reportbug
Section: User Commands (1)
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NAME
reportbug - reports a bug to a debbugs server
SYNOPSIS
reportbug
[options] <package | pseudo-package | absolute-pathname>
DESCRIPTION
reportbug
is primarily designed to report bugs in the Debian distribution; by
default, it creates an email to the Debian bug tracking system at
submit@bugs.debian.org with information about the bug you've
found, and makes a carbon copy of the report for you as well.
Using the --bts option, you can also report bugs to other
servers that use the Debian bug tracking system, debbugs.
You may specify either a package name or a filename; if you use a
filename, it must either be an absolute filename (so beginning with a
/) or if you want reportbug to search the system for a
filename, see the --filename and --path options
below. If installed, also dlocate is used to identify the
filename location and thus the package containing it.
You can also specify a pseudo-package; these are used in the
Debian bug tracking system to track issues that are not related to one
specific package. Run reportbug without any arguments, then
enter other at the package prompt, to see a list of the most
commonly-used pseudo-packages.
OPTIONS
The program follows the usual GNU command line syntax, with long
options starting with two dashes (`
--'). A summary of options
are included below.
- -h, --help
-
Show summary of options.
- --version
-
Show the version of reportbug and exit.
- -A FILENAME, --attach=FILENAME
-
Attach a file to the bug report; both text and binary files are
acceptable; this option can be specified multiple times to attach
several files. This routine will create a MIME attachment with the
file included; in some cases (usually text files), it is probably
better to use -i/--include option. (Please note that
Debian's bug tracking system has limited support for MIME
attachments.)
This option supports also globbing (i.e. names with wildcards, like
file.*) but remember to include them between single quotes (the
previous example becomes: 'file.*') else the shell would expand it
before calling reportbug leading to an error.
Be aware that when using an external MUA to send the message (such
as mutt), the attachment feature is not available and no file will
be attached at all: the MUA feature to attach files must be used
instead (so from within the MUA).
- -b, --no-query-bts
-
Don't check the Debian bug tracking system to see if this problem has
already been reported; useful for offline use or if you're
really sure it's a bug.
- --query-bts
-
Check the Debian bug tracking system to see if this problem has
already been reported (default).
- -B SYSTEM, --bts=SYSTEM
-
Instead of the Debian bug server (or the bug server specified in
/etc/reportbug.conf, use the server specified by SYSTEM.
- --body=BODY
-
Use the specified BODY as the body of the message. The body
text will be wrapped at 70 columns, and the normal reportbug
headers and footers will be added as appropriate. The editor prompt
and any "special" prompting will be bypassed.
- --body-file=BODYFILE, --bodyfile=BODYFILE
-
The contents of the (assumed to be) text file BODYFILE will be
used as the message body. This file is assumed to be properly
formatted (i.e. reasonable line lengths, etc.). The usual headers and
footers will be added, and the editor step and "special" prompts will
be skipped. (BODYFILE may also be a named pipe; using a device
special file may lead to unusual results.)
- -c, --no-config-files
-
Omit configuration files from the bug report without asking. By
default, you are asked if you want to include them; in some cases,
doing so may cause sensitive information to be sent via email.
- -C CLASS, --class=CLASS
-
Specify report class for GNATS BTSes.
- --configure
-
Rerun the reportbug first time configuration routine, and write
a new $HOME/.reportbugrc file. This will erase any pre-existing
settings in the file; however, a backup will be written as
$HOME/.reportbugrc~.
- --check-available
-
Check for newer releases of the package at packages.debian.org
(default). In advanced and expert mode, check
incoming.debian.org and
http://ftp-master.debian.org/new.html too.
- --no-check-available
-
Do not check for newer releases of the package at
packages.debian.org.
- --debconf
-
Include debconf settings in your report.
- --no-debconf
-
Do not include debconf settings from your report.
- -d, --debug
-
Don't send a real bug report to Debian; send it to yourself instead.
This is primarily used for testing by the maintainer.
- --test
-
Operate in test mode (maintainer use only).
- --draftpath=DRAFTPATH
-
Save the draft (for example, when exiting and saving the report
without reporting it) into DRAFTPATH directory.
- -e EDITOR, --editor=EDITOR
-
Specify the editor to use, overriding any EDITOR or VISUAL
environment variable setting.
- --email=ADDRESS
-
Set the email address your report should appear to be sent from
(i.e. the address that appears in the From header). This should
be the actual Internet email address on its own (i.e. without a real
name or comment part, like foo@example.com). This setting will
override the EMAIL and DEBEMAIL environment variables, but
not REPORTBUGEMAIL.
- --envelope-from
-
Specify the Envelope From mail header (also known as Return-path); by default
it's the From address but it can be selected a different one in case the MTA
doesn't canonicalize local users to public addresses.
- --mbox-reader-cmd=MBOX_READER_CMD
-
Specify a command to open the bug reports mbox file. You can use
%s to substitute the mbox file to be used, and %% to insert
a literal percent sign. If no %s is specified, the mbox file name
is supplied at the end of the argument list.
- --exit-prompt
-
Display a prompt before exiting; this is useful if reportbug is
run in a transient terminal (i.e. from its Debian menu entry).
- -f FILENAME, --filename=FILENAME
-
Report a bug in the package containing FILENAME so you don't
have to figure out what package the file belongs to. The path will be
searched for an exact path for FILENAME before attempting to
broaden the search to all files. If dlocate is installed,
FILENAME is actually a regular expression.
- --from-buildd=BUILDD_FORMAT
-
This options is a shortcut for buildd admins to report bugs from
buildd log; the option expects a value in the format of
$source_$version where $source is the source package the
bug will be reported against and $version is its version.
- --path
-
If the -f/--filename option is also specified, only search
the path for the specified FILENAME. Specifying an absolute
path with the -f/--filename option (i.e. one beginning with a
/) overrides this behavior.
- -g, --gnupg, --gpg
-
Attach a digital signature to the bug report using GnuPG (the
GNU Privacy Guard). (This argument will be ignored if you are using
an MUA to edit and send your report.)
- -G, --gnus
-
Use the Gnus mail and news reader to send your report, rather than
using the editor.
- -H HEADER, --header=HEADER
-
Add a custom RFC2822 header to your email; for example, to send a
carbon copy of the report to debian-68k@lists.linux-m68k.org you
could use
-H 'X-Debbugs-CC: debian-68k@lists.linux-m68k.org'
- -i FILE, --include=FILE
-
Include the specified FILE as part of the body of the message to
be edited. Can be used multiple times to add multiple files;
text-only please! From a suggestion by Michael Alan Dorman in the
bug mailing list. (See also the -a/--attach option.)
- -I, --no-check-installed
-
Do not check whether the package is installed before filing a report.
This is generally only useful when filing a report on a package you
know is not installed on your system.
- --check-installed
-
Check if the specified package is installed when filing reports.
(This is the default behavior of reportbug.)
- -j JUSTIFICATION, --justification=JUSTIFICATION
-
Bugs in Debian that have serious, grave, or critical
severities must meet certain criteria to be classified as such. This
option allows you to specify the justification for a release-critical
bug, instead of being prompted for it.
- -k, --kudos
-
Send appreciative email to the recorded maintainer address, rather
than filing a bug report. (You can also send kudos to
packagename@packages.debian.org, for packages in the Debian
archive; however, this option uses the Maintainer address from the
control file, so it works with other package sources too.)
- -K KEYID, --keyid=KEYID
-
Private key to use for PGP/GnuPG signatures. If not specified, the
first key in the secret keyring that matches your email address will
be used.
- --latest-first
-
Display the bug reports list sorted and with the latest reports at the top.
- --license
-
Show reportbug's copyright and license information on standard
output.
- --list-cc=ADDRESS
-
Send a carbon copy of the report to the specified list after a report
number is assigned; this is the equivalent to the option
-H 'X-Debbugs-CC: ADDRESS'. This option will only work as
intended with debbugs systems.
- -m, --maintonly
-
Only send the bug to the package maintainer; the bug tracking system
will not send a copy to the bug report distribution lists.
- --max-attachment-size=MAX_ATTACHMENT_SIZE
-
Specify the maximum size any attachment file can have (this also include the file for --body-file option). If an attachment file is too big, there could be problems in delivering the email (and also to compose it), so we set a limit to attachment size. By default this is 10 megabytes.
- --mirror=MIRRORS
-
Add a BTS mirror.
- --mode=MODE
-
Set the operating mode for reportbug. reportbug
currently has four operating modes: novice (the
default), standard, advanced, and expert.
novice mode is designed to minimize prompting about things that
"ordinary users" would be unlikely to know or care about, shifting the
triage burden onto the maintainer. Checking for new versions is only
done for the stable distribution in this mode. It is currently the
default mode.
standard mode includes a relatively large number of prompts and
tries to encourage users to not file frivolous or duplicate bug
reports.
advanced mode is like standard mode, but may include
shortcuts suitable for more advanced users of Debian, without being as
close to the metal (and potential flamage) as expert mode.
(Currently, the only differences from standard mode are that it
assumes familiarity with the "incoming" queue; it allows the reporting
of bugs on "dependency" packages; and it does not prompt where to
insert the report text in the editor.)
expert mode is designed to minimize prompts that are designed to
discourage frivolous or unnecessary bug reports, "severity inflation,"
and the like. In expert mode, reportbug assumes the user
is thoroughly familiar with Debian policies. In practice, this means
that reporters are no longer required to justify setting a high
severity on a bug report, and certain automated cleanups of the
message are bypassed. Individuals who do not regularly contribute to
the Debian project are highly discouraged from using expert
mode, as it can lead to flamage from maintainers when used improperly.
- -M, --mutt
-
Instead of spawning an editor to revise the bug report, use the
mutt mail reader to edit and send it.
- --mta=MTA
-
Specify an alternate MTA, instead of /usr/sbin/sendmail
(the default). Any smtphost setting will override this one.
- --mua=MUA
-
Instead of spawning an editor to revise the bug report, use the
specified MUA (mail user agent) to edit and send
it. --mutt and --nmh options are processed.
- -n, --mh, --nmh
-
Instead of spawning an editor to revise the bug report, use the
comp command (part of the nmh and mh mail systems)
to edit and send it.
- -N BUGNUMBER, --bugnumber BUGNUMBER
-
Run reportbug against the specified bug report, useful when
following-up a bug and its number is already known.
- --no-bug-script
-
Do not execute the bug script (if present); this option can be useful
together with --template to suppress every interactive actions,
since some bug scripts can ask questions.
- --no-cc-menu
-
Don't display the menu to enter additional addresses (CC).
- --no-tags-menu
-
Don't display the menu to enter additional tags.
- -o FILE, --output=FILE
-
Instead of sending an email, redirect it to the specified filename.
The output file is a full dump of the email message, so it contains
both headers and mail body. If you want to use it as a template to
create a new bug report, then you have to remove all the headers (mind
the Subject one, though) and start the report at the
Package pseudo-header.
- -O, --offline
-
Disable all external queries. Currently has the same effect as
--no-check-available --no-query-bts.
- -p, --print
-
Instead of sending an email, print the bug report to standard output,
so you can redirect it to a file or pipe it to another program.
This option only outputs a template for a bug report (but, differently
from --template it's more interactive); you will need to fill
in the long description.
- --paranoid
-
Show the contents of the message before it is sent, including all
headers. Automatically disabled if in template mode.
- --no-paranoid
-
Don't show the full contents of the message before it is sent
(default).
- --pgp
-
Attach a digital signature to the bug report using PGP (Pretty
Good Privacy). Please note, however, that the Debian project is
phasing out the use of PGP in favor of GnuPG. (This
argument will be ignored if using an MUA to edit and send your
report.)
- --proxy=PROXY, --http_proxy=PROXY
-
Specify the WWW proxy server to use to handle the query of the bug
tracking system. You should only need this parameter if you are
behind a firewall. The PROXY argument should be formatted as a
valid HTTP URL, including (if necessary) a port number; for example,
http://192.168.1.1:3128/.
- -P PSEUDO-HEADER, --pseudo-header=PSEUDO-HEADER
-
Add a custom pseudo-header to your report; for example, to add the
mytag usertag for the user humberto@example.com to the
bug, you could use -P 'User: humberto@example.com' -P 'Usertags:
mytag'.
- -q, --quiet
-
Suppress diagnostic messages to standard error.
- -Q, --query-only
-
Do not submit a bug report; just query the BTS. Option ignored if you
specify --no-bts-query.
- --query-source
-
Query on all binary packages built by the same source, not just the
binary package specified.
- --no-query-source
-
Only query on the binary package specified on the command line.
- --realname=NAME
-
Set the real name (human-readable name) to use for your report.
- --report-quiet
-
Register the bug in the bug tracking system, but don't send a report
to the package maintainer or anyone else. Don't do this unless you're
the maintainer of the package in question, or you really know what you
are doing.
- --reply-to=ADDRESS, --replyto=ADDRESS
-
Set the Reply-To address header in your report.
- -s SUBJECT, --subject=SUBJECT
-
Set the subject of the bug report (i.e. a brief explanation of the
problem, less than 60 characters). If you do not specify this switch,
you will be prompted for a subject.
- -S SEVERITY, --severity=SEVERITY
-
Specify a severity level, from critical, grave,
serious, important, normal, minor, and
wishlist.
- --smtphost=HOST[:PORT]
-
Use the mail transport agent (MTA) at HOST to send your report,
instead of your local /usr/sbin/sendmail program. This should
generally be your ISP's outgoing mail server; you can also
use 'localhost' if you have a working mail server running on your
machine. If the PORT is omitted, the standard port for SMTP,
port 25, is used.
- --timeout=SECONDS
-
Specify the network timeout, the number of seconds to wait for a
resource to respond. If nothing is specified, a default timeout of 1
minute is selected.
In case of a network error, there are chances it's due to a too low
timeout: try passing the --timeout option with a higher value than
default.
- --tls
-
If using SMTP, use Transport Layer Security (TLS) encryption to secure
the connection to the mail server. Some SMTP servers may require this
option.
- --smtpuser=USERNAME
-
If using SMTP, use the specified USERNAME for authentication.
- --smtppasswd=PASSWORD
-
If using SMTP, use the specified PASSWORD for authentication.
If the password isn't specified on the command line or in the
configuration file, a prompt will be displayed asking for it.
Use of this option is insecure on multiuser systems. Instead, you
should set this option in $HOME/.reportbugrc and ensure it is
only readable by your user (e.g. with chmod 600
$HOME/.reportbugrc).
- --src, --source
-
Specify to report the bug against the source package, and not the
binary package (default behaviour). In order for this option to work,
you have to populate the relevant 'deb-src' lines in
/etc/apt/sources.list so that apt cache will know about source packages
too.
- -t TYPE, --type=TYPE
-
Specify the type of report to be submitted; currently accepts either
gnats or debbugs.
- -T TAG, --tag=TAG
-
Specify a tag to be filed on this report, for example
--tag=patch. Multiple tags can be specified using multiple
-T/--tag arguments.
Alternatively, you can specify the 'tag' none to bypass the tags
prompt without specifying any tags; this will also ignore any tags
specified on the command line.
- --template
-
Output a template report to standard output. Differently from
-p/--print, it tries to be not interactive, and presents a
template without user's input.
- -u INTERFACE, --interface=INTERFACE, --ui=INTERFACE
-
Specify the user interface to use. Valid options are text,
urwid, and gtk2; default is taken from the reportbug
configuration files.
- -v, --verify
-
Verify the integrity of the package (if installed) using debsums
before reporting.
- --no-verify
-
Do not verify the integrity of the package with debsums.
- -V VERSION, --package-version=VERSION
-
Specify the version of the package the problem was found in. This is
probably most useful if you are reporting a bug in a package that is
not installable or installed on a different system.
- -x, --no-cc
-
Don't send a blind carbon copy (BCC) of the bug report to the
submitter (i.e. yourself).
- -z, --no-compress
-
Don't compress configuration files by removing comments and blank
lines.
EXAMPLES
- reportbug lynx-ssl
-
Report a bug in the lynx-ssl package.
- reportbug --path --filename=ls
-
Report a bug in the installed package that includes a program in your
path called ls.
CONFIGURATION FILES
From version 0.22 on,
reportbug has supported a simple run
control file syntax. Commands are read from
/etc/reportbug.conf
and
$HOME/.reportbugrc with commands in the latter overriding
those in the former.
Commands are not case sensitive, and currently take 0 or 1 argument;
arguments containing whitespace must be enclosed in quotes.
Any line starting with # is taken to be a comment and will be
ignored.
Generally, options corresponding to the long options for
reportbug are supported, without leading -- sequences.
See reportbug.conf(5) for all acceptable options and detailed
information.
ENVIRONMENT
- VISUAL
-
Editor to use for editing your bug report.
- EDITOR
-
Editor to use for editing the bug report (overridden by VISUAL).
- REPORTBUGEMAIL, EMAIL, DEBEMAIL
-
Email address to use as your from address (in this order). If no
environment variable exists, the default is taken from your user name
and /etc/mailname.
- DEBFULLNAME, DEBNAME, NAME
-
Real name to use; default is taken from /etc/passwd.
- REPLYTO
-
Address for Reply-To header in outgoing mail.
- MAILCC
-
Use the specified CC address on your email. Note you can also use the
-H option for this (and for Bcc's too).
- MAILBCC
-
Use the specified BCC address, instead of your email address. (CC and
BCC based on suggestions from Herbert Thielen in the bug
wishlist).
- http_proxy
-
Provides the address of a proxy server to handle the BTS query. This
should be a valid http URL for a proxy server, including any
required port number (simply specifying a hostname, or omitting a port
other than 80, WILL NOT WORK).
NOTES
reportbug
should probably be compatible with other bug tracking systems, like
bugzilla (used by the GNOME and Mozilla projects) and
jitterbug (used by Samba, AbiSource and FreeCiv) but it isn't.
SEE ALSO
reportbug.conf(5),
http://www.debian.org/Bugs/Developer#tags
for available tags,
querybts(1)
AUTHOR
Chris Lawrence <
lawrencc@debian.org>,
Sandro Tosi <
morph@debian.org>.
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- OPTIONS
-
- EXAMPLES
-
- CONFIGURATION FILES
-
- ENVIRONMENT
-
- NOTES
-
- SEE ALSO
-
- AUTHOR
-