Am 08.02.2019 um 20:46 schrieb Dr. Tobias Quathamer: > With that in mind, the list gets much shorter. Is there an easy way to > find out if a source package produces only the -dev binary package? One > hint at finding the right packages would be that the -dev packages are > arch:all, while other binary packages are arch:any.
It's surely not the most elegant approach, but I've taken the list from build-rdeps and saved it in a file called "packages.txt". Then I've used the following commandline to find all source packages which produce a binary package which is not arch:all. $ for i in `cat packages.txt`; do grep-dctrl --regex -FPackage ^$i --and --not -FArchitecture all -sPackage -n /var/lib/apt/lists/*Sources; done This gets you a list with some false positives, because those false positive packages are wrongly marked as arch:any instead of arch:all. They only contain go source code and are not compiled, so they don't need a rebuild with the fixed golang compiler. The remaining packages on the list maybe need a rebuild for jessie: aptly direnv golang-bindata golang-gogoprotobuf golang-goprotobuf heartbleeder kxd ngrok obfs4proxy pt-websocket slt If you'd like, you could probably boil this list further down by grepping for crypto/elliptic in the package's source code. >>> Please note that I was not able to get build-rdeps to run in a >>> jessie chroot >> >> (Ah, not just me then; I needed to hack the "sid|unstable" bit in >> the code but didn't want to yak-shave that at the time!) > > :-) Nice to know, I was at a loss in that chroot, only wondering how the > hell you got that command to run ... Oh well, just RTFM. I've discovered a helpful option: $ build-rdeps --distribution jessie golang-go Sigh. Regards, Tobias
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