatever registry is defined in the configuration when the package is about to be pushed to a remote location. registry : "https://npm.pkg.github.com" , publishConfig.type Replacement of the package's type field, used in the published tarball over the main one. type : "./build/index.d.ts" , } , installConfig Extra settings affecting how the package is installed. installConfig : { installConfig.hoistingLimits Defines the highest point where packages can be hoisted. See nmHoistingLimits for more information. hoistingLimits : "workspaces" | "dependencies" | "none" , installConfig.selfReferences Defines whether workspaces are allowed to require themselves. See nmSelfReferences for more information. selfReferences : true , } , Edit this page Next Settings (.yarnrc.yml) Copyright © 2026 Yarn Contributors, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://yarnpkg.com/configuration/manifest#private
Manifest (package.json) | Yarn Skip to main content Yarn Get Started Features CLI Configuration Advanced Blog API master (4.12.0-dev) master (4.12.0-dev) 3.8.7 1.22.22 Discord GitHub Search Manifest (package.json) Settings (.yarnrc.yml) Manifest (package.json) Manifest (package.json) Manifest files (also called package.json because of their name) contain everything needed to describe the settings unique to one particular package. Project will contain multiple such manifests if they use the workspace feature, as each workspace is described through its own manifest. Note that defaults for these fields can be set via the initFields settings. name Name of the package. Used to identify it across the application, especially amongst multiple workspaces. The first part of the name (here @scope/ ) is optional and is used as a namespace). name : "@scope/name" , version Version of the package. Usually doesn't have any impact on your project, except when it is a workspace - then its version must match the specified ranges for the workspace to be selected as resolution candidate. version : "1.2.3" , packageManager Define the package manager that should be used when working on this project. This field is used by Corepack and similar tools to detect the Yarn version in use in a project - in a sense, it has the same purpose as your lockfile, but only for Yarn itself. Yarn will automatically set this value when running yarn set version . packageManager : "yarn@4.0.0" , type Define how should be interpreted .js files. A Node.js v13.x option . Possible values are commonjs (the default) and module . Yarn 3+ will generate a .pnp.cjs file when using PnP regardless of this option. type : "commonjs" | "module" , private Define whether the package is meant to be published. If true, the package is considered private and Yarn will refuse to publish it regardless of the circumstances. private : true , license SPDX identifier defining the license under which the package is distributed. license : "MIT" , os Set of platforms on which this package works. The value of process.platform() will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. os : [ "linux" , "darwin" , "win32" , ] , cpu Set of CPU architectures on which this package works. The value of process.arch() will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. cpu : [ "x64" , "ia32" , "arm64" , ] , libc Set of C standard libraries on which this package depends. The host standard library will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. libc : [ "glibc" , "musl" , ] , main Path of the file that should be resolved when requiring the package via a bare identifier. This field can be modified at publish-time through the use of the publishConfig.main field. main : "./sources/index.js" , module Path of the file that should be resolved when requiring the package via a bare identifier in an ES6-compatible bundler environment. This field should be considered deprecated, with exports being its official replacement. module : "./sources/index.mjs" , languageName Arbitrary value selecting the linker to use when installing the dependency. This is an internal package setting that shouldn't be touched unless you really know what you're doing. languageName : "node" , bin Set of files to expose via yarn run bin-name and the shell environment. If set to a string, the binary value will be the package name (not including its scope part). bin : { my-bin : "./dist/my-bin.js" , } , scripts Set of scripts to expose via yarn run script-name , or as lifecycle hooks. Scripts in Yarn are executed by a POSIX-like shell which implements most features you would want to use in one-liner scripts. For example you can assign environment variables using the POSIX syntax, and Yarn will make it work across both Linux, OSX, and Windows. scripts : { test : "NODE_OPTIONS='--max-old-space-size=2048' jest" , build : "webpack-cli --config ./webpack.config.js" , count-words : "echo \"$@\" | wc -w" , } , dependencies Set of dependencies that must be made available to the current package in order for it to work properly. Consult the protocol documentation for more information. dependencies : { webpack : "^5.0.0" , } , optionalDependencies Set of dependencies that Yarn should only try to install if the os/cpu/libc fields match those of the host platform. Unlike regular dependencies, those listed in optionalDependencies are allowed to have a failing postinstall step - in fact, they won't even be installed at all if the os/cpu/libc filters don't cover the host platform. Note that optionalDependencies only cares about whether the package should install/build or not - it should still be resolvable, as otherwise it's impossible to tell whether a failure to retrieve the package metadata is intentional or not. optionalDependencies : { fsevents : "^5.0.0" , } , devDependencies Set of dependencies that must be made available to the current package in order for it to work properly as a workspace. Unlike regular dependencies, those listed in devDependencies will only be required when the package is installed as part of a workspace project - usually by cloning the project repository then running yarn install inside it. devDependencies : { webpack : "^5.0.0" , } , peerDependencies Set of dependencies that the package must inherit from its ancestor in the dependency tree. The semantic of peer dependencies guarantee that when the package require the dependency, it will be returned the exact same object instance as the one that would be returned to the package's ancestor. This mechanism makes peer dependencies the best way to share singleton states across multiple packages. As an extension, Yarn supports "peer dependencies with default": dependencies listed in both the dependencies and a peerDependencies fields will try to solve the peer dependency first, but will fallback to the regular dependency if it can't be satisfied otherwise. peerDependencies : { react : "*" , react-dom : "*" , } , workspaces Array of folder glob patterns referencing the workspaces of the project. Workspaces are an optional feature used by monorepos to split a large project into semi-independent subprojects, each one listing their own set of dependencies. The workspaces field is a list of glob patterns that match all directories that should become workspaces of your application. Consult the workspaces documentation for more information. workspaces : [ "packages/*" , ] , dependenciesMeta Extra settings affecting how the dependencies and devDependencies fields are interpreted. In the context of a workspaced project most of these settings will affect all workspaces and as such must be specified at the root of the project. Unless noted otherwise, the dependenciesMeta field will be ignored if found within a workspace. dependenciesMeta : { fsevents : { dependenciesMeta.built Define whether to run the postinstall script or not. If false, the package will never be built (deny-list). This behavior is reversed when the enableScripts yarnrc setting is toggled off - when that happens, only packages with built explicitly set to true will be built (allow-list); as for those with built explicitly set to false , they will simply see their build script warnings downgraded into simple notices. built : false , dependenciesMeta.optional Define whether the dependency is optional or not. Unlike most other settings in dependenciesMeta , optional is allowed anywhere in the dependency tree. It has the exact same effect as optionalDependencies - in fact, that's internally what optionalDependencies compiles down to. optional : false , dependenciesMeta.unplugged Define whether the package must be unplugged or not. If true, the specified package will be automatically unplugged at install time. This should only be needed for packages that contain scripts in other languages than Javascript (for example nan contains C++ headers). unplugged : true , } , } , peerDependenciesMeta Extra settings affecting how the peerDependencies field is interpreted. Unlike dependenciesMeta , peerDependenciesMeta is allowed in any parts of the dependency tree. peerDependenciesMeta : { react-dom : { peerDependenciesMeta.optional Define whether to log a warning when the peer dependency can't be satisfied. If true, the selected peer dependency will be marked as optional by the package manager, silencing any warning we would otherwise emit. optional : true , } , } , resolutions Override the resolutions of specific dependencies. This field allows you to instruct Yarn to use a specific resolution (specific package version) instead of anything the resolver would normally pick. This is useful to enforce all your packages to use a single version of a dependency, or backport a fix. The syntax for the resolution key accepts one level of specificity, so all the following examples are correct. Note: When a path is relative, like it can be with the file: and portal: protocols, it is resolved relative to the path of the project. Note: The resolutions field can only be set at the root of the project, and will generate a warning if used in any other workspace. resolutions : { relay-compiler : "3.0.0" , webpack/memory-fs : "0.4.1" , @babel/core/json5 : "2.1.0" , @babel/core/@babel/generator : "7.3.4" , @babel/core@npm:7.0.0/@babel/generator : "7.3.4" , } , preferUnplugged Define whether the package must be unplugged or not. While Yarn attempts to reference and load packages directly from their zip archives, it may not always be possible. A heuristic tries to detect cases where zip-loading would be problematic and unpack the files on disk instead but, being just a heuristic, it may report incorrect results. The preferUnplugged field lets you define yourself, as a package author, whether your package works or not when stored as an archive. If set, it will override the default heuristic. preferUnplugged : false , files Array of file glob patterns that will be included within the published tarball. File patterns follow a similar syntax to .gitignore , but reversed: including a file, directory, or glob pattern ( * , **/* , and such) will make it so that file is included in the tarball when it’s packed. Omitting the field will make it default to ["*"] , which means it will include all files. If this field is missing, Yarn will use the project's .gitignore to generate the pack list, or the .npmignore file instead if available. Some special files and directories are also included or excluded regardless of whether they exist in the files array. files : [ "dist/**/*" , "lib/**/*" , ] , publishConfig Extra settings affecting how the package is published. publishConfig : { publishConfig.access Define the access to use when publishing the package. Valid values are public and restricted , but restricted usually requires to register for a paid plan (this is up to the registry you use). access : "public" | "restricted" , publishConfig.bin Replacement of the package's bin field, used in the published tarball over the main one. bin : "./build/bin.js" , publishConfig.browser Replacement of the package's browser field, used in the published tarball over the main one. browser : "./build/browser.js" , publishConfig.executableFiles Set of files that must be marked as executable (+x) in the published tarball. executableFiles : [ "./dist/shim.js" , ] , publishConfig.main Replacement of the package's main field, used in the published tarball over the main one. main : "./build/index.js" , publishConfig.module Replacement of the package's module field, used in the published tarball over the main one. module : "./build/index.mjs" , publishConfig.provenance Define whether to produce a provenance statement for the package when publishing. Overrides all other provenance settings. provenance : true , publishConfig.registry If present, will replace whatever registry is defined in the configuration when the package is about to be pushed to a remote location. registry : "https://npm.pkg.github.com" , publishConfig.type Replacement of the package's type field, used in the published tarball over the main one. type : "./build/index.d.ts" , } , installConfig Extra settings affecting how the package is installed. installConfig : { installConfig.hoistingLimits Defines the highest point where packages can be hoisted. See nmHoistingLimits for more information. hoistingLimits : "workspaces" | "dependencies" | "none" , installConfig.selfReferences Defines whether workspaces are allowed to require themselves. See nmSelfReferences for more information. selfReferences : true , } , Edit this page Next Settings (.yarnrc.yml) Copyright © 2026 Yarn Contributors, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.
2026-01-13T09:30:28
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2026-01-13T09:30:28
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2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://yarnpkg.com/cli/npm/audit
yarn npm audit | Yarn Skip to main content Yarn Get Started Features CLI Configuration Advanced Blog API master (4.12.0-dev) master (4.12.0-dev) 3.8.7 1.22.22 Discord GitHub Search @yarnpkg/cli yarn add yarn bin yarn cache clean yarn config yarn config get yarn config set yarn config unset yarn constraints yarn constraints query yarn constraints source yarn dedupe yarn dlx yarn exec yarn explain yarn explain peer-requirements yarn info yarn init yarn init yarn install yarn link yarn node yarn npm audit yarn npm info yarn npm login yarn npm logout yarn npm publish yarn npm tag add yarn npm tag list yarn npm tag remove yarn npm whoami yarn pack yarn patch yarn patch-commit yarn plugin check yarn plugin import yarn plugin import from sources yarn plugin list yarn plugin remove yarn plugin runtime yarn rebuild yarn remove yarn run yarn search yarn set resolution yarn set version yarn set version from sources yarn stage yarn unlink yarn unplug yarn up yarn upgrade-interactive yarn version yarn version apply yarn version check yarn why yarn workspace yarn workspaces focus yarn workspaces foreach yarn workspaces list @yarnpkg/builder yarn builder build bundle yarn builder build plugin yarn builder new plugin @yarnpkg/pnpify yarn pnpify run @yarnpkg/sdks yarn sdks @yarnpkg/cli yarn npm audit On this page yarn npm audit Perform a vulnerability audit against the installed packages. Usage ​ $ yarn npm audit Examples ​ Checks for known security issues with the installed packages. The output is a list of known issues. : yarn npm audit Audit dependencies in all workspaces : yarn npm audit -- all Limit auditing to dependencies (excludes devDependencies ) : yarn npm audit -- environment production Show audit report as valid JSON : yarn npm audit -- json Audit all direct and transitive dependencies : yarn npm audit -- recursive Output moderate (or more severe) vulnerabilities : yarn npm audit -- severity moderate Exclude certain packages : yarn npm audit -- exclude package1 -- exclude package2 Ignore specific advisories : yarn npm audit -- ignore 1234567 -- ignore 7654321 Details ​ This command checks for known security reports on the packages you use. The reports are by default extracted from the npm registry, and may or may not be relevant to your actual program (not all vulnerabilities affect all code paths). For consistency with our other commands the default is to only check the direct dependencies for the active workspace. To extend this search to all workspaces, use -A,--all . To extend this search to both direct and transitive dependencies, use -R,--recursive . Applying the --severity flag will limit the audit table to vulnerabilities of the corresponding severity and above. Valid values are info , low , moderate , high , critical . If the --json flag is set, Yarn will print the output exactly as received from the registry. Regardless of this flag, the process will exit with a non-zero exit code if a report is found for the selected packages. If certain packages produce false positives for a particular environment, the --exclude flag can be used to exclude any number of packages from the audit. This can also be set in the configuration file with the npmAuditExcludePackages option. If particular advisories are needed to be ignored, the --ignore flag can be used with Advisory ID's to ignore any number of advisories in the audit report. This can also be set in the configuration file with the npmAuditIgnoreAdvisories option. To understand the dependency tree requiring vulnerable packages, check the raw report with the --json flag or use yarn why package to get more information as to who depends on them. Options ​ Definition Description -A,--all Audit dependencies from all workspaces -R,--recursive Audit transitive dependencies as well --environment #0 Which environments to cover --json Format the output as an NDJSON stream --no-deprecations Don't warn about deprecated packages --severity #0 Minimal severity requested for packages to be displayed --exclude #0 Array of glob patterns of packages to exclude from audit --ignore #0 Array of glob patterns of advisory ID's to ignore in the audit report Usage Examples Details Options Copyright © 2026 Yarn Contributors, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://yarnpkg.com/configuration/manifest#os
Manifest (package.json) | Yarn Skip to main content Yarn Get Started Features CLI Configuration Advanced Blog API master (4.12.0-dev) master (4.12.0-dev) 3.8.7 1.22.22 Discord GitHub Search Manifest (package.json) Settings (.yarnrc.yml) Manifest (package.json) Manifest (package.json) Manifest files (also called package.json because of their name) contain everything needed to describe the settings unique to one particular package. Project will contain multiple such manifests if they use the workspace feature, as each workspace is described through its own manifest. Note that defaults for these fields can be set via the initFields settings. name Name of the package. Used to identify it across the application, especially amongst multiple workspaces. The first part of the name (here @scope/ ) is optional and is used as a namespace). name : "@scope/name" , version Version of the package. Usually doesn't have any impact on your project, except when it is a workspace - then its version must match the specified ranges for the workspace to be selected as resolution candidate. version : "1.2.3" , packageManager Define the package manager that should be used when working on this project. This field is used by Corepack and similar tools to detect the Yarn version in use in a project - in a sense, it has the same purpose as your lockfile, but only for Yarn itself. Yarn will automatically set this value when running yarn set version . packageManager : "yarn@4.0.0" , type Define how should be interpreted .js files. A Node.js v13.x option . Possible values are commonjs (the default) and module . Yarn 3+ will generate a .pnp.cjs file when using PnP regardless of this option. type : "commonjs" | "module" , private Define whether the package is meant to be published. If true, the package is considered private and Yarn will refuse to publish it regardless of the circumstances. private : true , license SPDX identifier defining the license under which the package is distributed. license : "MIT" , os Set of platforms on which this package works. The value of process.platform() will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. os : [ "linux" , "darwin" , "win32" , ] , cpu Set of CPU architectures on which this package works. The value of process.arch() will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. cpu : [ "x64" , "ia32" , "arm64" , ] , libc Set of C standard libraries on which this package depends. The host standard library will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. libc : [ "glibc" , "musl" , ] , main Path of the file that should be resolved when requiring the package via a bare identifier. This field can be modified at publish-time through the use of the publishConfig.main field. main : "./sources/index.js" , module Path of the file that should be resolved when requiring the package via a bare identifier in an ES6-compatible bundler environment. This field should be considered deprecated, with exports being its official replacement. module : "./sources/index.mjs" , languageName Arbitrary value selecting the linker to use when installing the dependency. This is an internal package setting that shouldn't be touched unless you really know what you're doing. languageName : "node" , bin Set of files to expose via yarn run bin-name and the shell environment. If set to a string, the binary value will be the package name (not including its scope part). bin : { my-bin : "./dist/my-bin.js" , } , scripts Set of scripts to expose via yarn run script-name , or as lifecycle hooks. Scripts in Yarn are executed by a POSIX-like shell which implements most features you would want to use in one-liner scripts. For example you can assign environment variables using the POSIX syntax, and Yarn will make it work across both Linux, OSX, and Windows. scripts : { test : "NODE_OPTIONS='--max-old-space-size=2048' jest" , build : "webpack-cli --config ./webpack.config.js" , count-words : "echo \"$@\" | wc -w" , } , dependencies Set of dependencies that must be made available to the current package in order for it to work properly. Consult the protocol documentation for more information. dependencies : { webpack : "^5.0.0" , } , optionalDependencies Set of dependencies that Yarn should only try to install if the os/cpu/libc fields match those of the host platform. Unlike regular dependencies, those listed in optionalDependencies are allowed to have a failing postinstall step - in fact, they won't even be installed at all if the os/cpu/libc filters don't cover the host platform. Note that optionalDependencies only cares about whether the package should install/build or not - it should still be resolvable, as otherwise it's impossible to tell whether a failure to retrieve the package metadata is intentional or not. optionalDependencies : { fsevents : "^5.0.0" , } , devDependencies Set of dependencies that must be made available to the current package in order for it to work properly as a workspace. Unlike regular dependencies, those listed in devDependencies will only be required when the package is installed as part of a workspace project - usually by cloning the project repository then running yarn install inside it. devDependencies : { webpack : "^5.0.0" , } , peerDependencies Set of dependencies that the package must inherit from its ancestor in the dependency tree. The semantic of peer dependencies guarantee that when the package require the dependency, it will be returned the exact same object instance as the one that would be returned to the package's ancestor. This mechanism makes peer dependencies the best way to share singleton states across multiple packages. As an extension, Yarn supports "peer dependencies with default": dependencies listed in both the dependencies and a peerDependencies fields will try to solve the peer dependency first, but will fallback to the regular dependency if it can't be satisfied otherwise. peerDependencies : { react : "*" , react-dom : "*" , } , workspaces Array of folder glob patterns referencing the workspaces of the project. Workspaces are an optional feature used by monorepos to split a large project into semi-independent subprojects, each one listing their own set of dependencies. The workspaces field is a list of glob patterns that match all directories that should become workspaces of your application. Consult the workspaces documentation for more information. workspaces : [ "packages/*" , ] , dependenciesMeta Extra settings affecting how the dependencies and devDependencies fields are interpreted. In the context of a workspaced project most of these settings will affect all workspaces and as such must be specified at the root of the project. Unless noted otherwise, the dependenciesMeta field will be ignored if found within a workspace. dependenciesMeta : { fsevents : { dependenciesMeta.built Define whether to run the postinstall script or not. If false, the package will never be built (deny-list). This behavior is reversed when the enableScripts yarnrc setting is toggled off - when that happens, only packages with built explicitly set to true will be built (allow-list); as for those with built explicitly set to false , they will simply see their build script warnings downgraded into simple notices. built : false , dependenciesMeta.optional Define whether the dependency is optional or not. Unlike most other settings in dependenciesMeta , optional is allowed anywhere in the dependency tree. It has the exact same effect as optionalDependencies - in fact, that's internally what optionalDependencies compiles down to. optional : false , dependenciesMeta.unplugged Define whether the package must be unplugged or not. If true, the specified package will be automatically unplugged at install time. This should only be needed for packages that contain scripts in other languages than Javascript (for example nan contains C++ headers). unplugged : true , } , } , peerDependenciesMeta Extra settings affecting how the peerDependencies field is interpreted. Unlike dependenciesMeta , peerDependenciesMeta is allowed in any parts of the dependency tree. peerDependenciesMeta : { react-dom : { peerDependenciesMeta.optional Define whether to log a warning when the peer dependency can't be satisfied. If true, the selected peer dependency will be marked as optional by the package manager, silencing any warning we would otherwise emit. optional : true , } , } , resolutions Override the resolutions of specific dependencies. This field allows you to instruct Yarn to use a specific resolution (specific package version) instead of anything the resolver would normally pick. This is useful to enforce all your packages to use a single version of a dependency, or backport a fix. The syntax for the resolution key accepts one level of specificity, so all the following examples are correct. Note: When a path is relative, like it can be with the file: and portal: protocols, it is resolved relative to the path of the project. Note: The resolutions field can only be set at the root of the project, and will generate a warning if used in any other workspace. resolutions : { relay-compiler : "3.0.0" , webpack/memory-fs : "0.4.1" , @babel/core/json5 : "2.1.0" , @babel/core/@babel/generator : "7.3.4" , @babel/core@npm:7.0.0/@babel/generator : "7.3.4" , } , preferUnplugged Define whether the package must be unplugged or not. While Yarn attempts to reference and load packages directly from their zip archives, it may not always be possible. A heuristic tries to detect cases where zip-loading would be problematic and unpack the files on disk instead but, being just a heuristic, it may report incorrect results. The preferUnplugged field lets you define yourself, as a package author, whether your package works or not when stored as an archive. If set, it will override the default heuristic. preferUnplugged : false , files Array of file glob patterns that will be included within the published tarball. File patterns follow a similar syntax to .gitignore , but reversed: including a file, directory, or glob pattern ( * , **/* , and such) will make it so that file is included in the tarball when it’s packed. Omitting the field will make it default to ["*"] , which means it will include all files. If this field is missing, Yarn will use the project's .gitignore to generate the pack list, or the .npmignore file instead if available. Some special files and directories are also included or excluded regardless of whether they exist in the files array. files : [ "dist/**/*" , "lib/**/*" , ] , publishConfig Extra settings affecting how the package is published. publishConfig : { publishConfig.access Define the access to use when publishing the package. Valid values are public and restricted , but restricted usually requires to register for a paid plan (this is up to the registry you use). access : "public" | "restricted" , publishConfig.bin Replacement of the package's bin field, used in the published tarball over the main one. bin : "./build/bin.js" , publishConfig.browser Replacement of the package's browser field, used in the published tarball over the main one. browser : "./build/browser.js" , publishConfig.executableFiles Set of files that must be marked as executable (+x) in the published tarball. executableFiles : [ "./dist/shim.js" , ] , publishConfig.main Replacement of the package's main field, used in the published tarball over the main one. main : "./build/index.js" , publishConfig.module Replacement of the package's module field, used in the published tarball over the main one. module : "./build/index.mjs" , publishConfig.provenance Define whether to produce a provenance statement for the package when publishing. Overrides all other provenance settings. provenance : true , publishConfig.registry If present, will replace whatever registry is defined in the configuration when the package is about to be pushed to a remote location. registry : "https://npm.pkg.github.com" , publishConfig.type Replacement of the package's type field, used in the published tarball over the main one. type : "./build/index.d.ts" , } , installConfig Extra settings affecting how the package is installed. installConfig : { installConfig.hoistingLimits Defines the highest point where packages can be hoisted. See nmHoistingLimits for more information. hoistingLimits : "workspaces" | "dependencies" | "none" , installConfig.selfReferences Defines whether workspaces are allowed to require themselves. See nmSelfReferences for more information. selfReferences : true , } , Edit this page Next Settings (.yarnrc.yml) Copyright © 2026 Yarn Contributors, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.
2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://yarnpkg.com/configuration/manifest#libc
Manifest (package.json) | Yarn Skip to main content Yarn Get Started Features CLI Configuration Advanced Blog API master (4.12.0-dev) master (4.12.0-dev) 3.8.7 1.22.22 Discord GitHub Search Manifest (package.json) Settings (.yarnrc.yml) Manifest (package.json) Manifest (package.json) Manifest files (also called package.json because of their name) contain everything needed to describe the settings unique to one particular package. Project will contain multiple such manifests if they use the workspace feature, as each workspace is described through its own manifest. Note that defaults for these fields can be set via the initFields settings. name Name of the package. Used to identify it across the application, especially amongst multiple workspaces. The first part of the name (here @scope/ ) is optional and is used as a namespace). name : "@scope/name" , version Version of the package. Usually doesn't have any impact on your project, except when it is a workspace - then its version must match the specified ranges for the workspace to be selected as resolution candidate. version : "1.2.3" , packageManager Define the package manager that should be used when working on this project. This field is used by Corepack and similar tools to detect the Yarn version in use in a project - in a sense, it has the same purpose as your lockfile, but only for Yarn itself. Yarn will automatically set this value when running yarn set version . packageManager : "yarn@4.0.0" , type Define how should be interpreted .js files. A Node.js v13.x option . Possible values are commonjs (the default) and module . Yarn 3+ will generate a .pnp.cjs file when using PnP regardless of this option. type : "commonjs" | "module" , private Define whether the package is meant to be published. If true, the package is considered private and Yarn will refuse to publish it regardless of the circumstances. private : true , license SPDX identifier defining the license under which the package is distributed. license : "MIT" , os Set of platforms on which this package works. The value of process.platform() will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. os : [ "linux" , "darwin" , "win32" , ] , cpu Set of CPU architectures on which this package works. The value of process.arch() will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. cpu : [ "x64" , "ia32" , "arm64" , ] , libc Set of C standard libraries on which this package depends. The host standard library will be compared at install-time against this set. Should no matches be found, any postinstall script the package define will be skipped. If the package was exclusively depended upon via optionalDependencies entries, the package won't be installed at all. libc : [ "glibc" , "musl" , ] , main Path of the file that should be resolved when requiring the package via a bare identifier. This field can be modified at publish-time through the use of the publishConfig.main field. main : "./sources/index.js" , module Path of the file that should be resolved when requiring the package via a bare identifier in an ES6-compatible bundler environment. This field should be considered deprecated, with exports being its official replacement. module : "./sources/index.mjs" , languageName Arbitrary value selecting the linker to use when installing the dependency. This is an internal package setting that shouldn't be touched unless you really know what you're doing. languageName : "node" , bin Set of files to expose via yarn run bin-name and the shell environment. If set to a string, the binary value will be the package name (not including its scope part). bin : { my-bin : "./dist/my-bin.js" , } , scripts Set of scripts to expose via yarn run script-name , or as lifecycle hooks. Scripts in Yarn are executed by a POSIX-like shell which implements most features you would want to use in one-liner scripts. For example you can assign environment variables using the POSIX syntax, and Yarn will make it work across both Linux, OSX, and Windows. scripts : { test : "NODE_OPTIONS='--max-old-space-size=2048' jest" , build : "webpack-cli --config ./webpack.config.js" , count-words : "echo \"$@\" | wc -w" , } , dependencies Set of dependencies that must be made available to the current package in order for it to work properly. Consult the protocol documentation for more information. dependencies : { webpack : "^5.0.0" , } , optionalDependencies Set of dependencies that Yarn should only try to install if the os/cpu/libc fields match those of the host platform. Unlike regular dependencies, those listed in optionalDependencies are allowed to have a failing postinstall step - in fact, they won't even be installed at all if the os/cpu/libc filters don't cover the host platform. Note that optionalDependencies only cares about whether the package should install/build or not - it should still be resolvable, as otherwise it's impossible to tell whether a failure to retrieve the package metadata is intentional or not. optionalDependencies : { fsevents : "^5.0.0" , } , devDependencies Set of dependencies that must be made available to the current package in order for it to work properly as a workspace. Unlike regular dependencies, those listed in devDependencies will only be required when the package is installed as part of a workspace project - usually by cloning the project repository then running yarn install inside it. devDependencies : { webpack : "^5.0.0" , } , peerDependencies Set of dependencies that the package must inherit from its ancestor in the dependency tree. The semantic of peer dependencies guarantee that when the package require the dependency, it will be returned the exact same object instance as the one that would be returned to the package's ancestor. This mechanism makes peer dependencies the best way to share singleton states across multiple packages. As an extension, Yarn supports "peer dependencies with default": dependencies listed in both the dependencies and a peerDependencies fields will try to solve the peer dependency first, but will fallback to the regular dependency if it can't be satisfied otherwise. peerDependencies : { react : "*" , react-dom : "*" , } , workspaces Array of folder glob patterns referencing the workspaces of the project. Workspaces are an optional feature used by monorepos to split a large project into semi-independent subprojects, each one listing their own set of dependencies. The workspaces field is a list of glob patterns that match all directories that should become workspaces of your application. Consult the workspaces documentation for more information. workspaces : [ "packages/*" , ] , dependenciesMeta Extra settings affecting how the dependencies and devDependencies fields are interpreted. In the context of a workspaced project most of these settings will affect all workspaces and as such must be specified at the root of the project. Unless noted otherwise, the dependenciesMeta field will be ignored if found within a workspace. dependenciesMeta : { fsevents : { dependenciesMeta.built Define whether to run the postinstall script or not. If false, the package will never be built (deny-list). This behavior is reversed when the enableScripts yarnrc setting is toggled off - when that happens, only packages with built explicitly set to true will be built (allow-list); as for those with built explicitly set to false , they will simply see their build script warnings downgraded into simple notices. built : false , dependenciesMeta.optional Define whether the dependency is optional or not. Unlike most other settings in dependenciesMeta , optional is allowed anywhere in the dependency tree. It has the exact same effect as optionalDependencies - in fact, that's internally what optionalDependencies compiles down to. optional : false , dependenciesMeta.unplugged Define whether the package must be unplugged or not. If true, the specified package will be automatically unplugged at install time. This should only be needed for packages that contain scripts in other languages than Javascript (for example nan contains C++ headers). unplugged : true , } , } , peerDependenciesMeta Extra settings affecting how the peerDependencies field is interpreted. Unlike dependenciesMeta , peerDependenciesMeta is allowed in any parts of the dependency tree. peerDependenciesMeta : { react-dom : { peerDependenciesMeta.optional Define whether to log a warning when the peer dependency can't be satisfied. If true, the selected peer dependency will be marked as optional by the package manager, silencing any warning we would otherwise emit. optional : true , } , } , resolutions Override the resolutions of specific dependencies. This field allows you to instruct Yarn to use a specific resolution (specific package version) instead of anything the resolver would normally pick. This is useful to enforce all your packages to use a single version of a dependency, or backport a fix. The syntax for the resolution key accepts one level of specificity, so all the following examples are correct. Note: When a path is relative, like it can be with the file: and portal: protocols, it is resolved relative to the path of the project. Note: The resolutions field can only be set at the root of the project, and will generate a warning if used in any other workspace. resolutions : { relay-compiler : "3.0.0" , webpack/memory-fs : "0.4.1" , @babel/core/json5 : "2.1.0" , @babel/core/@babel/generator : "7.3.4" , @babel/core@npm:7.0.0/@babel/generator : "7.3.4" , } , preferUnplugged Define whether the package must be unplugged or not. While Yarn attempts to reference and load packages directly from their zip archives, it may not always be possible. A heuristic tries to detect cases where zip-loading would be problematic and unpack the files on disk instead but, being just a heuristic, it may report incorrect results. The preferUnplugged field lets you define yourself, as a package author, whether your package works or not when stored as an archive. If set, it will override the default heuristic. preferUnplugged : false , files Array of file glob patterns that will be included within the published tarball. File patterns follow a similar syntax to .gitignore , but reversed: including a file, directory, or glob pattern ( * , **/* , and such) will make it so that file is included in the tarball when it’s packed. Omitting the field will make it default to ["*"] , which means it will include all files. If this field is missing, Yarn will use the project's .gitignore to generate the pack list, or the .npmignore file instead if available. Some special files and directories are also included or excluded regardless of whether they exist in the files array. files : [ "dist/**/*" , "lib/**/*" , ] , publishConfig Extra settings affecting how the package is published. publishConfig : { publishConfig.access Define the access to use when publishing the package. Valid values are public and restricted , but restricted usually requires to register for a paid plan (this is up to the registry you use). access : "public" | "restricted" , publishConfig.bin Replacement of the package's bin field, used in the published tarball over the main one. bin : "./build/bin.js" , publishConfig.browser Replacement of the package's browser field, used in the published tarball over the main one. browser : "./build/browser.js" , publishConfig.executableFiles Set of files that must be marked as executable (+x) in the published tarball. executableFiles : [ "./dist/shim.js" , ] , publishConfig.main Replacement of the package's main field, used in the published tarball over the main one. main : "./build/index.js" , publishConfig.module Replacement of the package's module field, used in the published tarball over the main one. module : "./build/index.mjs" , publishConfig.provenance Define whether to produce a provenance statement for the package when publishing. Overrides all other provenance settings. provenance : true , publishConfig.registry If present, will replace whatever registry is defined in the configuration when the package is about to be pushed to a remote location. registry : "https://npm.pkg.github.com" , publishConfig.type Replacement of the package's type field, used in the published tarball over the main one. type : "./build/index.d.ts" , } , installConfig Extra settings affecting how the package is installed. installConfig : { installConfig.hoistingLimits Defines the highest point where packages can be hoisted. See nmHoistingLimits for more information. hoistingLimits : "workspaces" | "dependencies" | "none" , installConfig.selfReferences Defines whether workspaces are allowed to require themselves. See nmSelfReferences for more information. selfReferences : true , } , Edit this page Next Settings (.yarnrc.yml) Copyright © 2026 Yarn Contributors, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.
2026-01-13T09:30:28
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2026-01-13T09:30:28
https://tests.reproducible-builds.org/debian/forky/arm64/pkg_set_popcon_top1337-installed-sources.html
popcon_top1337-installed-sources package set for forky/arm64 Debian navigation Change suite/architecture Tested architectures: amd64 arm64 Tested suites: unstable forky trixie bookworm Test results statistics Results for forky/arm64 Unreproducible packages: with notes without notes Other package states: package sets Recently tested packages: last 24h last 48h all tested packages packages with .buildinfo files packages without .buildinfo files Scheduled for arm64 Maintainers of in forky Reproducible Debian overview Development dashboard Past releases dashboard Categorized issues Bugs filed Variations tested Packages with notifications enabled ⚑ Repositories overview Backend related Broken pieces Documentation (eg. on manual scheduling) Performance stats Health monitoring node overview job overview daily graphs weekly graphs monthly graphs yearly graphs The Reproducible Builds project reproducible-builds.org Reproducible Builds - Docs • News Reproducible Builds in Debian - Wiki SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH specification reproduce.debian.net aims for 100% bit-for-bit identical rebuilds of Debian other CI tests popcon_top1337-installed-sources package set for forky/arm64 All tracked package sets for forky/arm64 Debian package sets: essential required important build-essential build-essential-depends popcon_top1337-installed-sources key_packages installed_on_debian.org had_a_DSA cii-census cloud-image cloud-image_build-depends desktop package sets: gnome gnome_build-depends kde kde_build-depends mate mate_build-depends xfce xfce_build-depends Debian distribution package sets: CIP CIP_build-depends debian-edu debian-edu_build-depends freedombox freedombox_build-depends grml grml_build-depends tails tails_build-depends pureos_default_install pureos_default_install_build-depends maintenance team package sets: maint_debian-accessibility maint_debian-boot maint_debian-lua maint_debian-med maint_debian-ocaml maint_debian-on-mobile-maintainers maint_debian-python maint_debian-qa maint_debian-science maint_debian-x maint_pkg-android-tools-devel maint_pkg-erlang-devel maint_pkg-fonts-devel maint_pkg-games-devel maint_pkg-golang-maintainers maint_pkg-grass-devel maint_pkg-haskell-maintainers maint_pkg-java-maintainers maint_pkg-javascript-devel maint_pkg-multimedia-maintainers maint_pkg-perl-maintainers maint_pkg-php-pear maint_pkg-openstack maint_pkg-r maint_pkg-ruby-extras-maintainers maint_pkg-rust-maintainers maint_reproducible-builds The package set popcon_top1337-installed-sources in forky/arm64 consists of 1268 packages: 21 (1.7%) packages failed to build reproducibly: flite xorg-server grub2 + + + + fonts-cantarell python3.13 libtool nss librsvg qtdeclarative-opensource-src gtk4 gimp zxing-cpp pam underscore mesa lynx vlc # + libjcat alsa-utils libzstd bluez 32 (2.5%) packages failed to build from source: shim highway abseil qt6-base transmission gnutls28 libgweather4 nghttp2 liblqr efivar sphinxbase qt6-declarative python-dateutil webkit2gtk libtirpc libreoffice # cogl isc-dhcp vim gcc-14-cross gcc-15 gnome-shell linux nautilus gnome-robots firefox-esr libunwind llvm-toolchain-19 numpy onetbb ispell tpm2-tss 15 (1.2%) packages are either in depwait state, blacklisted, not for us, or cannot be downloaded: gcc-12 shim-helpers-amd64-signed fwupd-amd64-signed grub-efi-amd64-signed libvpl xserver-xorg-video-vesa xserver-xorg-video-intel iucode-tool intel-vaapi-driver intel-processor-trace intel-gmmlib intel-media-driver linux-signed-amd64 localsearch gcc-14 1200 (94.6%) packages successfully build reproducibly: 7zip a52dec aalib accountsservice acl adduser adwaita-icon-theme aisleriot alsa-lib alsa-plugins alsa-topology-conf alsa-ucm-conf anacron ann aom apache2 # apg # + apparmor appstream apr apr-util apt aptitude apt-listchanges argon2 aspell aspell-en atkmm1.6 at-spi2-core attr audit autoconf automake autotools-dev avahi ayatana-ido babeltrace babl baobab base-files base-passwd bash bash-completion bc beautifulsoup4 bind9 # binutils # blinker blt bogofilter bolt boost1.83 box2d brasero brltty brotli bsd-mailx bsdmainutils bubblewrap build-essential busybox bzip2 ca-certificates ca-certificates-java cairo cairomm cairomm1.16 catdoc cdebconf cdparanoia cdrdao cdrkit chardet chromaprint cjson clp clucene-core + clutter-1.0 cmark codec2 coinmp coinor-cbc coinor-cgl coinor-osi coinutils colord console-setup coreutils cpio cpuinfo cracklib2 cron cryptsetup cups # cups-filters cups-pk-helper curl cyrus-sasl2 dash dav1d db5.3 dbus dbus-glib dbus-python dconf debconf debian-archive-keyring debian-faq debianutils dee desktop-base desktop-file-utils dhcpcd dh-runit dictionaries-common diffutils discount discover discover-data distro-info distro-info-data djvulibre dmidecode dnsmasq dnspython dns-root-data docbook-xml doc-debian dosfstools dotconf double-conversion dpkg # dracut duktape e2fsprogs editorconfig-core efibootmgr elfutils emacsen-common enchant-2 eog espeak-ng ethtool evince evolution evolution-data-server exempi exfatprogs exim4 exiv2 expat faad2 fakeroot ffmpeg fftw3 file file-roller findutils firmware-free five-or-more flac flashrom flatpak fluidsynth folks fontconfig fonts-android fonts-dejavu fonts-font-awesome fonts-freefont fonts-lato fonts-liberation fonts-liberation-sans-narrow fonts-noto fonts-noto-cjk fonts-noto-color-emoji fonts-quicksand fonts-urw-base35 four-in-a-row freerdp3 freetype fribidi fstrm fuse3 fwupd game-music-emu gawk + gcab gcc-defaults gcr gcr4 gdbm gdisk gdk-pixbuf gdk-pixbuf-xlib gdm3 gegl geoclue-2.0 geocode-glib geoip geoip-database gettext gexiv2 ghostscript giflib git gjs glib2.0 glibc glibmm2.4 glibmm2.68 glib-networking glusterfs gmp gnome-autoar gnome-backgrounds gnome-bluetooth3 gnome-browser-connector gnome-calculator gnome-characters gnome-chess gnome-clocks gnome-contacts gnome-desktop gnome-disk-utility gnome-font-viewer gnome-icon-theme gnome-keyring gnome-klotski gnome-logs gnome-mahjongg gnome-maps gnome-menus gnome-mines gnome-music gnome-nibbles gnome-online-accounts gnome-remote-desktop gnome-session gnome-settings-daemon gnome-software gnome-sound-recorder gnome-sushi gnome-system-monitor gnome-taquin gnome-terminal gnome-tetravex gnome-text-editor gnome-themes-extra gnome-tweaks gnome-user-docs gnome-user-share gnome-video-effects gnome-weather gnupg2 gobject-introspection gpgme1.0 gpgmepy gpm graphene graphite2 graphviz + grep grilo grilo-plugins groff gsl gspell gst-libav1.0 gst-plugins-bad1.0 gst-plugins-base1.0 gst-plugins-good1.0 gst-plugins-ugly1.0 gstreamer1.0 gstreamer-editing-services1.0 gtk+2.0 gtk+3.0 gtkmm3.0 gtkmm4.0 gtksourceview4 gtksourceview5 gtk-vnc gts guile-3.0 gupnp gupnp-av gupnp-dlna gupnp-igd gvfs gzip harfbuzz hdparm hfst-ospell hicolor-icon-theme hidapi hitori hoichess hostname html5lib htop http-parser hunspell hwloc hyphen iagno ibus icu ifupdown iio-sensor-proxy ijs imagemagick imath im-config inetutils initramfs-tools init-system-helpers installation-report intltool-debian ipp-usb iproute2 iptables iputils isl iso-codes iw jackd2 jansson jaraco.context java-atk-wrapper java-common javascript-common jbig2dec jbigkit jemalloc jigit jimtcl jpeg-xl jq json-c json-glib jxrlib kactivitymanagerd karchive kauth kbd kcodecs kcompletion kconfig kconfigwidgets kcoreaddons kcrash kdbusaddons kded kdoctools keditbookmarks keybinder-3.0 keyutils kglobalaccel kguiaddons ki18n kiconthemes kio kirigami2 kitemviews kjobwidgets klibc kmod knotifications krb5 # kservice ktextwidgets kwallet-kf5 kwayland kwayland-integration kwayland-kf5 kwidgetsaddons kwindowsystem kxmlgui lame lapack laptop-detect lazr.restfulclient lazr.uri lcms2 lerc less libaacs libabw libadwaita-1 libaio libalgorithm-diff-perl libalgorithm-diff-xs-perl libalgorithm-merge-perl libao P libapt-pkg-perl libarchive libarchive-zip-perl libass libassuan libasyncns libatasmart libauthen-sasl-perl libavc1394 libavif libavtp libayatana-appindicator libayatana-indicator libb2 libbdplus libb-hooks-endofscope-perl libb-hooks-op-check-perl libblockdev libbluray libbpf libbs2b libbsd libburn libbytesize libcaca libcairo-gobject-perl libcairo-perl libcanberra libcap2 libcap-ng libcbor libcddb libcdio libcdio-paranoia libcdr libcgi-fast-perl libcgi-pm-perl libclass-data-inheritable-perl libclass-method-modifiers-perl libclass-xsaccessor-perl libclone-perl libcloudproviders libcmis libcommon-sense-perl libconfig libconfig-inifiles-perl libcue libdaemon libdata-dump-perl libdata-optlist-perl libdatrie libdbi-perl libdbusmenu libdbusmenu-qt libdc1394 libdca libde265 libdecor-0 libdeflate libdevel-callchecker-perl libdevel-stacktrace-perl libdisplay-info libdrm libdv + libdvbpsi libdvdnav libdvdread libdynaloader-functions-perl libebml libe-book libebur128 libedit libei libencode-locale-perl libeot libepoxy libepubgen liberror-perl libestr libetonyek libevdev libevent libexception-class-perl libexif libexttextcat libextutils-depends-perl libfastjson libfcgi libfcgi-perl libffado libffi libfido2 libfile-basedir-perl libfile-desktopentry-perl libfile-fcntllock-perl libfile-find-rule-perl libfile-listing-perl libfile-mimeinfo-perl libfont-afm-perl libfontenc libfreeaptx libfreehand libftdi1 libgav1 libgc libgcrypt20 libgd2 libgee-0.8 libglib-object-introspection-perl libglib-perl libglu libglvnd libgnome-games-support libgnome-games-support1 libgnomekbd libgpg-error libgphoto2 libgpod libgsf libgsm libgtk3-perl libgtop2 libgudev libgusb + libgxps libhandy-1 libheif libhtml-format-perl libhtml-form-perl libhtml-parser-perl libhtml-tagset-perl libhtml-tree-perl libhttp-cookies-perl libhttp-daemon-perl libhttp-date-perl libhttp-message-perl libhttp-negotiate-perl libical3 libice libid3tag libidn libidn2 libiec61883 libieee1284 libimagequant libimobiledevice libimobiledevice-glue libinih libinput libinstpatch libio-compress-brotli-perl libio-html-perl libio-socket-ssl-perl libio-string-perl libio-stringy-perl libipc-system-simple-perl libiptcdata libisofs libjaylink libjpeg-turbo libjson-perl libjson-xs-perl libkate libksba liblangtag liblc3 libldac liblinear liblocale-gettext-perl liblockfile liblognorm liblouis liblouisutdml liblrdf libltc liblwp-mediatypes-perl liblwp-protocol-https-perl libmad libmailtools-perl libmanette libmatroska libmaxminddb libmbim libmd libmediaart libmng libmnl libmodplug libmodule-implementation-perl libmodule-runtime-perl libmpc libmspack libmspub libmtp libmwaw libmypaint libmysofa libnamespace-clean-perl libndp libnet-dbus-perl libnetfilter-conntrack libnet-http-perl libnet-smtp-ssl-perl libnet-ssleay-perl libnfnetlink libnfs libnftnl libnice libnma libnsl libntlm libnumber-compare-perl libnumbertext libnvme liboauth libodfgen libogg libonig libopenmpt libopenmpt-modplug liborcus libosinfo libpackage-stash-perl libpackage-stash-xs-perl libpagemaker libpaper libparams-classify-perl libparams-util-perl libpcap libpciaccess libpeas libperl4-corelibs-perl libpgm libphonenumber libpipeline libplacebo libplist libpng1.6 libportal libproc-processtable-perl libproxy libpsl libpwquality libqmi libqrtr-glib libqxp librabbitmq libraw libraw1394 libregexp-ipv6-perl libreoffice-dictionaries librest librevenge librist librole-tiny-perl libsamplerate libsdl2 libseccomp libsecret libselinux libsemanage libsepol libshout libshumate libsidplay libsigc++-2.0 libsigc++-3.0 libsigsegv libslirp libsm libsndfile libsocket6-perl libsodium libsoup3 libsoxr libspectre libsrtp2 libssh libssh2 libstaroffice libsub-exporter-perl libsub-exporter-progressive-perl libsub-identify-perl libsub-install-perl libsub-name-perl libsub-quote-perl libsys-hostname-long-perl libtasn1-6 libteam libterm-readkey-perl libtext-charwidth-perl libtext-glob-perl libtext-iconv-perl libtext-wrapi18n-perl libthai libtheora libtie-ixhash-perl libtimedate-perl libtommath libtry-tiny-perl libtypes-serialiser-perl libudfread libunibreak libunistring libunity liburcu liburing liburi-perl libusb libusb-1.0 libusbmuxd libutempter libuv1 libva libvariable-magic-perl libvdpau libvdpau-va-gl libvidstab libvisio libvisual libvncserver libvoikko libvorbis libvpx libwacom libwebp libwmf libwnck3 libwpd libwpg libwps libwww-perl libwww-robotrules-perl libx11 libx11-protocol-perl libxau libxaw libxcb libxcomposite libxcrypt libxcursor libxcvt libxdamage libxdmcp libxext libxfixes libxfont libxi libxinerama libxkbcommon libxkbfile libxklavier libxml2 libxml++2.6 libxmlb libxml-libxml-perl libxml-namespacesupport-perl libxml-parser-perl libxml-sax-base-perl libxml-sax-expat-perl libxml-sax-perl libxml-twig-perl libxml-xpathengine-perl libxmu libxnvctrl libxpm libxpresent libxrandr libxrender libxres libxshmfence libxslt libxss libxstring-perl libxt libxtst libxv libxvmc libxxf86dga libxxf86vm libyaml libytnef libyuv libzip libzmf lightdm lightdm-gtk-greeter lightsoff lilv linux-base lirc lmdb lm-sensors logrotate lp-solve lsb lsb-release-minimal lsof lua5.2 lua5.3 lua5.4 luit lvm2 lxml lz4 lzo2 m4 mailcap make-dfsg mako malcontent man-db manpages mariadb markupsafe mathjax mawk mbedtls mc md4c media-player-info media-types mesa-demos meta-gnome mhash mjpegtools mobile-broadband-provider-info mod-dnssd modemmanager mokutil more-itertools mpclib3 mpeg2dec mpfr4 mpg123 msgraph mtdev mutagen mutter mysql-defaults mythes nano ncurses neon27 netbase netcat netpbm-free net-snmp nettle net-tools network-manager network-manager-applet newt nfs-utils nftables nghttp3 ngtcp2 nmap node-clipboard node-jquery node-prismjs norm npth nspr nss-mdns ntfs-3g numactl ocl-icd olefile onednn onnx openal-soft opencore-amr openexr openfec openh264 openjpeg2 openldap openni2 openssh openssl + opus orc orca osinfo-db os-prober ostree # p11-kit packagekit pango1.0 pangomm pangomm2.48 parted patch pavucontrol pcaudiolib pci.ids pciutils pcre2 pcsc-lite perl perl-openssl-defaults perl-tk pexpect php-defaults pigz pillow pinentry pipewire pixman pkgconf plymouth pocketsphinx policykit-1 polkit-qt-1 poppler poppler-data popt popularity-contest postgresql-18 powermgmt-base power-profiles-daemon powertop procps protobuf protobuf-c psmisc pthreadpool ptyprocess publicsuffix pulseaudio pyatspi pycairo pycurl pygments pygobject pyinotify pyjwt pyopenssl pyparsing pysmbc python3-defaults python3-stdlib-extensions python-apt python-attrs python-autocommand python-bcrypt python-certifi python-cffi python-charset-normalizer python-click python-cryptography python-cups python-debian python-debianbts python-distro python-httplib2 python-idna python-inflect python-jaraco.functools python-oauthlib python-packaging python-pip python-psutil python-pyxattr python-setproctitle python-sniffio python-typeguard python-typing-extensions python-tz python-urllib3 python-wadllib python-webencodings python-zipp pyxdg pyyaml qhull qpdf qqwing qrencode qt6-svg qt6-translations qt6-wayland qtbase-opensource-src # # # qtgraphicaleffects-opensource-src qtquickcontrols2-opensource-src qtspeech-opensource-src qtsvg-opensource-src qttools-opensource-src qttranslations-opensource-src qtwayland-opensource-src qtx11extras-opensource-src quadrapassel rake raptor2 raqm rasqal rdma-core re2 readline realmd redland reportbug requests rhythmbox roc-toolkit rpcbind rpcsvc-proto rsync rsyslog # rtkit rtmpdump rubberband ruby-defaults rubygems-integration ruby-net-telnet ruby-xmlrpc rust-rav1e rust-sequoia-sqv rygel samba sane-airscan sane-backends sbc scowl screen sdl12-compat sdl2-compat seahorse sed sensible-utils serd setuptools sgml-base sgml-data shadow shared-mime-info shim-signed shine shotwell sidplay-libs simple-scan six slang2 slirp4netns smartmontools snappy sndio snowball socat solid sonic sonnet sord sound-icons sound-theme-freedesktop soundtouch soupsieve spandsp speech-dispatcher speex speexdsp sphinx sqlite3 sratom srt sshfs-fuse ssl-cert startup-notification sudo suitesparse svt-av1 swell-foop switcheroo-control synaptic sysstat system-config-printer systemd systemsettings sysvinit taglib tali tar tasksel tcl8.6 tcltk-defaults tcpdump tcp-wrappers texinfo texlive-bin + tiff timgm6mb-soundfont tinysparql tk8.6 totem totem-pl-parser tpm-udev traceroute tree tslib ttf-ancient-fonts twolame tzdata ucf uchardet udisks2 unattended-upgrades unbound unixodbc unzip update-inetd upower uriparser usb.ids usb-modeswitch usb-modeswitch-data usbmuxd usbutils usrmerge util-linux v4l-utils vo-aacenc vo-amrwbenc volume-key vte2.91 vulkan-loader wavpack wayland webp-pixbuf-loader webrtc-audio-processing wget wheel whois wildmidi wireless-regdb wireless-tools wireplumber woff2 wpa wtmpdb x11-apps x11-session-utils x11-utils x11-xkb-utils x11-xserver-utils x264 x265 xapian-core xauth xbitmaps xcb-util xcb-util-cursor xcb-util-image xcb-util-keysyms xcb-util-renderutil xcb-util-wm xdg-dbus-proxy xdg-desktop-portal xdg-desktop-portal-gnome xdg-desktop-portal-gtk xdg-user-dirs xdg-user-dirs-gtk xdg-utils xf86-input-wacom xfonts-100dpi xfonts-75dpi xfonts-base xfonts-encodings xfonts-scalable xfonts-utils xft xinit xkbset xkeyboard-config xml-core xmlsec1 xnnpack xorg xorg-docs xorgproto xorg-sgml-doctools xserver-xorg-input-libinput xserver-xorg-video-amdgpu xserver-xorg-video-ati xserver-xorg-video-fbdev xserver-xorg-video-nouveau xserver-xorg-video-qxl xterm xtrans xvidcore xwayland xxhash xz-utils yajl yelp yelp-xsl z3 zbar zenity zeromq3 zimg zip zix zlib zvbi zxcvbn-c A package name displayed with a bold font is an indication that this package has a note. Visited packages are linked in green, those which have not been visited are linked in blue. A # sign after the name of a package indicates that a bug is filed against it. Likewise, a + sign indicates there is a patch available, a P means a pending bug while # indicates a closed bug. In cases of several bugs, the symbol is repeated. This page was built by the jenkins job reproducible_html_pkg_sets which is configured via this git repo . There is more information about jenkins.debian.net and about reproducible builds of Debian available elsewhere. Please send technical feedback about this setup to the Debian jenkins development list , or as a bug report against the jenkins.debian.org package . Feedback about specific job results should go to their respective lists and/or the BTS. The code of jenkins.debian.net is mostly GPL-2 licensed. The weather icons are public domain and were taken from the Tango Icon Library . Copyright 2014-2024 Holger Levsen and many others . Last update: 2026-01-13 06:47 UTC
2026-01-13T09:30:28
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https://yarnpkg.com/migration/pnp
To go further: Yarn PnP | Yarn Skip to main content Yarn Get Started Features CLI Configuration Advanced Blog API master (4.12.0-dev) master (4.12.0-dev) 3.8.7 1.22.22 Discord GitHub Search Starting with Yarn Introduction Installation Usage Migrating from 1.x / npm Benefits Step-by-step To go further Good to Know Corepack Editor SDKs Questions & Answers Recipes Migrating from 1.x / npm To go further On this page To go further: Yarn PnP info These steps are completely optional ! While we recommend to use Yarn Plug'n'Play for new projects, enabling it on existing projects may require a time investment. Feel free to skip this part if you prefer, and to come back to it whenever you have more time and/or a concrete benefit to get from it. Calling the Doctor ​ Plug'n'Play enforces strict dependency rules . You'll get errors should something in your application rely on unlisted dependencies which could cause your application to become unstable. To quickly detect which places may rely on unsafe patterns, Yarn provides a tool called the Doctor. Just run yarn dlx @yarnpkg/doctor in your project and the Doctor will start looking at your source files to detect any potentially problematic pattern. Example ​ For example, here's what the Doctor used to say about webpack-dev-server : ➤ YN0000: Found 1 package(s) to process ➤ YN0000: For a grand total of 236 file(s) to validate ➤ YN0000: ┌ /webpack-dev-server/package.json ➤ YN0000: │ /webpack-dev-server/test/testSequencer.js:5:19: Undeclared dependency on @jest/test-sequencer ➤ YN0000: │ /webpack-dev-server/client-src/default/webpack.config.js:12:14: Webpack configs from non-private packages should avoid referencing loaders without require.resolve ➤ YN0000: │ /webpack-dev-server/test/server/contentBase-option.test.js:68:8: Strings should avoid referencing the node_modules directory (prefer require.resolve) ➤ YN0000: └ Completed in 5.12s ➤ YN0000: Failed with errors in 5.12s We can see that the Doctor spotted a couple of legitimate issues: testSequencer.js depends on @jest/test-sequencer without listing it as a proper dependency - which would be reported as an error at runtime under Yarn Plug'n'Play, as nothing guarantees that the version of @jest/test-sequencer would match what the package has been tested with. webpack.config.js references a loader without passing its name through require.resolve - this is unsafe, as it means the loader will be resolved relative to the webpack package, rather than webpack-dev-server 's dependencies. contentBase-option.test.js checks the content of the node_modules folder - which wouldn't exist anymore under Plug'n'Play. Enabling Yarn PnP ​ Look into your .yarnrc.yml file for the nodeLinker setting. If you don't find it, or if it's set to pnp , then it's all good: you're already using Yarn Plug'n'Play! Otherwise, remove it from your configuration file and run yarn install . Commit the changes. What to look for ​ Now you should have a working Yarn Plug'n'Play setup, but your repository might still need some extra care. Some things to keep in mind: There are no node_modules folders. Use require.resolve instead. There are no .bin folders. If you relied on them, use yarn run bin instead. Replace any calls to node that are not inside the scripts field by yarn node . Custom pre-hooks (e.g. prestart ) need to be called manually now ( yarn prestart ). All of this and more is documented in the following sections. In general, we advise you at this point to try to run your application and see what breaks, then check here to find out tips on how to correct your install. Editor support ​ tip We only cover VSCode here, but we have a dedicated documentation page covering more IDEs! warning Make sure that typescript , eslint , prettier , ... all dependencies typically used by your IDE extensions are listed at the top level of the project (rather than in an arbitrary workspace). Install the ZipFS VSCode extension. Run yarn dlx @yarnpkg/sdks vscode and commit the changes. For TypeScript, don't forget to select Use Workspace Version in VSCode. General Advices ​ Fix dependencies with packageExtensions ​ Packages sometimes forget to list their dependencies. In the past it used to cause many subtle issues, so Yarn now defaults to prevent such unsound accesses. Still, we don't want it to prevent you from doing your work as long as you can do it in a safe and predictable way, so we came up with the packageExtensions setting. For example, if react was to forget to list a dependency on prop-types , you'd fix it like this: packageExtensions : "react@*" : dependencies : prop-types : "*" And if a Babel plugin was missing its peer dependency on @babel/core , you'd fix it with: packageExtensions : "@babel/plugin-something@*" : peerDependencies : "@babel/core" : "*" Should you use dependencies or peer dependencies? It depends on the context; as a rule of thumb, if the package is a singleton (for example react , or react-redux which also relies on the React context), you'll want to make it a peer dependency. In other cases, where the package is just a collection of utilities, using a regular dependency should be fine (for example tslib , lodash , etc). Call binaries using yarn run bin rather than node_modules/.bin ​ The node_modules/.bin folder is an implementation detail, and the PnP installs don't generate it at all. Rather than relying on its existence, just use the yarn run bin command which can start both scripts and binaries: yarn run jest # or, using the shortcut: yarn jest Call your scripts through yarn node rather than node ​ We now need to inject some variables into the environment for Node to be able to locate your dependencies. In order to make this possible, we ask you to use yarn node which transparently does the heavy lifting. note this section only applies to the shell CLI . The commands defined in your scripts are unaffected, as we make sure that node always points to the right location, with the right variables already set. Setup your IDE for PnP support ​ Since Yarn Plug'n'Play doesn't generate node_modules folders, some IDE integrations may not work out of the box. Check our guide to see how to fix them. Take a look at our end-to-end tests ​ We now run daily end-to-end tests against various popular JavaScript tools in order to make sure that we never regress - or be notified when third-party project ship incompatible changes. Consulting the sources for those tests is a great way to check whether some special configuration values have to be set when using a particular toolchain. Troubleshooting ​ Cannot find module [...] ​ This error doesn't come from Yarn: it's emitted by the Node.js resolution pipeline, telling you a package cannot be found on disk. If you have enabled Plug'n'Play, then the Node.js resolution pipeline is supposed to forward resolution requests to Yarn - meaning that if you get this message, it's that this forwarding didn't occur, and your first action should be to figure out why. Usually, it'll be because you called a Node.js script using node ./my-script instead of yarn node ./my-script . A package is trying to access [...] ​ Although rare, some packages don't list all their dependencies. Now that we enforce boundaries between the various branches of the dependency tree, this kind of issue is more apparent than it used to be (although it's always been problematic). The long term fix is to submit a pull request upstream to add the missing dependency to the package listing. Given that it sometimes might take some time before they get merged, we also have a more short-term fix available: create .yarnrc.yml in your project, then use the packageExtensions setting to add the missing dependency to the relevant packages. Run yarn install to apply your changes, and voilà! Should you choose to open a PR on the upstream repository, you will also be able to contribute your package extension to our plugin-compat database , helping the whole ecosystem move forward. Edit this page Previous Step-by-step Next Corepack Calling the Doctor Example Enabling Yarn PnP What to look for Editor support General Advices Fix dependencies with packageExtensions Call binaries using yarn run bin rather than node_modules/.bin Call your scripts through yarn node rather than node Setup your IDE for PnP support Take a look at our end-to-end tests Troubleshooting Cannot find module [...] A package is trying to access [...] Copyright © 2026 Yarn Contributors, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.
2026-01-13T09:30:28