How To Install devscripts on Kali Linux

In this tutorial we learn how to install devscripts on Kali Linux. devscripts is scripts to make the life of a Debian Package maintainer easier

Introduction

In this tutorial we learn how to install devscripts on Kali Linux.

What is devscripts

devscripts is:

Contains the following scripts, dependencies/recommendations shown in brackets afterwards:

  • annotate-output: run a command and prepend time and stream (O for stdout, E for stderr) for every line of output.
  • archpath: Prints arch (tla/Bazaar) package names. Also supports calculating the package names for other branches. [tla | bazaar]
  • bts: A command-line tool for accessing the Debian Bug Tracking System, both to send mails to [email protected] and to access the web pages and SOAP interface of the BTS. [www-browser, libauthen-sasl-perl, libnet-smtps-perl, libsoap-lite-perl, liburi-perl, libwww-perl, bsd-mailx | mailx]
  • build-rdeps: Searches for all packages that build-depend on a given package. [dctrl-tools, dose-extra, libdpkg-perl]
  • chdist: tool to easily play with several distributions. [dctrl-tools]
  • checkbashisms: check whether a /bin/sh script contains any common bash-specific constructs.
  • cowpoke: upload a Debian source package to a cowbuilder host and build it, optionally also signing and uploading the result to an incoming queue. [ssh-client]
  • cvs-debi, cvs-debc: wrappers around debi and debc respectively (see below) which allow them to be called from the CVS working directory. [cvs-buildpackage]
  • cvs-debrelease: wrapper around debrelease which allows it to be called from the CVS working directory. [cvs-buildpackage, dupload | dput, ssh-client]
  • cvs-debuild: A wrapper for cvs-buildpackage to use debuild as its package building program. [cvs-buildpackage, fakeroot, lintian, gnupg |gnupg2]
  • dcmd: run a given command replacing the name of a .changes or .dsc file with each of the files referenced therein. *
  • dd-list: given a list of packages, pretty-print it ordered by maintainer. *
  • debbisect: bisect snapshot.debian.org to find which change in the archive introduced a certain problem. [mmdebstrap, python3-debian]
  • debc: List contents of current package. Do this after a successful “debuild” to see if the package looks all right.
  • debchange (abbreviation dch): Modifies debian/changelog and manages version numbers for you. It will either increment the version number or add an entry for the current version, depending upon the options given to it. [libdistro-info-perl, libsoap-lite-perl]*
  • debcheckout: checkout the development repository of a Debian package. *
  • debclean: Clean a Debian source tree. Debclean will clean all Debian source trees below the current directory, and if requested, also remove all files that were generated from these source trees (that is .deb, .dsc and .changes files). It will keep the .diffs and original files, though, so that the binaries and other files can be rebuilt if necessary. [fakeroot]*
  • debcommit: Commits changes to cvs, darcs, svn, svk, tla, bzr, git, or hg, using new entries in debian/changelog as the commit message. Also supports tagging Debian package releases. [cvs | darcs | subversion | svk | tla | bzr | git-core | mercurial, libtimedate-perl]
  • debdiff: A program which examines two .deb files or two .changes files and reports on any difference found in their file lists. Useful for ensuring that no files were inadvertently lost between versions. Can also examine two .dsc files and report on the changes between source versions. For a deeper comparison one can use the diffoscope package. [wdiff, patchutils]*
  • debdiff-apply: Apply unified diffs of two Debian source packages, such as those generated by debdiff, to a target Debian source package. Any changes to debian/changelog are dealt with specially, to avoid the conflicts that changelog diffs typically produce when applied naively. May be used to check that old patches still apply to newer versions of those packages. [python3-debian, python3-unidiff, quilt]
  • debi: Installs the current package by using the setuid root debpkg script described below. It assumes that the current package has just been built (for example by debuild), and the .deb lives in the parent directory, and will effectively run dpkg -i on the .deb. The ability to install the package with a very short command is very useful when troubleshooting packages.
  • debpkg: A wrapper for dpkg used by debi to allow convenient testing of packages. For debpkg to work, it needs to be made setuid root, and this needs to be performed by the sysadmin – it is not installed as setuid root by default. (Note that being able to run a setuid root debpkg is effectively the same as having root access to the system, so this should be done with caution.) Having debpkg as a wrapper for dpkg can be a Good Thing (TM), as it decreases the potential for damage by accidental wrong use of commands in superuser mode (e.g., an inadvertent rm -rf * in the wrong directory is disastrous as many can attest to).
  • debrelease: A wrapper around dupload or dput which figures out which version to upload, and then calls dupload or dput to actually perform the upload. [dupload | dput, ssh-client]
  • debrebuild: A script that provided a .buildinfo file reports the instructions on how to try to reproduce the reported build. [sbuild | mmdebstrap, libdistro-info-perl]
  • debrepro: A script that tests reproducibility of Debian packages. It will build a given source directory twice, with a set of variation between the first and second build, and compare the binary packages produced. If diffoscope is installed, it is used to compare non-matching binaries. If disorderfs is installed, it is used during the build to inject non-determinism in filesystem listing operations. [faketime, diffoscope, disorderfs]
  • debrsign: This transfers a .changes/.dsc pair to a remote machine for signing, and runs debsign on the remote machine over an SSH connection. [gnupg | gnupg2, debian-keyring, ssh-client]
  • debsign: Use GNU Privacy Guard to sign the changes (and possibly dsc) files created by running dpkg-buildpackage with no-sign options. Useful if you are building a package on a remote machine and wish to sign it on a local one. This script is capable of automatically downloading the .changes and .dsc files from a remote machine. [gnupg |gnupg2, debian-keyring, ssh-client]*
  • debsnap: grab packages from https://snapshot.debian.org [libwww-perl, libjson-perl]
  • debuild: A wrapper for building a package (i.e., dpkg-buildpackage) to avoid problems with insufficient permissions and wrong paths etc. Debuild will set up the proper environment for building a package. Debuild will use the fakeroot program to build the package by default, but can be instructed to use any other gain-root command, or can even be installed setuid root. Debuild can also be used to run various of the debian/rules operations with the same root-gaining procedure. Debuild will also run lintian to check that the package does not have any major policy violations. [fakeroot, lintian, gnupg | gnupg2]*
  • deb-reversion: increases a binary package version number and repacks the package, useful for porters and the like.
  • deb-why-removed: shows the reason a package was removed from the archive. [libdpkg-perl]
  • dep3changelog: generate a changelog entry from a DEP3-style patch header.
  • desktop2menu: given a freedesktop.org desktop file, generate a skeleton for a menu file. [libfile-desktopentry-perl]
  • dget: Downloads Debian source and binary packages. Point at a .changes or .dsc to download all references files. Specify a package name to download it from the configured apt repository. [wget | curl]
  • diff2patches: extracts patches from a .diff.gz file placing them under debian/ or, if present, debian/patches. [patchutils]
  • dpkg-depcheck, dpkg-genbuilddeps: Runs a specified command (such as debian/rules build) or dpkg-buildpackage, respectively, to determine the packages used during the build process. This information can be helpful when trying to determine the packages needed in the Build-Depends etc. lines in the debian/control file. [build-essential, strace]
  • dscextract: extract a single file from a Debian source package. [patchutils]
  • dscverify: check the signature and MD5 sums of a dsc file against the most current Debian keyring on your system. [gnupg | gnupg2, debian-keyring]
  • edit-patch: add/edit a patch for a source package and commit the changes. [quilt | dpatch | cdbs]
  • getbuildlog: download package build logs from Debian auto-builders. [wget]
  • git-deborig: try to produce Debian orig.tar using git-archive(1). [libdpkg-perl, libgit-wrapper-perl, liblist-compare-perl, libstring-shellquote-perl, libtry-tiny-perl]
  • grep-excuses: grep britney’s excuses to find out what is happening to your packages. [libdbd-pg-perl, libterm-size-perl, libyaml-syck-perl, wget, w3m]
  • hardening-check: report the hardening characteristics of a set of binaries.
  • list-unreleased: searches for packages marked UNRELEASED in their changelog.
  • ltnu (Long Time No Upload): List all uploads of packages by the given uploader or maintainer and display them ordered by the last upload of that package, oldest uploads first.
  • manpage-alert: locate binaries without corresponding manpages. [man-db]
  • mass-bug: mass-file bug reports. [bsd-mailx | mailx]
  • mergechanges: merge .changes files from the same release but built on different architectures.
  • mk-build-deps: Given a package name and/or control file, generate a binary package which may be installed to satisfy the build-dependencies of the given package. [equivs]
  • mk-origtargz: Rename upstream tarball, optionally changing the compression and removing unwanted files. [libfile-which-perl, unzip, xz-utils, file]
  • namecheck: Check project names are not already taken.
  • nmudiff: prepare a diff of this version (presumably an NMU against the previously released version (as per the changelog) and submit the diff to the BTS. [patchutils, mutt]
  • origtargz: fetch the orig tarball of a Debian package from various sources, and unpack it. [pristine-tar]
  • plotchangelog: display information from a changelog graphically using gnuplot. [libtimedate-perl, gnuplot]
  • pts-subscribe: subscribe to the PTS (Package Tracking System) for a limited period of time. [bsd-mailx | mailx, at]
  • rc-alert: list installed packages which have release-critical bugs. [wget | curl]
  • reproducible-check: reports on the reproducible status of installed packages. For more details please see https://reproducible-builds.org.
  • rmadison: remotely query the Debian archive database about packages. [liburi-perl, wget | curl]
  • sadt: run DEP-8 tests. [python3-debian]
  • salsa: manipulates salsa.debian.org repositories and users [libgitlab-api-v4-perl]
  • suspicious-source: output a list of files which are not common source files. [python3-magic]
  • svnpath: Prints the path to the Subversion repository of a Subversion checkout. Also supports calculating the paths for branches and tags in a repository independent fashion. Used by debcommit to generate svn tags. [subversion]
  • tagpending: runs from a Debian source tree and tags bugs that are to be closed in the latest changelog as pending. [libsoap-lite-perl]
  • transition-check: Check a list of source packages for involvement in transitions for which uploads to unstable are currently blocked. [libwww-perl, libyaml-syck-perl]
  • uscan: Automatically scan for and download upstream updates. Uscan can also call a program such as uupdate to attempt to update the Debianised version based on the new update. Whilst uscan could be used to release the updated version automatically, it is probably better not to without testing it first. Uscan can also verify detached OpenPGP signatures if upstream’s signing key is known. [file, gpgv | gpgv2, gnupg | gnupg2, libfile-dirlist-perl, libfile-touch-perl, libfile-which-perl, liblwp-protocol-https-perl, libmoo-perl, libwww-perl, unzip, xz-utils]*
  • uupdate: Update the package with an archive or patches from an upstream author. This will be of help if you have to update your package. It will try to apply the latest diffs to your package and tell you how successful it was. [patch]
  • what-patch: determine what patch system, if any, a source package is using. [patchutils]
  • whodepends: check which maintainers’ packages depend on a package.
  • who-permits-upload: Retrieve information about Debian Maintainer access control lists. [gnupg | gnupg2, libencode-locale-perl, libwww-perl, debian-keyring]
  • who-uploads: determine the most recent uploaders of a package to the Debian archive. [gnupg | gnupg2, debian-keyring, debian-maintainers, wget]
  • wnpp-alert: list installed packages which are orphaned or up for adoption. [wget | curl]
  • wnpp-check: check whether there is an open request for packaging or intention to package bug for a package. [wget | curl]
  • wrap-and-sort: wrap long lines and sort items in packaging files. [python3-debian]
  • /usr/share/doc/devscripts/examples: This directory contains examples of procmail and exim scripts for sorting mail arriving to Debian mailing lists.

There are three methods to install devscripts on Kali Linux. We can use apt-get, apt and aptitude. In the following sections we will describe each method. You can choose one of them.

Install devscripts Using apt-get

Update apt database with apt-get using the following command.

sudo apt-get update

After updating apt database, We can install devscripts using apt-get by running the following command:

sudo apt-get -y install devscripts

Install devscripts Using apt

Update apt database with apt using the following command.

sudo apt update

After updating apt database, We can install devscripts using apt by running the following command:

sudo apt -y install devscripts

Install devscripts Using aptitude

If you want to follow this method, you might need to install aptitude on Kali Linux first since aptitude is usually not installed by default on Kali Linux. Update apt database with aptitude using the following command.

sudo aptitude update

After updating apt database, We can install devscripts using aptitude by running the following command:

sudo aptitude -y install devscripts

How To Uninstall devscripts on Kali Linux

To uninstall only the devscripts package we can use the following command:

sudo apt-get remove devscripts

Uninstall devscripts And Its Dependencies

To uninstall devscripts and its dependencies that are no longer needed by Kali Linux, we can use the command below:

sudo apt-get -y autoremove devscripts

Remove devscripts Configurations and Data

To remove devscripts configuration and data from Kali Linux we can use the following command:

sudo apt-get -y purge devscripts

Remove devscripts configuration, data, and all of its dependencies

We can use the following command to remove devscripts configurations, data and all of its dependencies, we can use the following command:

sudo apt-get -y autoremove --purge devscripts

Dependencies

devscripts have the following dependencies:

References

Summary

In this tutorial we learn how to install devscripts package on Kali Linux using different package management tools: apt, apt-get and aptitude.