Here's the control file, so you can see what it's for: Source: libsafe Section: libs Priority: optional Maintainer: Ron Rademaker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Standards-Version: 3.1.1
Package: libsafe Architecture: any Depends: ${shlibs:Depends} Description: Protection against buffer overflow vulnerabilities Libsafe is a library that works with any pre-compiled executable and can be used transparently. Libsafe intercepts calls to functions known as vulnerable, libsafe uses a substitute version of the function that implements the same functionality, but makes sure any buffer overflows are contained within the current stack frame. Ron Rademaker On Mon, 12 Jun 2000, Josip Rodin wrote: > On Mon, Jun 12, 2000 at 05:25:36PM +0200, Ron Rademaker wrote: > > I'm making a debian package that contains 1 thing: a shared library, it > > the first thing I'm ever packaging. Now lintian gives an error that > > there's no shlibs, it also says stuff about it being intential and so. I > > think I don't need this shlibs, but I want to make sure. There's no binary > > that depends on the shared library and as far as I understood from the > > packaging manual that's what this shlibs is for, right? > > If it's a shared library, and nothing links to it, what's the point of > packaging it? :) If it's a plug-in or something like that (hint: dlopen), > then Lintian errors are spurious, as long as you put your .so file in a > private directory, i.e. one that isn't in ld.so.conf. > > -- > Digital Electronic Being Intended for Assassination and Nullification >